Source: Lew Rockwell | VIEW ORIGINAL POST ==>
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Let’s say we’ve reached the moment everyone’s been afraid of. Disaster has struck so severely that the government declared martial law.
There might be chaos and pandemonium in the streets. Chances are people just aren’t as prepared as you are, and they might be willing to defy shelter-in-place orders to get what they need.
As much as this might seem like the time to load the shotgun and pull the curtains, there are always going to be crazies out there who think they can outgun Burt Gummer. Not to mention, the risk of someone breaking into your bug-out or bug-in location when you aren’t there!
If you’re worried about how to hide your supplies from would-be looters during martial law, or any other disasters, you might want to try some of the following.
Divide to Not Be Conquered
Regardless of the specific strategy you use to hide your supplies, the wise move is to split up your supplies into multiple batches. That way if a successful looter does get access to your wares, they might find some, but not all of them.
Ideally, you want your various stashes to have redundancy. Rather than putting all the toilet paper in one place, all the antibiotics in another, and the MREs all in one big box. Try putting a little of everything in each stash.
Unfortunately, having a stockpile of antibiotics, let alone two or more, is very hard.
Create a Sacrificial Stash
A good supply-hiding strategy also needs to deploy a little deceptive psychology. Let’s imagine a situation where Burt Gummer’s grandson is threatening to shoot his way in, or you’re simply away when would-be looters get at your shelter.
You can trust that they’ll keep searching until they find something. They’re not going to believe that you’ve been living on saltines and herbal tea.
So let’s say they find a 55-gallon barrel drum or a big tote with a modest handful of supplies. This small sacrificial stash makes it look like you’re already running desperately low. An inventory sheet with most everything checked off, and a bunch of empty cans and pouches in a nearby waste bin sells the perception that you’ve been foolishly overeating.
Don’t Hide Supplies in Light Items
Hiding supplies inside lightweight items, like a potted plant with a false bottom might sound brilliant on paper. In real life when someone is looking for anything of value they will quickly ransack, smash, and knock things over hoping to get lucky.
If they find one potted plant with a false bottom filled with MREs or a heavy flour canister loaded with 22 LR ammo, you can bet they’ll completely toss the place.
They might even start to get rough with your family members trying to get you to talk.
A Discrete Outdoor Storage Bunker
A storage supply bunker hidden outside away from the house or in an outbuilding gives you a great fallback stash. Even if your house does get ransacked and they find the supplies of value, you can still tape into the exterior stash to get you by.
Of course, anything stashed above ground outside has a real risk of spoiling or degrading. So, this is a strategy that’s better suited for things like fuel, and sealed MREs rather than canned goods or ammo.
The trick is to leave these supplies alone, and untouched until you absolutely have to access them. If you have a bunker hidden under the brush pile, or underneath some strawbales in the pole barn, you’ll leave a trail every time you affect the area.
Buried PVC Stashes
Imagine a scenario where looters get into your house, or they try to shoot their way in, and you have to evacuate.
Sealed PVC tubes buried in remote locations on your property give you fallback stashes you can use to either move on or take back your house when the time is right.
You can make all kinds of these loaded with non-perishable food and medical supplies. The ends of the PVC can be sealed watertight. If you bury it 2 feet deep in a shady spot, the tubes will be pretty much insulated from the effects of weather.
Inside an Exterior Liquid Propane Tank
If your rural property already has an outdoor propane tank, a second false tank can be a great exterior storage depot. It doesn’t have to be a massive tank that looks like it’s capable of heating the whole house.
You can usually find disused 100 or 200-gallon options by searching online for “Salvage Propane Tanks.” You could even go with an exterior fuel oil tank.
Attach some simple plumbing that runs a pipe into the ground, and you can position it just about anywhere near the house. Use a cutting torch to open a seam and turn it into a concealed door. A fresh coat of paint, and perhaps some repurposed gas service stickers hide everything in plain sight!
A False Rain Barrel
Assuming you’ve got a rain barrel system set up on your home, garage, or outbuildings, it’s easy to add another one or two. Instead of plumbing them into the system, you use them to store supplies.
Some dummy plumbing fixtures and hardware will make it look convincing enough to a looter. However, the inside of a rain barrel is going to get very hot on a warm summer day. So, it’s not the place to store anything remotely perishable or heat sensitive.
Secret Under-the-Floor Storage
Under-floor storage compartments are a great way to stash a fair amount of supplies out of sight. Especially if you don’t have a formal basement or a basement crawlspace.
After accessing the subfloor stringers, you can easily install a series of milk cartons using heavy-duty fasteners.
Then conceal the underside of the milk cartons in the basement or crawlspace.
Flooring and location are also important factors. Ideally, you want it to be a closet or a lesser-used part of your home. The area will sound different when anyone, like a looter, walks over it.
A closet floor makes it easy to plausibly hide the door seam under old shoes and lightboxes. Under the bed in the guest bedroom is also a good option.
When it comes to flooring type, a hardwood floor can be troublesome as it leaves a noticeable seam where the boards meet unevenly. A tile floor is easier. Especially if you have dark grout lines. With a carpeted floor, try to hide the door seam at the natural edges of the carpet.
Inside Heavy Furniture
The underside of a big couch, or a hide-a-bed that isn’t truly a hide-a-bed is another easy place to hide supplies in plain sight. This is a much better alternative to things like a fake potted plant.
Would-be looters might toss sofa cushions, zip or even cut into them. They might pick a couch to look under it. However, inspecting the frame where you can conceal shallow totes behind a thin sheet of furniture-grade particle board made from cheap lumber won’t look suspicious.