What You Need to Know About Bug Out Vehicles, Fuel, and the Energy Matrix
As many of our readers are definitely going to need a vehicle to arrive at some bug-out location, I could foresee the need of explaining some considerations that said bug-out vehicle should have.
The only person able to identify what vehicle you need is you, but here are some factors to consider, based on my experiences.
There are various factors to consider when choosing a bug-out vehicle.
Maybe an SUV is too expensive to maintain, indeed, as a daily ride. But you could find a decent, simple but reliable rig if you have space enough to park it. (Be aware that the daily ride perhaps will have to be left behind in a hurry, if it can’t make it to the BOL) Or, if you can’t afford either of these, maybe you could find a bug-out location in a safe place where you can get safely to without an SUV, just with your small little car – easy to maintain in a tight budget. It’s a little like the military. You need the proper equipment to complete the mission. You can’t open a breach in a stone wall without rocket fire. And it’s good planning to go overkill, instead of remaining short. I know it because a large car gives you a good degree of safety. But, a small car gives you maneuverability and stealth, good fuel economy after the event, and can hide it easily. It’s kind of a compromise, and your particular situation has to be assessed carefully. For me, in the open, MadMaxian roads in Venezuela, I would feel much better in an armored car. But my SUV will have to make it, once repaired.
Widget not in any sidebars
Be sure to store enough fuel for your vehicle.
OK, trust me on this now, please. Unless you have fuel enough stored, with the proper precautions, you’re not going anywhere. The blackout in Argentina made people desperate the 2nd day because there was no power for any gas station, and people with gensets found that replenishing was impossible. Go figure. (Stay tuned because I will write something and make a video about that in the next few weeks after I receive and research with more detail). If your tank is half empty and you need a quarter, unless you drill the tank of that neighbor you hate in the middle of the night (assuming you don’t get shot in the process) to complete your tank, you’re not going anywhere.
Is it worth the investment in a rig with a second tank, if you only need a full tank, to arrive at your BOL? That’s up to you. I had the strong feeling of things going on to hell. I don’t know how many times I woke up at 3 am with that bitter sentiment, about everything crumbling around. Slowly, but patiently. Anyway, I could make still some money, cover expenses, and get an extra job to prep, but I could have managed my mobility issues much better. I know, many of us have a family. A shared responsibility in the home economy, so to speak. Maybe it is not that easy to convince our partner about if it’s better to re-shape our budget to cope with the maintenance of a much different vehicle. I was weak and paid the price. Time told me, I knew better.
But trust me, you never know what you really need, UNTIL you need it desperately. In our case, it was driving the motorcycle through one of the worst storms of the year to go buy some food at night. 30 cms of water in the road made me see how big my mistake was. Windy and with lightning falling all around, just like any good tropical storm. Loaded with two large backpacks with food including glass jars. After some moron in a car started to honk to make me pull over because he was in a hurry, I think maybe she understood we could have been in much better shape. Arriving at our home soaked up and down, I told my (now ex) wife “remember when I told you I wanted to change that junk for a diesel truck?” She nodded silently, with water dripping off her hair and tip of the nose and shaking because of the cold and the effort of the two heavy backpacks. I remained silent too. Didn’t want to push my luck though.
Depending on the stage of the evolution of your prepping itself, this is not something that will need a high degree of money to invest in. It’s more about the proper timing of the investment, just as it is usually the norm. I am pretty sure that a large underground biodiesel market will spike once some difficulty for finding regular fuel is in place. Therefore, my choice for 4 wheels vehicles from now on, are Diesel engines.
Consider keeping these supplies in your bug-out vehicle.
Automatic transmission, I don’t pretend to win any races. I care about reliable vehicles, and you never know if you are going to get hurt and have to drive with just one foot and one hand. A good set of modifications are going to provide good clearance. I have been in the need to make some maneuvers that in my former, shiny and brand new 4-door sedan were impossible, and with the taller SUV we could get through the side curb, around the obstacle like nothing. For some reason, Venezuela is plagued with all types of 4x4s. So get your rig a body lift. Get a second tank, too, if there is space enough. You could need it someday. Get a nice HAM radio, and find or makeshift a good console to install it, but don’t leave it inside. Radio must be detachable because it could get stolen.
There are several options in boxes to keep some permanent stuff like some oil cans, tire repair cans, tools, and some devices. I would get a sturdy one, not very big but capable, and fill it with equipment that MUST be there. A 2nd spare wouldn’t be bad either. This is economy, too: once you need tires, you may extend the lifetime by just changing two. I usually noticed that my front tires were wasted much before the rear ones. By buying them by the couple, I always had two spare tires in good shape, one in the truck and another one at home. Something that can extend the cargo capacity is a need: a good quality roof shell is great, and you can just stuff some duffel bags inside quickly and silently. But take the pets inside! Don’t use those roof pet pens. Please.
Oh, and a last suggestion. Save some money for brand new tires. Once things get hairy, you may buy them and store them under good conditions. You’re going to need them if things go bad. Once we go back we’re going to need them, and they’re much more expensive now because factories are not producing.
Here are some additional considerations to keep in mind.
The first of these considerations is something called the energy matrix. We can define roughly that, in a country, or a state, this matrix is composed of all the energy types produced: wind, solar, oil derivatives, hydro, biofuels, and so on. Therefore, the more diversity there is, as it is evident, the lack of one of the elements of the matrix will not impact our energy needs. We can interpolate and treat every homestead as a place with a determined energy matrix. I am sure it is much better treating the homestead as an isolated system: totally off-grid. No matter you have power lines big enough for a refinery. If you are still reading this, it’s because, or you are in your golden years and have plenty of time, or because you want to be really independent, self-reliant and prepped for whatever life comes along with.
This said, and being my subdivision home a VERY small energy matrix and almost entirely reliant on grid power, I bought a small solar panel after another, saved my used batteries for a rack and use it to light a LED setup, and similar little projects, got myself a used HAM radio, and so on.
One of the most important effects (and yes, this is a proven fact) I have identified in Venezuela in the last months are the difficulties that are facing both producers and consumers to transport themselves.
If you don’t know it yet, our gasoline is being sent to Cuba, the few barrels produced and the one imported from Russia, paid with gold. The few barrels a day our only working refinery is producing, and whatever other crappy fuel they can beg from Russia, no matter its anti-freezing additives, totally useless for the tropical countries destroy our engines, who cares? No matter our people are dying because there is no gasoline for the ambulances, but Cuba’s shipments must be sent.
Yes, I am p—d off enough, and please excuse my French. These days have not been good for me.
Rant finished, let’s continue.
No matter which vehicle you choose, watch out for this.
This side effect of the consequences of a flawed energy matrix (electric scooters and cars are just nonexistent in Venezuela: those were toys for kids, if you even though having something electric and non-contaminant for commuting you’d be ridiculous) that relied uniquely on fossil fuels. I know, having several energy sources in our homestead can be tricky. But I am a fan of simple systems because they are reliable. Instead of having a sophisticated electronic relay to change between your arrangements, whatever it’s a combination of solar, wind, and hydro turbine, a steam engine with Peltier effect devices all around, or your pig-sized hamster wheel in the pigsty, just have a simple circuit box.
Lightning nearby could fry all the electronics in a time where you (or those who come after you) will not be able to replace it, and that could be costly. I have been in a truck, a modern one, 2000 and something, when lightning struck about 50 meters of us. The overload of the systems almost left us stranded: the lights in the dashboard blinked, and the engine almost stalled. Driving at 50 kmh in a flooded road with 15 cms of water under the wheels. The EPM is real, people. I’ve seen the sparks in all the sockets once lightning struck the building I was in. It had concrete roofing, and the discharge blew off one of the corners like a sledgehammer. It seems the rebar was very close to the surface, and the sharp roof corner was the most adequate part to discharge. Amazing. I had seen other effects of discharges, but not this close.
This said, I must mention, life taught me to NEVER underestimate two things: the power of lightning, and PMS.
Please stay tuned for the next article.
Thanks for your much-needed support! Good things coming in.
What do you think?
What kind of vehicles do you think are ideal for bugging out? Are there aspects you think are important that we missed? Please share your thoughts in the comments.
Jose is an upper middle class professional. He is a former worker of the oil state company with a Bachelor’s degree from one of the best national Universities. He has a small 4 members family, plus two cats and a dog. An old but in good shape SUV, a good 150 square meters house in a nice neighborhood, in a small but (formerly) prosperous city with two middle size malls. Jose is a prepper and shares his eyewitness accounts and survival stories from the collapse of his beloved Venezuela. Thanks to your help Jose has gotten his family out of Venezuela. They are currently setting up a new life in another country. Follow Jose on YouTube and gain access to his exclusive content on Patreon. Donations: paypal.me/JoseM151
Subscribe to Natural Blaze for health freedom and natural living headlines to your inbox. Follow Natural Blaze on Twitter and Facebook.