Categories: Blog Posts

How Preppers Can Help Keep Their Neighborhood Safe

Image Source: Pexels

Prepping is often seen as a solitary activity. It is stereotypically depicted as overly skittish individuals hoarding everything they can so that they can survive the inevitable end of the world.

But the truth is, prepping is an activity everyone should participate in — and not just for themselves, either. Along with making sure that you’re ready for the next emergency, here are a few suggestions for ways that you can show that brotherly love by helping to prepare your neighborhood for any potential problems, too.

Choose Your Neighborhood Carefully

Before we get into the nitty-gritty aspects of orchestrating neighborhood-wide prepping activities, it’s worth taking a minute to talk about the place that you choose to live. From the setting to your particular house, you want to choose your living space carefully.

This starts with your home. Prepping influences your choice of living space in multiple ways. For instance, here are a few questions to ask when you’re looking for a home:

  • Are you choosing a home that is in an open, clear location where you can defend yourself and maintain your self-sufficiency and autonomy if necessary?
  • Is your new home going to undercut your financial preparedness or are you tackling monthly costs and future budgeting?
  • Is the local neighborhood overcrowded or difficult to protect?
  • Are the neighbors engaged or do they avoid interacting with one another?

You may not be able to answer all of these questions upfront. Nevertheless, it’s worth asking them beforehand to help make as informed a decision as possible.

Of course, if you’re already in a house and aren’t planning on moving any time soon, you can still work with what you have. However, if and when you do choose to move, do so with a long-term prepping mindset — both in regards to your personal living space as well as your local community.

Be Diplomatic

When you set out to prep for your entire neighborhood, the first thing to do is consider how you’ll approach the task. There is a stigma around prepping that you want to avoid.

Instead of reinforcing the paranoid stereotype already mentioned, emphasize the sense of control that being prepared offers. Prepping isn’t about being scared or fearful. It’s about safeguarding yourself against potential future issues. 

This doesn’t have to be a full-blown apocalypse. Instead, focus on things like the possibility of going through another pandemic, a serious electric outage, a flood, or some other event that is more likely in the short term. This will make your propositions more relatable.

Start a Neighborhood Watch

When it comes to first steps, consider starting a neighborhood watch. This is a common, practical activity that many will see useful even if they aren’t sold out to the prepper mindset yet.

You can start a neighborhood watch by:

  • Setting things up with local law enforcement;
  • Meeting with neighbors to discuss the task;
  • Electing officers and coordinators to oversee the effort;
  • Creating a schedule and setting up an online group for community communication.

A neighborhood watch is a great way to get your local community comfortable with the idea of prepping as a unit.

Gather Resources

Once you have your neighborhood involved in the prepping efforts, you can begin to work toward expanding them beyond basic safety concerns. Start having meetings for those who want to take basic prepping more seriously.

Again, be diplomatic with this. Focus on things like ensuring that everyone has basic supplies and properly stocked go bags in the event of a minor emergency like a power outage or storm.

From there, you can begin to introduce more complex and important resources for a larger disaster. For example, gather transportation, terrain, and Google image maps of the local area. 

Then go over them with your neighbors. Look for things like nearby water sources and designate gathering points if things go wrong.

Over time, you may even be able to start discussing things like defensive strategies and tactics. Outline an area of the neighborhood that will be the easiest to defend if things really go south. Talk through things like weapons, lock systems, and so on.

Easing Your Neighborhood Into a Prepping Mindset

Prepping takes a lot of work. This is just as true on a neighborhood scale as it is for an individual or a household. It requires coordination, communication, and the right mindset.

Community prepping also takes time and patience. You can’t create a defensively sound, self-dependent community in a week. 

Instead, start to lay the groundwork in reasonable ways. Launch a neighborhood watch program. Set up a community Facebook Group or text feed. Have collective prepping days to ensure that everyone is ready for basic emergencies.

As you identify those who are more sold out to the prepping lifestyle, you can create a team of individuals that can help spearhead the prepping efforts across your community. If you can do that, you’ll find that your neighborhood is as prepared as possible before long.

Ainsley Lawrence

Ainsley Lawrence is a freelance writer from the Pacific Northwest. She is interested in better living through technology and education. She loves traveling to beautiful places and is frequently lost in a mystery podcast.

Recent Posts

Gardening in Cooperation With Nature to Increase Self-Sustainability

On the surface, gardening is one of the original self-sustainability practices. The very nature of…

2 years ago

5 Easy Ways To Get Your Child Involved In Prepping

Planning for emergencies, like natural disasters, can be difficult, especially when you have children. You…

2 years ago

The College Student’s Guide To Disaster Prepping

As a student, you're living away from home for the first time and you're having…

2 years ago

How Focusing on Waste Prevention Will Make You More Prepared

When disaster strikes or there’s an emergency in your community, chances are the garbage man…

2 years ago

How to Stay Prepared for a Power Outage

Nobody expects a power outage, so it’s important to plan ahead and keep yourself prepared.…

2 years ago

Prepping With Pets

85 million families in the U.S. have a pet. Many of those families consider those…

2 years ago