90% Will Die In 9 Months! We Tried 72 Hours

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Published 2023-04-17
We went 72 hours without power after an EMP destroyed the power grid! Here's how we did it. Go to athleticgreens.com/haxman to get started on your first purchase and receive a FREE 1-year supply of Vitamin D3+K2 and 5 travel packs. Thanks to AG1 for sponsoring today’s video! An electromagnetic pulse can destroy the power grid. They aren't just man-made devices. They can and have happened from solar flares from the sun. If you weren't prepared for an EMP or an attack on the power grid how would you survive?

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All Comments (21)
  • 15 years ago my church did an event where everyone was encouraged to go an entire week without buying anything from the store. It was eye opening for lots of people and I highly recommend everyone try it.
  • Your wife is an absolute saint! To put up with your antics is a true blessing from God. Love your videos and love your family. Lord bless you all.
  • I've been a prepper 15 years. When hurricane Michael hit us in 2018, we were out of power ten days. But were so well prepared that we found very few issues we couldn't handle. Those issues after were soon addressed.
  • @reloadnorth7722
    I am an infantry veteran and we live in the countryside on an acreage. We have a spring well, a deep creek with lots of flowing water, moose, bear, rabbits, grouse, etc. My neighbors are a mile away on either side. There are lots of wild vegetation to consume and we do have a small garden. I trained my wife and sons to shoot rifles, shotguns and archery, and clean game to consume, we are all licensed. There are small lakes nearby for fishing. I have a small HAM/GMRS radio for communications if possible. I'm not too worried.
  • @outbackeddie
    I did a 24 hour winter power outage practice run a few years ago. It was a lot tougher than I thought it would be mainly because I had to split a lot of firewood. Hauling the firewood to the house and keeping the wood stove fired up was also a big time killer. I learned a lot from that experiment and now I have 2 cords of split, dry, firewood on permanent standby.
  • Us old people are like, no, we did that in the 60s and 70s. It was called No Air Conditioning, and if you opened the refrigerator door, your dad yelled at you to close it and go outside. 😊
  • @terrence369
    😂😂😂 Loved the part when you said "I closed the door to keep the cold." But, when asked, "what's in there?" Your reply is "I don't know. I closed it too quickly." 😂😂😂
  • Others are going to smell cooking when done outside. I would suggest having a good cast iron dutch oven that you can put fire coals in to cook inside. Fill the cast iron with hot coals, use a small grate for the top and put your cooking pan right on the grate. Also, don't forget, you'll have about 50gals of water in your water heater, you just have to learn how to drain it safely... its under pressure right now. Save your plastic shopping bags, they fit nicely in a small waste pail that can be used as a toilet. Put the bag in the pail, a small amount of dirt, and take the "trash" out when finished. You can take the seat off of a kitchen chair and put the waste pail under it so you can sit comfortably.. No outside vulnerabilities. The Lord be with you all in the days ahead...
  • @gaaarete
    If we were your neighbors we’d have definitely participated in the 72 hour run. Preparation is always important and it keeps anxiety down. If people only knew, it’s better to have and not need than to need and not have!
  • @teresas3550
    It's a good idea to do a simulation to see where our weaknesses are, what we are short on, or what we still need to get to be better prepared. Great job Haxman!!
  • It’s great how your family can laugh together and you can laugh at yourself. I love you guys!
  • @jackiestowe6987
    I live in Oklahoma and it gets cold in the winter here. We had the largest ice storm in years. Our house heating system went down. I had to go 8 days without the heater for my 3,500 sq. ft. home. That was the soonest the part would come in. We were able to use the gas logs in the fireplace and if it got a little chilly, I have two ovens, I would fire up the ovens and leave the doors opened. We didn’t leave them unattended. We all slept in the den, it is closest to the kitchen. Put up some quilts to close off the rest of the house. Space heaters in the bathrooms so the cold did burst water lines. My family and I survived.
  • @pman2916
    I think next time you do this simulation, you get someone outside your family to call it without notice, like you just did on your neighbours. That would've been even more interesting. I did something like this with my bestfriend and my children, but for only 24 hours, it was a great way to see how well we used our 72 hour pack. I'm gonna use this as a discussion point and see if I can get others to participate in this with us. I'd have to see what hubby thinks because the man is glued to technology lol
  • I wish more people did videos like this, its going to put your plans and preps into practice and if I were your neighbor I would have participated with ya.
  • @TalentNetworked
    Thanks to your family for participating and becoming stronger together. You are all blessed.
  • @lynnrabe4428
    This was fun to watch- and a reminder to make sure I’ve got things in place in case an event like this happens.
  • This simulation was a great idea. My family and I unfortunately delt with something close to this scenario the summer before last in our neck of the wood's. The Sequoia National Forest to be exact. The French Fire hit a few miles from our home and to say it was a challenge is an understatement. We learned a lot from this experience and it wasn't easy. We chose to stay as long as we could and fight to save our home. I don't recommend doing this if you don't have an experience with firefighting or in field first aid. I was a volunteer for search and rescue for 7 year's and an EMT while in college. I then worked as a probation officer with juveniles until I chose to go back to school and became an autism therapist for children on the autism spectrum. My experience with search and rescue, a first responder and law enforcement helped a great deal, but it wasn't a cake walk in the slightest. At the time of the fire I had been prepping for 3 and half year's so my family and I had that in our favor to a point. 24 hours in I ended up packing all of my long and short term prep on a trailer along with essential clothing pet kennels and supplies and our most important possessions. I don't think those of us whom live in fire prone area's think about everything we've prepared being damaged by a fire. The only reason I thought to pack my preps is because the year before California was experiencing many fires and I had read a story about a woman having to start over and losing 7 year's of food preparation along with everything she owned and the thought of all the time and money she had put into her preps gave me food for thought. I wasn't going to lose all I had worked so hard to accomplish if at all possible. I learned from that story and had everything packed a certain way so if a forest fire occurred I could easily move my preps from one place to the next in a quick and efficient manner. This planned out decision worked in my favor. Other thing's didn't. We were without power for 8 day's. We utilized what was in our refrigerator, but weren't able to save everything. We barbecued everything we could in our backyard by the creek that runs through our property. We ate well those 8 day's so that was a plus. No eggs were harmed in the preparation of any of our food. Lol. One of my learned lessons were always test your equipment. I didn't do this with certain equipment and paid a heavy price. We went without cellphone service because of my costly mistake in trusting equipment and the sellers word the it would work if we had no power. Well those 4Patriots solar chargers and flashlights didn't charge in the slightest. We had them in direct sunlight from 7am to 7pm. They didn't charge and they failed us in our time of need. We had to depend of our friends that were firefighters, law enforcement and first responders to get word to family and friends that we were alive and fighting to save our home. We live in a small town where everyone knows everyone so it wasn't an impossible task to get the word out that we were ok for the time being. My suggestion is always test your equipment no matter what. I should've known better, but I got complacent on this particular equipment and took the manufacturer word for it. Big mistake. I also wasted a good $150 in useless equipment. Lesson learned. The faulty equipment has been replaced and tested a few time's. We were evacuated to our local lake a few time's then we would drive back up the mountain to our home and the work would continue. We were able to not only save our home, but the neighbors homes on each side of us were saved to. We drenched all three properties and kept a 24 hour watch at all time's and took turns as lookouts. It helped that we had radios to hear when the fire was more active and moving and when it wasn't. This experience really put us to task and was a huge learning experience. We figured out what our weaknesses and strengths were. We've made the necessary changes so we're not caught off guard like last time. I would encourage anyone to practice different scenarios of what could occur in their area and if the SHTF. You think your prepared well enough until your not. Practice makes perfect is a great place to start. Learn your equipment and how it performs in emergency situations. Work with your neighbors even if they aren't there. They'll be grateful that you did. Take care of one another and work as a team you'll accomplish more in an efficient manner. Stay safe and God bless.
  • You should make a video on how folks who don’t have their own property could survive. So many off gridders seem to think everyone can do what they can, but what about folks who don’t have property; or even a yard? My husband and I are both disabled, and live in a fifth wheel RV in a public RV park. (On less than 1k a month.) We do what we can to be self sufficient, but it’s getting harder. Maybe you could make a video sharing tips on helping folks who don’t have access to as much as you do. We have a little bit of space on a concrete pad that our RV is parked on, but there are rules about what we can or cannot have on or around our RV. I do my best to container garden every year, even try to make my own compost but there’s only so much I can grow and do where we’re at. Because we’re disabled we can’t even afford to move. And honestly we’re only one or two rent increases away from not having that. So, how about a video series on survival and self sufficiency for people like us?
  • @Krauser84
    God bless y'all for doing this together as a family. This was a nice "preview" of what the "average" family would go through in case an emp does happen.