Episode 487
Scroll through YouTube or a prepping forum and you’ll see endless bug out bag loadouts. Guys showing off their tactical packs with 80 pounds of gear stuffed inside. Looks impressive, sure—but if you’ve ever humped one of those packs more than a hundred yards, you know the truth: most bug out bags are doomed to fail.
The number one failure point? Weight. Most people build a fantasy bag, not a functional one. You’re not Rambo. If your bag is so heavy you can’t comfortably carry it for a few miles, it’s useless. A bug out bag should be something you can actually move with, not just something you can show off on social media.
Another classic fail: filling your pack with “cool” gear instead of the stuff you’ll actually need. Three machetes, a folding saw, and a tomahawk? Great. But where’s the extra socks? Where’s the water filter? Prepping is about survival, not cosplay.
A bug out bag that’s never been used is just dead weight. If you haven’t tried carrying it, cooking with it, or sleeping with what’s inside, you don’t have a bug out bag—you have a closet trophy. The first time you realize something’s missing shouldn’t be when your life depends on it.
Everything loose and scattered in one big sack? That’s chaos. When stress hits, you won’t be digging for a lighter in the bottom of a 60L pack. This is why I like the bag of bags method. Organized, modular, and fast—gear where you expect it to be when you need it most.
A bug out bag isn’t a mobile survival warehouse. It’s not supposed to keep you alive for a year in the woods. It’s supposed to help you get from danger to safety. That might mean hiking to a hotel after a gas line break, evacuating to family during a power outage, or moving quick when the neighborhood goes sideways.
Published on 2 days, 12 hours ago
If you like Podbriefly.com, please consider donating to support the ongoing development.
Donate