The Common Sense Practical Prepper

Keith Vincent

Welcome to The Common Sense Practical Prepper. No doom, no zombies — just straightforward, practical advice for real people who want to be prepared without breaking the bank. From food storage and home security to situational awareness and bug out strategies, I break down what actually works for everyday folks. Have a question or topic suggestion? Drop it in the comments.  Email practicalpreppodcast@gmail.com.  Support the podcast with Augason Farms, your go-to for reliable food storage. Use code PODCASTPREP for 10% off your order! Please check out Augason Farms. Affiliate link below. Use PODCASTPREP at checkout for an additional 10% off your order. https://augasonfarms.com?sca_ref=9315862.VpHzogdDNu

  1. hace 1 d

    Blackout At The Fairgrounds

    Send us Fan Mail The music cuts out at 7 PM, the lights die, and you realize it is not just the fairgrounds. Traffic signals are dark, gas stations are dark, and a regional power outage has taken down the grid across the county while you and 15,000 other people sit in 104 degree heat behind intentionally closed roads. Now add a vulnerable family member, a cooler that is running out, and a cell network that is collapsing under load. That is the kind of “ordinary” emergency that turns into a dangerous night fast. We walk a realistic timeline from the first hour of confusion to the moment the parking lot becomes gridlock in the dark and heat-related medical calls start stacking up. Along the way, we break down what most people miss: water is finite, card readers fail, porta potties get worse by the minute, and first responders get stretched thin because the outage hits the whole region, not just your venue. If you have an elderly parent on beta blockers, young kids, or anyone with medical needs, your margin for waiting shrinks to near zero. We also get practical about preparedness that actually matters here: a lightweight get home bag with water, filtration, electrolytes, a cooling towel, cash, a charged power bank, real walking shoes, basic first aid, and a reliable light. We talk through communications options when cell towers go down, including why satellite messengers can be the difference between coordinating a pickup and navigating blind. The big takeaway is decision-making: set clear triggers ahead of time so you do not wait for permission while conditions worsen. If this scenario makes you think, take 60 seconds before your next public event and run the five questions we share at the end. Subscribe for more scenario-based prepping, share this with someone who goes to summer events, and leave a review so more people can find the show. https://augasonfarms.com?sca_ref=9315862.VpHzogdDNu Augason FarmsSupport the podcast. Click on my affiliate link and use coupon code PODCASTPREP for 10% discount!Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the show Have a question, suggestion or comment? Please email me at practicalpreppodcast@gmail.com. I will not sell your email address and I will personally respond to you.

    30 min
  2. hace 2 d

    Prepping Is The American Default

    Send us Fan Mail The July 4th weekend has a funny way of revealing what we actually depend on. When it’s 100-plus degrees, everyone’s traveling, and the grid is working hard, it’s a good moment to ask a simple question: how much of your safety and comfort is yours, and how much is outsourced? We dig into the roots of practical prepping by looking at early American life, when preparedness wasn’t optional. No grocery stores, no 911, no next-day delivery, no reliable utilities. If a family didn’t grow food, preserve it, or trade for it, they didn’t eat. If someone got hurt, you handled it or rode for help. That history reframes modern emergency preparedness, food storage, water storage, medical readiness, and home security as a return to normal, not an extreme lifestyle. We also make the case that Benjamin Franklin belongs in any conversation about self-reliance and community resilience. He didn’t wait for someone else to fix problems; he organized volunteer fire response, supported public resources, and pushed prevention as a way of life. From there, we connect colonial homesteads to today’s “bug out” thinking and challenge the lone wolf myth with the older truth: mutual aid and neighbor cooperation are the real force multipliers. If you want a grounded, non-paranoid approach to disaster readiness that’s built on history, skills, and community, press play. Then subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find practical preparedness that actually fits real life. https://augasonfarms.com?sca_ref=9315862.VpHzogdDNu Augason FarmsSupport the podcast. Click on my affiliate link and use coupon code PODCASTPREP for 10% discount!Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the show Have a question, suggestion or comment? Please email me at practicalpreppodcast@gmail.com. I will not sell your email address and I will personally respond to you.

    11 min
  3. 28 jun

    Why Practical Prepping Stays Above Politics

    Send us Fan Mail Politics can be fascinating, but it can also hijack your time, your mood, and your focus. We talk through why we keep preparedness nonpartisan and why that choice is not about ignoring reality, it’s about staying useful. If your goal is practical prepping and emergency preparedness that works under stress, the fastest path is to stop treating outrage as a substitute for readiness. We dig into how current events can still matter to your plan without turning the show into a voting guide. Energy prices, inflation, supply chain disruptions, and international conflict all affect what you pay and what you can find on the shelf. A real example is the instability around Iran and the Strait of Hormuz, where even rumors and short-term restrictions can ripple into oil prices and gas prices. You may not control any of that, but you can prepare for the impact by tightening your budget, prioritizing essentials, and staying disciplined with your purchases. We also answer listener questions about platform choices, including why we stay audio-only instead of producing a full YouTube video version, and why we avoid Facebook posting. When online spaces get toxic, beginners stop asking questions about basics like water storage, solar panels, chickens, dehydrating food, and first aid. That hurts the whole preparedness community. Our focus stays on what matters when the power goes out: a 72-hour kit, clean water, basic medical gear, and the habits that keep you calm and effective. If you like this practical approach, subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a positive review so more people can find it. What’s one prep you’ve done lately that beat doomscrolling? https://augasonfarms.com?sca_ref=9315862.VpHzogdDNu Augason FarmsSupport the podcast. Click on my affiliate link and use coupon code PODCASTPREP for 10% discount!Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the show Have a question, suggestion or comment? Please email me at practicalpreppodcast@gmail.com. I will not sell your email address and I will personally respond to you.

    13 min
  4. 23 jun

    The Emotional Truth About Prepping

    Send us Fan Mail Most people don’t avoid prepping because they’re clueless or lazy. They avoid it because it forces a brutal admission: the life that feels stable and predictable can be up-ended fast, and nobody gets a guaranteed rescue timeline. We go straight at that emotional wall, unpack the “reasonable” excuses we all hear, and explain why those lines are often coping mechanisms that keep fear at bay rather than plans that keep families safe.  We talk about the real emotional cost of preparedness: accepting that jobs can disappear, grocery shelves can stay empty longer than you expect, and emergency services may be stretched thin when a crisis is widespread. Drawing on real events like hurricanes, freezes, and wildfires, we explore how quickly normal routines can break and why even capable people get caught off guard when the speed and severity spike.  Then we bring it down to an everyday image you won’t forget: someone driving for months on a temporary donut spare tire, worn thin, hoping it never fails. That small story captures the psychology behind procrastination, risk denial, and why “knowing” you should prepare is not the same as accepting reality and acting on it. If you’ve ever felt the weight of being the person who thinks ahead, we also talk about that burden and why it can become a quiet kind of strength.  If this hits home, subscribe, share the show with a friend who needs a gentle wake-up call, and leave a quick review so more people can find practical, clear-headed preparedness. Support the show Have a question, suggestion or comment? Please email me at practicalpreppodcast@gmail.com. I will not sell your email address and I will personally respond to you.

    13 min
  5. 19 jun

    Build Your Ark - One Week of Food

    Send us Fan Mail Most people assume they have “plenty of food” until the power goes out or the store shelves get thin and they do the math for a family of four. We take that problem head-on with a clear, realistic goal: a one-week emergency food supply you can build quickly, affordably, and actually use. We’re continuing the Building Your Ark series with the food pillar, breaking down three practical methods that fit different budgets and situations. First is the no-cook approach for zero power and zero heat, built around shelf-stable canned proteins, beans, chili or stew, peanut butter, crackers, granola bars, and canned fruit and vegetables. We also call out the one tool that turns stored food into edible meals: a good manual can opener. Next is the camp stove method, where boiling water unlocks inexpensive staples like dried beans and rice, gives you hot meals that boost morale, and expands your options with simple mixes like tuna rice bowls or chili over rice. Then we talk about the freeze-dried emergency food bucket option, why it’s the ultimate compact grab-and-go choice, and what to watch for with portions and leftovers when refrigeration isn’t available. We wrap with a practical home tip for rotating bread in your freezer, plus a reminder about food safety thresholds during outages so your emergency plan doesn’t create a new problem. If you want a simple SHTF food plan you can scale from one week to two weeks to a month, hit subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the show. https://augasonfarms.com?sca_ref=9315862.VpHzogdDNu Augason FarmsSupport the podcast. Click on my affiliate link and use coupon code PODCASTPREP for 10% discount!Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the show Have a question, suggestion or comment? Please email me at practicalpreppodcast@gmail.com. I will not sell your email address and I will personally respond to you.

    13 min
  6. 13 jun

    A Prepper’s Rant On Crime And Consequences

    Send us Fan Mail The older I get, the less patience I have for pretending this is normal. When you can’t ride a train, sit on a bus, or walk down a street without hearing about another unprovoked stabbing or shooting, “random crime” starts to look like something bigger and uglier: societal decay happening in real time. I talk through the headlines and personal reactions that pushed me into a full rant, including public attacks, “teen takeover” chaos, and the way mainstream narratives can twist facts to inflame division. Then I lay out what I see as the core drivers: consequences disappearing, violence becoming the default response to minor conflict, social media turning brutality into entertainment, parenting breaking down, and personal responsibility dying in the home, at school, and in the courtroom. If you care about personal safety, situational awareness, and practical preparedness, you’ll recognize how these forces change your day-to-day risk. From there, we get honest about what to do when society won’t fix itself. For me, that means shifting toward self-reliance and building peace on purpose: fewer points of friction, stronger boundaries, and a realistic plan that might include land, distance, and living more off-grid. I call it building my arc not to stop the flood, but to get out of its way. If this resonates, subscribe for more Common Sense Practical Prepper, share this with someone who’s been feeling the same pressure, and leave a review so more people can find the conversation. Support the show Have a question, suggestion or comment? Please email me at practicalpreppodcast@gmail.com. I will not sell your email address and I will personally respond to you.

    9 min

Información

Welcome to The Common Sense Practical Prepper. No doom, no zombies — just straightforward, practical advice for real people who want to be prepared without breaking the bank. From food storage and home security to situational awareness and bug out strategies, I break down what actually works for everyday folks. Have a question or topic suggestion? Drop it in the comments.  Email practicalpreppodcast@gmail.com.  Support the podcast with Augason Farms, your go-to for reliable food storage. Use code PODCASTPREP for 10% off your order! Please check out Augason Farms. Affiliate link below. Use PODCASTPREP at checkout for an additional 10% off your order. https://augasonfarms.com?sca_ref=9315862.VpHzogdDNu

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