What Rural Folks Should Have in Their EDC

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There are copious amounts of articles and videos published about creating the ultimate EDC (everyday carry) bag and gear. While many of them offer great tips and advice, most forget one very important aspect about surviving the immediate aftermath of a SHTF disaster… where you lives matters – a lot.

The EDC bag to get an urban dweller home will not likely require many of the essential gear items a rural prepper will need to have tucked away in his or her bag. A suburban prepper will likely need a mixture of the EDC items both a rural and urban prepper should keep handy – but it is doubtful a suburbanite will be remiss if not packing a snake bite kit!

The survival skills a prepper possesses also play a significant role in what goes in the EDC kit. Rural preppers typically boast far more survival skills than the average urban or suburban prepper, but that fact should not create a false sense of confidence about the ability to make it home with no or minimal gear during a doomsday disaster.

Rural preppers live in a beautiful crime-free area surrounded by basically like-minded people who also grew up with guns and are willing to point them at the marauding hordes without a second of hesitation to protect their home and community.

But, like many rural folks, the prepper may be forced to engage in a rather lengthy commute through the suburbs and into a city for work each day. In situations like this one, the EDC bag most accommodate the needs the prepper may face in more than one type of environment… getting a bag so large it will attract unwanted attention AND making it too heavy to carry.

A rural prepper who works 30 to 60 miles away from home, which is not uncommon, will have a far longer walk to potential safety than an urban or suburban prepper who laments on a regular basis about a cross-town or 15 minute commute to and from work.

Rural EDC Environmental and Terrain Aspects to Consider

  1. Hiking through steep, muddy, and rocky terrain, or through waterways, might be necessary to get home and to avoid treacherous roads.
  2. The EDC kit and the items contained inside may need to be rotated to address seasonal issues. Rural residents must always remain mindful of flooding during the rainy seasons of spring and fall, focus on water needs more during the drought-prone summer months, and be prepared to traverse rugged terrain in several feet of snow and avoid getting frostbite and hypothermia during the winter.
  3. Rural preppers will have to be prepared to deal with not only potential human attacker, but predators who walk on four legs as well. The very real possibility of stepping in an animal trap or getting shot by a hunter does exist. Never make the mistake of assuming that just because you know a SHTF disaster has started, that the news filtered down to everyone. A hunter in the woods stalking prey has not likely been on Facebook to see the news alerts.
  4. Walking home is going to take a whole lot longer than driving home. Practice walking the same distance at a local track or around you property while carrying your EDC bag to get a better idea of how long the trek will really take and stuff you bag with the food and sheltering items necessary to get you through an overnight in the woods that could very well be necessary.

Rural EDC Bag Tiers

Everyday carry items should always be accessible, but do not all have to be necessarily stored in a bag- and probably shouldn’t.

  • Carry EDC items on your person.
  • Store EDC item in your desk, locker, cabinet, purse, or drawers at work.
  • Carry EDC items in your car – both inside the main vehicle and in your trunk or lock box in the truck bed.
  • Carry and EDC bag that is both as discreet as possible and truly portable.

When the doomsday disaster strikes, you might not be able to get to your car, or even out of your place of work for multiple hours. The sooner you can get on the road home or to your survival retreat the better, but plan for possibly extensive lag time before a best case SHTF exit scenario can occur.

Putting all of your survival gear inside the rural EDC bag will leave you defenseless, cold, hungry, and thirsty if the bag is taken from your or lost while fighting, climbing, or swimming away from danger.

Rural EDC Personal Carry Gear

Carrying survival items on your body not only always keeps them ready for immediate use or at least within arm’s reach; employing this EDC set up will help ensure you are not left with nothing if your bag or car are stolen or unreachable.

  1. Sew hidden pouches into your coat, hat, gloves, purse, inside a bra or pants cuff, or work uniform to hide a small knife, matches, lighter, pen flashlight, gold or silver coins, etc. If you carry briefcase to work, purchase one with a false bottom to hide small and lightweight EDC gear.
  2. Get TWO boot knives to constantly wear inside any type of footwear you regularly wear to work or while doing errands away from home. Boot knife clips can work their way loose – I lost one of my favorite knives this way. Cut a slit in your boot liner or sew in a second liner, to hide the boot knife inside – secure the opening with a small snap or Velcro fastener.
  3. Grad that survival staple, duct tape, and use it to affix gold or silver coins to the inside of your belt.
  4. Purchase survival jewelry and accessory gear. Paracord bracelets designed with both men and women in mind are inexpensive and should be worn daily – and an extra one placed in a purse, briefcase, and rural EDC bag. Paracord hair ties are also a great addition to the on body EDC carry for preppers with long hair.
  5. Credit card shaped survival tools should also be placed in the wallet you carry in your back pocket, if you are a male prepper – and nearby in your purse for lady survivalists.
  6. Carry cash, ATM machines will either be in operational or bled dry during a doomsday disaster.
  7. Dress with an apocalypse in mind. You can barter your gold or silver jewelry or precious gems in your tie tacks, rings, necklaces, and earrings for a just about anything you might need while trying to get home – perhaps even for your very lie!
  8. Keep a small canister or pepper spray attached to your belt loop and carry your gun at all time legally allowed. An emergency whistle with a key chain style attachment so it too can be added to your belt loops is also a good idea.

Rural EDC Purse and Work Space Gear

Carefully tuck away the bare minimum EDC gear you will need to survive if trapped at work or delayed when trying to reach your EDC bag or vehicle.

Survival Gear to Store Nearby During the Work Day

  1. Water purification kit and Water – do not assume that faucets will continue to flow water at your work place. If a communal water fountain, dispenser, or vending machine does exist, expect panicked co-workers to empty them quickly and horde the contents.
  2. Protein – Food from the vending machine will disappear quickly as well. Depending upon the type of disaster, you could be trapped at work and away from your vehicle where your EDC bag and extra gear is located for at least a day or more – before starting a dangerous and long walk back to your rural location. Keeping up your strength for the hike home should be a primary concern. Store protein bars, granola bars, beef jerky, peanuts, and similar snack foods with a long shelf life nearby while at work, inside your car, and in a pocket in your rural EDC bag.
  3. Ammo – Store at least two, but preferably more fully loaded magazines in an accessible place in your work area. If you work somewhere that prohibits concealed carry, well, that’s a damn shame and a really bad idea – and storing ammo nearby will probably not help you survive. Also keep a bare minimum gun cleaning and repair kit stored with your extra ammo. If force to defend yourself for hours to day while stuck at your work place, the gun will need cleaned before the drive or walk home.
  4. Warmth – Store several Mylar emergency blankets, an inflatable pillow, wool blanket, as well as cold and rain outerwear at your work place. Getting sick or being too cold and miserable to get any rest while sheltering at your work area could greatly inhibit your chances of making it home alive. Once you can make your way to your vehicle to get your EDC bag and hopefully start the engine and drive home, you should not expose yourself the elements or dangers posed by humans – or the disaster itself, any longer than necessary.
  5. Footwear – You might wear cute heels or dress shoes to work, but that kind of attractive footwear is not the type you will want on when fleeing the office as quickly as possible to make a run for your car or to walk home. Store a solid and weatherproof pair of boots at your office and a pair of winter hiking boots with quality tread soles to change into the moment you learn the SHTF.
  6. Hazmat Gear – Store a hazmat jumpsuit and gas mask, along with iodine pills at your work place. A blister pack of the pills should also be stored on your person at all times.
  7. Light – Store both a quality flashlight and extra batteries; as well as a hands-free headlamp in your work area.
  8. Cell Phone Chargers – Purchase several portable and rechargeable cell phone chargers and a solar charging mat as a backup will help you keep in touch with loved ones and get breaking news about the disaster as long as communication are still in active operation.
  9. First Aid Kit– Turn a medium-sized tackle box into a portable aid station. Make sure to include plenty of antibacterial waterless lotion and quick clotting bandages, along with standard first aid supplies. If you take prescription medication, put a week’s worth in the work place first aid kit as well.

Rural EDC Bag and Car Gear

A duplicate of all the office gear should be stored in your rural EDC bag. You do not want to burden yourself with trying to pack all of the survival gear stored at your office to your car or bag as well.

  1. Hatchet – A survival hatchet with a hammer head on one side can serve as both a weapon and a tool to cut firewood, branches to make a temporary shelter, to kill snake, and to cut through thick and thorny brush you will surely encounter if hiking home through the wood.
  2. Work Gloves – Cold weather gloves are only a good start to protecting your hands while making your way home. On your trip back to a rural home, you will surely encounter barbed wire fences and dense brier bushes along your path.
  3. Maps – Purchase folding maps of the counties you will be driving or walking through – do not rely on your GPS car system or phone app to work or accurately reroute you away from main or blocked roads. Anyone who lives in a rural area already knows those tech gadget don’t always work well in our neck of the woods and can drive your right into a creek or neglect to recognize a dirt road as a real road. Topography maps or online printouts from Google Earth will help you decipher the terrain you may have to hike and alert you to potential source of water.
  4. Weather Protection – Pack at least a few disposable ponchos in the rural EDC bag. These type of ponchos are not durable and will likely tear while hiking in the woods. They, along with Mylar emergency blanket, can double as the material needed to make a temporary shelter. Pack a bandanna, sunglasses, and a hat to shade you from the sun or help you retain your body heat, depending upon the season.
  5. First Aid Kit – Duplicate the office first aid kit and store the supplies according to their use in zip lock baggies in a designated pouch in your EDC bag. Life-saving supplies like quick clotting bandage and tourniquets, should be stored on top so they are easily reachable. Pack snake bite first aid supplies and insect sting or bite supplies in a readily accessible section of the bag as well.
  6. Compass
  7. Bottled water and MREs/food – enough of each to last for 72 hours. Store ample water and food, along with primitive camp cooking gear in your vehicle, as well. A lightweight camp cooking set should be stored in the rural EDC bag.
  8. Fire Starters and Tinder
  9. Emergency Radio – preferably one that is both battery and solar powered
  10. Walkie Talkie or Portable HAM Radio – to communicate with loved ones waiting at home or who will be connecting with you to hike away from danger and back to the house or survival retreat together.
  11. Activated Charcoal – for emergency water purification and a host of other home remedy uses.
  12. Glow Sticks
  13. Toilet paper – and for the ladies; feminine hygiene items
  14. Eye Care – pack an extra set of contacts and glasses
  15. Duct Tape and Zip Ties – each have hundreds of potential uses
  16. Paracord and/or Nylon Rope – pack at least 50 feet of rope
  17. Rifle – with a scope for hunting and personal protection. The scope can be used instead of binoculars to see into the distance. Attack a strap to the rifle and carry it on your back to you can reach the trigger in seconds.
  18. Folding Fishing Rod and Reel – to fish for food if your 72 hour pack of edible supplies is lost or taken or you are delayed longer than planned due to illness, injury, or the nature of the SHTF disaster.
  19. Knives – a Bowie knife and similar knives that can be used for field dressing wild game and cleaning fish should also be placed in the EDC bag. Don’t forget to pack a knife sharpener as well.
  20. Tools – a multi-tool or Leatherman and small selection of hand tools that can be used to make minor repairs to the vehicle, weapons, etc. A more extensive set of tools, including a wench, battery charger, fix-a-flat, etc. should be stored in your vehicle at all times. A finger or folding saw should be added to the bag for cutting small branches to use as firewood or in shelter making.
  21. Shovel – a portable folding shovel with a serrated edge will be both a handy tool and a defensive weapon.
  22. Fresnel Lens or Mirror – for signaling purposes. The Fresnel lens could also be used during the water purification process.
  23. Sewing Kit – this will be handy if you need to give yourself stitches or to repair the bag itself or your outerwear.
  24. Inflatable Ring – if you could even possibly be forced to cross a river or creek to make it home or to the survival retreat safely – or flood water, the blow up ring could be used to float your bag across to make sure all the contents remain dry. Tie the rural EDC bag to the float and to yourself to make sure it is not swept away in the water.
  25. Reference Material – pack a pocket wilderness survival guide, a first aid guide, and a book or printout of foraging field guide as well as natural medicine guide with the pages relating to bark, weeds, berries, and plants that can be used as alternative first aid supplies, earmarked.