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What is the Baseline of Prepper Fitness?

Avatar for Gaye Levy Gaye Levy  |  Updated: December 16, 2020
What is the Baseline of Prepper Fitness?

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Of the myriad of preparedness topics, one that is often shunned is that of prepper fitness.  It is easy to see why.  Fitness is hard work and with busy lives that border on frantic, we barely have time to go to work, do our chores, spend time with our families, then crash as our head hits the pillow each night.  Physical fitness?  What’s that?  And why is that important?

In the latest think piece from contributor Richard Broome, we ask that question within the context of a disruptive event and SHFT.  Going beyond that, we ask a few questions in our quest to establish a baseline of fitness.

What is the Baseline of Prepper Fitness | Backdoor Survival

All you have to do is hike ten miles with a twenty or thirty pack on your back to realize that fitness is indeed an important part of prepping.  This article is going to make you ponder, no doubt, but beyond that it just might trigger some positive action to set you on the path of prepper fitness, or, what Richard has call “PrepperFit”.

Enjoy this latest think piece and note the special bonus at the end.  Richard is giving away an autographed copy of his book Good Crazy, to one Backdoor Survival reader.  You are not going to want to miss it.

PrepperFit ©

“If you wish to be out front, then act as if you were behind.” ― Lao Tzu, Chinese philosopher

I have been out of town for the last week spending time with my wife, my four children and their spouses, and four grandchildren at a resort in Florida. I know. I know. Seriously? Florida in July? Yet…it was a great family time renewing our connections before we scattered all over the country at the end of the vacation and tended to our very busy lives. We will not be together again until my youngest son gets married during the holidays this winter.

As I spent time sitting in the shade of a large umbrella, watching my family splash about in a pool, I took note of the other people at the resort and was taken aback some by the fairly rotund people around me. Montana’s lifestyle requires a certain level of fitness. Admittedly there are plenty of people in Montana who could stand to lose a pound or two or more (and, I reluctantly, but honestly must count me in this group). Most Montanans I know here like to hunt, fish, hike, bike, ski and have the physical fitness level to do this.

So, back to that pool in Florida. As we age, it is clear to me that with our intense lifestyles and demanding careers, many of us are not as fit or lean as we would like. Small wonder. Exercise falls to the bottom of the priority list when all you can do is just cope with each stressful, hectic day.

For me, retired from both the military and the business world, and now teaching at a university, I do have more time each day to try to stay fit. I walk at least a couple of miles every morning with my golden retriever, Molly, and then go to the gym on most days to lift weights and generally workout. But, admittedly, I am very far from that peak level of fitness I had at age eighteen as a high school athlete.

I went into the Army about that age feeling very confident about my physical abilities. No problem, I thought. However, pretty early in boot camp they required us to learn to do the things we were expected to be able to do as soldiers.

The first time we were told to drop to the ground with our rifles cradled in our arms, and then low crawl on our stomachs using only our arms and legs (no getting up on our knees, hands or elbows and crawling like a baby) and move for 50 yards as fast as we could go. I was shocked at the effort this took. It was exhausting.

The drill sergeants did help us though. Every time we tried to rise up and crawl on our knees and elbows, (which would expose us to enemy fire if we ever got that high off of the ground) they kicked us in our rumps to encourage us to learn how to do the low crawl correctly. The second time they had to kick you in the rump, they were also nice enough to have you start over at the beginning of the 50 yards, so you could be really sure you understood how to do it right. It was an early, painful, but necessary lesson as we went through the rites of passage from civilian to soldier.

It got better. As a former football player, a big guy at 6’4”, I was assigned the job of carrying my platoon’s machine gun. Just try walking twelve hours in 100-degree Texas heat carrying a heavy machine gun with its belts of ammunition also draped around your neck. Your shoulders ache. Your arms become rubber.

On the move, there was no place to put the machine gun down. Every time the platoon finally stopped to take a quick break and drink some water out of our canteens, I was grateful to rest the machine gun on the ground for a few moments. By the end of the day, I was so spent I could barely move.

But at the end of the day and getting ready to settle in for the night, the drill sergeants then told me to dig a foxhole that I could shoot the machine gun from. I also had to fill up several sand bags with dirt to surround the foxhole. I could not stop until the drill sergeants were satisfied I had built a good fighting position. I thought I was in great physical shape, but was staggering with exhaustion when I finally finished all of this. It was a level of physical stress and endurance I had never imagined.

So, as we begin to have a conversation on Backdoor Survival about what standards we need to have as preppers, it occurred to me while sitting comfortably in the shade by the pool at that very nice resort in Florida looking at some less than physically fit people, that while preppers may well be ready with the material items they need to gather, will our bodies fail us?

On the long plane ride back from Florida to Montana, I was on one of those airlines that had a TV embedded in the seat back facing you. There are moments when you have read as much as you possibly can, so you are grateful for anything that is on TV on an airplane to help pass the time. I know I was.

I flipped channels until I came across the CrossFit games. Men and women competitors were doing feats of strength and endurance such as picking up a 50 pound bag, running the length of a football field with it, then dropping it and running back to fetch another 50 pound bag until they had several bags moved from one end of the football field to the other. They were doing this as fast as they could to win the event. This struck me as a pretty tough challenge that required peak fitness.

So, in that vein, here are some challenging PrepperFit questions:

–Can you walk for twelve hours carrying a rifle, ammunition, food and water hunting for game, then shoot something and carry a heavy load of meat back for several miles to your shelter?

–If the SHTF and we are all surviving, do you think you could carry in each hand a 2-½ gallon can down to a stream three miles away, fill it with water and then carry it back?

–How long during a day can you chop, split, carry and stack firewood?

–Can you build enough of a woodpile over time to keep from freezing during the winter?

–If you had to run and hide, how much can you carry? How fast can you move?

And…how do you even prepare for something like this without your neighbors thinking you have gone completely bonkers?

[clickToTweet tweet=”Prepper fitness is a topic we must not ignore. What is the baseline of prepper fitness?” quote=”Can you walk for twelve hours carrying a rifle, ammunition, food and water hunting for game, then shoot something and carry a heavy load of meat back for several miles to your shelter?”]

Here is the bottom line. My guess is for every 1000 people who read this article about prepper fitness on Backdoor Survival, maybe 25 of you have this level of fitness now and 975 don’t. Just a guess and I am definitely in the 975. I also believe that most of us in the 975 are doing as well as we can, but have no real hope of ever getting into the top 25. Something keeps getting in the way. It is called “Life.” We are who we are. We live how we live. We do what we can do. There is a term for people like us. The term is: “Normal.”

Given my suspicion that most of us will likely be physically challenged if the SHTF, how do you prepare for a sudden increased level of physical demand? I think the most honest approach is to know that you are going to be, as the Chinese philosopher Lao Tzu says, behind before you are out front.

I was able to get through my first weeks of Army boot camp because I had a baseline of high school athletic physical fitness to start with. I was sore and tired each day and would fall into my bunk as soon as our drill instructors turned the lights out in our barracks. I fell asleep as soon as my head hit the pillow and was always startled when the bugle sounded reveille early the next morning and the drill instructors ran through the barracks yelling at us to get out of our racks. Each day I just kept on, keeping on until my muscles grew stronger and my endurance improved. This experience made a deep impression on me.

If the SHTF I do not feel life will be much different than this for most of us. But…for all of us, the key factor is going to be where you start from on the fitness scale and it cannot be grossly obese and seriously out of physical condition. You may die from the physical shock no matter how materially well prepared you are. As well, if you think a good lunch is a bag of Cheetos chased down by a can of Mountain Dew, I am going to suggest you rethink this lifestyle too.

In short, at whatever age or state of life you are presently in, a healthy lifestyle with good nutrition and routine exercise needs to be a baseline for all preppers. There is no way around this.

So, as our starting point to developing a PrepperFit standard, suspecting most of us will only be moderately physically ready for the SHTF moment, here are some questions for all of you.

If asked for your opinion today, before the SHTF, what would your answers be to the following questions?

–How far should a prepper be able to walk in a day right now?

–How far should a prepper be able to swim?

–How far should a prepper be able to carry 30 pounds of dead weight in each hand?

–How far should a pepper be able to carry a 150-pound person on their back?

–How much weight should a prepper be able to lift over their head?

–What other PrepperFit physical standards would you add?

But, most important, how far behind do you think you are right now, before you will be able to get out front?

Richard Earl Broome –  Copyright. All Rights Reserved – July 27, 2015

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Richard Earl Broome is a contributing author and friend to Backdoor Survival. He has lived an extraordinary life rising from an Army private to an Army colonel who served on the White House staff for two Presidents of the United States as a member of their National Security Council staff.

He is considered a national expert on the subjects of preparedness, disaster recovery and survival. He is a frequent contributor of articles about the many threats facing our society, appearing frequently on shows to discuss issues such as pandemics, ISIS, and the cyber threat and how we need to meet the new threat realities facing all of us.

Now living in a small community in Montana, he is a member of the faculty at Montana State University where he teaches leadership. For more about Richard, visit the About Richard page.

Also, note that his two books, Leaving The Trees and Good Crazy (Leaving The Trees Journey) (Volume 2).  His next novel, Final Reckoning Day, will be out in the fall of 2015.

Win An Autographed Copy of “Good Crazy”

You know the drill when it comes to giveaways.  This one is very simple; all you need to do is answer the giveaway question posed in the Rafflecopter and you are good to go.

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The deadline is 6:00 PM Pacific next Tuesday with the winner notified by email and announced on the Rafflecopter in the article.  Please note that the winner must claim their prize within 48 hours or an alternate will be selected.

The Final Word

On more than one occasion I ask myself why I post articles on the less popular aspects of prepping fitness, for example.  After all, traffic, or eyeballs in website-speak, attract advertising which is how most site owners support their efforts.  So if a topic is not popular or even uncomfortable, my answer is the same one I used way back when during my years on the corporate world.

“If no one asks the tough questions then nothing will get resolved and this meeting is a waste.”

So there you have it.  As proponents of preparedness, we must both ask and answer the tough questions as they relate to our personal situation.  And for now, that is all I am going to say about that.

For additional reading, visit Prepper Preparedness: Personal Fitness and Health.

Enjoy your next adventure through common sense and thoughtful preparation!
Gaye

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 I frequently emphasis the importance of “Comfort” when it comes to survival.  Whereas being truly comfortable during and following a disruptive event is an oxymoron, here are items that I feel will contribute to our comfort, for better or for worse.  For more ideas, visit 16 Items To Help You Hunker Down in Comfort.

Let’s start with something we can use to brew coffee and move on from there.

Farberware Classic Stainless Steel Yosemite 8-Cup Coffee Percolator: Here is a link to my own percolator.  It makes great coffee.  I also own this manual coffee grinder but have not used it yet although the reviews are good:  Hario Ceramic Coffee Mill.  Note that whole beans store well when sealed in a Mason Jar (see How to Use a FoodSaver for Vacuum Canning).

Making biscuits in a cast iron pan - Backdoor Survival

Lodge Logic Cast Iron Pre-Seasoned Drop Biscuit Pan: Biscuits with jam are one of my favorite comfort foods.  This is the pan I purchased for biscuit making and to me, it was worth the cost.  If you don’t mind seasoning your own (it’s easy), you can save some money with this one Texsport Cast Iron Biscuit Pan.

Dorcy LED Wireless Motion Sensor Flood Lite: Having adequate light when the grid is down is another key to comfort.  Don’t let the price lead you to think this wireless flood light is wimpy. I have two of these and feel that these lights are worth double the price.

Coleman Mini Lantern:  You already know that I have a think about flashlights but this is a slightly different take on portable lighting.  It is 7.5 inches tall lantern and weighs just seven ounces, including batteries.  And boy does it give off light.  Inexpensive plus, it is a genuine Coleman.

Mr. Heater Portable “Big Buddy” Heater:  Off course you are going to need a heat-source.  With the Mr. Buddy heater, you can use propane indoors safely.  It features an automatic low-oxygen shut-off system that automatically turns the unit off before carbon monoxide fumes reach dangerous levels in home.  To learn more about propane, read the series Propane for Preppers.

Ticket To Ride: This my favorite board game, bare none.  Family friendly, you will spend hours in front of the fireplace playing Ticket to Ride with your favorite people.  This is worth the splurge.

Bicycle Canasta Games Playing Cards:  This timeless classic will keep the entire family occupied when the power it out.  Playing cards or board games should be in everyone’s preparedness kit.

Coloring Books for Grown-Ups :  This is the latest addition to my list of comfort items.  I hope you don’t think I am being silly because there really is something quite relaxing about coloring books. Don’t forget the crayons or Colored Pencils.

Note:  If you prefer to print your own, check out this eBook that includes a link to a PDF version for printing on your home printer:  Adult Coloring Book: 40 Relaxing And Stress Relieving Patterns.

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43 Responses to “What is the Baseline of Prepper Fitness?”

  1. Those of us in our advanced years know that we have to pace ourselves and not expect what we did of ourselves in our military days. A big part of the prepping process is knowing your limits and preparing alternatives. If I were not a flatlander, I would be in deep trouble. 5 B X is a distant dream.

  2. Being of normal weight and having strength to move around for hours at a time will make the difference between those who make it and those who don’t. This post has inspired me to do begin an exercise plan of strength training and stretching. I have the ability to walk for 10 miles, but carrying anything is beyond me right now. Thanks for writing this.

  3. I agree with everything that has been said. I am in the senior category and after I get the surgery done on my leg I might be able to do the 5 miles but I doubt much more. I will probably be the one bringing up the rear.

  4. I see many people eating a lot of garbage. Fast food and processed foods are a sure fire way to stay out of shape. The first step toward better fitness is as one person already mentioned, fueling the machine correctly. Wholesome foods preferably without chemicals, antibiotics, GMO’s and other additions to the animal or plant before we consume it. Leaving behind the corn syrup is a great way to start shedding pounds. Just look at labels and when you see “high fructose corn syrup” or other corn syrups, don’t buy the food product, buy a different form of meat, for example. most deli meats are chopped and formed with added chemicals, so even if you’re eating a turkey on rye, its full of nonsense your body can’t and won’t use. Change the way you eat and your body will change. Corn syrup is extra calories pumped into food and its addictive. CHALLENGE- go a full week, 7 days, without eating or drinking any high fructose corn syrup derivative. You’ll feel the pull, just like any other addiction. get rid of those calories and your body will naturally lose weight. The equation is simple: energy in (food) = energy out (exercise). When there is more ‘energy in’ it is stored as fat. Simple.

  5. Like most other aspects of prepping, the baseline will probably vary from one individual to the next. For my situation, I frequently travel about 20+ miles from home. If a majorly disruptive event were to happen my primary goal will be to get back home. The amount of supplies in my GHB allows for 3 days. If vehicle travel was not an option, then I would need to hike 7 miles per day, so there is baseline #1 for me. My heaviest dependent weighs 40lbs so I would need to make sure I could carry that much weight at least besides by GHB(which is 15#).

  6. Well I try to go hiking at least once a week and have also been in the military, so I am well aware of my physical abilities…and let’s just say I need to do a lot of work to get back into shape since the military 🙂 But I think that in a single day, dependent on the terrain (mountains and hills for me) an average person should be able to do at least 5 miles, and my goal is to be able to do 10-15 miles in a day. As far a swimming, I think that also depends on your situation, for me the nearby lake is the largest body of water that we have, so probably should be able to swim across the whole thing. As for carrying the weight, it should probably be around 2 miles and for carrying a person, realistically you will only do that for at most 1/4 mile or less.

  7. I don’t think, in the long run, that immense physical strength is going to be as much an asset in a SHTF scenario as will endurance. Strength is good, yes. But the ability to put what strength you have to use hour after hour, day after day, will be more important.

  8. i think everyone at a minimum needs to be moderately in shape in order to be able to physically make it in a post apocalyptic world. I think I fall into this category. I have been building my endurance and strength this year (and have committed to trying to eat as clean as possible with minimal processed food) and I am really starting to see the results! I can hike a couple miles with a moderate size backpack on, run a couple miles without a pack, and I have been doing the Body shred program during the week which involves weights.

  9. Now that I’ve transitioned to senior citizen status (10 years ago), Ive learned to “triage” my energy expenditure. There’s no way right now I could bug out with a 20 lb backback. But by focusing on what I can do and always push myself to do a little more than I thought I could, I’m continuing to build my strength up. As I look at my friends, many of whom are quite sedentary, I think one’s mindset is most important. If you think you can’t do something, then you don’t even try. The same thing if you think it’s too hard. A wise man I know said that you have to voluntarily and intentionally embrace some pain in order to really grow. It’s hard being your own boot camp sargent, but it beats settling for the familiar comfort and convenience, thinking it will always be there.

  10. I think it depends on where you are and what your expectations are during SHTF. Endurance covers a wide range – here in south TX it would be crazy to try to do much during the heat of the day – but you need to be able to survive that heat without passing out. I recently realized my cardio is laughable so I’m working on that, and I’m working on my heat tolerance too. You can only shed so many layers when there is no more a/c.

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