The Economics of Doomsday Survival(smartasset.com) |
The Economics of Doomsday Survival(smartasset.com) |
We'd need solar panels (which don't pay off nearly as fast in a forest that has a brutal winter) or a windmill (surprised this wasn't listed as an electricity option - some neighbors up there have one, and while it isn't a replacement for modern electricity usage, it more than powers their electricity when they aren't there - a good start), and land for growing our own food (although it is in a forest with lax hunting laws that has wild edible vegetation, and on a lake filled with fish, some predictability would be valuable).
That's the original cabin. The new, more modern one that we built recently has an indoor fireplace and better winterization, but it likely requires more electricity and is connected to a public water source (should be easily remedied post-apocalypse since it is right on a lake).
Book: (no affiliate links) http://www.amazon.com/The-Modern-Survival-Manual-Surviving/d...
You're right that this may not be the best possible disaster prep if you are simply preparing for disaster (and don't plan on going off the grid unless totally necessary).
If the "doomsday" event is "The Great Tribulation," then you would have done better using the $137,000 doing the 1,050 commands of the New Testament: http://www.cai.org/bible-studies/1050-new-testament-commands
If the "doomsday" event is gamma ray bursts from within the Milky Way galaxy aimed straight at Earth, extraterrestrial invasion, or a massive meteorite impact, then kiss your a$$ and your $137,000 goodbye.