What If You Instantly Had No Water?

As if the solar storm troubles of last week weren’t enough, we also discovered that we had no water Friday afternoon. Everything was working fine that morning, but then family members started complaining that we had no water pressure at all.

Seeing as though most people overexaggerate problems around here, I investigated the problem myself. After a single handle turn I was able to confirm that my family wasn’t entirely crazy. We had no water pressure whatsoever.

So, I did the sensible thing and called a higher authority – the local water company. They confirmed that there was a water main break and that they were working on it. But the lady was hard to hear on the phone, so I didn’t get an ETA on when the problem might be fixed. Not wanting to hear more complaints, I went to the library for a few hours. (Yes, that’s apparently how I deal with a crisis, lol.)

Thankfully, it wasn’t two hours or so until the problem was corrected. Crisis averted.

But what if it hadn’t been corrected so quickly?

We would’ve been fine for a while because I store cases of bottled water and several barrels of clean water even though I do my best to mess things up at times. Even so, I’m sure I would’ve panicked at least a little. I might have even gone to the store and bought every last case of water I could manage if I’d thought about it. But who’s to say others wouldn’t beat me to it by the time I decided to so?

One option I often recommend is that people stash a WaterBOB water bladder and fill that when there’s a possibility of water loss (something I discuss in my latest DIY projects books) but even that solution wouldn’t help in this situation. Only having stored water would’ve worked … or maybe rushing to the store.

Anyway, I just don’t think people understand how important water is to everything we do. Besides our ridiculous reliance on the power grid, water is probably first on the “must have” list of survival supplies. I know most people think about food (and sometimes firearms) when they first consider prepping, but water is far more crucial and does so much more!

Although I don’t recommend it, try going the entire day and night without any liquid consumption at all and see how you feel by the end. My guess is that you’re going to be rather unhappy. And while they say you can survive three days without water, that isn’t long at all. Hell, I can blink and miss three days the older I get.

The fact is that water should be at the top of your list of survival supplies, though there’s a lot more to consider. You should have water stored, possess the ability to collect more especially when it rains, and have a way to purify what you collect.

Of course, this got me to thinking about buying more black Berkey filters. But then I saw the price and decided there’s no way I’ll buy any more Berkey filters; $280 for a pair of filters is utterly ridiculous. So, I’m on the hunt for something different. I haven’t found anything I like yet, but I’ll let you know when I do. Probably.

My questions for you: what situation would you be in if your water stopped instantly? Do you have anything stored for such a scenario? How long could you last if you had to use only your stored water? Do you have pets covered? What if there are family, friends, or neighbors who need your help?

The honest truth is that I just hadn’t expected a sudden loss of water. I understood that if the power went out that we would still have water available for a short time because of the water towers that supply the community. I figured I could act faster than other people and fill containers, my WaterBOBs, buckets, and additional barrels that aren’t entirely clean.

But now it’s obvious that might not always be the case. The life of being a prepper is a nonstop battle, isn’t it? Sometimes I’d rather never have taken this way of life on to begin with. Ugh.


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Comments

5 responses to “What If You Instantly Had No Water?”

  1. GregE

    We live in a rural area without mains water and rely on rainwater tanks so the the only problem we have is when the power goes out and the pumps stop working in which case we fill a 20 litre food safe jerry can fitted with a tap and park it on the draining board for kitchen use and a bucket full to pour in the toilet cistern for when we need to flush. I thought you already had a rainwater collection system set up, if not, it might be a good idea? You might need to boil the water but we do that for tea and coffee anyway. A long term outage makes washing and laundry a bit of a pain but manageable if you adopt the camping mentality, if you live in a tropical area one of those solar showers could be useful otherwise a kettle load of boiling water added to a large bowl of cold water takes the chill off and works for a sponge bath. I remember as a kid in the 50s bath night revolved around a galvanised “tin” bath with a large iron kettle boiled on the wood range and added to the cold water in the bath to bring it up to where we stopped screaming it was too hot or cold, that was in Cornwall in the UK!

  2. David Cook

    We have two 150-gallon stackable water tanks in the back of our garage, treated for years-long stability. They were expensive but worth it for peace of mind. When we grocery shop we pick up an extra pallet of water bottles and store them on a reinforced shelf in the basement. I also have several water filters; there’s a stream nearby but I expect those upstream will drain it in a prolonged shortage.

    1. Just be wary about storing bottled water for years due to leaching of plastic into the water. But then I do the same thing and, now that I think about it, haven’t swapped out my cases of bottled water in about three years, lol.

  3. Marianne Capellen

    The infrastructure where we live is so antiquated. The water mains freeze routinely every winter and in all parts of town. We’ve gone without water for longer than 24 hours and this past summer, with yet another water main break, it was in/out for several days! After the repair, which was down the street from our house, the water remained dirty for quite a while (sediment in toilet in morning, brown water in faucet, etc. and then clear in afternoon). After 2 weeks of that, I called the city and they discovered that the sediment had abnormally collected in the lines and flushed them. Oh, and JOY! our entire town was under a “boil order” for 8-10 weeks this past summer!

    this taught me to always have a case and several gallons of water stored for our pets and ourselves.

    1. The sad part is that the city had no idea the water was bad until you told them. Makes me wonder if anybody got sick because of it. And a 2+ month boil water order would get old quick!

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