Original Post:
Well I guess it is time to get my
book out in the public eye. So, I will start posting parts of my book,
when I can. Let's see if this works.
I
started working on this book in December 2009. By December 2010, I had a
copy ready to print. Paladin Press in Colorado, USA was interested in
printing my book once I signed over all my rights. At this time I still
do not feel inclined to give up on having my book published. But, I
prefer to have it published on my terms. For example, I do not want to
lose my rights to this material. But, if you promise not to try to steal
my material and call it your own, I will start to post the book in
pieces on my blog.
I
wrote this book because every brochure you ever read tells you to make a
plan. But no one ever shows you what the plan looks like. This is not a
survival manual per se, more of a manual to plan your family's
evacuation, should you ever need to. I hope this is of some assistance.
This
is copyrighted material. I am the copyright holder. I am extending
viewing privileges to you the reader. You may read this but you cannot
copy this material and reproduce it and sell it. You cannot take it to
the printer and have it printed. IF, any publisher would like to work
with me to have a printed version made, please, email me at:
thegoodplan@hotmail.ca . Thank you. Mountainman aka V. Andrew McMillan.
Sorry Folks, could not get my cover to paste. So, we carry on.
I may have found copies of my Cover and Back Cover to post: Fingers crossed this will work. Yes!!
Table of Contents
Preface
Introduction
Terms
and Definitions
When to
Enable The G.O.O.D. Plan
The
G.O.O.D. Plan
Individual
Family
Community
Planning
Equipment
Resources
Routes
Safe
Zones
Standard
Operation Procedures (SOP's)
Threat
assessment
Practice
& Drills
It's
Over, Now What?
Going
Home
Starting
Over
The
Review
Restock
& Prepare Again
Conclusion
Table of Contents
Appendix
A – Sample G.O.O.D. Plan
Appendix
B – First Aid Kit List
Appendix
C – Disasters & Man-Made Headaches
Appendix
D – Intelligence
Appendix
E – Defensive Techniques
Appendix
F – Convoy Driving Techniques
Appendix
G – Skills Assessment
Appendix
H – RV Survival Kits
Appendix
I – Long Term Survival Considerations
Appendix
J – Contingency Plan
Appendix
K – Health & Fitness Considerations
Appendix
L – SERE Food Plan For Consideration
Appendix
M – Communications Plan
References
& Bibliography
Sample
Forms (Deluxe Binder Edition Only)
Bonus
Material DVD/SD Card
Books &
Manuals (From Free Web Sources)
Army
Combatives 2002
Combat
Skills
Garmin
Rino 530Hcx Manual
NIJ
Battery Guide
Scout
Platoon
US
Army NBC Manual
US
Army Ranger Handbook 1992
USMC
Wilderness Medicine Manual
USMC
Scouting & Patroling Manual & More
Catalogs
Leupold
Fulton
Armory & More
Diagrams
& Photos
Emergency
Preparedness
Forms
The
G.O.O.D. Plan (Get Out Of Dodge) in PDF
(e-Book)
Dedication
This
book is dedicated to the late Mr. Fred Allan, my English Instructor
from Grade 8 to Grade 10 at C.S.S.
Thank
you for pushing me when I needed a push. I will be the first to admit
I was not a strong English student. Thanks to your mentoring my
writing skills improved.
I
wonder if you would be surprised that I have written a book?
Rest in
Peace. Thanks again.
PREFACE
This
is my first attempt at writing a book. This particular book, The
G.O.O.D. Plan (Get
Out
Of
Dodge),
could have been written by any number of current or former military
persons. But, I guess it was left for me to write. I hope I have done
this topic justice. Planning to evacuate is easy to say, but it is a
whole lot of work to build a successful plan.
The
author would like to be forgiven for being belligerent at times. This
writing style was chosen to drive home important points of survival.
Situations that cannot be imagined in our day-to-day lives, must
still be prepared for if society dissolves or during a crisis
situation.
The
author would also like to recognize that the group most likely to
purchase this book, is most likely the group that needs this
information the least. So, please help those that need this
information the most, give them a copy or lend them your copy.
If
any Subject Matter Experts or dedicated readers have any constructive
feedback for the next edition, please forward suggestions to the
author:
Thank
you for purchasing my book.
V.
Andrew McMillan
1.
Introduction
Welcome
to the G.O.O.D. Plan. If you are reading this you may foresee a need
to GET OUT OF DODGE and you want to know how to prepare for that day.
The
G.O.O.D. Plan is an evac plan. It will be part of your family's
emergency preparedness plan.
These
days we are faced with threats to our freedom and safety from every
side, be it, religious extremists trying to share their suicide bomb
with us, dirt bag criminals trying to rob us blind (or worst), or
unstable governments losing their nuclear weapons to terrorists.
Today is a dangerous place for law abiding, peace loving citizens.
So, what is a good guy to do?
Well,
first you have to be skeptical of the world around you, quickly
followed by being skeptical of the information you receive about that
world. Is the source trustworthy? What angle are they providing the
information from? Who benefits? You the viewer? Or some corporate
client?
Additional
information is provided to help your planning process. Including
sample scenarios, gear lists, threat assessments, possible terrorist
targets and a sample G.O.O.D. Plan.
The
G.O.O.D. Plan requires you to have solid information from a
trustworthy source. To Get Out Of Dodge, you need to be on the road
before anyone else knows there's a problem.
The
G.O.O.D.
Plan
will
help you
to
be ready and packed and on the road
before
the panic starts!
2.
Terms & Definitions
Get Out
Of Dodge – A phrase from the Wild West. Meaning to leave town
before the shooting started in Dodge City.
P.O.L.
Point – P.O.L. (petroleum, Oils, & Lubricants) storage
point. Best made with a bermed earth bank around the
perimeter & lined with heavy plastic. Jerry cans should sit
in drip pans. Drums & barrels should sit on stands with drip
trays under spouts. Assorb-all available for spills. Fire
extinguishers and shovel at fire point close by.
Billy
Can – A Billy Can is a large metal. It can be used to boil
water, melt snow or heat soup, stew or coffee. A heavy gauge
can, such as a 100 oz ketchup can. A lid from a large coffee can
makes it more useful. The addition of a pot gripper completes the
Billy Can. This removable handle makes moving or pouring much
easier.
Opsec –
Operational Security. Need to know, others are not told. “Loose
lips, sink ships” Effective Opsec keeps you and your family
invisible, which is good.
GMRS –
General Mobile Radio Service. Compact 2
way radios. Channels 15 – 22. 1.0 – 5.0 watts.
FRS –
Family Radio Service. Compact 2 way radios.
Channels 1 – 14. 0.5 Watts. Short range radios.
VOX –
Voice Activation System. With headset, allows hands-free radio
operation. Very useful on foot patrol or convoy duty.
3.
When to Enable The G.O.O.D. Plan
This is
the part of converting gut feelings and accurate intelligence into a
time to act. There are no guarantees in life, lest of all when your
and your families lives are on the line. The importance of good,
solid information can not be overstated.
The
worse that can happen, is you enact your G.O.O.D. Plan too early. As
long as, you refrain from killing anyone on your evacuation you can
turn your oops into a valuable, real-life training scenario. Don't
give in to the feelings of, “I screwed up.” Instead, look at it
from the point-of-view of, “I jumped the gun. If this had been the
“Real” time to use this plan, I could have succeeded
better if we had done this....”
When
the time comes, you will know. You will be ready. You will keep gear
in your vehicle. You will keep your vehicle's fuel tank at least half
full at all times. You will have an escape pack for each member of
your family ready incase you have only minutes to evacuate your home.
I know
this, because you are reading the G.O.O.D. Plan. You are reading this
because you want to be prepared. You just need a little push in the
right direction. You are planning and have been for a while now. You
want to get yourself organized and ready. That time is NOW!
Time to
enact the G.O.O.D. Plan is when civil order is just on the verge of
collapse. The trigger event is not important, it can be a natural disaster or a man-made tragedy. Time is your greatest challenge. If
you have enough warning you can survive any event. The challenge is
being able to succeed when there is not enough time. That requires
pre-planning and preparation. You have to be ready before there is an
event to prepare for.
Prepare
now. Survive later.
4.
The G.O.O.D. Plan
Individual
Family
Community
The
G.O.O.D. Plan can be tailored to meet your needs. Are you solo or do
you have a wife and kids? Is there an extended family member to care
for? Or are you a member of a group or community that plans to tough
out whatever comes, together?
The
tailoring process can also be done as your needs or commitments
change. You can grow your plan from yourself, to when you get
married, when you have children or are caring for a parent.
It is a
lot of work to build the perfect plan. too bad, the perfect plan
rarely works perfectly.
Start
today, and you can have a G.O.O.D. Plan in a few hours. These will
not be easy hours, but when the chips fall, these hours could be
worth your life or your family's lives.
Enough
talk, let's get some action!
Planning
Equipment
Resources
Routes
Safe
Zones
Standard
Operating Procedures (SOP's)
Threat
Assessments
Practice
& Drills
5.
Planning:
This is
what you are doing right now.
You
need to know what to do in any natural disaster that may strike your
neighbourhood. You need to know what to do in the event of a man-made
disaster. And, you need to know what to do in the event that a
war-type incident breaks out near you.
You
also need to scale your plan to the number of people it will include.
You can just multiply the individual gear for each member or you can
have a base amount of personal gear and share the group gear split
equally between each member of your group.
You
also have to determine the worst case scenario. If your worse-case
scenario is a planet killing asteriod impact on the planet earth:
your plan may just be to get the family together for one last BBQ and
a few (a lot of) Beers.
Next
your plan needs to determine if you will shelter-in-place or escape
to a safe zone. Where would your safe zone be? Is it a safe distance
from where you currently live? Have you moved to an area, that allows
you to shelter-in-place so, your home is your safe zone?
Do you
have the supplies of water, food, fuel and defensive stores to
protect your supplies from looters? Do you have shelter from the
elements? How about shelter from fallout or other forms of radiation?
How long will your water and food supplies last before you need to
replenish them? Where will you get more supplies from? What if
the government is not able to help the citizens of your country?
These
are tough questions. If you are thinking about them now, you may have
a plan to solve these challenges before they drop in your lap. That
is the largest part of the planning phase – think about what
obstacles will be in the way of your survival.
6.
Your
plan needs to outline:
Where
to meet up – at least one close to home & at least one
alternate outside the disaster area
Who is
your contact person and what is their phone number (all members will
message through this person)
Where
do you store the escape packs
How
will you travel – alternate travel mode
Link
up plan incase family members are separated when the disaster
strikes
G.O.O.D.
Travel routes
Location
of caches along G.O.O.D. Travel Route
List
of gear and supplies
An
address book with current information
Copies
of all personal identification, insurance, driver's licenses,
passports, banking information, and credit cards
Medical
plan – triage, medications, treatments
Convoy
driving plan – stay together no matter what
Map to
safe zone – alternates as well
Priority
of work at the safe zone
When
is the emergency over
Return
home plan
Recovery
Process
Review
& modify your G.O.O.D. plan
Resupply
plan
See
sample plan in Appendix A
As you
can see the G.O.O.D. Plan contains a lot of personal and confidential
information. Some of this information will not want to end up in the
wrong hands. The criminal element will use this information to rob
you blind and the law enforcement agencies would throw you in jail
for planning to deal with trouble during periods of extreme
lawlessness. So, my recommendation is once you and your family have
made your plan, keep it safe and secure. Review it at least once a
year. Update it as needed. Keep it current, because when you need
this plan to work you will not have the time for updates.
7.
Equipment:
This is
a subjective area. The reader will have to use their personal
knowledge of their climate, terrain, and seasons to modify the
following lists of equipment. These lists will try to address the
needs and give specific examples. The extremes between summer and
winter will mean long lists. The most important aspect of items is to
satisfy more than one need or feature. Versatile and durable are key.
When
creating your escape pack try to acquire the best quality items you
can afford or build at the time. Upgrade on an as you can basis. In
this game, quality matters. Your life depends on the item to work
when you need it and there is no going to the store to exchange it
for one that does.
Personal
Escape Pack
Quality
Backpack – Military Alice packs, McHale Custom Pack
Shelter
– SilTarp, Tent, Bivy Bag, Shelter-half
Water
Bottle/Hydration system – Military canteen, Platypus, Camel Back,
Naglene
Camp
stove – pocket rocket and fuel canister
Cook
set – stainless steel or titanium. 0.5 l pot & 1.0 l pot, or a
pot set that will also hold your stove and fuel canister
stacked inside
KFS –
Knife, fork & spoon – Stainless Steel
Pot
Gripper – aluminum
Sturdy
Belt knife – Mora, Kabar, Cold Steel, Gerber, Buck
Fire
starter kit – matches, flint & steel, lighter, tinder,
Magnessium bar, match case (plastic, waterproof)
Sleeping
Bag – The Best You Can Afford
Ranger
Blanket – A.K.A Poncho Liner
Rain
Poncho – Light Nylon Military Poncho to work with liner
Set of
Clothes or Flightsuit – Think BDU's
Poly-pro
Lohn Johns and Long sleeve shirt
Underwear
– x2 pair
Socks –
x2 Poly-pro liner socks & x2 Wool Work Socks
Boots –
Sturdy. Danner's. Bate's. Matterhorn's.
Jacket
or Anorak – Gore-tex shell + Light warm liner. Fleece.
8.
Boonie
Hat – for sun and rain.
Toque –
for cold and snow. Balaclava if in the North Country.
Gloves
– Leather. Shooting. Working. General Protection.
Gloves
– Fleece. Warmth. Dexterity.
Mitts –
Gore-Tex Shells. Wear over fleece gloves.
Mitts –
Down. For extreme cold.
Sunglasses
or googles – uv protection. Snowblindness.
Food –
For at least 24 hours. 72 hours is better.
See
appendix L – Cat Food Diet.
Brew
Kit – Tea or Coffee, sugar, salt & whitener if needed.
First
Aid Kit – Build your own or purchase a good one.
See
Appendix B.
Shell
Dressings or Pressure dressings – Large x2.
Water
Purification tablets – x24 Tablets.
Sleeping
pad – 3/8” or 1/2” thick. At least 48” Long, 72” is
Better. Must have in winter, cold climates, or at altitude.
LED
Flashlight or headlight – Use common batteries, AA or AAA or
Lithium CR123A.
Spare
Batteries – use one common type if possible. Aa or aaa.
Portable
radio – am/fm/weather. Eton. Grundig. Crank-type.
Solar
type. Have common battery back-up.
GMRS/FRS
Radios – At least 2. For communication on the run.
Whistle
– Fox-40. Storm.
Multi-plier
type tool – Gerber. Leatherman.
Climate
kit – Bug juice, mosiquito coils, sunscreen, lipbalm
Copy of
ID: Driver's License. Passport. Insurance. Credit cards. Birth
Certificate. Marriage Certificate.
Cash –
$1, $2, $5, $10, & $20's. At least a few hundred in small bills
or coin. Gold and diamonds are good, too.
Spare
Credit card.
Prepaid
Fuel Cards – Choose a common petro company along your G.O.O.D.
Route. $100 worth, depending on route.
Route
Map(s) – Road and foot. Compass. GPS. Pencil. Ruler.
Notebook
– In Ziploc bag.
Extra
Ziploc bags – Medium. Large. Heavy duty freezer type.
Pack
all items in dry bags, garbage bags and/or ziploc bags; before
putting into your escape pack. This will keep everything weatherproof
until you need it. In addition, because everything is sealed, your
pack will float.
9.
If in a
group ensure all packs have the same type of items in the same
general area:
First
Aid Kit is always in the top pocket
Whistle
is lanyarded to the right shoulder strap
1x
shell dressing is taped to left shoulder strap
Kitchen
kit is in the left exterior pocket
food
for 24 hours is in the centre exterior pocket
Fire
starting kit, toilet paper & brew kit in right exterior pocket
extra
stove fuel in red dry bag in main bag of pack
Winter
gear is packed in a white dry bag
summer
gear is packed in a green dry bag
bug
juice, sunscreen and mosquito coils are in a double set of ziploc
bags. In pocket under the top pocket
Extra
food (in ziploc bags) in a blue dry bag
large
compression bag at bottom of pack:
sleeping
bag
ranger
blanket
bivy
bag or tarp
tent
and sleeping pad sandwiched between bottom of pack and the
compression bag
Water
bottles in pouches on left & right sides of hip belt.
You
pack the same so you can find items in your pack in the dark. Also,
in an emergency, you will be able to find the required items in your
friends pack without a light or delay. Their life may depend on you
finding the right item at the right time, so your life will depend on
your friend finding the right item in your pack if the situation was
reversed.
Standardization
is
a
Group
Survival Technique