Help Me Build Better Long-Term Food Storage (Need Real Feedback)

Discussion in 'New Member Introductions' started by jtechmiami, May 18, 2026 at 12:42.


  1. jtechmiami

    jtechmiami Neophyte Monkey

    Hi everyone, my name is JOHNNIE. I’m building a business around long-term meal storage using freeze-drying and real meal concepts. I’m not here to promote myself or push my business in any way I’m genuinely here to learn, listen, and get feedback from people who care about preparedness and long-term food storage. I’d love to hear what needs you have, what’s missing in the market, and what matters most to you. Looking forward to learning from everyone here.
     
  2. Wildbilly

    Wildbilly Monkey+++

    Welcome! I'm in Alabama and have been prepping for about 27-years, yeah, I was around for Y2K. I have stored food in zip-lock bags, Food Saver bags, canning jars, mylar bags, etc. I have some plastic buckets of Legacy 25-year food, and I purchased a Harvest Right freeze-dryer to make my own freeze-dried foods (mostly eggs, milk and meats) cause the cost is so high. I'm also planning to create a larger pantry and stock it with cases of canned goods that we use regularly. Hopefully, I'll get everything done this year, or next, then I will be ready for hell or high water, except for rotation/replacement.
     
  3. Brokor

    Brokor B.D. Knight Moderator Site Supporter+++ Founding Member

    Mostly, this place has become an echo chamber for old grumpy men to complain...mostly about politics. But we were once primarily suited toward survival and preparedness.

    I don't think most active members are even in need of a great deal due to having decades of time to do whatever has been necessary, fewer still can probably still see well enough to post. Regardless, I'd guess that there may be a few here and there who may still be looking around for some food items to stock up on, but that will be the same anywhere you look. With the price for food, especially anything protein, you are looking at serious investment with freeze drying. This is why some of us are thankful to get into it a decade or more ago, pre COV and well before the prices rose hundreds of percent. And now with the war going on and prices once again rising, good luck!

    I cannot speak for every prepper, but what every logical person wants in my opinion is quality protein and full #10 cans. Everything else can be sorted out for the most part. Freeze dried eggs, beef, chicken, that sort of thing. Now when you buy these items you pay 25 times the price for half the total content and half of that is just pasta because they skimp on the damn meat. But you still get 25 years shelf life or more, so it's better than traditional canning and other methods.

    Another guess of mine is that the longer people wait, the more expensive it will be to stock up on freeze dried foods. Can't say we never warned you.
     
  4. hot diggity

    hot diggity Monkey+++ Site Supporter+++

    I'm a very happy old man, thank you.

    During hurricane Bertha (1996) we learned that five gallon food grade buckets with mylar liners were compromised after getting battered around by flood waters, while glass mason jars and #10 cans survived, even if they got washed out of the house and were recovered after the storm. If you pack in buckets weight seems critical to their ability to survive battering from any source.

    Now that I'm older I'm learning that everything is getting heavier. During Hurricane Florence (2018) we lost a coastal home and found out how difficult everything that survived was to move. Smaller and lighter is definitely an advantage as you age or get injured.
     
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