A Green Beret’s Guide To Micro-Cache Escape and Evasion Systems: “Plan B”

Tuesday, July 14, 2015
By Paul Martin

Jeremiah Johnson
July 14th, 2015
SHTFplan.com

This article details an E&E (escape and evasion) system to complement the bug-out measures you may have already emplaced for yourself. The system involves micro-caches for use along a preplanned route from where you’re caught when it hits the fan to your initial hide site and eventual return home. The system can be tailor made to fit your individual needs, locale, and climate. The mindset will be thoroughly explained to give you a base from which to make your adjustments to your program.

First we must define a few things. The word micro-cache may be a big misleading, because while we are talking about one cache, the micro-cache is actually one of the component parts (or a “stage”) of the entire system, made up of 3 parts. The micro-cache system is not your primary! I place emphasis on this statement. It is your backup, your “plan B” and should be used as a last resort. If you “deploy” this system, it can serve you in good stead both in the short-term immediacy, or to place “on hold,” banking it for a longer duration for future use.

The micro-caches are emplaced (all three stages), to 100 meters (300 feet, approx.), 200 meters, and 300 meters, away from your immediate location where you’re operating when the substance hits the fan. You must first conduct an assessment of your workweek and where you will be during the course of your day. As an example, you may work in a paper mill. Your vehicle may be parked near a main administration building, and where you actually perform your work may be ¼ mile from there.

You may actually have varied locations that you spend during the day…an office building for your planning in the morning, and a job site a few miles away, for example. In either case, with the paper mill scenario, you must correlate 1 set of 3 micro-caches for both of your paper mill site locations, and you must have 2 sets of micro-caches for the second scenario (1 set for the planning office and 1 set for the job site). So what are these micro-caches, you may ask, and what is their purpose? Here it is:

The micro-caches are for use individually (per stage), and preferably in combination when gathered together to add up to (1) complete backup “bug-out”/A-bag when your primary bag and supplies are compromised.

Here is our hypothetical situation. The Chinese have just attacked with an EMP device, and the radio reports that the DEW line and NORAD have a dozen incoming ICBM nukes heading toward the U.S. Pandemonium breaks out, and the IHM (the Incredible Human Mob) manifests itself at your workplace. You leave your workplace by the back door to grab your bag and weapon from your blazer and you notice many bad things occurring in the immediate vicinity of your vehicle. You also notice many cars and trucks have smashed windows, and your rear window is one of them.

So there is no retrieving your equipment from the vehicle.

This is where your micro-cache system comes into play. Each micro-cache has a tiny amount of food, water, tools, medical gear, ammo, and small equipment. The micro-caches are set in a staggered, yet linear distance of 100, 200, and 300 meters respectively from your workplace. They can be set in anywhere that you are almost 100% sure they will not be compromised in any way! This is the toughest part of the job: ensuring they are safe and will be there when you need them.

The Rest…HERE

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