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Hello everyone out there in internet radio land, this is Dave Jones, the NBC guy, and
this tip is going to be kind of out of the ordinary, but it is a good prepper tip just
the same.
Do you have something to keep young minds occupied?
Do you have something that does not require electricity
to keep people busy, busy, busy, busy?
Do you have board games on hand?
Listen, if you have board games on hand? Listen, if
you have to shelter in place,
or spend a long period of time in the
house, and there is no
electricity, how are
you going to keep those young minds
occupied while you're
taking care of business?
Board games.
Go around.
Yard sales. things like that.
Make sure you check all the pieces,
sometimes on clearance at Walmart,
but you need to have on hand some board games.
Clue, Risk, Monopoly.
Games that young people can play
and not think about what you're doing,
and they can play all by themselves.
Set them up, get them started.
It's like a snowball rolling down the hill.
Look, we started this a long time ago,
and for a while,
the kids looked forward to
the power going off
because they knew that's when we were
going to break the board games out and play.
Now they're a little older
and
well, but
family time.
Maybe even make a
game night. Do a game night.
Do a game night to get them used to it.
Train them so that they know what Monopoly is and how to play it or Risk
or any one of the games that take a while.
Even Sorry.
You know, Sorry, it's kind of like
a short version of Chinese checkers.
You should have them on hand.
Take them out every once in a while.
Have a game night with the family.
And prep on.