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Thread: Milk?

  1. #1
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    Milk?

    So I have toddlers, 2 of them, 2 year old twins. If SHTF what the heck am I supposed to do about milk? I was wondering if anyone has thought of this problem? I am also wondering if anyone has any experience with powdered milk? If I still lived on the farm like when I was a kid, I would just raise goats but here in the burbs I cant really get away with that.

  2. #2
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    I thought about it a while back. They sell milk (liquid) in the baking department of the grocery store that is sealed and last a long time. We did a taste test and it is OK. It has a strange after taste, but if SHTF it will do. It is just real milk, so you can bake with it, drink it by itself, etc. It requires no refrigeration until after it is opened and has a really long shelf life.

  3. #3
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    Fortified dehydrated milk from Emergency Essentials. Long shelf life and tastes pretty good.

  4. #4
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    Awesome, Ill take a look at both of these this morning.

  5. #5
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    At 2 they shouldn't be needing milk.



    BTW I have 4 year old twin boys....

  6. #6
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    Why do they need milk?

    Multivitamins, some supplemental vit D, and calcium supplements are going to be far easier to store.

  7. #7
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    Well my daughter wont eat ANYTHING except oranges, and fruit bars. We try all kinds of stuff but she just pushes it away. So she doesn't eat much and the milk kind of fills in calories vitamins and such. We still give them both a bottle to go to bed because well we value our sanity LOL.
    Last edited by motorwerks; 11-08-10 at 18:31.

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by motorwerks View Post
    Well my daughter wont eat ANYTHING except oranges, and fruit bars. We try all kinds of stuff but she just pushes it away. So she doesn't eat much and the milk kind of fills in calories vitamins and such. We still give them both a bottle to go to bed because well we value our sanity LOL.




    Just a little advice (you didn't ask for it so dont read anymore if you dont want it)......but you need to set those habits up now because they are going to get worse as time goes on.


    We used to bottle feed the boys and rock them to sleep. It would take us 3 hrs a night to get them to bed. I finally had enough, and we just stuck them in bed letting them cry it out. After a week they were going to bed in 15-30 minutes on their own. They are 4 now, and its still sometimes a pain to get them to sleep (usually if they have a late nap) but we were no longer spending 3hrs a day putting them to sleep.


    RE the food....IME if they don't want to eat something its because they've got a sweet tooth for something else they get often. Find out what it is, and stop giving it to them. They will eat.


    Just remember you are the parent, and you control your kids. Don't let your kids decide what they eat, when they go to bed, ect. If you don't stay on top of it kids will control you. It may be more difficult at first to put your foot down but in the long run it pays off.


    Unless he/she is really underweight I would not worry too much about it. Most likely they will catch up down the road. Kids grow at different rates. My sister has a boy a few months older than ours, and that kid is a tank. He is 4, and weighs more than his 7 year old sister.

  9. #9
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    if you do have to obtain sterilized milk or even powdered milk, it will most likely be gone by the time you need it. I carry both parmalat and borden brand at work and have to throw it out as it collects dust and has to be disposed of due to being closely dated. Also, that stuff is not something that is typically carried with any degree of onhand inventory. Powdered milk might do you good, but keep it somewhere airtight.
    Democracy is two wolves and a sheep discussing lunch, Liberty is a well armed sheep contesting the vote.

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by Belmont31R View Post
    Just a little advice (you didn't ask for it so dont read anymore if you dont want it)......but you need to set those habits up now because they are going to get worse as time goes on.
    Mehh I'm not terribly worried about the milk thing.... ever met a kid in the 4th grade that needed a bottle to go to sleep? Nether have I, all I'm say'n is that they will grow out of it. When I say bottle I mean sippy cup really, we are into those big sippy cup things that are bottle-ish. Shes not under weight but shes no where the size of her brother, hes a fricken Moose!

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