2026 Summer Prepping Checklist. Are You Ready?

Last July, my garage hit 104°F and nature reminded me that no matter how prepared you think you are, it’ll find a way to punch holes in your plan. The flaw in my setup showed itself when a case of canned tomatoes I’d had on the shelf for about eighteen months started swelling at the seams. Not all of them, just the ones stacked closest to the south-facing wall.
The acid in tomatoes reacts with the tin lining when temperatures climb past 95°F for extended stretches, and what looked like a perfectly good rotation suddenly turned into a biohazard sitting next to my workbench.
That’s the kind of thing nobody warns you about when you first start building a stockpile, and it’s exactly why summer is the perfect season to have a prepping checklist.
The Truth About Rice and Other Grains
Grain weevils, rice moths, and Indian meal moths all become active when storage temperatures cross 75°F. Their eggs are already in your grain when you buy it. Every bag of flour, rice, oats, cornmeal, and pasta from any grocery store comes with microscopic eggs already deposited by the producer’s facility. Cold storage keeps them dormant, while warm storage wakes them up.
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The fix is dry ice or oxygen absorbers in sealed mylar, and it has to be done right or you’re just creating a sealed environment for the bugs to thrive in:
- For mylar with oxygen absorbers, you need at least 5-mil thickness (most cheap mylar is 3.5-mil and pinholes will let oxygen back in within months).
- For dry ice treatment, you place about three ounces of dry ice per five-gallon bucket on top of the grain, let it sublimate completely with the lid resting loose for about thirty minutes, then seal. The CO2 displaces oxygen and suffocates any active insects and most eggs.
If you’re already stored and just want to check, pour a cup of your stored rice or wheat onto a white plate and leave it under a bright light for ten minutes. Any movement, any tiny dark specks crawling, you’ve got an infestation. The whole bucket is compromised. You can still salvage the grain by freezing it for a week (kills all life stages), then re-storing in properly sealed mylar, but don’t pretend it’s pristine.
What 95°F Storage Actually Does to Your Cans
The shelf life printed on a can assumes storage at around 70°F. For every 18°F above that, the chemical degradation roughly doubles.
A can rated for five years sitting in a 95°F shed is realistically giving you maybe eighteen months of true nutritional integrity before the vitamins start collapsing and the seals begin to fatigue.
Also, high-acid foods like tomatoes, citrus, pickled goods, and anything with vinegar will go first. The acid eats through the protective lining and you’ll start getting metallic taste, then eventually botulism risk if seals fail.
Walk your stockpile this week and physically touch the tops and bottoms of every can. Any flex, any popping sound, any bulge, that one goes in the trash. Don’t compost it, don’t feed it to the chickens, bag it and bin it. Botulinum toxin doesn’t care about your livestock either.
For jars, the lid is your tell. Press the center. If it pops back, the seal is broken and oxygen has been getting in for who knows how long. Even if the contents look fine, toss it. Some preppers will tell you to reprocess, but reprocessing food of unknown age and contamination history is asking for trouble you don’t need.
What to Do With the Expired Food
An expired can isn’t automatically garbage, but it isn’t automatically safe either.
For example, low-acid canned goods (beans, corn, peas, meats) that are within two years past their printed date, with no bulging, no rust, no dents along the seam, and that hiss properly when opened, are generally fine.
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It’s also important to take a smell test on a small amount and then cook thoroughly. I’ve eaten ten-year-old canned chicken from a properly stored basement. It was bland, but safe.
High-acid foods past their date go in the trash. The risk-to-reward ratio isn’t worth it. Anything with even slight rust along the seam, anything that hisses wrong (you’ll know the difference!), anything with off-color or texture, all of it gets tossed without debate.
Water Storage in Summer is a Different Animal
UV exposure breaks down plastic faster than you realize. If your blue 55-gallon drums are sitting where summer sun touches them even briefly each day, you’re getting phthalate leaching into your water supply.
Cover them, move them, or wrap them in heavy-duty reflective material. Same applies to those stacked 5-gallon water bricks in the garage.
It’s also worth mentioning that bleach loses potency in heat.
The bottle of plain unscented bleach you bought in March for water purification has already lost a percentage of its sodium hypochlorite by July. Bleach degrades roughly 20% per year at room temperature, faster in heat. Calcium hypochlorite (pool shock) is your better summer storage option because it’s stable as a dry powder for years and a small amount treats enormous volumes of water. One pound treats about 10,000 gallons. Store it separately from anything organic because it’s an oxidizer.
Also (and I really can’t stress this enough), the best way to avoid this kind of hassle altogether is to buy or even build your own atmospheric water generator. It’s one of the most useful devices you can own, since it essentially pulls water straight out of thin air and doubles as a water filter.
Ammo and Optics
Brass-cased ammunition stored in fluctuating humidity will develop verdigris, that green corrosion, around the case mouth. Toss a few silica gel packs into your ammo cans and replace them annually.
Battery-powered optics, red dots especially, will drain faster in heat. Pull the batteries on anything you’re not using regularly and store them separately.
The Medicine Cabinet Gets Forgotten Every Year
Insulin, EpiPens, and most antibiotics lose potency rapidly above 86°F. If you’ve got a family member dependent on temperature-sensitive medication, summer is when your power-out plan gets tested whether you want it to or not.
A Yeti cooler with rotating frozen water bottles will hold safe temperatures for 72 hours if you’re disciplined about opening it.
Beyond that, you need either a generator-powered fridge or you can bury them underground – for this, you can follow this DIY Buried Fridge.
Check expiration dates on your antibiotics, pain relievers, and any prescription stockpile. The often-cited military study showing many medications remain potent decades past expiration applies to dry tablets stored cool and dark. It does not apply to liquids, suspensions, or anything stored in a hot garage. Tetracycline antibiotics specifically can become toxic past expiration.
HERE’S THE LIST of medications you can still safely take after they expire.
The Actual Checklist Before You Close the Tab
Print this. Tape it to the inside of your storage room door. Walk through it with a pen in hand, not from memory.
Get out there before the worst of the heat sets in. Bring a notebook, not just this checklist. Write down what you find, what needs fixing, and what needs replacing before September. Your future self will thank you when you’re not scrambling in October.
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