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<blockquote data-quote="Blitzfike" data-source="post: 2662493" data-attributes="member: 807"><p>I'm originally from Broken Bow in McCurtain County, S.E. Oklahoma. I grew up in the woods and hills there. I often thought that would be a great place to bug in after a nuclear exchange. Several years ago, working in State Civil Defense, I was shown some maps detailing projected fallout regions as dictated by target locations and prevailing winds. S.E. Oklahoma is going to glow in the dark if that ever comes to pass. No place in Oklahoma is going to be safe in that case, too many targets both within and without the state boundaries that will create fallout for prevailing winds to distribute. West Texas looks to be one of the most fallout free areas within a few hundred miles of central Oklahoma. Should that come to pass, I think being at ground zero would be the best place to be. Subsistance gardening in West Texas would be a challenge as dry as it is there..</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Blitzfike, post: 2662493, member: 807"] I'm originally from Broken Bow in McCurtain County, S.E. Oklahoma. I grew up in the woods and hills there. I often thought that would be a great place to bug in after a nuclear exchange. Several years ago, working in State Civil Defense, I was shown some maps detailing projected fallout regions as dictated by target locations and prevailing winds. S.E. Oklahoma is going to glow in the dark if that ever comes to pass. No place in Oklahoma is going to be safe in that case, too many targets both within and without the state boundaries that will create fallout for prevailing winds to distribute. West Texas looks to be one of the most fallout free areas within a few hundred miles of central Oklahoma. Should that come to pass, I think being at ground zero would be the best place to be. Subsistance gardening in West Texas would be a challenge as dry as it is there.. [/QUOTE]
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