More thoughts on the mendicant life and resiliency. One will need a mode of transportation whether one takes up the mendicant life, or seeks to survive a global disaster, like a direct hit from a coronal mass ejection; or a regional disaster, like flooding, famine, plague, war, tidal waves, earth quakes, and volcanoes.
Modes of transportation for the mendicant life:
4] The most basic mode of transportation is walking, so be able to put your entire survival kit on your back and walk into the wilderness at a moment's notice.
5] A touring bike, or mountain bike, will get one further with less effort. A bicycle that is set up for long distance riding and camping is all too easy to own these days; and having it fully outfitted with panniers and camping gear is possible given the time and money ahead of time to put it together. The camping gear for tour cycling is not much different from backpacking, so the same kit could be used for both. The only difference is panniers are made to fit onto racks on a bicycle, and you can carry more on a bike than you can on your back.
I have both kits and could be ready to hit the road in a few hours of packing. I would go with the touring bicycle first, if I had a choice.
In the case of a coronal mass ejection it is likely that every computer on the planet will be fried permanently, so every automobile with a computer will be dead at the curb. However, if one had the resources to own more than one auto, then one could have a modern automobile, and have a second auto that is pre-computer. This would be up to the 70s for most gasoline engines, and up to 1990 for a diesel engine. Thus the advantage of owning a pre-computer automobile following a global disaster, there is likely to be a nearly infinite supply of auto parts, batteries, tires, motor oil, and fuel in those many abandoned dead automobiles sitting at the curb.
If the industrial revolution comes to a grinding halt because of a global disaster, such as a coronal mass ejection, then the entire global transportation system will collapse, along with the global electric grid; and it is not likely to come back. This means within the first 2 weeks of such an event billions of people will starve to death; and the human population is likely to be cut in half every week following the disaster for the first year. This is the time to disappear into the wilderness, because people will be desperate, and do desperate things to each other to survive.
A coronal mass ejection is the most probably source of a global disaster. The solar cycle (see below) will give you some insight into the frequency of coronal mass ejections. Previous coronal mass ejections caused social problems, such as war, witch burnings, etc. For instance, the American Civil War broke out 1 year after the 1859 Carington Event. I do not believe that is a coincidence.
From 1859, when the Carington event took place, and afterwards, we have become increasingly dependent upon technological advancements. So, it is possible that the human world could fall back to a mid-19th century technology; however, we have left behind those technologies, so it would be very difficult to restore them. Thus, the
Mennonites and
Amish are the most resilient social group who is likely to survive a global disaster, because of their simple lifestyle that depends upon community, and 19th century technology.

The solar cycle
List of solar stormsElectromagnetic, geomagnetic, and/or proton storms
2225 BCE[5]
1485 BCE[5]
95 CE[5]
265 CE[5]
774–775 carbon-14 spike 993-994 CE[6] (another significant carbon-14 spike)
1460 CE[5]
1505 CE[5]
1719 CE[5]
1810 CE[5]
Solar storm of 1859 ("Carrington event") Aurora of November 17, 1882 May 1921 geomagnetic storm March 1989 geomagnetic storm August 1989[7]
Bastille Day event of July 14, 2000 Halloween solar storms, 2003[8]Recent
coronal mass ejectionsOn 1 August 2010, during solar cycle 24, scientists at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA) observed a series of four large CMEs emanating from the Earth-facing hemisphere of the Sun. The initial CME was generated by an eruption on 1 August that was associated with NOAA Active Region 1092, which was large enough to be seen without the aid of a solar telescope. The event produced significant aurorae on Earth three days later.
On 23 July 2012, a massive, and potentially damaging, Solar Superstorm (Solar flare, CME, Solar EMP) barely missed Earth, according to NASA.[19][20] There is an estimated 12% chance of a similar event hitting Earth between 2012 and 2022.[19]
On 31 August 2012 a CME connected with Earth's magnetic environment, or magnetosphere, with a glancing blow causing aurora to appear on the night of 3 September.[21][22] Geomagnetic storming reached the G2 (Kp=6) level on NOAA's Space Weather Prediction Center scale of geomagnetic disturbances.[23][24]
Global catastrophic riskA global catastrophic risk is a hypothetical future event with the potential to inflict serious damage to human well-being on a global scale.[2] Some such events could destroy or cripple modern civilization. Other, even more severe, scenarios threaten permanent human extinction.[3] These are referred to as existential risks.
Natural disasters, such as supervolcanoes and asteroids, pose such risks if sufficiently powerful. Human-caused, or anthropogenic, events could also threaten the survival of intelligent life on Earth. Such anthropogenic events could include catastrophic global warming,[4] nuclear war, or bioterrorism. The Future of Humanity Institute believes that human extinction is more likely to result from anthropogenic causes than natural causes.[5][6]
Researchers experience difficulty in studying human extinction directly, since humanity has never been destroyed before.[7] While this does not mean that it will not be in the future, it does make modelling existential risks difficult, due in part to survivorship bias.