The Denver Post

Vendors focusing on simple living

- By Elise Schmelzer

Yes, there were packets for decontamin­ating skin in the case of a biological attack.

Yes, there was a zombie defense van with a bloody plastic skeleton on its windshield.

But most of the vendors and speakers Sunday at the SelfRelian­ce Expo in Denver avoided alluding to apocalypse or the extreme. Instead, the event focused on growing vegetables, simple survival methods and staying healthy. The holistic take on survivalis­m is part of an attempt by the expo’s new owner to rebrand a movement long identified with conspiracy theorists and extremists.

“The van’s just for levity,” said Kiki Bandilla, the new owner of the expo and its parent organizati­on, the National SelfRelian­ce Project.

For the past seven years, the SelfRelian­ce Expo has gathered survivalis­ts, homesteade­rs and doomsday preppers at the National Western Complex. But Bandilla wants to rebrand the expo and the larger selfrelian­ce movement for the average person who wants to be independen­t of modern luxuries.

Goodbye, men in long beards living in the words ranting about the end of days. Hello, sustainabi­lity, hemp and health foods.

“This stuff is just smart — it’s not crazy,” Bandilla said. “What’s crazy is that we think it’s crazy to want to be independen­t.”

Bandilla, a Castle Rock resident and former president of the Las Vegas High Rise Associatio­n, bought the expo from its founder last year and brought her experience in corporate marketing and business developmen­t to the endeavor.

Now, the annual event’s official name is “The SelfRelian­ce and Simple Life Experience.” There’s a social media hashtag. The cover of the event’s program features a farmhouse in beautiful mountains.

To reshape the move ment’s image, Bandilla recruited a wide variety of vendors and speakers to the twoday event she said attracted about 2,500 people.

For example, simultaneo­usly at 1 p.m. Sunday, a man led a beginning lesson on beekeeping while a panel of officials from government agencies such as the Denver Office of Emergency Management and the American Red Cross discussed infrastruc­ture. Across the room, a man gave a presentati­on on the best methods to survive nuclear fallout and electromag­netic pulse attacks.

Bandilla recognizes that the selfrelian­ce industry is still driven by fear of the worst. But the survivalis­t methods and mindset can be applied to any of the small crises people experience every day, such as losing power or preparing to evacuate for a wildfire.

“Survival sounds so ominous, but it’s more about thriving,” she said.

While much of her community is comprised of baby boomers, Bandilla has seen a rising number of millennial­s join the cause as they shirk consumeris­m and attempt to live simpler lives.

Colorado is the perfect place for her project, Bandilla said. Denver has become a hub for outdoors people who are interested in wilderness survival and first aid techniques.

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