This weekly Snippets column is a collection of short items: responses to posted articles, practical self-sufficiency items, how-tos, lessons learned, tips and tricks, and news items — both from readers and from SurvivalBlog’s editors. Note that we may select some long e-mails for posting as separate letters.
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Remote Work Can Thrive in Remote Places. JWR’s Comment: It is interesting seeing that article posted at a website where the stock answers to nearly every question are either: “More government”, or “We should create a [taxpayer-funded] program to…”
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Over at WND: Tesla won’t start after driving in rain, owner speechless when stuck with $21,000 bill.
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Video from Mark Dice: We’re Being ManipuIated in Ways Most People Can’t Even Imagine! JWR’s Comments: Watch this, and you’ll understand one of the reasons why we discontinued the Reader Comments on posts at SurvivalBlog. (Yes, we DID detect comments being posted by sockpuppets.)
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Please pray for those who lost loved ones: Death Toll Rises, At Least 158 Vehicles Involved In Massive Pileup On I-55 In Louisiana.
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Reader L.E. offered this:
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L.E. also had this comment:
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SaraSue sent us this snippet:
“It’s been a very busy week. Two of my milk cows are spoken for but needed to be bred, and confirmed bred, before leaving. I found a new A.I. tech (wonderful person who manages a local dairy). He came over and serviced both cows. I’m sure we had the timing right on one of them, but may be off a day on the other. In 21 days I’ll know who is bred and who isn’t. I’m hoping to have them sold and off to their new homes before winter. This will give me a milking break, and reduce feed costs, until my other cows calve in the Spring.
I’ve started calling my two piglets “hellions”. I installed more electric fencing this week, but they found a way around it and are still getting loose. They took off down the long driveway when the main gate was left open and went off down the road. A bucket of grain and some coaxing got them back to the back pasture where they belong. However, before that, they took the opportunity to get into the garage where I store buckets of clabber (fermented milk that turns into cheese for feeding pigs with excess milk). They dumped out the buckets all over the garage and made a huge mess while I was out tending to cows. That was an enormous job to clean up with a power washer, but it is done. I am in process of setting up a farrowing barn for my sows who will birth next month. I don’t want the boar to impregnate my feeder pigs before they reach butcher age in the Spring, so am setting up a separate electrified fenced in area for them. I need 3 separate areas for periods of time: the feeder pigs, the sows, and the boar and barrow. I’m learning to raise pigs, so lots of mistakes!
I sold half my meat bird chicks to lessen the load, and moved the remaining meat bird chicks out of the brooders and into a locked coop in the main chicken run. Only a clever predator will be able to get to them. I’m hopeful I can get these birds to butcher weight in about 6 weeks. My next step is installing electric fencing around the main chicken run area so when I let the meat bird chicks out to forage, they will be protected.
I decided to go with raised garden beds for next year’s garden and have “a plan”. And you know, the best laid plans of mice and men… I ordered a number of powder coated steel raised beds and they all arrived this past week. They are huge. I have learned that plowing the garden area in the Spring only brings up every native seed in the county, which quickly overgrows the area. Instead, I’m not going to plow, but skim the entire garden (via skid steer), lay down ground covering, have a dump truck load or two of wood chips dumped on top to hold down the ground cover, in hopes of killing every wild seed over winter. The garden beds are tall, so I will fill them halfway with rotted wood from an old wood pile, then fresh dirt and compost for the remaining half-hugelkultur style. The reason for the tall beds is that there are so many wild rabbits here. Last spring, after babying my sweet potato slips for months, I planted several rows, only to wake up and find that the rabbits ate all the tops off. The large garden is already fenced to deter the deer, and the ground cover will deter voles, but I may put hardware cloth in the bottoms just to ensure they can’t get in.
And I guess you could call it “panic buying”, but I decided to upgrade my personal defense strategy. Scaring off coyotes and other wild critters is completely different than being able to drop intruding two-legged creatures quickly. I consulted my law enforcement and military family members on my purchases. I will need to train with the new equipment. I also upgraded my EDC ability with a better shoulder holster so I can carry while working on the farm and not worry about something getting knocked off of me. I am most vulnerable when I am out working on the farm, although my German Shepherds are with me constantly day and night. Lots more work to do, which keeps my mind off the world’s insanity. I am hoping to rest over the holidays, but it’s not looking likely. I remind myself that this is what growing food looks like. I could just dispense with the farm and go to a grocery store, eh? I believe this farm was a gift from the Lord and I believe it will feed my large family in hard times. So, here I am. I do so enjoy the learning!”
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Greg wrote this update:
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