Notes for Monday – September 19, 2016

On September 19th, 1778, the Continental Congress passed the first budget of the United States. While the budget may have passed, the states responded poorly to the call for taxes to fund the government, and the government resorted to printing paper money to cover debts. In effect, the first budget was a failure, due in large part to the states not responding to the demands of Congress and the depreciation of fiat paper money. Are we talking about 1778 or 2014 here?

Also on this date in 1796, George Washington addressed the nation in his farewell address as president.

On a less serious note, Mickey Mouse made his first screen debut in 1928 (Steamboat Willy at Colony Theater NYC).



Pat Cascio’s Product Review: CRKT Trencher

If you stop and think about it, everything I cover on our website, be it knives, guns, or water filters, are tools. They’re tools for survival in one shape or another. Many people simply look at a knife or a gun and consider them as “weapons”, and they are. However, they are still tools designed for specific tasks. Some firearms are designed for self defense, some are designed for hunting, and some are designed for target shooting. The same goes for knives; some are for self defense or everyday use, some for dressing out game, and some for use around the kitchen. So, don’t limit your thinking to expect that everything we cover and test are weapons. They are first and foremost tools, designed for specific tasks. Some are for multiple tasks.

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I was ten or eleven years old when my step-father took me to an Army/Navy Military Surplus store in Chicago. Back in those days, about the only military surplus you ran across was U.S. military items. There weren’t any military surplus items from other countries, for the most part. I still remember my step-father buying me a genuine, U.S. military folding entrenching tool (shovel), and it was a WWII design, which is still popular today. I also got a pistol belt with a canteen/cover and a first-aid pouch, to wear on the pistol belt, and the ol’ fashioned “Castro” fatigue cap. I was ready to go to war at that tender age. I’ve always had an interest in military surplus, especially US military surplus, which is getting harder and harder to find these days, due to some regulations passed by former Presidents. Most military surplus is sold, given away to our allies, or simply destroyed these days, instead of allowing us, taxpayers, the opportunity to purchase it. What a waste!

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When I joined the military in 1969, we were issued the new tri-fold, folding shovel in Infantry School that was more compact than the older style WWII folding shovel we were issued in Basic Training. I thought that the new tri-fold shovel was a better design because it was easier to pack on a pistol belt, and more compact. However, it simply didn’t cut it in my humble opinion, over the original WWII designed entrenching tool that I grew up with.

Today, there are so many poorly made tri-fold entrenching tools on the market, it just makes my head spin. Most are just junk. You use use it once, and it breaks on you, simple as that. I’ve seen them for as little as $5, and remember, you don’t always get what you pay for. In this case, if you believe you are getting a “genuine” US military tri-fold entrenching tool for $5, you are in for a surprise. Don’t waste you money on cheap junk.

I was more than a little intrigued when I spotted the www.crkt.com CRKT “Trencher” in their 2016 catalog, and placed an order for one – and it arrived several months later. I don’t know why some (many?) companies advertise products in their new catalogs, and then they don’t have them in-stock for months and months, sometimes, even a year later, then again, I’m not in marketing any longer, so I guess they know what they are doing.

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At first glance, the CRKT Trencher reminds me of my old WWII genuine surplus entrenching tool that I received when I was a kid. And, to be sure, my entrenching tool was genuine US military surplus and not a knock off or a cheap clone, like the ones you find today.

From the information in the CRKT catalog, it appears that the Trencher must have been designed in-house, as there is no one listed in the catalog or on their website as the designer. Let’s clear the air. The Trencher is manufactured in China. However, this is NO piece of junk. Trust me on this! The Trencher’s blade is manufactured out of 1050 carbon steel with a Rockwell hardness of 40-45, and this is a good hardness on a steel that is going to be used for chopping and digging. Anything harder and the blade will chip and break under that kind of hard-use.

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The length of the spade is 7.85 inches, which is about par for an entrenching tool. The edge of the blade has two edges– one for cutting, which can be sharpened easy enough, and one has a saw blade on it. Plus, the tip of the spare is reinforced for digging through tough stuff. You have no worries about the tip bending or breaking if you hit rocks. Overall length of the Trencher is just over 27-inches when opened, and the spade head closes fully for carry in the included case, or it can be opened and lock halfway, for serious digging. The handle material is two-fold, it is made out of carbon steel and is reinforced with Polypropyline Nylon on either side of the handle – we are talking strong!

The butt end of the Trencher has a wide polypropylene head on it, for a much better hold than the WWII entrenching tool. I like it a lot. There is also a hole in the poly head. I don’t quite know what it is used for, but it is there. The spade can be locked in three different positions– completely closed and locked, halfway open and locked, and fully open and locked, and it locks up solid with the twisting motion of the lock.dscf0410

The Trencher comes in a black ballistic nylon sheath, and it is a bit different than most sheaths I’ve seen with entrenching tools. First off, the tool is removed from the bottom of the sheath, instead of through the top. It is secured by two straps, each one having two snaps. There is no way the tool is going to fall out of the sheath. Secondly, the sheath has a pocket on the top that is also secured with a cover than has two snaps on it. The pocket can be used to carry quite a bit of survival gear, which is something I haven’t seen with any other entrenching tool sheath . Nice job, CRKT! There are also straps on the back for attaching the sheath/tool to your MOLLE gear. The tool is too long to attach to the front of your combat vest, so it will do on the side or the rear, or it can be attached to a pack. However, there is no method for attaching the set-up to a belt. That’s too bad!

One thing we never have a lack of, in the western part of Oregon, are blackberry vines. They are not native to Oregon, but they took off like you wouldn’t believe. Blackberries are free for the picking, come the end of August and into September, if you care to fight the large thorns on the blackberry vines which are wicked! I usually test knives on these vines to see if a knife is sharp enough to slice through a vine with one felled swoop. With the Trencher, I took a different approach to see how well the entrenching tool would dig into the ground and cut the blackberry vines where they begin. The Trencher had no problem digging through the roots of the vines. We also have ground that has nothing but rocks, big and small, under the soil. It is next to impossible to start digging without hitting rocks in short order. I didn’t do a lot of digging, but I did enough to know just how tough the Trencher is. I hit lots of rocks, but the tip of the spade wasn’t damaged in the least. The saw side of the spade was used to saw through some dead tree branches. The things worked great. I’ve tested other entrenching tools with a saw blade on one side of the spade that didn’t do well at all, when it came to sawing through wood.

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You can easily toss the Trencher in your Bug Out Bag, or keep it in the trunk of your vehicle, in the event you need to chop, cut, or dig your way through something, or dig your way out of deep snow. The whole setup weighs a little more than three pounds, which is a bit heavier than other entrenching tools, but the weight is needed on this heavy-duty tool. It is about as bullet proof as they come. It would make a great addition to your survival supplies.. Full retail on the Trencher is $99.99, and you can find CRKT deeply discounted if you shop on the ‘net. Yeah, it’s a lot of money, but you are getting a top-notch entrenching tool– one that will never let you down and will last a lifetime. As I’ve said many times, don’t waste your money on junk. If you do, you will be buying junk over and over again. With the CRKT Trencher, it will be the last entrenching tool you’ll ever need. It is “that” tough.

– Senior Product Review Editor, Pat Cascio



Recipe of the Week: Beefburger Stroganoff

Ingredients:

  • 1½ lbs lean ground beef
  • 3 slices of bacon, diced
  • 1 small onion
  • 2 tbs flour
  • ¼ tsp paprika
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1 (10¾ oz) can of condensed cream of mushroom soup
  • 2 tbs dry red wine
  • 1 cup dairy sour cream
  • 6 to 8 hamburger buns, toasted and buttered

Directions:

  1. In a large skillet brown beef and bacon until red color disappears; then, drain.
  2. In a slow cooking pot, mix together drained beef, bacon, onion, flour, paprika, and salt.
  3. Stir in undiluted soup and wine.
  4. Cover and cook on low for 4 to 5 hours.
  5. Stir in sour cream.
  6. Spoon mixture over toasted buns.

For an easy-on-the-cook meal, serve with fresh vegetable relishes and potato chips. Makes 6 to 8 servings.

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Useful Recipe and Cooking Links: Reader P.S. sent in this link to a good looking Apple Butter recipe that doesn’t require unusual ingredients.

Do you have a favorite recipe that would be of interest to SurvivalBlog readers? Please send it via e-mail. Thanks!



Letter Re: The Golden Moments of Silence

Hugh,

This article, “The Golden Moments of Silence” struck me by its coinciding with my experience from just last week while traveling through a very majestic and picturesque part of the country. This paragraph in particular by Sarah Latimer: “This article, I hope, will inspire you to look up from the computer, smart phone, iPad, or pull out the ear buds ….” While camping in the Black Hills of South Dakota last week I was appalled at the behavior of those who drove up to scenic overlooks that jumped out of their vehicle and went to the perch and held up their smartphone on a “selfie stick” with the majestic scenery in the background, clicked a couple of times, and zoomed off. I watched as a car full of five people unloaded in front of a vast panorama of hills as far as the eye could see, without a single person taking more than a glance at it as they sought out someone to take their group photo, and then off they went. They saw it all. They had “been there, done that”.

Several times we have had campers pull up at the neighboring campsite and whip out their device and sit on the picnic table after a few quick shots of the scenery and joyously jabber out loud how they are posting them on Facebook. They said they’d make their friends envious? I’ll never forget the couple that spent close to an hour trying to find a weather forecast on their smartphone as storm clouds were overhead. Hiking through the Cathedral Spires we encountered several couples who had cameras draped around their neck with foot-long lenses. They spent so much time “looking for that shot” that of course would impress “friends” on their social media forum that they never even saw what was really before them. Once when I pulled over to observe an awe-inspiring landscape, it wasn’t long before cars slowed down to see what I was looking at, grabbing their cameras and smartphones, some stopped, got of their car, concluded “nothing here”, and off they went.

I have often stood at scenic overlooks and meditated on the words of the hymn that goes: “O Lord, my God, when I in awesome wonder, Consider all the worlds Thy Hands have made, I see the stars, I hear the rolling thunder, Thy power throughout the universe displayed”. And in humble adoration of what I have the privilege to experience with my five senses that God Almighty has granted me, I am grateful to be alive. This is when the weight of all the wrong turns that I have taken are lifted and I know that I can go on now, I can take another step, because, Oh Lord, How Great Thou Art! – R.T.



Economics and Investing:

Washington’s Endgame: First Your Guns, Then Your Cash? This is an eye opening article. Use cash wherever you can, and resist the removal of cash from your life, because it gives you a type of freedom you need. It keeps the government from complete dictatorship. – H.L.

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Harvard Economist: US Should Phase-Out All Currency Larger Than $10 Bills. Eliminate “filthy lucre?” – D.S.

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Free Trade Brings Abundance — Protectionism Brings Scarcity

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Beijing desperately needs a recession to shift the economy

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SurvivalBlog and its editors are not paid investment counselors or advisers. Please see our Provisos page for details.



Odds ‘n Sods:

It is noteworthy that my #1 Son’s SurvivalRealty.com web site now has 175 retreat properties listed. It is a great place for land buyers and sellers to connect, the ad space is surprisingly inexpensive, and there are NO sales commissions charged. Many of the properties have truly great attributes as retreats, like this one: Northern Ontario Wilderness Home – Plane or Boat Access. – JWR

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Pokemon makes its foray into international espionage: ‘Pokemon Go’ lies behind China’s unprecedented military overhaul – D.F.

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Jihad Knife Rampage at St. Cloud Mall, 8 Stabbed, Muslim Asked Victims if They Were Muslim – Pat Cascio

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So you don’t have to find out about it at the last minute from the Lame Stream Media: Stations Prep For National EAS Test – RBS

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Cops Are Watching You – Even If You’re Not A Criminal – B.B.



Hugh’s Quote of the Day:

“Now those who seek absolute power, even though they seek it to do what they regard as good, are simply demanding the right to enforce their own version of heaven on earth, and let me remind you they are the very ones who always create the most hellish tyranny.” – Barry Goldwater





The Golden Moments of Silence, by Sarah Latimer

I have been doing some reflecting recently on the power of silence. While our words have the power to build up or destroy and are so important, so too is our silence; silence is powerful also. Silence can generate equally powerful and varied reactions as words. When a man, who is madly in love with the woman of his dreams proposes marriage on bended knee with expectation that she will be thrilled and readily accept his proposal is instead met with a wide-eyed blank stare and silence, his world teeters on the brink of destruction in that silence. This silence of hesitation or alarm is not the one that has been on my heart, though it is one that can be important to recognize as survivalists. We need to read hesitation in those whom we are asking questions for intel purposes. Alternatively, when a driver approaching an intersection dodges a drunk pedestrian that has stepped off the curb and, though only traveling 15 mph, slightly bumps the fender of the car in the next lane and then approaches the car’s driver, silence coupled with a mildly annoyed glance from the offended driver rather than screaming and aggression is a welcome relief. We are still obligated for repairs to their vehicle, but we don’t have to deal with threats of an irate individual. This calm, rational silence can be a relief in a tense survival situation.

Sometimes the absence of sound tells us what we need to know– that the other person does not share our enthusiasm or reciprocate our feelings, or that they are not angry or filled with emotion. Sometimes, it just means that they are thinking because the proper response is not clear to them yet. In a survival situation, that kind of silence can be valuable, too. We need to know who to trust, and we need to know those we are trusting well. We need to know who can make quick, quality decisions in tense situations and who will not know how or be able to respond in a tense moment. We need to be able to read those who are telling the truth versus those who are lying to us. We need to be expert communicators and interpreters of communications.

The point of this article is that we need to know ourselves and motivations and develop a bank of memories that help drive us forward when things are difficult. Along those same lines, we need to know those with whom we are teaming in terms of their motivations and integrity and encourage our team and our children and families in developing their inner strength and memory banks to endure the hardships that await us. I assert that we need to partner with those who have determination and inner strength to persevere when things are difficult, or have what’s required even when they have to stand alone at times.

To know someone, we have to have spent time with them and listened to what is in their heart and what drives them. This only comes forth when we go through some things together, whether monumental highs and/or dark valleys that either are or feel like the valley of the shadow of death. In these times, good and bad, we need to be silent to hear from them and to experience the moments together. Let’s talk about these golden moments– times where we are silent to absorb the moment, listen to the hearts of those around us, and share in the experiences that can occur at the most unexpected times and bind us together, or at least give us insight into the person to help us know this person’s strength and weaknesses in order to appropriately depend upon them. Golden moments may be monumental to humanity, such as stopping a terrorist attack on U.S. soil, but they can also be help with a vehicle break down or a weekend plumbing crisis. It can be listening to them after a loss of a loved one or in a fit of anger over an injustice. It can be in receiving some homemade artwork from a child who is thrilled at their first finger painting that they made just for you as they tell you what each thing is on the paper and the fantastic story behind it. What grand imaginations our children have! Listening is so important to knowing someone. Do it without distraction!

I have had relatives– uncles, cousins, as well as one of my sons– who fought in wars and told me stories of those who had the mental fortitude to endure tremendous hardship as well as those who gave up, even soldiers who committed suicide in their barracks. From what I can tell, a lot had to do with the family support at home and/or the hope of support upon their return home. I have not fought in wars, so I am not speaking from personal experience. I have, however, endured some very difficult, even life-threatening battles myself that supports what I have heard from others. What I heard was that these soldiers who endured believed they were fighting to protect those they loved and would return to them some day, or at least were fighting for those back home because they felt loyalty to them. They didn’t just fight to save themselves and their fellow troops, though that is obviously a significant motivation, but many had the mindset that they were fighting for their loved ones at home and to be able to return triumphantly to them. Some have endured incredible torture and overcome what seemed like impossible odds to get back home. One relative of mine was on two war ships both sunk within a 24 hour period, and he survived those attacks and cold waters through persistence as well as the rescue efforts of others, of course! I believe it was the memories and thoughts of these loved ones and the hopes and dreams stored deep in their minds’ reserves that fed their will and pushed their bodies onward. In difficult times, it is the snip-its of video that play in our mind’s eye. From my perspective, these golden moments include the photographs of loved ones, the words from letters we have read, the key phrases of telephoned messages, the video of special moments re-lived, the majestic images that moved our souls and we stood together praising God for His creation, the events that stirred us to tears whether in joy or grief, the tender and adoring look upon the face of one who loves us and we love, the thrilled look in our young child’s eyes when we get home carrying a surprise for them, and the shared hopes and dreams of those loved ones who depend upon us, as well as the aspirations we have to pursue adventures, create great things, and become a person of significance. These are some of the “golden moments” that come to my mind, but there are surely many other types of moments that motivate others. It may be a father who said you couldn’t that replays in your mind, as you know that you can and are certainly going to prove him wrong. These golden moments are those moments that we store away in our memory as significant and precious, even if they were painful, and that help drive us onward. They give us hope, courage, and motivate us onward. Even if some of these people with whom we shared these moments are gone, we believe that we carry on in their stead and want to make them proud or we want to see their work, legacy, or dreams completed, so we invest ourselves to finish what they could not. We want to return to the special places we shared together. We see ourselves as part of their legacy, as they invested in us, and we believe we can carry it forward to others.

As believers and followers of the Son of God, we have hope of seeing other believers again and telling them “the rest of the story”. We are invested and strengthened to go forward because of those who were in our life, those who are in our life, and those who will be in our life in the future. However, we are only as invested as we are able to know them and focus upon them. We can’t know them without focused silence to listen, really listen to them. This is especially true of our God and His Word. We have to be silent and listen to Him above all. In our silence, we can hear Him speak to us through His word, His Spirit, and through those who follow Him. If there is too much noise, we will not hear His still small voice calling to us. His Word has much to teach us about who to trust and about being people of integrity and trusting people of integrity.

Proverbs 27:1-19

Boast not thyself of to morrow; for thou knowest not what a day may bring forth.

Let another man praise thee, and not thine own mouth; a stranger, and not thine own lips.

A stone is heavy, and the sand weighty; but a fool’s wrath is heavier than them both.

Wrath is cruel, and anger is outrageous; but who is able to stand before envy?

Open rebuke is better than secret love.

Faithful are the wounds of a friend; but the kisses of an enemy are deceitful.

The full soul loatheth an honeycomb; but to the hungry soul every bitter thing is sweet.

As a bird that wandereth from her nest, so is a man that wandereth from his place.

Ointment and perfume rejoice the heart: so doth the sweetness of a man’s friend by hearty counsel.

Thine own friend, and thy father’s friend, forsake not; neither go into thy brother’s house in the day of thy calamity: for better is a neighbour that is near than a brother far off.

My son, be wise, and make my heart glad, that I may answer him that reproacheth me.

A prudent man foreseeth the evil, and hideth himself; but the simple pass on, and are punished.

Take his garment that is surety for a stranger, and take a pledge of him for a strange woman.

He that blesseth his friend with a loud voice, rising early in the morning, it shall be counted a curse to him.

A continual dropping in a very rainy day and a contentious woman are alike.

Whosoever hideth her hideth the wind, and the ointment of his right hand, which bewrayeth itself.

Iron sharpeneth iron; so a man sharpeneth the countenance of his friend.

Whoso keepeth the fig tree shall eat the fruit thereof: so he that waiteth on his master shall be honoured.

As in water face answereth to face, so the heart of man to man.

This article, I hope, will inspire you to look up from the computer, smart phone, iPad, or pull out the ear buds and take a break from the hard work of providing and prepping as you can to focus on listening more to friends and family, to look around you, and to record life in your memories and listen intently to others. Know their hearts and heed their wise counsel. Absorb the golden moments that are fleeting and too often missed because of the noise of our busy lives.

I write this to myself. I am a multi-tasker. I always have many things spinning around in my head– new business ideas, project ideas, ideas for how to help loved ones, article ideas, prayers for people I know in need, and just a lot of wheels churning around. However, I realize how important it is “to be still” as God says, “Be still and know that I am God.” It is often in the quiet times that we are able to know God and also others. It is in those moments when I focused on someone or some beautiful aspect of God’s creation that I built my mind’s storehouse of “golden memories”. The funny times, the sweet times, the sorrowful times, the miraculous moments of children’s births and other amazing events, the powerful and humbling experiences, the majestic mountain views, the inspirational sunrises and sunsets over the ocean, mountains, or prairies, and more all came when I was quiet and focused enough for a moment to soak them into my mind’s eye and store them away in the treasure chest of my memory. Even when I am not with these people I love and with whom I shared these moments, I can remember and be strengthened. We have shared, and I recall.

As a mother watching the community children get off the school buses this time of year, I am also reminded about the silence a parent should have about they ask their children about their day to listen as they return from school or outings with friends. There are precious few “golden moments” when a child enters the home that they have a desire to share about their experiences of the day, before their minds move on and the excitement over what has happened is gone, as is the opportunity to hear about it and share in it. If you are not home to greet them with a smile, a cookie, and a hug, you will miss those golden moments with them, and one day they will be grown and possibly living far away, distant in both body and in heart. Our culture is all about the “now experience”, when rather it is the roots of the past that hold us strong when troubling winds blow and the storms of life try to toss us around. Friends and family may be with us to help, or they may not. Those who have stood with us and shared with us are the most invested and most likely to be the ones not tossed aside easily. Are you investing with your silent focus ready to listen and share in the moment?

Take some time to listen and be silent to share in special “golden” moments. Listen to what is in the hearts of those you care about and those you are partnering with in life, business, and survival. Go for coffee. It will not only help you through storms, but it will give you sweet memories for the golden years of life, too. Build a storehouse of precious memories and relationships that are an emotional larder, if you will. It’s good for survival in hard times, and it is good for making life better in all times!

I’m providing one of my favorite cookie recipes below. Make some cookies to share while you listen to someone you care about share with you what’s on their heart, or do something memorable together. Focus on those who are important to build memories that will sustain you in the times to come.

Sarah’s Recipe for Triple Chocolate Chip Cookies

Ingredients:

  • 1/2 cup unsalted butter
  • 1/2 cup white sugar
  • 1/4 cup packed light brown sugar
  • 1 large egg
  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1 1/8 cups flour
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/3 cup semi-sweet chocolate chips
  • 1/3 cup white chocolate chips
  • 1/3 cup milk chocolate chips (or substitute extra of either other type of chocolate chip, if milk chocolate unavailable)

Procedures:

  1. Preheat oven to 375 degrees Fahrenheit.
  2. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper.
  3. Mash the butter, white sugar, and brown sugar together in a large mixing bowl with a spatula or with mixer until creamy and smooth (2-3 minutes).
  4. Add egg and vanilla and whisk vigorously for 30 seconds.
  5. Whisk the flour, salt, and baking soda together in a small bowl; dump into the butter mixture and mix until combined.
  6. Fold the semi-sweet chocolate chips, white chocolate chips, and milk chocolate chips into the mixture.
  7. Arrange dough onto the prepared baking sheet using a small scoop or large spoon.
  8. Bake in preheated oven until golden brown, about 10 minutes.
  9. Remove from oven and allow to cool on the sheet for 10 minutes; then transfer to a wire rack to finish cooling completely.
  10. Makes 12-16 cookies. (I often make a double batch and freeze the extra, but they don’t last long.)


Letter: Road Maps

Hugh,

On two recent trips this summer, one two week trip to eastern Pennsylvania and one to Las Vegas, I tried to find the old style folding road maps.

In Pennsylvania’s Allentown, Harrisburg, and Philadelphia, and both Pocono’s and New Jersey shore area, at every gas station I stopped at, I asked about folding paper road maps. At some of the more modern stations I was met with a quizzical stare. I finally settled on a Rand McNally book. Fortunately, having grown up in that area, I knew my way around. I did find a paper map of the Las Vegas and Nevada area. My point is we should get these maps now because people are now depending on Google maps, GPS, and other electronic means of navigation.

Places to look now for these maps would be out of the way (older) gas stations or by contacting some of your local auctioneers to ask them to keep a look out for these maps when they do estates of older persons. An old map is better than none, and roads aren’t moved that often. Another good source are the “Gazetteer” State maps. While they are bulky books, they also have back dirt roads and trails in them. C B





Odds ‘n Sods:

This path never ends well: First mercy killing of minor in Belgium – DSV

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Muslim Horde Storms Through Mall of American on Eid Al Adha Holiday. It’s like Black Friday but in September. – B.B.

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Small bomb explodes ahead of New Jersey road race; no injuries – C.L.

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Dallas Cop, Demetrick Pennie, Sues Black Lives Matter And Associates For Inciting Race War – DMS

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What The Media Is Not Telling YOU About The Muslim In New York Who Hacked An Officer With A Cleaver. Read His Own Confession To Become A Muslim Jihadi Martyr – B.B.



Hugh’s Quote of the Day:

“Your glorying is not good. Know ye not that a little leaven leaveneth the whole lump? Purge out therefore the old leaven, that ye may be a new lump, as ye are unleavened. For even Christ our passover is sacrificed for us” – 1 Corinthians 5:6-7 (KJV)





Guest Article: The Real Dirt About Gardening For Survival, by Melisa Mink

I know the “survival” mindset is very popular right now. There’s always a new threat of earthquakes, pandemic, flooding, wild fires, and so on. So, I would like to take a minute to pass on some truthful knowledge to the folks who are not avid gardeners but may find themselves in a disaster or other scenario where it could be a needed skill to survive. You need to be doing it now, to know how to do it later! Should a disaster, such as an earthquake or other event ever occur, your mind, body, and resources will be pushed yet limited to what they are accustomed to dealing with normally. If you do not normally make yourself garden, weed, problem solve for bugs, understand soil needs, et cetera, you will be even less able to cope in a “survival” type situation because of stress and scarce resources. In short, practice makes perfect. You need to practice these skills now, before you regret it.

Let me share with you the attitude of the proud– those who will starve in a survival situation. A few years ago, I attended church with a pretty wealthy family whose kids really liked my garden and decided to put their own together the following year. The parents, being accustomed to having everything they ever needed at the drop of a hat, wouldn’t even help the kids except to till the ground. I asked the Dad what he would do, not having any skills in that area, if a crisis or survival situation actually called for him to provide for his family with his own two hands. To my surprise, he says to me, “How hard can it be to throw some seeds out there?” Well, my first thought (after choking on his prideful attitude) was obviously, “You wouldn’t know.” My vocal answer to him was this, “If you think you can sit on some stock of seeds and just get out there when you’re hungry and think you’re going to have the know-how to deal with issues or overcome the learning curve required to get food on the table, you’re going to go hungry.” It takes years of practice to learn to do anything well, no matter your career, interest, hobby, or sport. Even seasoned farmers and gardeners will tell you it’s a game every year. The skills needed to know how to react and knowing what to do for certain things, like diseases or bugs, need to be gained years before you actually have to do it for provision. Read the book before you take the test. Don’t think seeds will just grow themselves. That is the gardener’s job. As God said, “He put man in the garden to tend and keep it”. And believe me it takes a lot of tending and keeping, even for a small garden. We fill up the kid’s wagon to haul to the garden. It takes a few trips on the day we plant tomatoes. We grow some in every color. This makes it super fun for teaching the kids about an agrarian lifestyle and how important these skills are. They will always remember purple and orange tomatoes. 🙂 ?

The next topic I want to share is size or the amount of land required to produce the proper amount of food needed. You cannot grow two tons of food on a 0.25 acre lot. I’m sorry to bust your bubble; it ain’t going to happen. I’ve tried and tried. To my disappointment, it’s a joke. Make sure that you can grow things on a large enough scale to actually feed your family. Most big producers will not fit into a raised bed. Reserve the beds for small fruits, like strawberries, lettuce, spinach, squash, and some bushy plants, if needing to save space. In a real survival situation, you will need room to grow hearty things like corn, potatoes, beans, peas, and such. Listen to people who have lived through a war or famine. It’s all those type crops that got them through. A few raised beds will not keep you fed, unless you are very diligent about succession planting, have a green house for winter, and can eat greens everyday. There are ways to do it smaller with a green house, but that is going to require a lot of work and energy. So get busy figuring it out now. You cannot do the big producers and hearty things successfully in raised beds and get very much food. ?

You can do some of these things in a large green house in winter. I know an Amish man that rotates his poultry and early spring growing in a huge green house, and that works. However, farming is his full time job. Maybe you should consider getting one if your budget will allow. To feed a family of even just four, most of the year, you are going to need at least 1/3 to 1/2 an acre garden. And you’ll still need to succession plant. Keeping up with a garden is a rewarding way to live, but like the Amish friend told my husband once, “There’s only so much time in a day.” Decide to get proactive now rather than later. The people who can pull a rabbit out of the hat, garden for 50 all year on .25 an acre or less, are full-time gardeners with nothing else going on, with paid help, and that is their full-time job. For most people it isn’t realistic. If doing fruit trees or fruit, you’ll need more space or try edible landscaping. They do not go into that figure of 1/2 acre for a family of four. They are extra and need their own space. I know how frustrating it can be to spend so much time trying to get enough food to make it worth my time, only to end up with a few cobs of corn, a few melons, a few tomatoes, and a few peppers at the end. That was when I did it on .25 acre lot. Now, I don’t even play. My kids and I grow a full acre garden of veggies with no problem every year. I learned to throw out the books, roll up my sleeves, and figure it out myself. Some books are helpful, like seed saving books, but sometimes sweat gives you better results. For more production, try the oldies but goodies; the big producers are those row crops mentioned below. Look at these crops for the most bang for your time and money. *We must have caught someone’s eye, because the helicopters searching for weed, fly over us often. I guess one lady and a bunch a kids growing an acre garden is really something suspicious. Lol…I’ve learned to just ignore it. The kids think it’s cool. 🙁 ?

?We plant around 200-300 tomatoes each year. Everyone joins in, and we haul them and plant them together. I thank God for these times with the children. ? We haul in some of the strangest things. We grow fancy melons, cucumbers, and things that produce well. If it can’t hang with our heat, it’s gone. It must be a good producer, or it’s not worth our time. ?I haul some of the strangest things out of the garden as well! They just grab on, and who can resist a piggy back ride? Go for row crops. Quit wasting your time with things that don’t produce as much. To try it out, till up the whole yard if needed. I did when we lived in the suburbs. Our entire back yard had to be sodded when we moved. It was the only way I could get what I wanted out of the garden, and I still needed more space. Maybe you could invest in a piece of land or rent a place where you can grow row crops that will yield more than what you could ever eat. Beans, peas, melons, and squash/zuccinini, corn, okra, potatoes, sweet potaoes and all the things old timers grew are the best producers. They were doing it well before all these new fangled ways became popular, and they were getting enough food to eat. In other words, if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. Row crops are your staples and usually your items that give you more nutrients as well. But you must get varieties that are good for your climate and soil. Your local co-op and other farmers around you will be one of the best places to look for those items that will be of real use. What do the locals consistently grow with success? Around here it’s G-90 corn or Silver Queen sweet corn. I tried for years, wasting much time and money on other “better” varieties. Heirloom corn cannot keep up here, and it’s a total waste of our time and money, just to be let down. Finally I gave in and now grow either one of those two, and I have an abundance each year. What a waste to spend your time and money on something unproductive when all you need to do is ask around and give it a try. ? We grow an heirloom variety of purple okra that is found at the local farm supply for a very cheap price. The co-op seeds are also tons cheaper than these fancy seed catalogs. I do grow the fancy stuff. We have a tomato in every color of the rainbow. We have orange water melons and even a white cucumber. It took years of trying to see what would and would not work well in our soil, climate, and garden. The local co-op seeds are usually native to the area and do better than seeds from other places. We also know how to bring in the bacon, by sticking to some row crop staples that don’t go out of style, like purple hull peas and green beans. By growing these in large quantities we feel our time is worth the effort. If you’ve spent lots of money on a heirloom seeds that will not survive your climate or produce little to nothing, you will starve. If it comes from similar climates in another country, it might work as well. One of the best buys I ever made was on winter squash seeds from a Guatemalan Blue Squash. It is the only winter squash that can take our heat and humidity in Mississippi and still be very productive. Even though all the seed catalogs have Watham Butternut as a favorite, ours always bombed. There was nothing but a couple of raggedy little squash for all my time and work. It’s better suited for the north and cannot hang with the southern heat. The squash from Guatemala, however, is an awesome producer here. I am always shocked at how much we get off of one 30ft trellis. Below is a medium-sized one. They get huge and put out loads of squash. It’s worth my time to get that food. I wouldn’t know this if I had not been actively trying to figure out these things before it could be a needed skill. And though I hope the grocery store is always an option, if anything happens we can do it. ? ?

You need to make sure you have enough seeds to do the job. Buying from the co-op makes this affordable. Buying from an expensive seed supplier does not cut it if you need seeds by the pound. Johnnyseeds.com is a good one for online bulk purchases of seeds. I always plant more than what I need, and end up glad I did. I garden with kids and critters with two and four legs around me all day. There is no planning for some of the unreal things that happen around here. So whether it is a natural disaster, like a storm or the dogs chasing a rabbit through my beans, I plan for that by planting twice as much as I wanted to get, so I at least get what I needed to get in the first place. In raised beds, row crops, or in seed starting, this has saved our food every year in some way. Also go into it easy and if the soil has never been worked, don’t be ashamed of using a chemical fertilizer just to get started. We did. Then we have weaned ourselves into an organic approach on most things by using our animals’ manure and other composted material. Lime for the soil is all natural and most soils need to be tested to see if you need it. ?Dogs are a great investment. Not only do they keep away would-be thieves, they also keep away varmints that will kill a good crop. Rabbits, coon, deer, or you name it, our dogs are our first line of defense in protecting our food supply. Last but not least, humble yourself before it’s too late. Make friends with the older folks around you, and there is a free flowing well of knowledge right at your finger tips. If you are not actively gardening, take a class or get with someone who is to get you started now! You will need these people as a life line of support as well as learning from them or to trade with in a disaster situation. In bad times, if you are a stranger, they will have nothing to do with you, because you will be a threat to them and their food supply. A friend/pastor to third world countries once told me, morals go out the door when you’re hungry. People who are normally upright and kind will be killing for food. Those who have it will also be doing the same to protect it. Do not think these folks, who bust their butts and sweat for a living, will befriend you then. Try to form relationships with those in your neighborhood or area of survival now. People who do not know you will laugh at you or “worse” in a crisis situation. They have their own families and lives to watch out for. You are a stranger, and if you intend to make it through you should have been doing what they were doing years ago. Community needs to be formed way ahead of a crisis. Building trust is as important as building a storm shelter. Your work ethic and skills should speak for you. Hard working folks will only look at deeds not words. “New comers are not to be trusted”, is an unwritten rule in the country. Most of the time it’s true. We live in a small community off of the interstate, and new comers are usually trafficking drugs up to other states. Everyone keeps a close eye on newcomers here, because they often mean trouble for small towns or very rural areas. In a crisis, you don’t need others being leery of you, when everyone is high strung and motives will be questioned. You probably will also need to depend on animals at some point, and starting now will give you an understanding of there needs such as food, shelter, pests and diseases. So start evaluating what you can do now rather than later for this learning to begin. We began our homesteading in the suburbs 12 years ago. We had chickens and bunnies. Do whatever you can, where you are now. ? Seriously, I make it a point to befriend old folks. Especially old timers that know how to farm, garden, bee keep and just survive. It’s always a treat to have one old timer or another stop by to check in on me and my family and offer garden tips. We chew the fat and carry on about farm stuff and local gossip. My bee man is near ninety years old (he won’t tell me for sure), and he still brings me goodies and offers tips that help me in some way every time he comes by. Thank God my husband isn’t the jealous type, because I’ve got a lot of old timers for miles to help me when I need it. They know I want to learn, and they love that a younger person has time for them and wants their knowledge. There’s a different older man almost daily coming by to check in on my projects and offer wisdom. They love sharing wisdom and our family is loving the learning we get to do and friendships we have made. One near and dear to us passed away a year ago, but right up to his death he taught me things. This man was near ninety as well and went out and wild harvested some Sassafras root for me, so I could have Sassafras tea like he had growing up. I already knew what it was, but I thanked him and came home to make my tea, because he cared enough to take the time to dig it for me. Sassafras was the original base for root beer. It’s slightly spicy and good served warm with honey. It was a major staple crop for colonial Americans to sell to England. ?

The lesson was to be sure to invest your time learning now, because when you need it you’ll have the proper skills. If it’s ever a game changer and you have to do it for survival, you cannot afford to be unskilled, unlearned, and out of shape. I hope you found this helpful. Now, I’m going to pick my okra and sweat for a while. 🙂 *I’ll be teaching a class on Basic Soap Making With or Without Electricity at the National Preppers & Suvivalists Expo in Baton Rouge, March 4-5th 2017! Check it out at NPSexpo.com Make plans now to attend! This article originally appeared in Homesteadmoma.com