Big Production Declines From The World Largest Silver Producers
o o o
Remember those horrible, Sacajawea dollar coins they tried to Force on us ? – T.P.
o o o
How Russia’s Energy Giant Imploded
o o o
Learning along with Wranglerstar: Punching a Hole In Steel
o o o
St. Paul shooting leaves a clear lesson. But too late for one young man. – J.C.
o o o
The Slaughter of Babies – D.S.
o o o
EMP Trash Can Faraday Cage Testing in Lab – K.S.
o o o
“…much of what passes before our eyes may be invisible to a brain that is focused on something else.” – Michael Shermer
On August 6, 1945, the United States of America dropped the first Atomic bomb on Japan. The bomb, though small by today’s standards, possessed more power than 20,000 tons of TNT, a destructive force equal to the load of 2,000 B-29s and more than 2,000 times the blast power of what was previously the world’s most devastating bomb. While the effect of the bomb on the outcome of the war is still debated today, one thing is sure–Pandora’s box had been opened. Even today, the fear of a single nuclear bomb in the hands of an unstable government sends chills down the spine. To date, the U.S.A. is the only country to have ever used nuclear bombs in a military attack on another country.
o o o
Today, we present another entry for Round 60 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The $10,000 worth of prizes for this round include:
First Prize:
Second Prize:
Third Prize:
Round 60 ends on September 30th, so get busy writing and e-mail us your entry. Remember that there is a 1,500-word minimum, and that articles on practical “how to” skills for survival have an advantage in the judging.
A recent post commented on how it is next to impossible to grow one’s own food. It’s very hard work, has a difficult and long learning curve, but it can be done. This essay explains how to efficiently grow and store your own food. You can learn from our mistakes. Both my sets of grandparents farmed with a team of mules. We know a couple in a county north of us who farm using with a team of mules; they are able to feed themselves, the mules, and also customers at a farmer’s market.
I’m 73 years old and retired. I grew up in West Tennessee. Both my wife and I have a PhD in biophysical chemistry and have worked in academia and in the pharmaceutical business. Our scientific background in biochemistry is extensive. Now for my experience in farming, I grew up on a Farmall A tractor. My dad worked for the USDA, in the Soil Conservation Service. He used almost all of his vacation time building up the farm. At various times we had horses, turkeys, goats, chickens, pigs, and always cattle. We, at one time or another, grew soybeans, corn, cotton, and always hay. We had a sizable veggie garden. My mom did not work, and she put up much produce each summer. We always had two large freezers full of meat and veggies.
For the last six years, we’ve farmed on a 2.65 acre minifarm and sold veggies at local farmer’s markets. This essay is based on our farming experience and biochemical knowledge.
I’ve found repeatedly that city folk who have never grown or raised any amount of their own food do not really understand very much about agriculture. The anecdotes in Barbara Kingsolver’s wonderful book, Animal, Vegetable, Miracle, demonstrate this all too well. I’d figure that maybe 3% of Americans would recognize an asparagus plant in July.
One may grow enough food for one year for one person in 8000 square feet of good, correctly fertilized, full sun, away from trees, soil. As Ragnar Benson correctly points out in his recent book, Survival End Game, mechanization is essential. Every task that can be mechanized should be. One needs to use efficient irrigation systems that do not require dragging a hose around a half acre. Sprinkler irrigation is to be avoided, especially for those of the cucurbit family, as it will lead to powderey mildew. Carol Deppe’s suggestion to first focus on high calorie content crops that are easily stored is great advice.
I consider these to be absolutely essential books:
The Resilient Gardener by Carol Deppe. Read this first.
Seed to Seed Suzanne Ashworth. This is the Bible on saving your own seed, which is an essential skill.
Root Cellaring by Mike and Nancy Bubel (You need a root cellar to benefit from this.)
How to Dry Foods by Deanna DeLong
The Art of Balancing Soil Nutrients William McKibben (There’s more on this subject later in the article.)
Diet for a Small Planet by Frances Moore Lappe. (This is essential to learn how to correctly combine a legume and a grain to give the optimal mix of the eight essential amino acids we humans need to consume. As a general rule a mix of 80% grain and 20% legume, by dry weight, works well.)
More-With-Less Doris Janzen Longacre, Herald Press, Scottsdale PA (If you only have one cookbook for hard times, this is IT! The Mennonite Central Committee of Akron PA commissioned this book. It has a great chapter on making soap with a novel idea I’ve not seen elsewhere about how to best “cure” the soap.)
First, learn about soils. See who grows what in your area. Go to your local Natural Conservation Resources Service office and County Extension office and learn about soil types. Beware of areas that have lots of rocks in the soil. Before you buy any farmland, get a hand auger and sample the soil in a number of locations to a depth of 18”. You need to know the amount of rocks and the thickness of the topsoil. We’ve spent a great many hours picking up rocks from our veggie plots. Oh, did I mention about full sun and trees? Veggies do best in full sun, which means they need to be at least 50’ away from any trees. Trees suck water out of the soil at a fast rate and water will diffuse from your veggie plot to the trees. However, if you have a tree windbreak to the west and north, it will help.
The second thing to consider is your seed. With few exceptions we use non-hybrid seed. Each year we save a LOT of seed, enough to share with our neighbors when The Crunch comes. Each year we grow a different mix of legumes, so that we will have a large variety of legume seed available. The seeds are stored in the root cellar. (There is more about this below.) We also save seed potatoes in the root cellar. We store seeds in glass mason jars with the air pumped out and in the cool dark root cellar. Insects will not be able to grow if the partial pressure of oxygen is too low. Researchers in Iowa have ascertained that the major factor in seed life is the moisture content. We gently dry legume, winter squash, and similar seeds in an Excalibur dehydrator at 90F.
Here are some suggested seed dealers with extensive listings:
Prices do, however, vary a lot, so do comparison pricing.
For plants to be started as seedlings (e.g., tomato, eggplant, peppers, cucurbits, and cabbage family) the good folks at the University of Tennessee Agriculture Institute strongly advised us to start all our own seedlings in sterile starting soil, and not to buy them. Do you have a small greenhouse in which to start seedlings? We do. Now, Sweetie Pie is a serious experimentalist and has found that adding a ***AMAZON.amazon.com/Grow-More-7508-Hawaiian-1-5-Pound/dp/B00CJJ0ZT6/ref=sr_1_1?s=lawn-garden&ie=UTF8&qid=1438818297&sr=1-1&keywords=soluble+phosphate+solution***soluble phosphate solution to the seedlings on planting them really jump starts them.
First, only grow pole beans. Why is this so important?
Now many years of trying different bean cultivars have shown us that different bean cultivars are attacked by Mexican bean beetles at vastly different rates. One year we grew four different bush bean cultivars, all next to each other, all fertilized identically. One cultivar–the coco rubio– drew the bean beetles like a supermagnet and stripped the leaves clean in several days. Guess what? We will not grow this cultivar ever again. Italian canillini bush beans were also a supermagnet for the Mexican bean beetles, and only a meager harvest was obtained. So we choose from our own field trials cultivars that have the best yield and are least attractive to the bean beetles.
As an aside here… we have two species of weeds that are supermagnets for Japanese beetles. We are in the process of identifying these two species. These, usually very destructive pests, leave every other leaf on the farm alone and focus on just these two weeds. Thus, these weeds serve as a “sacrifice crop.” Chinese cabbage works as a great sacrifice crop next to any plants of the cabbage family. The beetles prefer these leaves to the other leaves.
We grow pole beans on 60” high Red Brand horse fence because horse fence has twice the vertical wires of other fences. At chest height we have a run of 1” PVC pipe with two hose outlets every twenty feet for easy watering of veggies between the pole bean fences. We connect the run of PVC pipe with a hose to yard faucets. The system is easy to drain come late fall. With more vertical wires, one has better separation of the vines for more sunlight and carbon dioxide assimilation. Run the pole bean fence west to east to shade the weeds on the north side of the fence. Plant the bean seeds on the south side of the fence. You will have to help the vines find the fence wires, several times a week for a couple of weeks. Place 2’ high chicken wire around the pole bean fence else Bugs Bunny will chomp the vine 3” off the ground for the sweet sap. Keep the bottom of the fence about 6” or so off the ground for easier weeding. It is important to inoculate your bean seed with the bacteria that fixes nitrogen in the root nodules. Different legume species prefer different strains of the root nodule bacteria. Pull up some of your dying bean vines and examine the density of the root nodules. Dr. Albrecht (more below) showed that 1/16 of an ounce per acre of molybdenum was enough to supply the nodule bacteria with this essential micronutrient that is a cofactor for the enzyme that splits the triple bonded nitrogen molecule. No molybdenum, no root nodules, and no nitrogen from the air gets turned into proteins in the beans. Plant seed 1” deep and 5 to 6 inches apart. Water with a soaker hose or drip irrigation system. Do NOT cultivate when dew is on the leaves else you will efficiently transfer soil pathogens to the leaves.
After trying a great many pole green bean cultivars we find that the Rattlesnake pole green beans are the best. Two shelly pole bean cultivars which are less attacked by the Mexican bean beetle and have good yields are Turkey Craw (16 lbs dry beans per 100 feet of row) and Good Mother Stallard. We are growing this cultivar for the first time, and this is an amazing cultivar. Sweetie Pie told me I was going to pick these beans as the leaves are so big and thick she could not locate the beans under them!
For those living in the south, field peas are the legume of choice. Southern field peas make the most edible seed of any legume. My family in the 1930s called them “lifesavers” for a reason. Rabbits seem to leave these legumes alone in contrast to the damage they will do to any sort of bean plant. Our dry pea yield data per 100 feet of row are: Whipporwill (will climb a fence a la pole beans) 19 pounds and Brown Crowder; 24 pounds. Plant seed only after the soil is warm 1” deep and 8-10 inches apart. I suggest growing the Whipporwill field peas on a fence with soaker hose irrigation.
As Carol Deppe correctly points out, field corn is the grain of choice for a number of reasons. We like the heirloom Bloody Butcher dent field corn for two important reasons: it has the best and most prop roots of any corn I’ve ever seen. This reduces wind damage. Secondly the ears are 5 to 6 feet above the ground and too high for the (expletive deleted) raccoons to reach. Around here both coyotes and raccoons will devastate any sweet corn, so we do not bother with it. Plant seeds 1” deep and 8-9 inches apart, only after the soil is warm. Side dress with 23-7-7 enhanced fertilizer. Your corn leaves should be VERY green if they are getting enough nitrogen. Note that corn is wind pollinated and a corn patch best have at least six adjacent rows. One may always tell a newbie veggie gardener as they will have only one row of corn. Our yield per 100 feet of row is around 40 pounds dry shelled corn. Please note that corn is sold by the bushel, NOT by the protein content. Commercial hybrid corn cultivars are selected to have the most bushels per acre. In doing this, the protein content of the dry corn is considerably less than old heirloom corn with lower bushels per acre.
Now it is critical to note that the niacin in corn is unavailable unless the corn is heated with alkali. In MesoAmerica, folks made tortillas with corn meal and wood ash. One may make hominy by slowly boiling corn with alkali. In Little House on the Prairie, hominy was made by putting wood ashes into a small cotton bag and boiling until the skins came off. Both methods make niacin available. Pellagra results from niacin deficiency. In one of Joe Nobody’s novels a community living off mostly corn suffered badly from pellagra.
HJL,
What do you think of Jade Helm 15? I’ve heard lots of things about this from mild to wild… What say you? – B.D.
HJL Responds: While our minds always have a tendency to fall to the conspiratorial side, I am a firm believer in Occam’s Razor. The more complex an issue is, the more people have to be involved and people are the greatest weakness of any “plan”. JWR and I are in complete agreement on the implications of Jade Helm 15 and its impact on the people in the United States. It is nothing more than a training exercise. The states selected for the training bear more than a passing resemblance to the parts of the world that are in the most turmoil and have the greatest prospects of U.S. military involvement. This allows the military the ability to save money on their training by not having to ship the hardware to and from the overseas destinations just for an exercise. On the surface, that is an acceptable reason for the training that they are engaging in. However, a person would literally have to have their head stuck in the sand to not see the coming civil unrest over the economic situation. I don’t believe it is unreasonable to imagine Baltimore on a national level. The media and TPTB have worked hard to create racial division among the people, and we are seeing that work come to fruition.
In every major natural disaster, the U.S. government has taken heat from the public sectors for not responding in a timely manner, whether it was the responsibility of the government or not to respond in the first place. I see the additional benefit to the military that they are trying to meet this coming civil unrest head on, because they know they will be tasked with dealing with it. The local governments have shown an amazing lack of interest and ability to handle even the most basic trouble situations, and I fully expect riots on a grand scale. However, the danger to you as an individual will probably not be coming from the military. Rather, I believe it will be the roving gangs causing the civil unrest. I believe that that is the long game being played by the government.
I do have friends who fear the time for the rounding up of Christians and the declaration of martial law is just around the corner, but this isn’t it. In the first place, the military does not have the manpower to declare martial law across the nation. In a country of 318 million people, it will take more than 500,000 military personnel to maintain that order. To add to that problem, the average American is more independently minded than the average person found anywhere else in the world and is more likely to ignore, either passively or overtly, any attempt at martial law. The Christian world tends to think of themselves in terms of the Roman persecutions, but in reality, today’s Christian is milquetoast. They are not a danger to the government, and the government knows it.
You can think of the convoys that are being reported across the nation as similar to the reaction of a pregnant woman. When a woman finds out she is pregnant, she suddenly starts realizing how many other women around her are also pregnant. She sees belly bulges everywhere she looks. Since Jade Helm 15 is on everyone’s mind, they think they are seeing more military hardware moving than they normally do, but I suspect the total tonnage of moving hardware is about what is normally moved.
There really is no short-term danger presented by this training exercise. However, the long-term issues do not bode well for the citizen but are in line with moves that the government has made for the past 100 years. Anytime the government gets you to trade a little bit of freedom for a little bit of safety, you will run into problems. The greatest danger will be when you see the military collaborating with the local law enforcement agencies. While the government does not have the military power to declare martial law on their own, they are working towards the federalization of all police forces. The process is well underway and the police forces will willingly allow themselves to be co-opted. We’ve seen it before; just look at the school systems. The once powerful and independent (and actually useful) school systems took the money that the federal government handed out like candy and got hooked on it like it was crack. All the government had to do was threaten to take away that money and the school boards folded. The local law enforcement will be no different, and they are already getting addicted to the money.
Middle Eastern Men Intimidating U.S. Military Families In Colorado & Wyoming – H.L.
o o o
Iran Warns of ‘Third World War’
o o o
Chicago police detained thousands of black Americans at interrogation facility – G.P.
o o o
Shooter At Nashville Movie Theater Now Dead – T.P.
o o o
Rohnert Park Officer Pulls Gun On Man Recording Him On Cellphone – T.P.
“You don’t drive an economy by consuming – the consumer is not the engine, the consumer is the caboose.” – Peter Schiff
August 5th is the sad anniversary of the Mann Gulch Fire in Montana that took the lives of 13 firefighters (including 12 smokejumpers and one former smokejumper), in 1949. The intense, fast-moving forest fire took place in what later became the Gates of the Mountains Wilderness. The events of that fire were chronicled in the book Young Men and Fire by Norman Maclean and immortalized in the haunting lyrics of the ballad Cold Missouri Waters by James Keelaghan.
o o o
Safecastle is currently having a sale on canned meats. SurvivalCave Meats are on sale now and good meat is a must for the protein!
o o o
Today, we present another entry for Round 60 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The $10,000 worth of prizes for this round include:
First Prize:
Second Prize:
Third Prize:
Round 60 ends on September 30th, so get busy writing and e-mail us your entry. Remember that there is a 1,500-word minimum, and that articles on practical “how to” skills for survival have an advantage in the judging.
First, I had to decide where to spend my time bargain hunting and then plan my trip to maximize opportunities. The places where I decided to shop for the remaining necessary “get home” items were:
These are stores that serve as outlets for the donation of goods to support the charity’s mission. Goodwill, DAV, and Salvation Army are the mainstays in this area. These are generally good to browse at, but they can be hard places in which to find bargains, as they get smarter about what things are worth and also as they leverage the Internet to sell higher-end items.
I have found there are also two other generic types of thrift stores. One is run by an individual who is trying to make a profit to support themselves, maybe with a “charity” that they publicize a relationship with. I usually avoid these, as the goods generally seem to come from garage sales that the owner goes to, buys stuff from, and then marks up to near new prices. The other type is a cause related charity that is normally opened by folks in the area who truly want to make a difference. These are usually staffed by volunteers and supported by donations from some of the more well-off people in the area. They have the advantage of higher quality goods and a staff that is not overly knowledgeable about what used items are worth. You can find these supporting cancer, AIDS outreach and prevention, adoption support, and other causes. Many times these are the only sort of thrift store where you can offer less than the amount being asked and the staff will lower the price.
I did some research on the Internet and found two Goodwill stores and one Salvation Army relatively close to each other. I also found two cause-related stores in the area. I allocated an hour and a half to see what I could find at these stores.
From the thrift stores, I was able to procure the following items:
The cost so far has been a mere $9.80.I have more than $90 remaining.
Next I stopped at a dollar store. I don’t normally shop at one, as I have found that most of them don’t seem to sell much of what I want. I had been reading some blogs lately where folks had gotten some good value at them, and I thought I’d give it a try. Now, I am sure that some stores are better than others, but the one I stopped at really didn’t have much that I could use. I did find the following:
The total spent so far is $15.80.
At Walmart, I was able to purchase the following:
My running total of what I’d spent so far was now $56.30. (I still had more than $43 remaining.)
I usually try to avoid the wealthier neighborhoods, as the people who live there tend to believe that what they are selling should still be worth close to what they paid for it. Instead, I like middle class and blue collar neighborhoods, especially those that don’t have a lot of young families selling baby clothes and toys that their kids just outgrew. I used Craig’s list and the local newspaper online classified to search for neighborhood garage sales where there would be quite a few sales within walking distance of each other, and then I checked with some of my co-workers who were locals to find out what kind of neighborhood they were.
From the garage sales, I was able to obtain the following:
My running total at this point is just $73.80. (This leaves me more than $26.)
I also checked Craig’s list (craigslist.com) for tag sales. These have become my favorite sort of sale of late. If you don’t have them in your area, basically they are an estate or moving sale where the owners have hired someone to sell the contents of their home. Everything is for sale, and the person running the sale has no emotional attachment to the goods, so the prices are reasonable and they take offers. The best way to find out about these is by searching Craigslist or by looking for signs posted on corners. Most of the folks running the sale with keep email lists, so ask to be added so you will have advanced notice. I found two tag sales listed and used the GPS to navigate to them.
From the tag sales, I purchased:
The grand total was $104.80! Honestly, I thought it would be less than this, but overall I think I did pretty good. At the end of my stay, I packed up the stuff I wanted to keep in the used Samsonite I bought and then I donated the food to a food pantry and the larger stuff (shovel, water jug, and so forth) to the local Salvation Army (for a tax write-off).
I did attend a farm/estate sale on Sunday in a nearby town. At that sale, I could have picked up a couple of five gallon plastic fuel cans for $2 each, as well as a 12ga Stevens pump shotgun with shells for $45. I passed on this because I really didn’t need the fuel cans since the trip was imaginary and it would have been a violation of federal law for me to buy a shotgun from a private party when in a state I was not a resident. In an emergency situation, I would not have worried about it.
Overall, I think I would have been able to make it home as planned. More food, especially dried camping food, would probably be a good idea, but that would have blown the budget. Maybe some day when I am retired I can try this for real. In the meantime, I might take a weekend and simulate the foot travel portion of this hypothetical journey, using the stuff I gathered for it to see how it works. Please feel free to let me know what you think I missed out on, including what I wasted money or time on, and what else I could have done better
HJL,
I thought that live ammunition is banned from the US Mail. If so, would he to UPS his stuff to that address, with proper ORM-D labeling?
Or, could he mail the rifle and then carry the ammo in checked luggage? – C
HJL Responds: You can send a “long gun” or an antique through the U.S. mail, but you can not send a modern handgun or live ammunition. I have heard of people in the past sending things through that should not have been sent, but I would strongly encourage you NOT to do that. You never know when the contents of your package are going to be examined, either by physical inspection or other means, and the visit from the feds you will get will not be pleasant, nor will the all-expenses paid vacation in the Federal holding facility be any fun. It’s just not worth it when you have legal alternatives, such as FedEx or UPS available.
8 Financial Experts That Are Warning That A Great Financial Crisis Is Imminent – B.B.
o o o
Fed Finally Figures Out Soaring Student Debt Is Reason For Exploding College Costs
o o o
Iceland Recovering Fastest in Europe After Jailing Bankers Instead of Bailing them Out – C.C.
o o o
o o o
Items from Mr. Econocobas:
Video Interview: Chris Martenson-$40 Trillion Lost in Next Crash – Great interview worth listening if you can.
Sir, I have read through the movie list of recommended viewing and find it very good. However I did not see a series that I consider to be very instructive not only for post-nuclear living but general life in any SHTF scenario. Please consider viewing “Jericho: the series.” Our EMA office actually uses this series in our CERT training, as does the local Ham club. – C.Y.
o o o
We have been small scale animal husbandry farming and gardening for years. Here are books we refer to over and over. – S.Y.
Practical hands on animal info/health treatment.
Handbook of Livestock Management Techniques by RA Battaglia and VB Mayrose
Preserving food.
Preserving the Fruits of the Earth by Stanley Schuler and Elizabeth Meriwether Schuler (This book is like having your grandmother or great-grandmother in your kitchen.)
Stocking Up; How to Preserve the Foods You Grow, Naturally by the staff of Organic Gardening and Farming. (This book gives detailed info, including blue prints to build various underground storage, with timetables on everything from canning to curing meats.)
This is why you don’t draw on a drawn gun! – JFJ
This is an excellent short training film using actual security camera footage. Warning: Very Graphic! Very Violent, but it makes the point quite well. – HJL
o o o
50 Reasons Why Preppers Need Vinegar in Their Stockpiles – D.S.
o o o
o o o
35 acre farm in Virginia being raffled off for $200 and an essay. – J.C.
o o o
2 immigrants in US illegally are named to city commissions – MtH