Notes for Tuesday – December 16, 2014

December 16th, 1928, was the birthday of Philip K. Dick, who died March 2, 1982. He penned a remarkable number of sci-fi novels and novellas that have been adapted into movies, including Blade Runner, Total Recall, Screamers, Impostor, Minority Report, Paycheck, A Scanner Darkly, Next, and The Adjustment Bureau. Though he had a troubled personal life (with drug use and several failed marriages), his captivating books certainly had a knack for envisioning potential futures.

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Today, we present another entry for Round 56 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The $12,000+ worth of prizes for this round include:

First Prize:

  1. A Gunsite Academy Three Day Course Certificate, good for any one, two, or three course (a $1,195 value),
  2. A course certificate from onPoint Tactical. This certificate will be for the prize winner’s choice of three-day civilian courses. (Excluding those restricted for military or government teams.) Three day onPoint courses normally cost $795,
  3. DRD Tactical is providing a 5.56 NATO QD Billet upper with a hammer forged, chromlined barrel and a hard case to go with your own AR lower. It will allow any standard AR type rifle to have quick change barrel which can be assembled in less then one minute without the use of any tools and a compact carry capability in a hard case or 3-day pack (an $1,100 value),
  4. Gun Mag Warehouse is providing 30 DPMS AR-15 .223/5.56 30 Round Gray Mil Spec w/ Magpul Follower Magazines (a value of $448.95) and a Gun Mag Warehouse T-Shirt. An equivalent prize will be awarded for residents in states with magazine restrictions.
  5. Two cases of Mountain House freeze dried assorted entrees in #10 cans, courtesy of Ready Made Resources (a $350 value),
  6. A $300 gift certificate from CJL Enterprize, for any of their military surplus gear,
  7. A 9-Tray Excalibur Food Dehydrator from Safecastle.com (a $300 value),
  8. A $300 gift certificate from Freeze Dry Guy,
  9. A $250 gift certificate from Sunflower Ammo,
  10. KellyKettleUSA.com is donating both an AquaBrick water filtration kit and a Stainless Medium Scout Kelly Kettle Complete Kit with a combined retail value of $304,
  11. TexasgiBrass.com is providing a $300 gift certificate, and
  12. Two cases of meals, Ready to Eat (MREs), courtesy of CampingSurvival.com (a $180 value).

Second Prize:

  1. A Glock form factor SIRT laser training pistol and a SIRT AR-15/M4 Laser Training Bolt, courtesy of Next Level Training, which have a combined retail value of $589,
  2. A FloJak EarthStraw “Code Red” 100-foot well pump system (a $500 value), courtesy of FloJak.com,
  3. Acorn Supplies is donating a Deluxe Food Storage Survival Kit with a retail value of $350,
  4. The Ark Instituteis donating a non-GMO, non-hybrid vegetable seed package–enough for two families of four, seed storage materials, a CD-ROM of Geri Guidetti’s book “Build Your Ark! How to Prepare for Self Reliance in Uncertain Times”, and two bottles of Potassium Iodate– a $325 retail value,
  5. $300 worth of ammo from Patriot Firearms and Munitions. (They also offer a 10% discount for all SurvivalBlog readers with coupon code SVB10P),
  6. A $250 gift card from Emergency Essentials,
  7. Twenty Five books, of the winners choice, of any books published by PrepperPress.com (a $270 value),
  8. TexasgiBrass.com is providing a $150 gift certificate,
  9. Organized Prepper is providing a $500 gift certificate, and
  10. RepackBox is providing a $300 gift certificate to their site.

Third Prize:

  1. A Royal Berkey water filter, courtesy of Directive 21 (a $275 value),
  2. A large handmade clothes drying rack, a washboard, and a Homesteading for Beginners DVD, all courtesy of The Homestead Store, with a combined value of $206,
  3. Expanded sets of both washable feminine pads and liners, donated by Naturally Cozy (a $185 retail value),
  4. Two Super Survival Pack seed collections, a $150 value, courtesy of Seed for Security,
  5. Mayflower Trading is donating a $200 gift certificate for homesteading appliances,
  6. Ambra Le Roy Medical Products in North Carolina is donating a bundle of their traditional wound care and first aid supplies, with a value of $208,
  7. APEX Gun Parts is donating a $250 purchase credit,
  8. Montie Gear is donating a Y-Shot Slingshot and a Locking Rifle Rack (a $379 value).

Round 56 ends on January 31st, 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.



Your Bags Are Packed, But Are You Ready To Go? by M.T.

The world isn’t safe and never has been. Read the headlines– financial collapse, terrorism, unemployment, rising crime, drugs, water shortages, distrust of government, all of which should give us pause to reflect on our future if we are realists. If these are not enough, the new clips from Ferguson, Missouri may give us pause to reflect. These are just some of the main reasons the prepper community exists and flourishes. Fear of the future, which is unknown, is a common human emotion. We all desire to be safe and secure, but can we ever really be? Will civilization, as we know it, end in our lifetimes, and if so what can we do about it? We have prepared, stockpiled, learned to garden, honed our firearm skills, learned hunting and trapping, but have we prepared mentally and spiritually for the future that we may face? It’s true the world isn’t a safe place and will probably never be, but that has always been a part of life. Ask the farmers in Oklahoma during the dust bowl day or the original Pilgrims who came over with an axe and shotgun and built this nation. There are always uncertainties and the fears that follow. So should we prepare? You bet. Should we be ready to leave when disaster strikes? We certainly should have a plan. How then should I mentally prepare myself, my family, or my community to be better prepared to meet an uncertain future? To do that we need to understand what drives us and how to interpret those drives.

Uncertainty and fear– the ugly twins we never really wanted. We have the gift of imagination, even from an early age. I’m realizing this more from my grandchildren. Imagination helps us dream big, drives our creativity, and makes our world more exciting but also much more scary. We learn from an early age that the world is not a safe place. The ability to fear is natural to us. It is something that we inherit and don’t actually have to learn, although it is re-enforced in today’s society, which in intent on developing fear in our lives. Fear attacks us because it attacks what we value. For instance, if we value family, then every headline will have us double locking our doors or packing our bags. If we value money, then every drop in the market will warn us to sell our stocks, buy gold and silver, and head for the hills. If we value safety, then every headline will bring worry about our safety and how to protect my children. We have made our plans, prepared our bug-out bags, but are we mentally and spiritually prepared? Our family has been thinking a lot about this by watching an old TV series, that had a short life span, named Jericho. Every series finds the people innovative, energetic, solving huge problems, but they’re unprepared mentally and spiritually as the events unfold. I won’t spoil the series for those of you who haven’t watched. However, while the innovation and problem solving are great, the poor mental and spiritual preparation has them questioning themselves constantly. Having a proper understanding of fear will help us to understand ourselves and what we cherish most in this world and what we will do to maintain control. Sun Tzu, a wise Chinese General, in his treatise on The Art of War made his famous statement “know your enemy and know yourself and you shall not fear a thousand battles.” We have spent a great deal of time and effort knowing what we believe to be our enemies but spent so little time in understanding our make-up as human beings and how we react to fear and the unknown. Without a proper understanding, we can never truly be prepared and will continue to run from one problem to another.

We like to be scared, and we learn this from an early age. From the stories we tell around the campfire to the nightmarish tales we tell as teens, to the thrills we seek at the amusement park most of our lives we choose to be afraid. We actually train ourselves to be fearful, which can impact our adult perceptions on the reasons to flee. A sense of fear makes us feel alive; remember your first time on a roller coaster or the high-speed thrill ride in your first car? As we mature to adulthood and read the newspaper or watch the evening news, we realize the threats to our freedoms and that our way of life seems at risk. This produces in us anxiety, as well as the need for preparation, because what we value seems to be at risk. Since we live in a somewhat free country and have the ability to make our own choices, that should resolve our fears, but it doesn’t, because now we have the increased pressure of personal failure, especially on that decision on when to leave.

We shouldn’t be alarmed from fear’s presence, because fear is resident in every man, woman, and child in the world, although it manifests itself in different ways with different people. The story comes from the Bible, Genesis 3:7 and following when after sinning in the Garden their vulnerability or as the Bible put it their “nakedness” left them vulnerable, estranged from the Creator who just earlier before enjoyed their fellowship and community. The very next verse tells of the results of that transgression: separation, fear, hiding, and blame shifting, which is as common today in every man and women as it was back in biblical times. Why is this important for our consideration? First, if we have no peace with God, we will always be on the run, vulnerable, and fearful. This condition will cause us to make poor decisions. Think for a moment about what the first couple did– hiding from the Creator behind bushes and fig leafs? This is a camouflage technique that should be avoided at all costs!

We fear losing what we cherish. Having our bags packed is only the first step, though an important one, in preparation. Proper interpretation of the circumstances in which we find ourselves is what is needed before we pull the trigger and leave. Of vital importance is proper interpretation. Remember Y2K? Many left homes, family, and good jobs, fearing the worst. When it didn’t happen, they had to return to normal civilization and resume life as it was with a lot less money and many regrets. There are more than a few that had given up preparation because of the mistakes of the past. Proper interpretation is key to understanding if and when we should leave. One key to this interpretation is being able to understand the fears of life and what they reveal about us. It is essential in mental and spiritual preparation that those things we fear reveal more about us than about what we fear.

Danger and fear are curious twins, which we need to be able to understand and interpret. Danger links us to being vulnerable, needy, and the ability to get our lives in control. Isn’t that one of the driving links to the prepper community? We need to interpret the fears we have of our way of life collapsing and interpret how that makes us vulnerable. We may ask ourselves some questions like what is it I love or desire so much that I’m willing to leave all I cherish behind? If you are a person to whom relationships are of utmost importance and you can’t stand silence, you might want to understand that before you flee to a place where you are very alone. Our fears are instructive and point to the things we really care about.

Who’s driving, and why can’t I be in control? One thing of which we can be certain is that the circumstances of life draw us to be fearful. Ever read the headlines? If so you may feel that you want to leave right now, as I sometimes do, just to escape the madness and be left alone! Being part of the prepper community feels like we are always being driven, since there is simply so much to do and never enough resources or time to get it all done. We need to manage our world, prepare, work, plan, pray, learn new skills, build community, and extend relationships. The last one– relationship building– is vital; since we can never do everything ourselves, we better have others around in our communities who can help. Is our busyness self imposed or imposed by others? Are we driven by the ever-changing circumstances, or do we have purpose in our plans? More than anything else, we need to understand what is driving us. Is it a desire for a better lifestyle? Less stress? A simpler way of life? Or, is it fear?

Control is something we all desire but which seems just slightly out of reach. You understand, don’t you? You spend time and money in preparation and when finished with some project, you realize something on the list is still lacking or worse! When something happens, we realize more gaps in our preparations and we begin to plan again; it’s a never-ending cycle. Every level of preparation lifts us to a new state of readiness, but it also brings along the baggage of obtaining new knowledge to manage what we now understand and need to control. Control is something we desire but never fully realize in this life, because basically we are not ultimately in control. We understand we lack control when fear, anxiety, and concern over what may happen or what the future holds brings fears to our heart. If you doubt that, then why are you even in the prepper community? Our community is based off some fear and a lot of common sense, because we know things are not right, at least according to our moral compass. Decisions based off worry or anxiety cloud our thinking and make us vulnerable to pulling the trigger to leave before necessity dictates, only causing us to return to begin again.

There are several relationships between those who worry and the prepper community, which we need to understand, as we make preparation and also to help mature our decision process. First, preppers live in the present for the future, but our preparations are usually based off past events that we have either suffered through or read about. Ultimately, we do not control the future, so details of the future are still cloudy. If you doubt that, think about housing prices the last ten years. Preppers also react to crises in the present and how those will impact them in the future. As adults, we have the ability to use our imagination to envision the future, which doesn’t currently exist normally with all of the vivid details of a modern animated movie. Because of this, we are all prone to veer out of control, imagining the worst, and not using reason in our decision-making process. This is the normal human condition; we have worry, anxiety, distrust, and fear built into our lives. We are desperately seeking control in an out–of-control world. The only solution is to prepare and trust the future to a Sovereign God, who is ultimately in control.

To summarize:

  1. You will need to understand the link between your personal vulnerability and needs, as they have a tendency to drive decision-making. You need to understand what you need (freedom, less stress, safety, et cetera), since they point to what you value in life, and when those thing are restricted or taken away they drive us to do what we can to protect them. Understanding your needs will point to your personal vulnerabilities and the things we fear and bring some clarity to your decision-making. You will need to ask yourself questions, such as “will my future destination fulfill those needs?” If not then you can be assured that more prepping and fleeing lay in your future.
  2. You need to understand if you have a need to manage your world? Does the daily newscast add more to your to-do list for preparation? Chances are you are a driven person, and driven people make poor decisions because everything is situation dependent on the current circumstances, the latest news, and/or current trends. It’s better to realize and trust that the future doesn’t belong to us, not that we cannot or shouldn’t prepare, but that we be of like mind to see the signs of the time and what they point to and let them, and not media, drive our decisions.
  3. You need to develop firm exit criteria about those things that will cause you to leave with your loved ones and/or before you decide. Making a decision to leave is fleeing, pure and simple, and it is important to understand why the decision is being made and under what criteria the decision has been made. Understand what you are fleeing from, your exit criteria, and the kind of life and environment of what you are fleeing to. Ensure your destination will meet the expectations of your exit criteria, write it all down, discuss, and pray about it with your family/community before you go.
  4. Is your conscience clear? Much can be said about the conscience– that inner guide that tells us when we are wrong and confirms when we are acting right. The Bible is instructive here, “The wicked flee when no one is pursuing but the righteous are bold as a lion.” Lions may be king of the jungle, but if you study the nature of lions they know their vulnerabilities, strengths, and weaknesses. They are strong because they know their environment, know their strengths, and understand the dangers in the areas they prowl. When a strong wind blows behind them, they don’t simply run-away, because like Sun Tzu stated, they know themselves. Those that don’t know themselves will always be frightful and timid and ready to flee at the slightest provocation. Animals, it is believed, don’t have a conscience but do have instincts; we, as humans, have both. So clear your conscience, mend relationship, get peace with God, and live within the law of the land; trust God, and He will clear your conscience so that being righteous you also can be bold like a lion and have clarity in your decision making.

A proposed menu of family discussion items to help in mental and spiritual preparedness:

  1. Have a family discussion about some of the current headlines and how they impact each member of the family. Identify their fears; then talk about previous fears and how they have played out in their lives. This can help people see if their fears are based in reality.
  2. Have a family or group discussion about what each person values. How would they react if those values were taken away? How do they react when those values are threatened?
  3. Discuss the relationship between their personal fears and the values they believe are threatened. Are they based in reality? Will these fears subside when you are at your alternative location? If not, what can be done to alleviate those fears now, before you carry them to another location.
  4. For those interested in religion, discuss Genesis 3 with your family. Do you see yourself in this story? Are you trying to camouflage yourself from something or someone? Do you run away from relationship, responsibility, or even from God?
  5. Discuss with your family how each individual feels vulnerable and how the family or group has helped them overcome that feeling. If they haven’t overcome those vulnerabilities, work these out before any major decision to leave.


Letter Re: The Care and Feeding of a Woodstove

Hugh –

I enjoyed Jim’s article “The Care and Feeding of a Woodstove“. We have a Blaze King Sirocco free-standing wood stove that, so far, we are very well pleased with, and, no, there is no financial interest involved. As the good ‘ol (sarc on) EPA has proposed new, tougher rules on emissions, this one was the best we could find with the lowest emissions.

Like Jim, we heat a lot with wood, with propane back-up, our home is approximately 2500 square feet, and seems to be well insulated. We use mostly pine and fir; our kindling is split from same.

However, unlike Jim, I am a paraplegic, confined to a wheelchair. We purchase our firewood from local sources, pick it ourselves, and stack it ourselves (the wife, grandson, and myself). Most of the firewood is split, however some “chunks” need to be split further. Needless to say, it’s hard to properly handle an axe while in a wheelchair!

Enter the “Smartsplitter”. This contraption is excellent for me to use in my condition. Basically, it is a weight that you slam down on a wedge which is on the wood you want to split. No matter the size, within reason, I can split wood with one hand usually after 2-3 strokes. I highly recommend this device for others like me, or to those who are not comfortable wielding an axe or maul.

Peace of the Season to all….

-D



News From The American Redoubt:

66 years ago, beavers were parachuted into Idaho’s backcountry. – RBS

Hugh notes: Somehow, even after reading the article, it’s hard to put the image of an airborne paratrooper beaver out of my mind…

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Rustling suspected as Idaho cattle herds vanish. – G.S.

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Powered parachutist spotting deer fined. – RBS

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Flap over sage grouse spurs Congress to intervene. – RBS

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Hunters Are Not Bloodthirsty Barbarians As One Photographer Had Believed. – J.M.



Economics and Investing:

Same Currency War, New Battle Phase

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Russian Rate-hike Stunner. – CDV

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Low Oil Prices Could Point To A More Serious Problem

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Multiple countries have closed their embassy in Egypt, as their country struggles with solvency concerns. It’s the worst economic crisis to hit Egypt since the 1930’s. Such a threat could lead to war. The worst economic crisis to hit Egypt since the 1930’s – CDV

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Milk prices are about to fall big time. – K.W.







Notes for Monday – December 15, 2014

December 15th is Bill of Rights Day. (The Bill of Rights became law on this day in 1791, following ratification by the state of Virginia.) We encourage our American readers to gather publicly and read the Bill of Rights aloud.

The 15th of December, 1923, was the birth day of Uziel “Uzi” Gal (born Gotthard Glas). According to Wikipedia, he was “…born in Weimar, Germany. When the Nazis came to power in 1933 he moved first to England and later, in 1936, to Kibbutz Yagur in the British Mandate of Palestine where he changed his name to Uziel Gal. In 1943, he was arrested for illegally carrying a gun and sentenced to six years in prison. However, he was pardoned and released in 1946, serving less than half of his sentence.” He is, of course, remembered as the inventor of the famous Uzi submachine gun and the short-lived Ruger MP9 (an improvement to the Uzi). Uzi Gal is not to be confused with Israel Galili, the chief weapons designer for Israeli Military Industries (IMI), who along with Yaacov Lior designed the Galil improvement to the AK-47.

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Ready Made Resources is offering four extra cases of Mountain House with the purchase of their Premier Gold Package of Mountain House Foods, in addition to the standard package. That’s two cases of Rice and Chicken and two cases of Lasagna– a $636 value. That is in addition to the five cases of yoders meats, one case of Red Feather butter, one case of bega cheese, and 18 yahoo canned cakes. Overall, that is a $5390 for only $3895.

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SurvivalBlog is running low on recipes for the Monday edition. If you have a recipe that you would like to see featured, send it my way. It should not be a recipe that is published on the Internet elsewhere (unless you have modified it for your own use).



The Care and Feeding of a Woodstove

Here, at the Rawles Ranch, we heat our house with a masonry wood stove. Because of the thermal mass of its masonry construction, the stove holds heat and, therefore, provides a much more consistent heating effect; well, that is the case for at least three-fourths of our house. Our stove’s wood box is large, so there is the risk of overheating the living room, especially in the fall and spring, when the afternoons warm up outdoors. In those seasons, we have to be careful to keep the stove’s air vent nearly closed almost all of the time. (However, we are careful to let the stove burn “full rip” for a short time each day, to prevent an accumulation of creosote in the chimney. This is of course no substitute for proper chimney cleaning, which is a lengthy annual chore each spring. I usually do so after the roof is clear of snow and dry for the first time in the spring.) A daily brief hot burn keeps a stove safe in snowy climes where you can’t safely get up on the roof for five or six months of the year.

Our house is one story, which greatly simplifies things for wood heat. (Two story houses tend to be too hot upstairs and too cold downstairs.) We typically stoke the stove three times a day– around 5:30 AM, at mid-day, and just before we retire for the night.

I prefer to burn Red Fir and Western Larch woods. (The latter is commonly but erroneously called “Tamarack”, locally.) Last year we burned an odd assortment of wood, because we had just manually cleared two wooded acres of our property in order to make room to expand our orchard. (We have about a dozen varieties of trees on the ranch, including one sizable stand of Western Larch.) Most of this wood was a mix of various types of fir and a bit of pine. Even though the wood was well-seasoned, this Duke’s Mixture made for more erratic heating and more creosote build-up than we experience in a typical year. (In contrast, Red Fir and Western Larch both consistently burn hot and clean.) To heat our house, which is well insulated and around 3,000 square feet, we burn between five and eight cords each winter, depending on the weather and how much we travel each year.

All in all, we enjoy heating with wood. It is nice being able to keep the house at 75 to 80 degrees and not feel guilty about it. (To do the same with electricity or propane would be prohibitively expensive for a house of our size.)

I typically get 60 to 80% of our annual wood supply split and stacked before winter each year. The remainder is kept tarped and is split gradually, to provide some winter exercise on sunny days. We recently had a clear but unseasonably cold week. This was perfect weather for wood splitting. When a piece of wood is frozen at 10 degrees Fahrenheit, it doesn’t just split; it fairly well explodes, when the splitting maul hits it. What fun!

For kindling, I typically burn cedar. I specially cut these rounds just 8″ in height, to make for easy splitting. I split them either with a short-handled mine axe or with a shingle froe.

I’m presently fine tuning my wood splitting tools and techniques. I long ago discovered the trick of using a discarded car or truck tire to keep a round together, while splitting. BTW, I should mention that Wranglerstar showed me a new twist on that method.

I already have as large assortment of wedges and mauls, but I’m now shopping for a Vipukirves “Leveraxe”. Thankfully, their price has dropped dramatically in the past year. (They were formerly ridiculously expensive, but now they are just very expensive. At that price, I certainly hope they are built to last a generation, as advertised.) – JWR



Scot’s Product Review: Panteao Productions, LLC

The ability to learn is, in my view, about the most important of the many gifts God gave us. During my stint as a teacher, which continues as I homeschool my son, I got to study learning styles and the ways people manage to accumulate knowledge. Some of us best learn to do something by reading about it. Others best learn if someone tells them how to do it. Then there are those who best learn by seeing others do it, and finally there are those who can only learn if they do it themselves. While I remain convinced that the education establishment’s obsession with catering to learning styles is off task, I am convinced that learning styles do exist and that the best way to learn is to use them all. I also believe that if we don’t practice what we learn, we will forget it in short order.

Training, in my definition, goes a step beyond learning and requires active coaching by a skilled teacher and much practice. This pushes us beyond simply being learned and up to a level of being able to deliver performance on demand. I know how to do a number of things, but there are many I do poorly, and that is because I am not well enough trained through numerous repetitions under the eyes of a quality instructor, who can correct my errant ways. Learning may not require practice, but training certainly does.

Instructional videos are very useful tools in acquiring knowledge. We get to hear and see things we want to learn, and a skilled presentation by a quality instructor makes it all the more effective. As is repeated frequently in the videos I’m going to review here, instructional videos are not, however, a substitute for training. Good ones, however, can give us a basis that will save time and energy in the process of acquiring skills, and that’s why we should consider using them.

As much as I learn from videos, I don’t buy many, due to the cost. I suspect others are in the same boat. I recently got a press release about the videos Panteao Productions, LLC is planning to begin releasing in December on survival, and I thought it might be helpful to review a few of their current ones to get an idea of what we might have in store, in terms of quality in the upcoming ones.

Panteao is a South Carolina-based video production company that specializes in videos on shooting, self-defense, and documentaries on military events. They have been involved in making videos with the NRA.

I was grateful that their website explains that Panteao is a Portuguese word that means Pantheon. While it refers to the Greek temple where the pagan gods supposedly gathered, it has the additional meaning of being an influential group of people. Panteao has indeed gathered such a group of shooters and instructors to make a series of videos on weapons related topics. Some are competitive shooters, while others, such as the late Louis Awerbuck, Bill Jeans, and Freddie Blish, have roots in Gunsite and the practical use of firearms. There are also folks with reputations in law enforcement, armorers, and gunsmiths, as well as special operations veterans, such as Paul Howe. Massad Ayoob contributes with videos on legal issues, home defense, and concealed carry. I am leaving out a number of significant names, but these few should give you an idea of the quality they have brought to bear.

Panteao videos are available for purchase in DVD form or you can subscribe to their streaming service, if you have a fast connection. The subscription may be the best deal to experience as many videos as possible, though you can’t archive them, which is something I would want to do if I found one particularly useful. They offer monthly deals for $20 or yearly for $165. The subscription allows you to see all of the videos currently available. I did have problems with one hanging up a few times, but otherwise, they worked fine on a fiber optic connection.

Panteao was kind enough to let me view a number of their videos online for review as well as sending me a few disks. It was hard to choose which ones, but I picked a new one on optics and an older one on the use of the defensive shotgun, based on some knowledge of the two instructors.

Introduction to Combat Optics – Freddie Blish

Freddie Blish is a retired Marine Lt. Colonel who has worked for Aimpoint, LaRue Tactical, and Robar since he left the Corps. Aimpoint is the maker of some of the red dot sights that sit on many U.S. military weapons today, and a lot of those sights are in LaRue mounts. Robar is a well-known shop that refinishes firearms and performs custom gunsmithing on practical weapons. Colonel Blish also designed the combat optics tool that will work on the various controls and fittings on many of the optics found on defensive long arms. He is a Gunsite instructor and brings a lot of knowledge and experience to a video that focuses on what some might term close combat optics. These are primarily the increasingly ubiquitous red dot sights along with the low power Trijicon ACOG sights found on Marine rifles. Most of the time is spent on the AR-15 platform, but he delves into their use on handguns, shotguns and as backups on rifles with more powerful scopes.

What impressed me the most with this video was how much information is provided in one place. I don’t want to seem egotistical, but I did already know most of what is in this video, but I had to take three classes and spend many, many hours of reading and research to learn it. Here, you get it in a three-hour video, which is a pretty good deal at $40.00. Mind you, it isn’t the same as having a good instructor looking over your shoulder and correcting you, but I would have gotten a lot more out of my classes had I already stockpiled in my brain what is in this video. A number of dumb questions on my part could have been avoided.

As one might expect, Colonel Blish spends a fair amount of time discussing hardware. He goes over the various offerings from Aimpoint, EoTech, Vortex, Trijicon, and JP Enterprises. Despite his affiliation with Aimpoint, he seems to give all of the sights their fair due.

He also tells us about mounts, focusing on the sight maker mounts as well as some aftermarket ones. More importantly, he goes into the issue of co-witnessing in a very clear manner. Co-witnessing is how the dot in the red dot sight relates to the iron sights on the weapon. In the early days of red dot sights, we worried a lot more about sight or battery failure. Shooters wanted to keep their iron sights available in the event of some failure to the optical sight. If the optical sight is co-witnessed to the iron sights, the front and rear sights are at the same point in the view through optical sight. That causes a lot of clutter and interference to our seeing the target unless we are able to fold down the rear sight, which we didn’t want to do as they provided instant backup in case of sight failure. That problem lead to the 1/3 co-witness mount, which places the red dot sight a bit higher, so the irons are in the bottom third of the window of the optical view and not in the way when we use the red dot sight. Should the optical sight fail, we just drop the head a bit and use the iron sights. Today, since red dot sights are so robust and the battery life has stretched to as long as seven years on some, we may not have to worry about optical sight failure, so leaving the rear folded and out of the way is not a problem.

One of the most important things he does in the video, in my view, is showing the effect of various zeroes with the AR-15. Watching a trained professional go through the zero process at different ranges was very illuminating to me. I always suffer a lot of angst over what range to zero at and whether I am doing it correctly. Colonel Blish helps a lot on that note, taking us through 100-, 200-, and 300-yard zeroes. By actually firing groups at distances out to 300 yards with each zero, he shows us what to expect in real life. I had already decided on the 200-yard zero and will stay with the decision, but seeing how the others performed helped convince me I had made the right choice for my circumstances.

The next thing I was really happy to see explained is the effect of the mechanical offset of the sight. The straight line stock of many modern long arms forces the sight to be higher over the bore than on traditional rifles. This means that we have to allow for more difference between the point of aim and the point of impact of the bullet at close range. Colonel Blish explains and demonstrates this clearly. Getting it wrong can result in the death of the wrong person.

I noticed that he drops the magazine of his AR after chambering a round to verify that a round fed. If your weapon has a double row magazine, you can do this by noting which side the round is on when you insert the magazine and then checking after running the bolt. If a round chambered, the top one will now be on the other side of the magazine. It is a good trick to perform and one I have trouble remembering.

The good Colonel sees miniature red dot sights as the future for handguns, noting that ten years ago we didn’t trust them on carbines but now we do. As they get more rugged, he feels they will become what we expect to have on handguns. He does like having iron sights along with the red dot, as it helps us index the weapon as we present it. I have so little red dot on handgun time that I can’t say much about it, but I suspect I will need to spend a good bit of time to get it to work as quickly as irons. Since my eyes no longer want to focus on the front sight, the concept is still appealing for when I need a very precise shot.

There is much more on the video that is worth knowing, but I hope I have given you enough of a taste to judge whether it could help you. I found it a superb review of the information I had to work hard to gather on my own, and seeing and hearing it greatly reinforced my notes from classes, the books, and articles I’ve collected over the years. Additionally, I really enjoyed his direct language and some of his expressions, like “Marine math” and “applying some group tightener” to his shooting.

The DVD is still in the pre-order state on the Panteao website, but I was able to stream it online.

Shotgun Operator – Bill Jeans

As a disclaimer, I have paid good money to take a class from Bill Jeans, and he has been gracious and kind enough to answer a number of moronic questions I have written him. He is an avid reader and a keen student of history, who served four years as a combat Marine, twenty-one years as a street cop, and ten years as an adjunct instructor at Gunsite under Lt. Colonel Jeff Cooper, who then hired him for a seven year run as the operations manager of Gunsite. He left Gunsite after Col. Cooper sold it and formed his own on-the-road training company– Morrigan Consulting, in 1998. Unfortunately, he decided to retire recently and that makes the world a less well versed place. Despite his best efforts to appear otherwise, he is a warm and kind individual who works hard to keep us from making fools and worse of ourselves. That said, I wouldn’t want him as an enemy.

One of Jeans’ favorite things is the shotgun. I am really sorry I only took his carbine class. Friends who took the shotgun class speak of it with awe. That’s why, when I spotted the video on the Panteao site, I decided I had to review it.

While it is a far cry from sitting in class with Jeans at the front of the room, the $40.00 video does capture more than I expected. The man has a way with words, which would do merit to the book he won’t write, and it comes across in the video. Among my favorite quotes are:

“We have a name for people who stand still in gun fights; we call these people casualties,” as he addressed the need for movement.

“Get it right, then get it fast,” when he spoke about how we all too often attempt speed when we still don’t know how to do something properly.

And perhaps my favorite, as he discussed slug loads, “Slugs are wonderful things; I love them– great, big, flying door knobs of death.”

The shotgun is an interesting arm, one that Jeans calls the “thinking man’s” weapon and one which is often misunderstood. This is because it has two forms of ammunition– shot and slugs. Furthermore, shot loads come in a variety of sizes and they perform differently as the range changes. Jeans likes the gun for its devastating power and versatility and tells us that it allows a bit of a fudge factor on the marksmanship level, though not as much as many think.

A common belief is that the shotgun is a street sweeper and you don’t have to aim it. Jeans makes it clear that you need to aim, but he also shows that if you are off a bit, it will still work. You just can’t be off by too much. The shotgun is extraordinarily useful at night, which is when, as Jeans notes, the creeps come out. If you are using shot, he explains, the pattern can “make up for the shakes”. He also points out the intimidation factor and that “the slide being run is a universal communication tool” and that TV gives us the impression that if hit with a shotgun we will “burst into flames”.

There are a number of different loads available for the shotgun. You could use birdshot for a close shot, which would limit penetration so that you don’t endanger as many people on the other side of a wall; you could use buckshot, which has more penetration, or use a slug, which will just keep on going and going as well as give you the accuracy to make solid stopping hits at 100 yards.

Shotguns are limited in ammunition capacity, but Jeans argues that the shotgun is decisive and the “power factor is such that we get very few failures to stop”. One of the solutions for this problem is to always replace any rounds we shoot. If we shoot one, load one; if we shoot two, load two, and so on.

There are certain things we need to do to maximize the potential of our shotguns. Better sights are one area of concern. The gold bead, according to Jeans, is fine for close range, but we need something better to take full advantage of our weapon. He likes the ghost ring aperture sight on the rear, with a post on the front. A sling gives us a way to carry the gun when we need to use our hands, and he shows the types we could buy and how to use them. He also considers lights to identify targets and how to carry extra ammunition on the gun to help make up for that limited capacity.

When we are carrying ammunition, Jeans points out how critical it is that we keep it straight. Slugs and shot loads have very different characteristics, and using the wrong one can have horrible consequences. He tells us about a police officer who meant to use a slug and got a buckshot round by mistake for a long shot. Not only was the bad guy not hit hard, a stray pellet killed another officer.

Gunsite developed the concept of the A, B, and C zones for the shotgun, with shot loads, and they are well explained on the video. The basic concept is in the A zone; you are basically shooting one projectile as the shot has not had a chance to spread. The B zone is the sweet spot for shot loads, as the shot has spread some but not too much. We can be off a couple of inches and still do the job well. It does not mean we can just point the gun down the hall and let fly. The C zone is where the shot has spread so much that you might not get enough into the center of your target to do your job. At this point, we need to switch to slugs. Complicating this is that each shotgun varies in how it patterns any given load, so these distances with vary. The only way to be sure is to go to the range and try your gun and ammunition.

Then there is the recoil issue. They have it, but Jeans mentions a five foot one inch tall, one hundred pound woman who had no problems. A lot of it is psychological, and there are big hulking linebacker types who are turned into Jell-O at the mere thought of a shotgun. Jeans likes to point out that “if you are uncomfortable in the back of it, think about the guy in front of it.” Making sure it fits helps a lot. Most stocks are too long. It is far easier to deal with a stock that is too short than one that is too long. Recoil pads can help and also keep the gun from sliding about on the shoulder. Forming a pocket on the shoulder helps with recoil as well as with shooting effectively, and Jeans shows how to form one and fit the shotgun into it.

How we stand when we shoot is important, and the more recoil we have, the more important the stance becomes. Jeans advocates that we form a box with our feet, arguing that this is a fighting stance rather than a shooting stance. We can move or fight. Some stances work well for shooting but prevent movement. I recently saw a range safety officer push a woman shooter to use an extreme stance that did provide good recoil control, but it would have prevented her moving to cover or pivoting to another threat. Jeans shows that our feet should be shoulder width apart and the support side foot should be forward with the heel about even with the front of the firing side foot’s toes, forming a box. We then should push weight forward onto the support side foot and tip the spine forward. The position allows good control of the weapon as well as movement.

As we move, Jeans advises that we should maintain this position as “things are going to go haywire soon enough; there’s no point with helping that situation by lunging around and getting your feet out of sorts any sooner than you have to.”

There is a lot more on this video, but the most important section, and the one that should have been first, is the one on mindset. I have heard several instructors give these, but Jeans’ is the best I have experienced. I never got to hear Colonel Cooper give his in person, but I can’t think of anyone besides Jeans who could substitute for Colonel Cooper. I’m going to buy this video so my son can hear it, since he won’t be able to get it in person. I got to hear Jeans give a lot of it on a cool and crisp morning as the sun came up while waiting for the range to open. We were gathered with a group of kindred circled around him. I will never forget the time. The video is good, but it is a pale version of what I was lucky enough to get. Even so, it is better to experience it vicariously through video if that is all you can get.

If the survival series comes up to the caliber of these two videos, they should be worth a look. Again, subscribing and watching all of them is probably the best deal. If you see one that you want to be sure to have for all time, then you can buy a hard copy.

– SurvivalBlog Field Gear Editor, Scot Frank Erie



Recipe of the Week: Basic Pinto Beans

We eat a lot of beans, prepared in a variety of ways. I read on SurvivalBlog that alot of people are stockpiling “beans, rice, and bullets”. However, I’m wondering if all of those people who are stockpiling beans know how to prepare them so they will be enjoyable. Here is our most basic recipe, which is sometimes spiced up more with additional red chili, cooked longer for softer/refried beans, or added to other recipes. I cook up a big batch and can them, as it is just as easy to make a “mess” of them for additional quick meals later. (They can also be used with eggs and tortillas for breakfast, in place of or in addition to meat. This recipe can be used for other beans, such as black beans, as well. You just might want to adjust spices to your liking.)

Ingredients:

  • 2 lbs. dry pinto beans
  • water
  • 2 tsp salt
  • 3 cans chicken broth (or 6 tsp chicken boullion + 6 cups water)
  • 2 onions, chopped
  • 4 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 1 or 2 cans Rotel tomatoes with green chilis, undrained
  • 3+ Tbsp chili powder (use more, if you like spice and heat)
  • 1 Tbsp cumin powder
  • 1 tsp black pepper
  • 1 cup chopped meat, such as ham or smoked jerky (optional)

Instructions:

Sort dry beans, removing rocks and any non-bean items. Wash/rinse beans with water and drain them; repeat several times. Soak beans in large pot in about 14-16 cups of water overnight (or at least eight hours). (If you do not have time to soak them, you must cook them at least 2-3 hours longer; they will be firmer. Some folks soak in baking soda water or salt water to de-gas or add flavor.) After soaking, be sure to rinse beans again, especially if you have soaked them in baking soda water.

Return rinsed beans to soup pot, add cans of chicken broth, bay leaf, chopped onions, garlic, Rotel tomatoes, chili powder, cumin, black pepper, and 2 tsp of salt; also add meat, if using. Add water so that there is about 2-inches of liquid above the beans/vegetables. Bring to a boil, stirring the bottom occasionally. Turn heat down to a simmer. Cover with lid tilted. Simmer for about two hours, testing for doneness and stirring occasionally to keep what’s on the bottom from sticking. Add water, as needed, to keep some liquid above the beans.

(If pressure canning the beans, you can remove them from the heat when they are cooked but still firm, since the canning process will cook them more and soften them further as well as reheating them when they are prepared for a meal. If you are planning to make refried beans, you will want to cook them very well, until they are soft and mash easily.)

Remove the bay leaf before serving, canning, or freezing.

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



Letter: OPSEC

Mr Rawles,

I received an interesting letter today that profoundly reminded of OPSEC. The letter was notification of a class action suit against Oregon ARCO stations. They failed to disclose their prices when the station charged a 35 cent debit card transaction fee.

While my visits to Oregon Arco stations “south of the river” are quite sporadic, the dates of time are what really got my attention– January of 2011-August of 2013. This seems to prove three things to me– our debit and card purchases are being tracked and cataloged, and perhaps Mr. Snowden is not the ogre he is being made out to be in some circles. The third, of course, is OPSEC. Purchases locally with cash may be the better action, even though some items may cost a bit more.

Thank you for the info posted on your site and your books! Take care. – P.M.



Economics and Investing:

Paying Down The Debt Is Now Almost Mathematically Impossible. – E.B.

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Items from Mr. Econocobas:

Venezuela Has a 93% Chance of Defaulting on Its Debt

Greek Bonds Extend Worst Week Since Euro Crisis

Greek Stock Rout Means ASE Is 2014 Worst After Russia

Memo To Citigroup CEO Michael Corbat: Does Your Crony Capitalist Plunder Know No Shame? – FDIC is not a free market solution, and Glass–Steagall was only needed because of FDIC. It’s an example of government regulations necessary to protect us from a prior government mandate. Perhaps we could try the free market again? Perhaps we would then spend more time researching the bank we choose to deposit with than we are currently spending, as a nation, researching the TVs we buy.



Odds ‘n Sods:

Thug run “fake roadblock” documented by NJ driver’s dashcam. – T.P.

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Teachers Are Being Mandated To Get the Flu Vaccine or Wear a Mask and Gloves. – D.S.

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“Knockout Game” Player Shot By Concealed Carry Permittee . – RBS

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From the Department of Fiscal over-reach: Despite promises, Social Security still trying to collect old debts from kin. – B.B.

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Cop admits on camera MRAP is for “Constitutionalists”. – T.P.