“If ye love wealth greater than liberty, the tranquility of servitude greater than the animating contest for freedom, go home from us in peace. We seek not your counsel, nor your arms. Crouch down and lick the hand that feeds you. May your chains set lightly upon you; and may posterity forget that ye were our countrymen.” – Samuel Adams
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Notes for Monday – October 20, 2014
October 20th is the birthday of actor Viggo Mortensen (born 1958.) He lives somewhere in the American Redoubt. On his ranch is his horse-for-life “TJ”–one of the five paint horses used in the filming of the movie Hidalgo.
This is also the birthday of “fast and fancy” shootist Ed McGivern (born 1874, died December 12, 1957.) He was born in Nebraska but was a long-time resident of Butte, Montana.
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JWR’s latest novel Liberators: A Novel of the Coming Global Collapse will be released on Tuesday, October 21st. If you plan to buy any copies in bulk, then please order them on that day.
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Guest Article: Lights Out, by NightlyJazz
Not to take away from the novel of the same name by David Crawford–which really is an excellent book that I do recommend you read as well as save a hard copy–I experienced my own little Lights Out situation.
I’ve always wanted to test my preps by switching off the electricity and running everything off the grid, but I never pulled the trigger. I kept telling myself that I did not have enough equipment to do a test, plus there was also the fact that I was afraid, as a single father of one-, two-, and three-year olds, my children would freak out if I plunged them into darkness.
Imagine my surprise to arrive home one Friday evening to discover that the power had been turned off for non-payment. While I was able to make a payment, the offices were closed and there was no one to come out and turn the power back on until the next day. I thought, “It’s no problem. I’m a prepper and I have enough supplies to at least get us through the night.” Yeah right. I was in for a surprise.
Here are some things to think about. We congregated in one room to conserve heat. I entertained the kids for a few hours, fed them, and then they went off to bed. It was easy enough.
Refrigerators/Freezers. Do not open the freezers, and keep the fridge openings down to a minimum.
Water. The water was still on, so I did not have to worry about that. I do have a few hundred gallons stored though.
Cooking Food. Although I have a charcoal pit, I did not want to open the freezer to take anything out. Instead, I pulled out the jetboil and heated enough water to have a Mountain House meal. We had the chicken and rice dinner, which tasted pretty good to me, but the children would not eat it.
Emergency Food. I have to say this did not work because two of my three children would not eat it. Yes, I understand you should stock what you eat and I pretty much do that, but at the present time, most of my food stores are perishable as I purchased ¼ of a cow, a couple dozen chickens, and lots of frozen food. I do have other items, but what I pulled out to eat is the Mountain House.
Power. I have a generator large enough to run two freezers, the fridge, electronics for entertainment, and lights. I also have 50 gallons of gas to run the genny for a long enough time. What I did not have was an extension cord to run from the generator outside to anywhere in the house. I had not one single extension cord. Sure, I have power strips that are the three feet variety, but I had no extension cords, so we had no power.
I had only eight D-cell batteries none of which were rechargeable and no way to recharge them even if they were. While I have lots of AAA and AA batteries, I have no way to charge them without the generator.
Propane. I have lots of propane– about 20 small bottles, regular barbecue pit bottles, and a 100-lb bottle. Besides the Big Buddy, I have absolutely nothing else to use the propane for. As it was a warm night, the propane was not useful. I had no lighting, nor a two-burner cook top that uses propane. I don’t even have a propane barbecue grill.
Lights. I have two lanterns and two different types of fuel– a clear fuel substance you find in the candle section at Walmart as well as kerosene. I purchased a lantern from each of the sections as well. So I light up the lanterns and get an alarming (annoying) amount of black smoke coming from each one. I go to open the windows and none of them will open. I’m a renter and had never attempted to open them before. I do have head lamps, which worked well. The headlamps, a flashlight, and a couple of light sticks pretty much sustained me through the night. While I do have a combo emergency light with a radio and signal light included, it shorted out and kept blinking in and out. There is nothing like seeing your equipment fail when it’s time to use it.
Entertainment. I have lots of electronic entertainment items. While my children have a playroom, there’s nothing in the way of board games, puzzles, or even crayons for that matter. Over a longer period of time, my entertainment options are too limited at the moment.
Some of the lessons I learned, include:
- Don’t just purchase without a clear plan. I think this was the most important lesson.
- Testing is essential. Plan a thorough test, and put it on the calendar. Then, stick to the plan. I chickened out. We went to IHOP for breakfast the next day.
- I needed a complete end-to-end power system. I went out the next day and purchased two contractor’s extension cords from Sam’s Club and purchased more D-cell batteries. I also realized I need a solar option to recharge batteries.
- As far as emergency food is concerned, it’s important that the children actually eat the freeze-dried food. If we have to bug out, that’s what’ll be on the menu. I know I like it, but they need to be introduced to it. I’ll server it to them twice a month moving forward.
- Ventilation is important for the use of the lanterns and the propane. CO2 detectors are needed throughout the house.
- I have only one small fire extinguisher and need more.
This was an extremely simple test that I failed. How would you fair in such a situation?
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Scot’s Product Review: FLIR LS-Series Thermal Imaging Camera
Seeing in the dark is something we poor humans aren’t good at. The term “cover of darkness” is an apt description, and if we can penetrate it we have a serious advantage over those who can’t. This also applies to anything that obscures visibility, such as smoke, haze, or other obstructions. We often hear the buzz phrase “force multiplier”, and anything that helps us see when our opponent can’t is a big one in my book. Being able to detect attackers first or control our own people is pretty huge, as the perils of being clueless are obvious. Besides the “golly gee whiz” factor of getting play with this sort of equipment, I thought it important to discuss how useful this technology could be to preppers as well as how dangerous it is if the wrong folks have it.
There are basically two technical strategies to seeing in the dark. One depends on the light reflected from the target. The Gen I, II, and III night vision devices we see advertised are of this type. They allow us to see short wave infrared (SWIR), also called near infrared. This is a form of light that is just outside our ability to perceive it. An image intensifier can convert it into visible light that we can see in a night vision device. Gen III units also show us a bit of visible light. Since we are seeing reflected light, the target has to be lit by a light source for us to perceive it. The earliest units required an infrared floodlight. The newest and most expensive models will let us see with the help of moonlight, starlight, or even the glow from city lights reflected from low clouds. While each successive generation requires less and less SWIR light reflected from the target to allow you to see it, if someone is in a shadowed area or it is a cloudy night away from all other lights, you won’t be able to see them, even with the best unit, unless you shine a SWIR light on them. This has obvious disadvantages. Your light, at worst, is going to be a bullet magnet if a hostile also has this sort of night vision.
The military PVS-14 is a commonly seen example of this sort of gear. They provide the green image we often associate with night vision from having seen it on the news.
Then there are thermal units, like the FLIR LS I am writing about in this review. It is made by FLIR Systems, Inc. It detects the long wave infrared (LWIR) or far infrared energy emitted by all objects. It sees heat, in other words. Since it is detecting emissions and not reflections, it is completely passive and won’t give you away. Further, it can detect objects in total, absolute darkness, which is a pretty amazing feat. You have probably seen a lot of this type of imaging on TV when you watch terrorists targeted by aircraft or police chases from helicopters. What makes this work so well is that animals (other than reptiles and the like) are almost always a different temperature than their surrounding terrain.
Unlike SWIR imagers, the LWIR ones can be helpful in spotting targets in daylight. It can make it far easier to see an animal or person in foliage or through haze, even if they are wearing good camouflage. You see them as a very bright object against the background.
This video can help show some of the differences between thermal and SWIR night vision equipment. The people who made it appear to be vested in LWIR technology, so they do stress the advantages.
Thermal imaging is becoming more and more popular in law enforcement and units like the one I am reviewing are small and light enough to carry easily. It weighs less than a pound and is under seven inches long and about 2.5 inches in diameter (though it isn’t perfectly round). It has a built-in lithium ion rechargeable battery that gives about five hours of service. It charges with a USB cable. The only drawback is the cost, which starts at about $5,000.
These devices usually provide a black and white image, but they can add color to indicate the temperatures of objects in the field of view. One helpful trick with this one is that you can tell it to display hot things as lighter than cooler things or reverse it and have the hot things dark. Depending on the background, changing the view might make it easier to see targets. You can adjust the settings for how bright to make certain temperatures. You can also tell it to show things above a certain temperature as red, which could help make animals pop out even better when you are scanning with it. A FLIR Systems video will show how some of these options work pretty well.
It is possible to defeat SWIR units, like the PVS-14, with good camouflage and maintaining awareness of surroundings. If you stay in the shadows and avoid being silhouetted against the sky or a bright background, it is far harder to be spotted. The only way to see into deep shadows with this equipment is to use an infrared illuminator, which will give you away. Interestingly, some fabrics and how they are laundered can make you much more visible. The fabric brighteners and softeners that make your clothes look clean also make you more visible under IR. It would be best, if you worry about this, to look for some of the special detergents used for hunting clothes that don’t have the brighteners or softeners.
I think thermal imagers are far tougher to defeat than SWIR devices. The best way appears to be putting something between the imager and yourself that blocks your heat radiation. That part isn’t very hard. The problem is that if you block yourself with something that does not blend in with the surroundings, you will create a suspicious anomaly that can attract attention. First, your screen has to be at about the same temperature as the surroundings or it will show. It also has to have the same heat texture as the surroundings. Just as light reveals texture to our eyes, thermal energy exposes a texture that shows up in the thermal imager. A material that is very uniform, as a man-made object might be, is going to look suspicious. If it has straight edges, they could also attract attention as there are few truly straight lines in nature. Further, everything in nature is constantly changing temperature over time. It gets hotter as the sun goes up and cooler as it goes down. If your screen gives up or absorbs heat at a different rate than its surroundings, it can expose you. Your cover could also absorb your own heat and reveal you that way.
There is camouflage clothing intended to defeat thermal night vision. While it is clearly a major help, it is still possible to see the camouflaged subjects using LWIR equipment. They no longer show hot spots; instead, they show as dark blotches that don’t belong in the scene. An alert operator will be curious about that. Since camouflage clothing has to trap your radiant heat it will have drawbacks in hot climates. If you are moving and you change to a warmer or colder location, it has to be able to adapt to it quickly or you will standout. When you are standing, it will not necessarily be the same temperature as what’s behind you. I am trying hard to stress the difficulties of dealing with this. We can pretty much make ourselves invisible to normal vision without much trouble, and with some knowledge and care we can disappear to SWIR devices, but this thermal stuff is far more complex of a problem. Some materials that offer good blocking of thermal energy, like aluminum foil, are highly visible to even the Mark I Eyeball. We now have a three-way problem– normal vision, SWIR, and thermal– to defeat.
I’ve heard suggestions for using diversionary devices, like flares or fire bombs, to blind thermal imagers, but they appear to regain their sight fairly quickly. When you move out of the bloom from the fire, you will show up. If the enemy has an area weapon, they could just target the bloom. A better plan would be to hide amongst something, like a herd of animals, but those aren’t always available. A city will certainly offer more options than the countryside. I was not able to verify it, but different types of foliage appear to offer varying degrees of concealment. Learning which is best could be helpful. Hiding under a car could also help, especially if it was warm from driving.
There are units that can blend visible and thermal images, which will provide more details for the observer. These are showing up in light aircraft, and the results are impressive http://ww w.youtube.com/watch?v=O1MymcwHEV0. This corrects one of the startling features, to me at least, of the LWIR units. You cannot see visible light in the display. This means someone can be walking about shining a flashlight and you can’t see them through the unit. If a light doesn’t make much heat, you won’t even be aware of it. The blended view gives you both. Some units blend visible, thermal, and SWIR into the same display and also allow you to select between each type in case a target is visible to one and not another.
There is also talk of applying computer image analysis to thermal imaging that can detect anomalies in the scanner area and mark them for the operator to investigate.
The unit I’m reviewing is owned by a friend I will call Apollo, for the Greek god of light. He has worked with a wide array of technology over the years and has spent a lot of time with the electromagnetic spectrum, video, photography, and a host of other things I have trouble understanding. Much of Apollo’s time has been at a major university. In his spare time, he is a very serious gun guy who has shot most everything from an action pistol to a long range rifle. He grew up traveling the world with his scientist father and traipsed through revolutions, roadside ambushes, and the like as a child and teen. Apollo is very aware of what the world can dish out, but it doesn’t shake his strong faith as a Christian. He is a very good guy and highly knowledgeable in many areas, and I’m lucky he lets me be his friend. I wanted to explain all that so you would know I had some serious help writing this. He was kind enough to let me spend several hours picking his brain and working with his FLIR LS. Without his help, I would have been underwater at times.
In case you are wondering, they call the FLIR LS a camera, because it is a video camera. It simply sees heat rather than light. While you can connect it to a video recorder, it is more likely to be used as a monocular.
Looking through the eyepiece is initially confusing. You have to tell yourself you are seeing the world in a completely different manner. It is a monochromatic world, and some things we can easily see become invisible, like light foliage and normal lights. Other things become brilliant glowing masses, like the surface of a road. Things like cars take on different shapes. Black tires glow white from the heat made as they rolled over pavement.
What is shocking is how visible animals and particularly people are. Apollo says this unit can detect an unshielded human at 1,000 yards, even if they are in the deepest shadow on the darkest night. Based on the couple of hours I used it, I believe him. I was especially impressed with how well I could see him at 100 yards through brush. While it broke up his shape, it was patently obvious that there was something there I needed to check out.
I was quite surprised by how easy it is to see footsteps using the FLIR LS. You leave less of an imprint with thick soled shoes, and they do fade fairly quickly, but if you aren’t too far behind someone, you can probably follow them with the FLIR.
I did find the narrowness of the view makes it a little difficult to maintain situational awareness. You can, if you don’t stay sharp, lose a target. The field of view isn’t large, so you have to keep scanning or you will miss something. Scan too quickly, though, and you may go past a target.
There is a visible laser in the unit, so you can mark a target for someone without a thermal imager, but you can’t see it through the imager.
You lose night vision in the eye looking through the imager. This is a common problem, however, with all night vision gear. Most of us will bring it straight up to our master eye to view with it, but that could be a problem for a shooter, unless they also have a thermal or night vision sight. It would be better to use the non-dominant eye and save the master for the sights.
I had trouble trying to use it as I walked around. Objects that are close go out of focus. As I already mentioned, light foliage sort of disappears, so I walked into branches. I had a lot of trouble keeping both eyes open, and even if I did, the brightness of the viewfinder overwhelmed my brain, so that’s all I really saw. Overall, if I had to use night vision to negotiate a trail in the dark, I would probably feel more comfortable using a SWIR type. This may be simply a matter of my limited experience with thermal. I suspect it also has to do with the limitations of the tiny screen in the unit. On the occasions I’ve gotten to ride in a FLIR equipped helicopter, it seemed a lot easier to see. The overhead view might be a factor.
Things look more natural to me using the SWIR viewers. I think that might be because we are used to seeing things by reflected light. I get a better sense of distance and depth with SWIR than I did with thermal. That said, I can see things, like animals, far more easily with thermal; that, to me, is the most important element of this discussion.
When blended SWIR/LWIR units come down in price, they will make for a much better experience, judging by the videos I’ve seen from them.
I wish the battery pack in the unit were user replaceable. This sort of pack usually gives at least five years of service, but you could power it with an external pack, should the internal battery die and you can’t get it replaced.
I didn’t get to use it on a cold night. Apollo says the colder it is, the better it works. That agrees with what I saw in some videos using thermal in the snow. It also seems to work beautifully over water. It would be outstanding for finding a swimmer in the water.
One quirk is that it can’t see through glass. Images reflect nicely from glass, but glass blocks the wavelengths that image heat. Some think this means a sheet of glass could make a shield, but glass looks different from other objects in nature, so an alert observer might give a piece of glass in an unusual location a second look. Glass also gives and takes up heat at a different rate than most natural terrain, and if you touch it or even get close to it, it will warm rapidly, giving away your position.
FLIR Sytems makes a bewildering number of thermal imagers. Some have industrial and construction applications. Marine and aviation uses are also covered by the product line. There are several models for public safety as well as models for sportsmen. The FLIR LS Apollo chose appears to be a good blend of features for the prepper, but I’m not sure if one could be served almost as well with a lower cost model. I would rather give up some capability and at least have it than hold out for the best. They start at about $1,800, and apparently the sky is the limit when you get into the military area.
There are rifle sight versions as well as viewers, and they are quite popular with hog and predator hunters where it is legal to shoot at night. YouTube has a number of videos of this equipment in use by hunters, and it can help give you an idea of how well they work. These start at $3,500.
FLIR Systems, Inc. is a U.S. company. The unit I reviewed had stickers inside proclaiming that the key bits are made in the U.S.
My minor quibbles with the limitations of this technology do not in any way reduce my desire to own it. I always fret over anything that uses electricity or depends on advanced technology, but I think this is a game changer if you have to operate in the dark. Since I don’t control the sun, I am going to spend a lot of hours in the dark. This could save one’s life, if things were to go wrong. On the other hand, if you are up against someone who has it, you are in trouble. It would be wise to do some searches on countering thermal imagers to start getting some ideas on how to deal with it. Despite the effectiveness of this technology, you can erode its power if you have some knowledge. This site has what Apollo says is knowledgeable information on countering thermal imaging. It discusses how different materials have different levels emissivity of thermal energy, which is helpful for understanding the issues. An object that emits thermal more efficiently will look brighter than a less-efficient one, even if they are of the same temperature. This could make hiding even more complicated.
There are a lot of night vision users on this site if you want to do some further research on the devices themselves and how hunters use them in the field. – SurvivalBlog Field Gear Editor, Scot Frank Erie
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Recipe of the Week: Swiss Steak with a Kick by Mrs. HJL
This is a simple recipe that our family likes to cook using the crock pot. It’s a regular dish. We modified the traditional version to use some green chili and/or jalapeno peppers, which you can use to suit your personal tastes.
1 1/2 to 2 lb round steak, cut into six to eight serving portions
2 Tbsp flour
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 tsp pepper
2 Tbsp butter (or oil)
1 onion, chopped
1/2 bell pepper, chopped
1 or 2 small cans green chili, chopped
1 can tomato soup (or 14.5 oz can stewed tomatoes and omit water below)
1/2 cup water
1 jalapeno, diced (optional)
Use a meat tenderizer to pound meat a little. Sprinkle with flour, salt, and pepper; pound this into meat, repeating until all pieces are tenderized and seasoned. Brown steak in butter with onion and bell pepper. Add tomato soup and water. Bring to a boil. Transfer to crock pot. Pour in chopped green chili and stir. (You can add some jalapenos and/or cayenne for even more heat; we do when we aren’t sharing with company.) Cover and cook on low for six to eight hours, or on high temperature for four hours. Serve with rice, mashed potatoes, or pasta and a green vegetable. Don’t forget some bread or crackers for eating the yummy broth! – Mrs. Paul
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Do you have a favorite recipe that would be of interest to SurvivalBlogreaders? Please send it via e-mail. Thanks!
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Letter: Bullet Proof 3-Ring Binder
My daughter had a science project due and she asked for my help. So, I helped her build a bullet proof 3-ring binder. Her goal was for the binder to stop a .223 bullet.
The specs are as follows:
The size is 12″ tall by 11″ wide
The layers:
The front cover:
- 1/4″ Ultra High Density Plastic
- 1/16″ Steel
- 1 panel of Kevlar bullet proof material from a bullet proof vest that expired in 1998. I folded the panel so the panel would fit inside the above dimensions and duct taped them in place.
- 1/4″ Ultra High Density Plastic
- She then drilled a hole in the four corners and bolted the parts in place.
The center:
- 120 pages of notebook paper in the rings.
- The rings are a standard 3″ binder rings drilled out of a used binder and attached to a 1/4″ Ultra High Density Plastic strip that was piano hinged to the front and back cover.
The back cover:
- 1/4″ Ultra High Density Plastic
- 1/16″ Steel
- 1/4″ Ultra High Density Plastic
- She then drilled a hole in the four corners and bolted the parts in place.
She then attached, to the front cover, an additional 1/4″ thick by 4″ wide Ultra High Density Plastic strip.
The test:
An officer on the local police department shot the binder. The binder was in a closed position sitting on a table. He shot three times at it, and it stopped all three bullets. The binder did not even fall over. The bullet that struck the part of the binder without the additional 1/4″ thick by 4″ wide Ultra High Density Plastic strip went through the front cover and lodged in the notebook paper. He shot it twice through the attached strip. These two bullets did not penetrate the final 1/4″ Ultra high density plastic in the front cover. The officer was standing 15 yards from the binder. Either way, the projectiles never made it to the back cover.
He then shot it through the back cover, which is lacking a Kevlar panel. The bullet lodged in the front cover.
The problems:
- Weight; it weighs 19 pounds!
- It is bulky.
- It was nicked named the Sasquatch Binder
- After the Science Fair, we will test it further and see when it fails.
The summary:
My daughter’s idea finished second; she was robbed! The binder was over-engineered. For the binder to stop a .223 from 15 yards and never go through the paper was a little too much. Just for fun, we took the binder to a shooting range with the intention of taking it to its breaking point. Many people volunteered to shoot it. One gentleman shot it with a .308 from 20 yards; the bullet lodged in the back cover. Another person shot it with a 30-30; it too lodged in the back cover. Finally, a postal worker pulled out a M-14. He shot it on full auto and the binder was still intact after 7 rounds. The paper was shredded. The binder turned over, but the back cover was not breached. It was over engineered. In a school shooting scenario, it needs to stop nothing larger than a .223
The need:
I have spoken with some attorneys. The process of making the binder is not able to be protected by any type of patent. However, we have applied to trademark the name Sasquatch Binder.
This is why I am sharing this idea with your community. The weight has got to come down so that kindergarteners thru executives will want one. A process of making the binder must be invented so that a new molecular compound or a new method of manufacturing is made.
This one binder cost us about $200, which is way too high. However, my daughter learned about bullets and their velocity and strength. It also takes density to stop a bullet. She had a great idea to save life in a school shooting scenario. As a CPA, I look at the cost, but as a parent, I look at the benefit. In this case, spending $200 on a science fair was too much. If a child’s life is ever spared on account of this, it was well worth the $200. Would I pay $200 for a binder that weighed 2.5 pounds and promised to stop a 9mm to a .223? It might be worth it. Respectfully, Happy Howie
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Economics and Investing:
The World Has Less Than 5 Days Worth Of Copper Inventories
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Japanese Stocks Tumble After BOJ Bond-Buying Operation Fails For First Time Since Abenomics
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Yellen says rising income inequality in U.S. ‘greatly’ concerns her. And since when is this any of the Fed’s concern? This progressive horse manure will drive our once-great nation right over a cliff. – J.H.
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Russians and Chinese are ditching the dollar as Europeans start using renminbi in their reserves
Odds ‘n Sods:
JWR had some comments on the Ebola outbreak at the Prepper Recon Podcast.
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Over at The Daily Sheeple: 10 Books That Could Actually Save Your Life.
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Krayton Kerns, DVM: Main Street USA – Avalanche Lily
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Build a working ADSB Aircraft Radar System for $ 20.00. – T.P.
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Mental Health Issues Put 34,500 on New York’s No-Guns List. – H.L.
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Life in Quarantine for Ebola Exposure: 21 Days of Fear and Loathing. – RBS
Hugh’s Quote of the Day:
“The future of human liberty … means the future of civilization.” – Henry Hazlitt
Notes for Sunday, October 19, 2014
Today, we present another entry for Round 55 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The $12,000+ worth of prizes for this round include:
First Prize:
- A Gunsite Academy Three Day Course Certificate, good for any one, two, or three course (a $1,195 value),
- 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,
- DRD Tactical is providing a 5.56 NATO QD Billet upper with a hammer forged, chromlined barrel and a hardcase 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 1 minute without the use of any tools and a compact carry capability in a hard case or 3-day pack (an $1,100 value),
- Gun Mag Warehouseis providing 30 DMPS 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.
- Two cases of Mountain House freeze dried assorted entrees in #10 cans, courtesy of Ready Made Resources (a $350 value),
- A $300 gift certificate from CJL Enterprize, for any of their military surplus gear,
- A 9-Tray Excalibur Food Dehydrator from Safecastle.com (a $300 value),
- A $300 gift certificate from Freeze Dry Guy,
- A $250 gift certificate from Sunflower Ammo,
- 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,
- TexasgiBrass.com is providing a $300 gift certificate.
- Two cases of meals, Ready to Eat (MREs), courtesy of CampingSurvival.com (a $180 value),
Second Prize:
- 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,
- A FloJak EarthStraw “Code Red” 100-foot well pump system (a $500 value), courtesy of FloJak.com,
- Acorn Supplies is donating a Deluxe Food Storage Survival Kit with a retail value of $350,
- 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,
- $300 worth of ammo from Patriot Firearms and Munitions. (They also offer a 10% discount for all SurvivalBlog readers with coupon code SVB10P),
- A $250 gift card from Emergency Essentials,
- Twenty Five books, of the winners choice, of any books published by PrepperPress.com (a $270 value),
- TexasgiBrass.com is providing a $150 gift certificate,
- Organized Prepper is providing a $500 gift certificate, and
- RepackBoxis providing a $300 gift certificate to their site.
Third Prize:
- A Royal Berkey water filter, courtesy of Directive 21 (a $275 value),
- 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,
- Expanded sets of both washable feminine pads and liners, donated by Naturally Cozy (a $185 retail value),
- Two Super Survival Pack seed collections, a $150 value, courtesy of Seed for Security,
- Mayflower Trading is donating a $200 gift certificate for homesteading appliances,
- 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, and
- APEX Gun Parts is donating a $250 purchase credit, and
- SurvivalBased.com is donating a $500 gift certificate to their store.
- Montie Gearis donating a Y-Shot Slingshot and a Locking Rifle Rack. (a $379 value).
Round 55 ends on November 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.
Emergency Prepping, Sustainability, and the Idea of Adapting in Advance, by F.J. – Part 2
Prepping is a great cultural example of the observations that led bio-cultural anthropologists to a hypothesis that suggests human brains are hardwired to use past experience and present observations to make projections of hypothetical future scenarios following a basic “if–then” logical model. Those practices, which are inherent in all of us, form the basis of storytelling— an art form that humans alone have the capacity to practice. They say it’s an evolutionary trait we adapted to guide our decision making, since the days of our primitive ancestors, through all those stages of change that hadn’t happened yet, or were only just beginning, to lead humanity where it is now: facing yet more change. Prepping shows us the stories we’re telling ourselves.
While they have their roots in this same human behavioral pattern, prepping and survivalism must be more than just telling ourselves stories and assuming character roles. You don’t just molt into an expert survivalist by changing into khaki BDUs and eating a few freeze-dried meals with a titanium spork. Ask any experienced combat veteran, law enforcement officer, or even a patchouli-wearing hippie with survivalist skills, and they’ll tell you that survival depends on much more than the right costume, the right equipment, and the right order of gestures. It requires acceptance, and that leads to habituation. The idea of preparedness, among maybe a handful of other things, implies accepting the possibility of being wrong at some point past, present, or future. However, our ideologies don’t adapt to that idea very well at all. Imagine any war currently happening on the planet, including the so-called War on Drugs. It’s guaranteed that whichever war you imagined is the direct result of failed ideologies whose patrons refused to adapt in advance, and I fear this is true of many of us, preppers, as well. We may be prepping for a preconceived end because it’s preferable to changing course. The thing history shows us about ends is that they always come anyway, and in the end, it’s always the widespread unwillingness to change the story that brings them about.
Emergency preparedness as a theme in American culture is now so broad in its scope that many factions and subcultures have arisen within it. Each one with their own customized story. While it’s promising to see the message of preparedness becoming so widespread and widely accepted, it is important to pay attention to a few potential pitfalls that inevitably come with popularity. Among the most important pitfalls to avoid in this case is fethishism. Prepping for whatever may come isn’t supposed to be purgatory. While it may prefigure imminent changes to our way of life in the everyday sense, it shouldn’t be thought of as a lifestyle or an identity theme, at least not in the superficial fashion sense. It’s supposed to be a means and manner for life going on after the ends. Underground bunkers aren’t built to be places where we bury the remains of unborn futures. They aren’t meant to be mausoleums where we worship and make our offerings to the apocalypse.
While the idea of adopting daily habits that mirror, or at least resemble, the daily habits we imagine adopting in the aftermath of TEOTWAWKI, prepping really shouldn’t become a dominant source of meaning in our lives, at least not nearly as much as it should be a method of preserving pre-existing forms of meaning. If it’s not that, it should at least be thought of as a means for preserving our manner of constructing meaning afresh. If you think about it, prepping can be rightly thought of as a version of sustainable living. Or at least an expression of the desire to sustain life, or maybe an experiment along the path toward that discipline. Also, if we can get our heads in the right space, prepping could be rightly considered a two-pronged approach to dealing with our double-edged sword. On the one hand there is prepping for the reason and rationale we all understand– to survive an emergency event and hopefully thrive in the aftermath. On the other hand, there is always the possibility that the widespread adaptation of habits and routines that alter our consumption patterns may serve to turn this big sinking ship we’re all aboard toward safer harbors. Shouldn’t that be the real focus of prepping? From that frame of mind, prepping can be turned toward a win–win scenario instead of lose–win.
Many of us talk about having the stuff of emergency preparedness or at least getting it and using it for practice or some form of recreation, all in the context of staged mock emergency events. It isn’t that these practice events are purely superficial. It’s true, most emergencies come and go in the form of events— ice storms, snowstorms, microbursts, minor earthquakes, wildfires, brief instances of civil unrest, and so forth. They punctuate the years of our lives as forms of counter-balance to holidays, as crests and troughs in a temporal wavelength. In a similar fashion they give us grounding points to remember eras and their eventual passing catalogued right alongside styles of trousers, television shows, and political regimes. All of it fades together in memory, blurred behind present anticipation of whatever comes next, and everything continues along the obtuse trajectory of the status quo. It’s that the so called big one– the one we store six months to one year’s supply of food for– though it may begin with an event, will be of the sort where we will, no doubt, remember the dominant style of trousers by a single word “soiled”.
TEOTWAWKI, in whatever form it takes, will be far more than just an event. Those of us who are considered informed and involved in prepping understand it will be a paradigm shift. If we understand that, then now is the time to adapt, because implementing day-to-day use of prepping supplies will keep the restocking of materials within the day-to-day revenue stream and acclimate preppers to their repeated use while making regular life less expensive and more sustainable in the meantime, and we should be rotating food storage through our regular dietary regimen. We should be integrating it into our monthly expenses, and we should be participating in forms of recreation that provide opportunities to role play in a paradigm that resembles whatever we imagine the future to be. We should also remember in the course of these practices to keep themes of death, destruction, and war counterbalanced against the most important themes of life, living, and rebuilding.
The Internet is full of advice about how to work the stockpiling of emergency food stores into a budget. I would add that for several reasons budget isn’t the only aspect of life that prepping needs to be worked into. If we’re convinced that prepping is necessary– we are, and it is— then we might want to reconsider the notion that it’s something extra. Prepping forums all over the Internet approach food storage from just about every angle. The centerpiece of that conversation is the advice to store the kinds of food you typically eat. While I wouldn’t argue against that approach outright, I think that a balance could be struck between storing food to accommodate tastes and adapting tastes toward sustainable, storable, and accessible foods. Ultimately, the idea of prepping centers around sustainability, which I admit seems kind of strange, and if your lifestyle isn’t sustainable right now, then how much adapting will be forced upon you in an emergency or SHTF situation?
“Imagine the problem is that we cannot imagine a future where we possess less but are more. Where we lose our machines, but gain our feet and pounding hearts. Then what is to be done?” asks Charles Bowden, author of Blood Orchid: An Unnatural History of America
Don’t get too caught in the paradox of this statement, but implementing the regular and habitual use of food storage supplies is a deeper form of prepping itself. Emergency event and TEOTWAWKI prepping involve far more than just food and water. They involve a wide range of behavioral changes, many of which might be uncomfortable to adapt to at first. Who really knows how the scenario will really play out? Even though many preppers have pushed their chips all in on a specific scenario and designed their prepping efforts around that one scenario, it’s really anybody’s guess what the critical tipping point might be. Anything is possible, including nothing. What’s certain is that radical paradigm shifts introduce all kinds of stressors, and surviving depends largely on how well we cope with stress and adapt ourselves to the demands of a new environment. That’s why the military trains its personnel in the practice of “war gaming”. Backpacking is a great practice for adapting to the rigors of a less comfortable lifestyle. Lightweight and minimalist are the most crucial values of efficient backpacking, but right alongside those two are strong bodies accompanied by adaptable personalities. That’s because even with the lightest, most minimalist equipment and food, backpacking is a lot of hard work. Slinging bedding, clothing, food, and shelter onto your back and moving across wild, and uneven terrain in total exposure to climatic conditions can be very taxing on a body. Under those conditions, people’s true character comes right to the surface. Some people find the experience unpleasant; some find it cathartic, but pretty much everyone finds it enlightening on some level. Family backpacking trips are great exercises in solidarity and collaboration that give people the experience of cooking and eating dehydrated food, while under physical stress. The real leaders emerge while the ones who require extra help begin to lag behind. However, best of all, backpacking is terrific recreation. Backpackers get an intimate interaction with wild country and their traveling companions. They are the only people who get such an up-close view of the deep wilderness. Like soldiers in boot camp, backpackers learn their strengths and weaknesses. They learn what talents they have that lend themselves to survival skills, and they develop awareness of areas where they need to improve. This kind of knowledge gives individuals a more accurate idea of how to model emergency preparedness plans around the skills and talents of a family unit.
Five days after Hurricane Katrina made landfall, Bowden was in an Italian bistro in Houston. All 200 seats in the room were filled with evacuees from New Orleans who Bowden described as dazed and disheveled but bearing a new kind of fellowship that suddenly crossed race and class lines. They had all lost their homes and entire livelihoods. He noticed how the entire cook and wait staff was made up of dark-skinned Hispanics from the Mexican south. In a fairly stark reversal of circumstances, the people whose lives, homes, and livelihoods had been destroyed in the past were now the ones employed, probably in control of their own lives and fortunes for the first time and rendering aid to the more recently displaced. Evacuees were feeding other evacuees. A few weeks later the migrants started showing up in New Orleans looking for work in the rebuilding efforts. Since then the reconstruction and resettlement of New Orleans has been done largely by migrant workers. Half the conversations you hear on the streets there now are in Spanish. It is believed that the tens of thousands of Mexican immigrants now living, working, and building lives in New Orleans is just a trickle compared to the floodgate that would open if serious reconstruction efforts were undertaken. Say what you want about illegal immigration. Under circumstances like New Orleans’, it’s pointless, since the government wasn’t acknowledging the needs of its own naturalized citizens nor was it assuming responsibility for it’s failure in dealing with the disaster. It was doing the bare minimum in the reconstruction. New Orleans shows us that the marketplace of human capital, outside the ideologies, doesn’t care about distinctions like illegal immigrant vs. legal citizen. In the wake of disaster, the ones who flourish are the ones who are prepared, physically capable of survival, and not devastated by the story that didn’t play out. Instead, they are adaptable to the one that did.
Letter Re: Harvest Right Freeze Dryer
Hugh,
I am seriously contemplating purchasing the freeze dryer that you reviewed. While your review was very indepth, I still have a couple questions before purchasing. I know that when home canning you can’t can beans, can you freeze dry beans? Is this something that I could make a batch of chili and then pour out on the trays and freeze dry? Also, is there a guide of some sort to how much water you need to add back to freeze dried foods to rehydrate without making them soupy? Is it like one to one, or is there some sort of rule of thumb? Thanks, – T.C.
Hugh Replies: Who said you can’t can beans? We have been canning beans for years. My wife cans spicy beans (both pinto and black varieties), and they work well. The freeze dryer works best when the texture of your food items would be destroyed by canning, and canning works best when the flavors need to blend. We generally store the beans in their naturally dry condition but vacuum packed. She will cook a large batch and can the extra using a pressure canner– the All American 15qt. You can also freeze dry the cooked product, but you end up with a concrete-like substance. It reconstitutes very quickly, but you end up breaking the beans when you break it up.
When reconstituting, you have to take into account the effect of freezing the product. If it reconstitutes well (like green beans, corn, and most other things), you simply add the same amount of water you removed from it. If the product changes when you would normally freeze and then thaw it, you have to adjust accordingly. For instance, sour cream looses its “gel” when frozen and thawed. If you reconstitute it normally, you end up with a sour milk product. No matter how concentrated you make it, it will not re-gel. In this case, you are better off simply sprinkling the powdered product on the item you want it on for flavor. If it’s a baked potato, just add the powder to the potato and let the moisture work its magic. Cheese is another item that you may have difficulty with. We shred our cheese and simply use a misting water bottle to bring it back to life, so that it isn’t soggy with too much water.
In the end, you have to experiment with the foods and see what works for you.
Economics & Investing:
Jim Rogers Warns: Albert Edwards Is Right “Sell Everything & Run For Your Lives”
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Why Malpractice from the Fed Will Undermine Growth
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Items from Mr. Econocobas:
‘Stunning’ Fed Move Put Bottom under Stocks: Traders – It’s amazing; either they really don’t understand fundamental economics or are playing dumb. An economy that lives by QE will die by QE. The hint of reviving QE is the only thing that stopped the sell-off.
Another Reminder How Addicted Markets Still Are To Liquidity
Odds ‘n Sods:
Trust but Verify – Avalanche Lily
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Woman Sent To Jail For Overgrown Yard. – G.G.
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This scientific article explains the difference between a so called ‘airborne’ virus and a virus that is not airborne. COMMENTARY: Health workers need optimal respiratory protection for Ebola. – A.D.
Hugh’s Quote of the Day:
“In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. The same was in the beginning with God. All things were made by him; and without him was not any thing made that was made. In him was life; and the life was the light of men. And the light shineth in darkness; and the darkness comprehended it not.” John 1:1-5 (KJV)