Odds ‘n Sods:

California water infrastructure on verge of historic collapse

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Guy Fawkes data points: For anyone considering wearing a mask to a public event, this web site has some useful information on state laws. Thankfully, none of the American Redoubt states have any restrictions. – JWR

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Army sees ‘megacities’ as the future battlefield. T.P.

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The thin blue line and the double standard of the law: No Jail For Oklahoma Cop Who Lied About Beating Motorist. T.C.

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Broward Deputies Violently Arrest Men for Video Recording Before Destroying Evidence. – B.L

HJL adds: This would be an opportune time to make sure you have your Press Credentials in order.



Hugh’s Quote of the Day:

“Government-to-government foreign aid promotes statism, centralized planning, socialism, dependence, pauperization, inefficiency, and waste. It prolongs the poverty it is designed to cure. Voluntary private investment in private enterprise, on the other hand, promotes capitalism, production, independence, and self-reliance.” Henry Hazlitt



Notes for Wednesday – September 03, 2014

On September 3, 1752, the American colonies officially adopted the Gregorian calendar, and it immediately became September the 14th.

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Today, we present another entry for Round 54 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The $12,100+ 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 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),
  4. 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.
  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. A roll of $10 face value in pre-1965 U.S. 90% silver quarters, courtesy of GoldAndSilverOnline.com, (currently valued at around $180 postpaid),
  11. Both VPN tunnel and DigitalSafe annual subscriptions from Privacy Abroad (a combined value of $195),
  12. 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,
  13. TexasgiBrass.com is providing a $300 gift certificate.

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. Two cases of meals, Ready to Eat (MREs), courtesy of CampingSurvival.com (a $180 value),
  9. TexasgiBrass.com is providing a $150 gift certificate,
  10. Organized Prepper is providing a $500 gift certificate, and
  11. RepackBoxis 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, and
  7. APEX Gun Parts is donating a $250 purchase credit, and
  8. SurvivalBased.com is donating a $500 gift certificate to their store.
  9. Montie Gearis donating a Y-Shot Slingshot and a Locking Rifle Rack. (a $379 value).

Round 54 ends on September 30st, 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.



Musings of a Law Enforcement Paramedic – Part 2, by LEO Medic

Yesterday, we read about certifications and training to prepare to “doctor” your family/group in a post-SHTF scenario. Today, we have part two of this five-part article, looking at first aid in some serious, even under fire situations.

TCCC Lessons:

In addition to teaching basic EMT, I am a Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC or TC3) instructor, as well as an instructor for the associated Trauma First Responder and Law Enforcement First Responder classes. As anyone in EMS or nursing can attest, one of the first tenants of patient care is that the scene must be safe before care is provided. If the scene is not safe, you do not enter and do not provide care. TCCC is a great class for EMS providers, nurses, and doctors because it looks at what happens and what to do when the bullets are still flying and the scene is not safe. It is a two or three day course, with scenario-based training and skill stations.

I know that TC3 has been covered in a previous blog post by Cowpuncher.

That was an excellent article, and it provides a great overview of TC3. Read it and brush up.

I will try not to rehash the work of another, and will limit myself to worthwhile observations and experiences with teaching, training, and practicing TCCC, as well as new updates to the protocols. This is material that you need to be intimately familiar with. It will save lives. Hopefully this will encourage you to spend some time with your IFAK and medic gear. Guns are sexy. Wound packing is not. Don’t neglect it.

For those not familiar with TC3, the military looks at all combat deaths and does autopsies, determining cause of death and inputting vital information into a database. Of all deaths, they then look at preventable deaths. What they found from analyzing all of this data was that approximately 25% of soldiers were dying of potentially preventable deaths (The other 75% were killed outright, or suffered trauma incompatible with life.) The 25% of preventable deaths was broken down as such: 9 % died from external hemorrhage. 5% died from tension pneumothoraxes. 1% died from airway complications. Another 10% died from infections and complications of shock. Starting in the Special Ops communities in the 1990’s, TCCC was born as a solution to this. Its success has been remarkable. The Rangers have made it a goal to have all members TCCC certified. While the overall military preventable death rate is 24-25%, the Ranger preventable death rate is 3%. (So out of 100 deaths, only three could have been prevented with better field care. This is a remarkable rate.) In a nutshell, the course is external hemorrhage control and treatment for other preventable causes of death, set in the context of small squad tactics with the back drop of still accomplishing a mission. The application at TEOTWAWKI is huge. These truly are lessons learned and written in blood. I hope that by passing those lessons on, those deaths may continue to find a purpose. Why I like TC3 versus standard first aid is that it blends medicine and tactics, and often combines the two. It also understands that everything has a time and place. The focus is on skill mastery, knowledge of the application (both how and why), and thinking on your feet. The three objectives of TCCC are: Treat the casualty, prevent additional casualties, and complete the mission.

There were two recent police shootings in Utah and in Missouri where the officer shot a suspect, then used his IFAK to save the suspect’s life. Contrast this professionalism to the chokehold death by NYPD, and lack of care after. This training works.

The backbone of TCCC training is the Individual First Aid Kit (IFAK). This kit has also been gone through in detail in other posts on the blog, but for those unfamiliar, it’s basically a tourniquet, QuikClot gauze, regular gauze, an Israeli dressing, and an NPA (Naso-pharyngeal airway). It is also called a blow-out kit or gunshot kit. Some versions include an antibiotic pill pack. Within the past year, as a result from analyzing combat deaths, the military switched to the IFAK 2. This version includes new additions– a second tourniquet, an occlusive dressing, shears, an eye shield, and second QuikClot Gauze. I will go over the contents in more detail below.

TC3 breaks up care into a few phases. The first is care under fire. What care do you give while still under fire, if you or a squad mate is wounded? The initial response is to shoot back and get to cover. Prevention of further casualties is vital. Once at cover, the only care that is given while bullets are still flying is tourniquet application for a massively hemorrhaging wound. If it is not spurting blood, it can wait. You can bleed out in under three minutes from a good arterial bleed, and in the field, blood is like toothpaste– it’s hard to put it back in the tube, so keep it in. QuikClot gauze requires three minutes of pressure to work, so this is not amendable to a fire fight. If in doubt, tourniquet it up and shoot back. Ideally, you would move out of the kill zone /off of the X first and be able to self-apply. If your squad mate is shot, direct them to cover, and direct them to apply the tourniquet. If your squad mate is shot and is unresponsive and not moving, they are most likely dead and not worth the risk of a rescue attempt. That’s brutal, yes, but it’s honest. There are too many stories of five or six troops getting killed trying to ”rescue” one that is already dead or beyond saving. I have had multiple students remark that the tourniquet scenario is like a mag exchange or tactical reload. Shoot back, get to cover, do it quickly, and keep fighting.

It is almost impossible to keep manual pressure on a good bleed while moving a patient. In addition to stopping bleeding, tourniquets allow easier movement of patients after treatment, or the completion of a specific task. An Air Force PaveHawk pilot on an evac mission was shot through both thighs by small arms fire. A PJ who was on board for the rescue mission crawled up into the cockpit, tourniqueted both legs, and the pilot was able to complete the mission. This is very similar to what happened to Blanca in Patriots on a close air support run. Rather than applying a scarf, if she had a few tourniquets handy to apply and was aware of TCCC, she may have fared better!

The Raid on Entebbe is a great example of the care under fire priorities put into practice. For those not familiar, in 1976 Israeli commandos undertook a daring raid to rescue 106 hostages taken during the hijacking of a flight that landed in Entebbe, Uganda. At the onset of the raid, Yonaton Netanyahu, the older brother of Benjamin Netanyahu, was shot in the chest and fell. As trained and instructed, the assault continued. Only 90 seconds later, 102 of 106 hostages were rescued, and all hijackers were killed. (More Ugandan troops were killed during the exit.) Netanyahu was treated after the assault and died from his wounds. The 90-second delay in treatment did not change the outcome for the injuries Netanyahu suffered, but a 90-second delay would have had disastrous effects for the raid. Good medicine can sometimes be bad tactics. You are still waiting until the scene is ”safe” to provide care, but now you are the one making the scene safe.

The next aspect of care is called Tactical Field Care. This is care when hostilities have stopped (or for wounds suffered from non-hostile means) and all efforts and energy can be focused on medical care of the wounded. Realize it is fluid, so you may go from care under fire to tactical field care, and then back into care under fire. TC3 now uses the acronym MARCH to help with priorities in field care. (For those of you paying attention, it mirrors the recent change from ABC’s to CAB’s in the EMS world, where major bleeds are initially addressed.) MARCH stands for:

Massive Hemorrhage- Stop any major bleeds not addressed in care under fire. Now is the time to think about using QuikClot, if it’s needed for a bleed you can’t tourniquet, or Israeli/pressure dressings on good venous bleeds.

Airway- Does the patient have one? Time for the head tilt chin lift or NPA insertion, et cetera.

Respiration- Cover any chest wounds with an occlusive dressing. Needle decompress any suspected tension pnuemos. Provide respirations if needed.

Circulation- Start an IV/Saline Lock. Prepare to treat for shock.

Hypothermia and Head Injury- Prevent hypothermia and hypoxia.

MASSIVE HEMORRHAGE

Tourniquets-

In putting together the IFAKs, the military did extensive testing. The only tourniquets that they approved are the North American Rescue CAT (combat application tourniquet) and the Soft-T tourniquet. Both consist of a strap and buckle with a windlass. They differ slightly, but both work well. I am partial to CATs. I think they pack easier and are easier to manipulate. The strapping is a little wider also. SWAT-T, another commercially available tourniquet, did not fully occlude blood flow in military tests, and was not recommended. The SWAT-T is a long strip of elastic rubber, like an exercise band. I have played with SWAT-T’s before. I carry some as a pressure dressing or second tourniquet. (I’ll share more on this later.) They are cheap, around $8, and small, so you see them in a lot of pocket IFAK kits. (By comparison, CAT’s tend to be pricey, retailing around $30, but you can find them new in package on eBay for around $15 each if you buy a few together.) In our own trials of the SWAT-T, it was very difficult to occlude enough blood flow to stop a pulse, even under ideal conditions. It is extremely difficult to put on one handed. They will work in a pinch, but with the availability of the CATs at $15, there is no reason not to go with these. You and your loved ones are worth the extra $7. On this same note, buy extra for training. Tourniquets will fail after repeated use. The strapping will stretch, and windlasses will break. We spray paint all of our training ones, so they will not get mixed up with duty ones.

The SWAT-T is not CoTCCC approved because it is not one-handed applicable, which was a requirement in the 2004 testing. With a two-handed application, you can wrench it down enough to stop blood flow. When I am talking about not occluding blood, I am talking about single-handed application to your own arm. A faint but palpable pulse was almost always there, especially if applied over a shirt during our testing of it. The military also found similar results with two-handed tourniquets being applied one handed, hence the requirement for one-handed applicability. In full disclosure, I carry both CATs and SWAT-T’s in my gear.

Try the different types, and see what you prefer. The SWAT-T is not my favorite but is very handy for the ability to tourniquet (relatively) and act as an occlusive or pressure dressing, in a small, cheap package.

Be mindful of items in pockets or of leg drop holsters when applying tourniquets. I have seen a photograph of a tourniquet that ended up around a backboard handle as well as the patient’s leg. They will work over clothing, but hard objects will interfere with the effectiveness.

On the CAT, the pressure bar (part under the windlass) goes on the artery side of the extremity. There are two slits that the strap can be fed through on a CAT. They come fed through the inner slit only. The one slit method is for one-handed application, such as on an arm. The second slit is for two-handed application, such as on a leg. The tourniquet must be pulled as tight as possible and should not take more than three turns of the windlass to occlude blood flow. Blood pressure still follows the laws of physics. The wider the area, the less pressure required. If one tourniquet does not stop the blood flow, apply a second just on the heart side of the first. This is not a bad use for a SWAT-T.

I have seen field use of makeshift tourniquets a dozen or so times. They have ranged from bungee cords to shoe laces to belts. None worked, and all but one was not needed, since direct pressure stopped the bleeding. Remember, tourniquets are for squirting arterial bleeds; otherwise, direct pressure is still the best option. On the one time it would have made a difference (actual arterial bleed-true femoral artery laceration after ATV accident), it was put on below the laceration (honest to goodness), and so it had no effect. I have used CATs twice– once on a mid-thigh amputation and on a boat prop cut foot. In both instances, bleeding was quickly controlled. It makes a difference having the right equipment!

Once a tourniquet is on, LEAVE IT ON until higher care is reached. Do not loosen periodically. BUT…in TEOTWAWKI, what if there is no higher care? So your spouse got shot, and you were able to apply a tourniquet and stop the bleeding. Now what? If you are the ”surgeon”, you may very well have to remove one. So in the event you do, have an IV established and QuikClot in place over the wound. Leave the tourniquet on the extremity, and loosen one turn while applying pressure to the wound with hemostatic gauze. If able to control the bleeding, continue with pressure and a pressure dressing over the gauze, while slowly releasing the tourniquet. If bleeding is still uncontrolled, simply retighten tourniquet. DO NOT LOOSEN UNTIL YOU ARE READY, AS THE HIGHER MEDICAL CARE TO ADDRESS THE ISSUE. You can also use the tourniquet to stop blood flow for surgery, just as Mary did in Patriots, while fixing the forearm laceration on Margie, using a blood pressure cuff. Realize also that if a large artery was damaged, a more invasive method of stopping bleeding needs to be applied before it can be removed.

Try applying tourniquets one handed, separately using your weak and dominant hand. Try it in the dark. Try turning out the lights and having a partner wet a part of their pants or sleeve. Find the ”blood” by feel, and then apply the tourniquet correctly. Be sure to feel for lack of a pulse when applying a tourniquet to ensure proper application. The first few times, find the pulse, and keep a finger on it while someone else tightens the tourniquet, so you can feel when blood flow is stopped.

Tourniquets are also very useful in and a great change up for training. When a tourniquet is on correctly, it hurts. We have used tourniquets as a ”distraction” injury during live fire drills. It is a lot harder to shoot and manipulate a pistol when your dominate arm is throbbing from a tourniquet. Another very useful training involves simmunition guns but can be used with paintballs as well. Airsoft will not work because you need ammunition that leaves a mark. Have the trainee actively shooting with a sims gun or paintball, and then have the instructor shoot them in either their arm or leg with the marking weapon. The trainee has to return fire, move to cover, and then correctly apply the tourniquet to whatever extremity was injured, above the wound.

Make sure you can reach your tourniquet with full battle rattle on and with either hand. Consider having two or three in various locations. (I carry one in my left pant leg cargo pocket and one front and center low on my vest.) Have one standard location for your squad, so you can find it by feel in the dark if need be on each other. My squad also purchased Spec Ops Brand (a SB sponsor!) medical pouches. These are standard MOLLE pouches with a red stripe on the flap to denote First Aid. Anytime you see that stripe, you know it’s the IFAK, so time is not wasted. IFAKs go on the outside of bags, not buried on the bottom!

QuikClot

For an extremity bleed, you use a tourniquet. What about a junctional bleed, like the neck, shoulder, armpit, or groin? None of these areas are amendable to tourniquet use. (SWAT-T tourniquets can be used to come up with some very effective pressure dressings for these wounds, but please notice the term “PRESSURE DRESSING” not tourniquet.) This is where quikclot comes in.

The newest generation is Kaolin clay impregnated. The clay absorbs the liquid in blood, concentrating clotting factors. A couple of points about QuikClot first. It is not a magic bullet. It is an improvement over regular gauze, but it still requires proper packing and direct pressure for at least three minutes, and then hopefully a pressure dressing will work. It cannot magically overcome the laws of physics. Hemostatic gauze is the one exception to unpacking a wound as well. If after three minutes, bleeding is not stopped, you may unpack the wound and repack with a second hemostatic gauze to get more medicine to the bleeding site. If you do not have a second hemostatic gauze, leave the first in place and continue to pack on top as normal.

You want to purchase the gauze, not the sponge. In order to work, the medicine has to reach the bleeding site. Think about a wound as an open bottle of soda. The sponge is going to get slapped on top as a lid, and in addition to not putting the medicine where it needs to be, no pressure is on the actual site of the bleeding. Now picture the gauze being packed into the bottle through the top, and the difference becomes clear. In addition to medicine delivery to the right place, the gauze helps pressure reach the bleeding site as well. The gauze also allows easy unpacking in surgery. With bleeding wounds, people think about indirect pressure– folding up a towel and using your whole hand to apply pressure. Very good results (especially on deeper wounds) are seen with two finger direct pressure applied directly to the bleeding site. Next time you have a cut, try applying pressure with your palm and then your thumb, and see which is more effective.

When packing a wound, you want to feed gauze with one hand and keep as constant pressure as you can with the fingers on the other hand on the bleed. QuikClot has some excellent videos regarding this on their website (see below).

The only hemostatic agents that TC3 recommends are QuikClot gauze and the new Celox gauze. If you cannot afford QuikClot, compressed or ”Z fold” gauze is an excellent second choice. The military tests included inflicting actual wounds on the femoral arteries on pigs, then the application of different types of gauze to try to treat the wound. Regular gauze was the second most effective behind QuikClot in these tests. (The newer celox gauze was not tested in this series.)

Realize hemostatic agents are rarely necessary to stop a bleed. Most (almost all!) bleeds can be controlled with gauze and pressure eventually. What hemostatic agents do is give you a greater margin of error in technique and application, and they help stop the bleeding faster. Don’t get caught up and rush out to buy a case of QuikClot, thinking it will solve everything if you are just starting out with medical supplies and training.. For the $20-30 to purchase one pack of QuikClot, you can buy 20 packs of compressed gauze, which will go a lot further towards your group’s medical needs and wound care. If you can afford it though, two or three packs per person is probably worth it. You can also find packs on eBay. I have confirmed with a rep that as long as the vacuum seal is intact, the product is still good past expiration date.

For training, we constructed some cheap wound packer aids. We took a small Tupperware container (Deeper than wide) and drilled a hole in the side at the bottom. We threaded a 20 gauge IV catheter through the hole, and used a silicone bead to hold it in place. You can attach an IV line, and set the bag to run at a drip rate. With enough gauze and pressure in the container as you pack it like a wound, you can tamponade off the flow, as visible in the drip chamber. We used an old CPR mannequin face to cover the container, with the mouth as the wound, so it has a flesh type feel. Cheap, but effective.

For pressure dressing, I prefer Israeli style ones with the pressure bar over the ”Bloodstopper” gauze roll variety. I think they will apply more pressure and are easier to apply. Whatever pressure dressing you buy (I like the standard gray vacuum packed ones), buy extra to open and train with. Try them in the dark.



Letter Re: What I Like and Dislike About North Idaho

Hugh,

I thought I would write a note for those who are planning on moving to the American Redoubt about what I like and dislike about North Idaho.

I wasn’t sure if I should start with the good or the bad but have decided that because the good far outweighs the bad, I’ll start with the bad. There are only a couple things that really come to mind that I don’t like. The first is kind of a bigger one, though, and that is that work has been hard to find. I bring this up only because I don’t want anyone else making the mistake that I did. My main mistake was not researching enough myself. I listened to the realtor and what information he and the people whose property we bought provided. That was a big lesson there– be very careful when a person benefits, in this case financially, from how they answer your question. That was entirely my fault. I didn’t do my due diligence.

Most of the jobs I have been able to find were part time. A lot of that was due to Obamacare, or the Affordable Care Act, if you prefer. The second is kind of related to the first. The cost of living here isn’t that much less than where I moved from. I recently read an article that stated that Idahoans are among the lowest paid in the nation and pay among the highest for essentials, like food. Vehicle registration is a lot cheaper here and so are property taxes and some other things like that. The third is that it took a year, almost exactly, to get to know the neighbors. Once we got to know them, we were told that it took them that amount of time to kind of feel us out and get to know what we were like and also to see if we would stick around after our first Idaho winter. It may be better in the more populated areas, but where I’m at– in a rural area– the people are a bit closed off. It takes time to get to know them. I’m not saying they’re bad people or that taking the time to feel someone out is bad either. It’s just what I have found. I find that no matter where you go there are going to be some bad people. A couple of our neighbors have had druggies steal from them.

There are a lot of things that I do like about living here. It’s absolutely beautiful. I like the more conservative, Constitutional view that the majority of people have. It’s nice being around people that are more like minded. Whether they know it or not, a lot of people here are naturally more prepper minded. Unlike a lot of the western United States, there is still water here. If you’re researching northern Idaho, there is a good chance you’ll come across a lot that has to do with racism. I can’t say that I haven’t seen any of it here. There was a KKK rally near here. I believe that maybe six KKK members showed up for it, but a lot of people showed up in opposition to them. So while there are some racists here, they are the vast minority. I saw more racism in the more liberal states that I have lived in than I have here. I was hesitant to bring it up at all, but it does come up when people look into this area. So I figured it was a good idea to bring up here.

I don’t regret one bit moving here. I love it here. The only thing that I wish was different is that I would have liked to have known more about the couple of things mentioned above. I guess the most important thing I can recommend is that anyone thinking that they want to move this way should research it a lot for themselves. Come visit the area for a little bit. I recommend coming up in the winter. To me it’s the hardest season of the year. If you like it in the winter, you’ll probably love it the rest of the year. The first couple of winters will probably be the hardest on you, if you haven’t lived in a place that has winters like here. Once you get used to it, it’s not that bad–you just have to adjust and get used to it. – G.J.

JWR Replies: That July rally in Spirit Lake got some publicity, but it was not the norm. Just consider that it attracted less than 10 people out of a state population of 1.6 million. That hardly constitutes a “rally,” and it was roundly condemned.



Economics and Investing:

Are you Ready for the September Selloff?

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Video: ‘Mortgage crisis’ is coming this winter: Bove. – CDV

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Video: US consumers have decided to ‘hoard money’. – G.G.

Items from Mr. Econocobas:

Japan Wages Rising Most Since 1997 Not Enough to Beat Inflation

U.S. Hikes Fee To Renounce Citizenship By 422%

U.S. Consumer Spending Falls for First Time in Six Months

Survey: Americans’ Pessimism on Economy Has Grown – I believe this highlights the difference between the “recovery” for Main Street vs. Wall Street and those with lots of money in the market





Odds ‘n Sods:

Video: Hidden Secret Passages by Creative Home Engineering – JWR

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Android security mystery – ‘fake’ cellphone towers found in U.S.. – H.C.

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Baptist Preacher Censored, YouTube Account Closed For Sermon on Terrorism, Threat to Christians. – G.S.

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Federal Judge: ‘CA 10-day waiting period unconstitutional’. – RBS

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Dozens of police agencies report loss of Pentagon-supplied military weapons. – J.C.



Hugh’s Quote of the Day:

“Man’s mind is like a store of idolatry and superstition; so much so that if a man believes his own mind it is certain that he will forsake God and forge some idol in his own brain.” – John Calvin



Notes for Tuesday – September 02, 2014

We are running a five-part series on EMS this week. This is an area where there has been a burst of activity, both in writing of articles for SurvivalBlog and in the searching of archives. If you are one of those who needs this information, make sure you are printing out a hard copy of it. Simply click on the title of the article; you will then see a “print” link under the title.

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Today, we present another entry for Round 54 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The $12,100+ 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 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),
  4. 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.
  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. A roll of $10 face value in pre-1965 U.S. 90% silver quarters, courtesy of GoldAndSilverOnline.com, (currently valued at around $180 postpaid),
  11. Both VPN tunnel and DigitalSafe annual subscriptions from Privacy Abroad (a combined value of $195),
  12. 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,
  13. TexasgiBrass.com is providing a $300 gift certificate.

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. Two cases of meals, Ready to Eat (MREs), courtesy of CampingSurvival.com (a $180 value),
  9. TexasgiBrass.com is providing a $150 gift certificate,
  10. Organized Prepper is providing a $500 gift certificate, and
  11. RepackBoxis 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, and
  7. APEX Gun Parts is donating a $250 purchase credit, and
  8. SurvivalBased.com is donating a $500 gift certificate to their store.
  9. Montie Gearis donating a Y-Shot Slingshot and a Locking Rifle Rack. (a $379 value).

Round 54 ends on September 30st, 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.



Musings of a Law Enforcement Paramedic – Part 1, by LEO Medic

I am a peace officer by trade, but I am also a paramedic. This article will have five sections to it, based on experiences, thoughts, and training that I have seen and done on a few topics that I think may benefit the readers. The daily sections will be:

  1. Certifications/Training Options
  2. Tactical Combat Casualty Care Lessons/Training
  3. Canine ALS/TCCC
  4. Selection of Gear Carried
  5. Training Tips

A lot of this will be geared towards the retreat group that already has some medical training and for the medical coordinator, but it is applicable to someone looking to start somewhere.

First, let me share a little background on me. I am based in the western U.S. I can’t speak for the east coast, but in the west, it is common for the Forest Service to contract with local law enforcement to patrol and handle calls for service within the National Forest that fall within those local jurisdictional boundaries. USFS LEO’s are tasked primarily with resource protection, so this approach lets them focus on that while not neglecting the public’s needs for peace keeping. My current assignment is in this role. There are currently 20 of us in the division. My squad consists of five, and we have a little over 1000 square miles of patrol area. We range from a hundred degrees in the summer to snow in winters, with over 7000 feet of elevation change. There are a few rivers and lakes in the area. We have very few full-time residents in the area, and those that are full-time residents tend to introduce themselves with the ranch they ride for at the end of their name. There are some very popular recreation areas in our beat, so we deal with a lot of campers, hunters, fishermen, ATV riders, and day trippers that find misfortune.

I am a state and nationally-certified paramedic, and I was an EMT before that. I am a Wildlife First Responder and am Canine ALS trained. I am a NAEMT instructor, EMT instructor, and Tactical Combat Casualty Care/Trauma First Responder/ Law Enforcement First Responder instructor as well. I am the liaison between our department and our medical volunteer group. I have other law enforcement certifications as well, but they don’t pertain to this article.

This duty post is a very interesting look into mini-SHTF situations that the general public encounters. We (myself, a squad mate or two, and the patient/patient’s party) are often very isolated, with whatever gear we have on scene. We are often times assisted by whoever is in the victim’s group; this help has ranged from EMT’s, nurses, and doctors to good Samaritans. I have had the opportunity to witness all levels of people provide care in the field– some great, some awful. There are some interesting trends with each. While we see a few medical calls (medical as in difficulty breathing or stomach pain), most of our calls are trauma based– vehicle/ATV accidents, shootings, stabbings, falls, fights, prop cuts from boats, et cetera. In addition, I end up acting as the default care provider for my co-workers, for everything from cuts and scrapes, deep splinters, allergic reactions, and dehydration to infections that were left untreated too long and pulled muscles. (Why go to town and fill out paperwork when I can get this solved here?) I share duties for coordinating medical training for my division as well as for our volunteers. Nothing in this article is legal or medical advice. It is merely my observations and experiences from these unique situations that I’ve chronicled for the benefit of others, with an eye towards practicing medicine under austere conditions. I will talk about different certification levels. Many of the skills discussed may be outside of your scope of practice, and this is no way an endorsement for you to perform them. However, there may come a day when your knowledge and skill in them may save a life.

Certifications/Training Options

If you are looking into advanced medical training for yourself or group, it is often a daunting task. In addition to time away from work, there is often a large cost associated with any training available. Can you get by on a weekend course? Should you go longer? Should your group sponsor a member to go through something bigger and then re-teach it to the others? Is it worth it to get certified?

Common training avenues include pre-hospital options (like CPR/first aid, EMT, paramedic, and the Wilderness First Aid series) and nursing. I am not going to delve into NP, PA, MD, or DO. These deserve a separate article. Hopefully, this run down may help you plan for your retreat’s medical needs. Medical systems will change greatly at TEOTWAWKI, and the training options need to be looked at in this light.

At a minimum, CPR and basic first aid should be learned by all group members. My agency puts on free classes for the public, and most communities offer them free as well. This is bare bones stuff, covering basic wound care and splinting, RICE, et cetera. It is a very low cost, low time investment. Everyone above age ten (or younger, depending on the individual) should be certified.

As mentioned above, first aid training is usually broken up into two schools– EMS and hospital or nursing.

EMS

EMT or BLS (Basic Life Support) is usually considered the next step up from first aid. It is taught at local community colleges, or through special EMS schools. The EMT idea was devised by the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration in the 1960’s as a way to deal with the increase in vehicular trauma. Trauma is what EMT is about. EMT covers basic anatomy and physiology, recognition and treatment of shock, recognizing and treating basic problems with the ABC’s, and basic wound care. It is first aid on steroids. This is not a knock. It is the basics, but the basics with a very high level of comfort and skill. A good EMT can do amazing things. Once you have your EMT certification, most communities offer free continuing education (CE) classes to meet annual requirements. EMT’s have limited pharmacology, and a few systems allow them to start IV’s and carry limited medications.

In the same way the EMT idea was designed to deal with vehicular trauma, paramedics or ALS (advanced life support) were designed to deal with cardiac events. Paramedic is usually a 12-24 month certification. Besides EMT skills, medics have extensive cardiology training, pharmacology, pathophysiology, and other advanced skills, such as intubation and needle decompression. Paramedics carry a cardiac monitor and a drug box. A vast majority of it is still basic stuff, but with an even higher level of comfort. As an example, EMTs and medics are both trained in child birth. In EMT, it is covered in class. In paramedic, in addition to class, you have to assist with a certain number of births to pass.

EMT and paramedic are both considered pre-hospital level care. Both operate under a doctor’s license at their base hospital. You have “offline” and “online” protocols for patient care. Offline protocols are written orders that your doctor allows you to perform on any patient meeting the stated criteria. For example, I can give Benadryl or epinephrine to a patient having an allergic reaction without having to call in first. Online protocols or a ”patch” is where you call the base hospital and speak directly to a doctor for orders, usually for a complicated situation or for something outside of your protocols. For example, if I’m allowed to give a certain amount of morphine, but a patient with a high opiate tolerance and a compound fracture needs more to control the pain, I can patch through to a doctor, explain the situation, and seek permission to go outside of the normal protocols.

Both EMT and medic are exceptional with dealing with emergency scenes and immediate life saving care. Neither of these certifications includes any long-term patient care training, and this is a huge downside of EMS training in a SHTF world. The ”golden hour” is the standard of care for EMS systems. It is the goal of getting a patient from the time of accident to the hospital within one hour. EMS is designed to stabilize and go. Even with a critical care paramedic, such as a flight medic, you are stabilizing them to get them to surgery. So, you can intubate the unresponsive patient with massive head trauma to keep them alive to get them to the hospital, but what if the hospital is gone? EMS training is also hindered by the relatively short transport time. If the hospital is 30 minutes away, a doctor is not going to allow anything risky to be done in the field. Wounds are covered and transported, not cleaned, washed, and dressed on scene. Why waste ten minutes on scene trying to do a thorough cleaning of a wound when the hospital is ten minutes away, and they are going to re-clean and dress the wound anyway? Broken bones or dislocations are not set or reduced, unless a pulse is missing in the extremity. Even with a weak pulse, a reduction in blood flow, and nerve transmission will not tend to have long lasting effects, so why risk causing more harm? With this in mind, the limitations of EMS training come into view. The care is designed for minutes and hours, not days and weeks.

The wilderness series of certifications was designed to address some of the lack of long-term patient care training and the reduced availability of equipment for first responders, EMTs, and medics operating in remote back country areas. Think about your back country hunting guide or remote search and rescue team. Instead of an hour by the patient’s side before you reach higher care, think more in the 2-5 day range of time. In addition to the entire EMS curriculum, Wilderness teaches some additional skill sets. A few of these include reducing dislocations, bandaging/infection care, and clearing C-spine in the field. A lot of it is scouting basics, such as field expedient splinting and bandaging materials. Imagine you are on day three of a five day hike. Your hiking partner slips and rolls down a hill, dislocating his shoulder and opening up a nasty gash on his arm. In the three days it will take to hike out, infection will set in if not properly cleaned. If the dislocation is not reduced, lifelong deficits could develop. If you can’t clear C-spine in the field, you have to leave him there and go get help. These are not realistic options, so Wilderness Protocols were developed. As stated above with online and offline protocols, Wilderness Protocols are a set of guidelines for patient care when traditional EMS is not available.

I am a huge fan and supporter of the wilderness series of EMS. Our current protocols are a blend of traditional and wilderness ones. Our usual patient care time to transfer is from 30 minutes to four hours, but 8-12 hour time frames occur on a monthly basis. (Think rappelling to a patient and having to do a helicopter long line extraction), and we have been on scene for over 24 hours before, in extreme cases. A large portion of our patrol area is accessible only by boat, helicopter, or foot. We are blessed with a very good base hospital and a doctor who has taken the time to get to know us, our limitations, and the area we work in. Our pre-hospital coordinator is also in charge of emergency preparedness, and they are both realists. We have very liberal medication policies, due to the lack of radio reception in many areas, and we can clear some c-spine in the field among other things. Our hospital would rather have well-trained people capable of making independent decisions in the field, if needed, knowing we may not be able to patch, and then explain why we did what we did later. There is a huge responsibility with this, but it can be and is addressed with training. This is the basis of the mindset for Wilderness first aid, and should be the basis for your group’s planning.

As much of a supporter of the Wilderness Series as I am, it still has some limitations. It contains no patient rehab or long-term care. It covers hours to a few days but not weeks. As a side note, I have also seen that for some reason when someone is trained in Wilderness first aid, they have a hard time correctly applying it. People do not rise to the occasion; they sink to their level of training. So rather than treat the broken arm and shoulder injury by just safety pinning the bottom of the patient’s shirt to the collar in a make shift triangular bandage sling or some other simple fix, they feel a need to whittle a splint from birch bark and use natural grasses to tie it all up. I’m not joking. This is a consistent theme. I’ve seen people with paracord bracelets and all sorts of usable quality medical gear (including large first aid kits!) feel a need to use the most rudimentary option they can devise, just because they are surrounded by trees. I blame the approach to training. For the most part, people that take those classes are outdoorsy types, and they get caught up in the chance to play survivor man. I think most don’t have any other medical training, so they lose sight of the overall goal of patient care and get fixated on that cool thing they saw in class. Also, if you are Wilderness certified as an EMT but operating in the ”city”, wilderness protocols do not apply.

Nursing

In the same way EMS was designed to stabilize and get the patient to a hospital for treatment, nursing came about as its namesake; it is about nursing people back to health. Nurses originally took over after the doctor provided initial treatment, and they provided all aspects of recovery care. As hospitals have modernized (read as cut budgets and staffing) nurses have branched out into many other aspects of patient care, because in a nut shell, they cost less than doctors do. If you go to the ER, you will be triaged by a nurse, assessed by a nurse, a doctor will see you for a few minutes, then a nurse will provide the care the doctor prescribed. If you have surgery, it is very likely a Nurse Anesthetist will be the one putting you to sleep, not the anesthesiologist. Like EMS providers, nurses have patient care protocols. There are certain interventions they can perform, but they need a doctor’s orders for most care or medication administration. Nursing is usually broken up into CNA, LPN, and RN/BSN. (I’m sorry if I left any specialties out).

CNA is a 6-week course that is pretty much taking vitals, basic first aid, and changing bed sheets and bed pans. It’s the jobs in the hospital no one wants to do.

LPN is a year to 18 months, and includes all of the fun of CNA, plus a few more patient care aspects, phlebotomy, and some medication. They go over assessments, triage, et cetera.

RN is a two year program, and BSN is a four year program with a Bachelor of Nursing at the end. These are the real deal nurses people think of when they picture a nurse. There is extensive training in all of the above, including bandaging, dressing, rehabs, pharmacology, anatomy, pathophysiology, some advanced interventions, et cetera. (As a side note, if someone wants to join your group and presents themselves as a nurse, it would be beneficial to find out what type they are!)

As EMS was designed for seconds to a few days, nursing was designed for seconds to months, and every aspect of patient care. I am a huge believer in the usefulness of nursing post-SHTF. This may be a bit pessimistic and basic, but I think most injuries post-SHTF will either kill you or require a long rehab. You won’t have the surgical option to save those in between cases. During this rehab, nurses will shine.

Where nursing does not shine is in pre-hospital emergency field care. I know many critical care flight nurses that are patient care wizards in any condition, along with some top notch ER nurses. Their skill was learned on the job and in that specific field, not in the process of obtaining the basic certification. Nursing is not designed for this, so it’s not a knock against nurses. It’s the nature of the job. Nurses tend to be active types, so I run into a fair number of them on calls. Nurses are great at assessment and triage in the field, but not interventions. A lot of nurses are used to having the supplies of a hospital on hand, so they do not carry first aid kits afield. Many also have a difficult time prioritizing injuries in the field. For example, I’ll leave a broken arm alone until we take care of other things, because broken arms don’t kill right away. One thing nurses are excellent at is doing something rather than just standing by and waiting.

I have also seen doctors perform field care, which has been a mixed bag. From chiropractors to trauma surgeons to family practitioners, along the same lines as others, you must realize what your limitations are and work to fix them. Everyone loses skills if they do not use them. Just ask a doctor to start an IV sometime! Don’t rest on your laurels and be content with your current experience. Expand your training.

Before I start a firestorm of angry letters from doctors, medics and nurses, please understand what I am saying: Our modern medical system is an integrated one with different providers playing different roles. Because each of these roles and accompanying certifications play only a part, they do not receive comprehensive training. People struggle when you take them out of their comfort zone. So what is the solution, besides becoming a Wilderness paramedic, marrying a nurse, and going to Cynthia Koelker’s Survival Medicine class, or recruiting a trauma surgeon? First, realize the limitations of your current training. Then address them. If you are an EMT, get training on bandaging, infection control, rehab, suturing, dentistry, et cetera. If you are a nurse, look into getting EMT trained or buy and read a EMS text. Most states will let a nurse challenge the test and test out. Like Mary Gray in Patriots, think about the skills you may need (for example blood transfusions or suturing) and then seek out training in them. I have a cousin in the Peace Corps. I have used this to start all sorts of conversations with doctors I come across to ask questions about medicine in austere conditions.

If you have no medical training at all, I highly recommend Wilderness EMT. It is a great starting point, it carries national certification, and it lets you start to volunteer in your local community. It is also a low cost, low time commitment option. Note that it is only a starting point. (Go buy and read a nursing text book too!) You know what it is lacking, so plan on learning those topics as well. Nurses and EMS all require CE hours. These can be found for free. Go to them. If you are a nurse, go to EMS CE’s. If you are a medic, go to nursing CE’s. A lot of these apply to TEOTWAWKI. One I attended recently had a lecture on a recent increase of infant seizures. They ended up being caused by electrolyte imbalance from caregivers thinning out formula with water at the end of the month before the first of the month (and the money) came. This is absolutely a problem that will exit with TEOTWAWKI. You never know what you will find out. I also highly recommend Tactical Combat Casualty Care for any provider. (There is more on this later in this article.) I work with many volunteer EMT’s. Some of the best, as far as overall ability to manage a patient, are current or ex-nurses who became EMTs as well. They are well rounded and have addressed the weak points in each of their skill sets. The above is meant as simply a generic observation and is not a limitation on anyone. Use it to help direct your future training.

After getting your basic training, USE IT! Volunteer with a local fire service. There is no substitute for experience, and this will get you an ”in” to many EMS opportunities and trainings. You can often diagnose things by feel after a certain point. Anaphylaxis is a great example of this. After seeing anaphylaxis versus allergic reactions, you can almost tell by the restlessness of the patient which way it is going to go. Make your mistakes now when you have the benefit of others to help you learn from them. Improve your skills. You don’t want the first IV you try to give to be on your dehydrated eight year old who has had diarrhea for a week from bad food and now has collapsed veins. Get better training and experience now when the cost of a mistake is still low. There was a recent letter to the blog regarding the use of body armor. The author stated that although he attended a survival medicine class, he was unsure he could treat a gunshot wound. This is a common feeling that people go through. A little training makes you realize how much you don’t know, because your eyes are opened a little bit more. Training is designed to expose you to new ideas, so that you can learn them to proficiency later. Practice is what cements those ideas in. Let it spark a fire, not discourage you. There will be a day when whether you think you can or can’t won’t matter. You will have to, because no one else will be there to do it.

Realize that whatever level of training you have, you will be the ”doctor” for your family/group. Get training now and round out your skills. Go to a survival medicine class. (I still recommend having baseline medical training, as a starting point for a frame of reference and experience – see the above example.) Practice now. Treat your family. At a minimum, if your spouse has to go to the doctor for an infection or something, diagnose them first. Assess, decide what antibiotics you would give, what dose, length of time, et cetera, and compare them to the doctor’s prescription. If someone gets a horrible case of the flu, try giving them an IV at home. I get ear infections, and my wife made ear drops that work wonders by experimenting. Take vital signs. Listen to lung sounds. Even if you don’t know the names of the sounds, you will learn what normal is and recognize when something is different.

If you are on a strict budget, you could buy an EMS text, nursing text, and Armageddon Medicine, but you still need to read them and put them into practice. My medic teacher loved the analogy of medicine as cooking. Anyone can follow the instructions on a box of hamburger helper. However, a chef can look at a few ingredients and come up with a great meal. Your goal for medical training is to become a chef, not just a cook. The more you understand and learn about disease processes, physiology, and so forth, the better problem solver you will become. Rounding out your education and skills is critical to this. Leonid Rogozov was able to perform a self-appendectomy in Antarctica by being able to apply his skills and knowledge.

I will also encourage anyone in the medical field to start to instruct and teach. In addition to giving back, you will learn the subject in a way you never had imagined. Students ask some amazing questions, and keep you on your toes. It helps keep you up to date with the newest advancements in the topic. I think that medical instruction post-SHTF will be in high demand as a skill, as well as a community asset. (In the Expatriates book before the ambush is planned in Tangerine, imagine the benefit of giving a hasty class to the ambushers on gunshot care or the like.)



Letter Re: 9 Volt Batteries

Folks,

If you’re like me you are heavy in AA and AAA cells and rechargeables, and you’re light in 9v batteries (with none rechargeable). This may be a problem for our 9v devices.

I found a couple items that might be of some use:

Battery Holder for (8) AA with Standard Snap Connector : BH383

Philmore Battery Holder for (6) AA with Standard Snap Connector : BH363

This allows you to make a 9v battery with AA cells. The connector is the same as a 9v connector.

The good news is that this makes a great 9v battery, about 2500mAh compared to about 200mAh. It is inexpensive– the amazon price is high at $6. I just walked into Frys and bought these for $1.50 each. It makes a nice backup solution for 9v devices if you run out of 9v batteries. Also most 9v devices have a cable for connection rather than a battery “socket”, making these viable. It allows you to stay out of expensive 9v rechargeables and standardize more with AA’s. There MAY be some AAA versions of these holders that might fit in 9v spaces on the device, but I haven’t looked.

The bad news is that they won’t fit into the usual 9v space, making you have to duct tape the thing to your device, and they consume a lot of AA’s.

Keep the voltages in mind: 6 x 1.5v = 9v (alkalines) 8 x 1.5v = 12v 6 x 1.2v = 7.2v (nimh) 8 x 1.2v = 9.6v Using 6 1.2’s and 2 1.5’s in the 8-cell holder gives 9v exactly.

Apparently, 9v devices usually work with quite a wide range of voltages, although 9.6v is about max for them. The 12v one, although bad for 9v devices, might be otherwise useful.

Thought you’d be interested if you haven’t see these yet. – P.B.



News From The American Redoubt:

Coal industry dealt another setback as Oregon blocks export plan – will feds help?– H.L.

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Albertsons data breach involved 3 states – RBS

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When RightNow sold to Oracle for $1.8 billion, who got the money?

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Sentinel High principal, vice principal suspended

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Bison hunt starts slowly in northwest Wyoming

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Paging Sheriff Longmire! Investigation into decapitated body progresses (Powell, Wyoming)





Odds ‘n Sods:

One of the Ryans over at the great Total Survivalist blog has posted a pre-release review of my upcoming novel, Liberators. (The novel is scheduled for release on October 21st, 2014.) Bottom line: He rated it “excellent”, and called it “probably the best book in the series.” – JWR

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Just ten days and counting to the release of Atlas Shrugged III: Who Is John Galt? (September 12, 2014.) – JWR

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Drought in Spain means massive olive oil shortage in months ahead

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Strategy irony: Obama declares ‘National Preparedness Month,’ ‘PrepareAthon’. – G.G.

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Philadelphia Police Confiscating Thousands of Families Homes. – G.P.