As consumers, we are bombarded with new and improved devices and other consumer goods constantly. Buying something to make our daily work and tasks easier has been ingrained in our psyche over the centuries. As I prepare for the end of the world as we know it (TEOTWAWKI), I don’t look for the “new and improved” devices that have electronics, require power (either AC or DC), are made of plastic or that are made in China. That does not mean that I don’t have a Ham (amateur) radio, flashlights, solar panels, and plastic items made in China. What I mean is, that I try to look for prepping items from days before all the “modern conveniences”. Those items have survived decades and will, more than likely, continue to survive when pressed into service after TEOTWAWKI. What should we be looking for and thinking about?
The stark reality of post-TEOTWAWKI life is that the surviving people will have to revert back to self-sustaining agriculture for the most part. Sure, there will be exceptions to the rule, like a doctor or nurse who may be paid in food for their services. Raising crops and animals is not as labor-intensive as it once was. Mechanization allows one person, with millions of dollars worth of high-tech farm machinery, to plow, sow, maintain, and harvest hundreds of acres of crops. We live on a very small homestead where we cut hay, have a large garden, and have an orchard. We have cows for meat and chickens for both meat and eggs. We currently have one pig for meat, as well.Continue reading“What is Old is New Again – Part 1, by 3AD Scout”

