(Continued from Part 1. This concludes the article.)
Keeping warm will be another area where we revert back to old ways. I see lots of prepper articles and YouTube videos about sawing wood for heat. Back in the bygone days, one of the daily chores of children was picking up “sticks”. Many of us may remember the old nursery rhythm with the line “five, six pick up sticks”. These sticks were used for cooking. Heat from the daily food preparation was just an added bonus in the colder months. We may want to lower our expectations of post-TEOTWAWKI comfort. Trying to maintain our home’s temperature to 70 degrees may be a waste of resources. (Fuel, oil, wood, and time).
So how did our ancestors stay warm if not by keeping the home at 70 degrees? I remember questioning the rating of the old down-filled U.S. Army “Extreme Cold” sleeping bag. There was more than one occasion I remember being cold in West Germany in that sleeping bag. One of my Sergeants quipped that the army’s specification of extreme cold sleeping bag was not that you would be nice and toasty warm but rather that you would not get hypothermia. So when TEOTWAWKI happens, we may have to adjust our expectations as to what we consider “warm”. Besides warmth from a source of flame, we should consider body heat retention.Continue reading“What is Old is New Again – Part 2, by 3AD Scout”

