The Cycle of Prepping: One Man’s Approach, by Steve in Wisconsin

Although I’m sure far wiser people than I have said it before, I certainly subscribe to the notion that prepping is a road, not a destination.  In other words, although the pace may vary, I’m continually prepping and always will be.  Possible exceptions to this rule, to one degree or another, are the folks who have the means to simply take one of the “list of lists” available and write a big check to cover virtually all of their needs, but even that will require some ongoing maintenance.  I am certainly not in that camp and I think it’s clear that most other people are also not in that camp.  So for those of us who have to move in a more incremental fashion, I submit what I call the cycle of prepping.  For people who are just starting their prepping journey, getting started can be a daunting task and I believe this approach helps to chip away at the mountain that prepping is.  I’d imagine others have come up with similar philosophies, I certainly don’t claim to be the first, but this is my take and my approach.

My “road” of prepping is not a straight road where each priority is taken care of completely before moving down the road to the next.  My road is a loop that I go around and around, addressing each of my priorities bit by bit.  I take this approach because I want to have some of everything rather than all of only some things.  In other words, I don’t want to get totally squared away on one priority before even addressing other priorities at all.  This may not be that important if I knew how much time I had before I’ll need my preps, but I have yet to find a reliable crystal ball, so just in case I need my preps tomorrow, I want to make sure I have, at least, the basics of each of my priorities.

I’m using the rather general term “priority” to describe the various types of preps, and although I will use more specific examples of priorities below, your priorities may, and likely will, be different.  It is not the point of this essay to espouse the relative importance of any priority, general or specific, each of us must decide that for ourselves, it is simply a framework for addressing your priorities, whatever they may be.

For this example I will use three tiers of priorities, the first very general, the second more specific and so on.  You can add additional tiers or rearrange these as you like, remember, this is only a framework, use it with your specific situation in mind to come up with the final result.  For this example, tier one priorities are:

  • Shelter
  • Sustenance
  • Security
  • Other

If we apply the cycle paradigm to this list, we would procure some of our Sustenance priorities, then when able, acquire or enhance some of our Shelter-related priorities, then address some of our security priorities and finally some other priorities which will bring us back to Sustenance.

Adding in the second and third tiers of priorities might look something like this:

  • Shelter
    • Primary House
      • Heat/Fire
      • Waste Management
    • Retreat
  • Sustenance
    • Water
      • Backup Well Pump
      • Rain Water Collection
    • Food
      • MREs
      • Freeze-dried Food
      • Bulk Staples (rice, wheat, etc.)
  • Security
    • Firearms
      • Battle Rifle
      • Shotgun
      • Handgun
    • Ammunition
      • Caliber 1 (depending on weapons choices above)
      • Etc.
    • Edged Weapons
      • Combat Knife
      • Utility Knife
  • Other
    • Medical
      • First Aid Kit
      • Reference Books
    • G.O.O.D. Bag
    • Communications
    • Books

It is important to note that your specific version of this list will grow as you iterate through it.  Do not try to make the perfect list before taking action.  You risk paralysis by analysis and other potentially disastrous delays.  Get your top 2-3 tiers roughed out and get moving.  As time goes by, the list will flesh itself out.  Be flexible!  Don’t be afraid to add items to tier levels, for example, you may want your G.O.O.D. Bag(s) to be a tier one priority.  Everyone is different based on many factors such as where you live, how many (if any) dependants you have and what you believe to be the major threats or causes of a collapse.  Some priorities may be hit multiple times such as ammunition.  You may purchase some of the same type for multiple cycles, which is fine, or you may skip something in a cycle which is also fine.  In each cycle, when you arrive at a given priority, you simply have to decide what is most important at that time.

The important thing to remember about this approach is the cycle.  Marshal your resources and keep your iterations tight.  You will see progress and that can be very motivational, keeping you going for more cycles to come.

The information above covers the theory, now I will run through several iterations that are loosely based on my situation.  I’ll stress once again that your situation and priorities will be different, this is done to illustrate how to take the framework and overlay one possible set of specifics on top of it to achieve a result.

I am a mid-40’s single parent of a pre-teen son.  Although, as you will see, I have several other possible dependents, my son and I are absolute so my preps focus one the two of us.

Iteration #1:

  • Shelter – I’ve owned my own home in a rural/suburban area for many years.  It is not the ideal house/location, but I’ve deemed it serviceable (at least with a few upgrades) so that is where my Shelter priorities started.  One of the hard limits I had for my home with regard to it’s post-collapse viability is having it’s own well and septic system and my first priority was making sure I could use both regardless of the situation.  To this end I purchased a hand pump for the well and had it plumbed right into the system allowing my to pressurize my system by hand.  This went a long way to addressing both my water and waste removal priorities.
  • Sustenance – Luckily for me, the well modifications above also helped address my needs for water as it relates to sustenance (drinking and cooking) so for this iteration I usually make a trip to a big box for food or if I have the money, order some freeze-dried storage food.
  • Security – Firearms and ammunition for my son and I are the top priorities for each of these iterations.  For the first iteration, the purchase of one of my chosen battle rifles (with several, but not enough, magazines) was made.
  • Other – Although bugging out is something I hope to never have to do and won’t do unless absolutely every other option has been exhausted, I certainly didn’t want to be unprepared for that possibility so getting our G.O.O.D. bags squared away was at the top of the list.  For my first iteration, I bought ALICE packs for both of us.

It is worth emphasizing again that you can and should be flexible with this framework.  For example, when I bought our packs, I also bought a bunch of first aid-type supplies.  If you’re in a given priority and are not ready to move to the next, don’t.  Get that priority to a point you’re happy with and then move on.  This is especially applicable in early iterations when you need many things.  Later in the process, more and more basic needs will be fulfilled and you will be able to do fine tuning.

Iteration #2:

  • Shelter – I have shelter, the means to relieve myself and water for cooking, drinking and bathing.  Granted, bathing with cold water would suck, but if it came to that, I doubt there would be many complaints.  So now if came to heat.  For this I bought a wood-burning stove with both a cook-top and small oven.  I would’ve settled for just the wood-burner for heat, but was fortunate to be in a position (after selling some collectible I had) to spend the extra money for a stove that provided the extra bonus of being able to contribute to food preparation.  It is worth noting at this point that you can do some things in parallel.  For example, during this time, some friends and I were acquiring firewood (traded for the labor of felling and cutting up the trees in question).
  • Sustenance – Again here I looked at my current stock and compared it to my “sub” priorities under Sustenance and simply acquired this next items on my list.
  • Security – Again I just looked at what I had, what I needed and decided what I thought was the next most important need.  Perhaps the shotgun or the sidearm.  For some it may be additional ammunition or magazines.
  • Other – Early iterations of this priority were focused on our packs and other medical/first aid supplies.

By now you should have the idea as well as an estimation of whether or not this approach will work for you.  Finally, just a word on later iterations; even though I feel I have many basic needs addressed, I have never even come close to feeling done or “ready”.  My current iterations consist of adding to my consumables (food, ammunition, etc.) along with starting to prepare for some of my potential dependents.  My parents are in their 70s and although they are very good at keeping some extra food around, they do not have the means to do what I’d consider serious prepping.  I take this possibility seriously and my current iterations reflect the eventuality of having to care for them post-collapse.

My final point will be to, once again, stress the nature of this approach as a framework.  Apply your specifics to it in order to obtain the desired result.



Three Letters Re: Hand Wood Splitting Tools

James,
Here’s a wood splitter that I’ve been using for years.  The Woodwiz Splitter is easy to using and safe way of splitting wood and it’s made in the United States.
Respectfully, – Tim McC.

 

Jim
In my experience, over several decades of processing hardwoods for fuel in the lake country of mid-Ontario Canada, I found no maul which can out split the venerable “chopper 1”.   With or without operational springs on the wedge face, these axes, usually marketed with a tough composite handle in Canada would be my candidate to recommend as the “American made splitting tool of choice”!  I notice on eBay there are several listings.

Another thought regarding a company whose products I use and respect is Norwood sawmills. (“Quality-built in the USA and Canada”). I own and use their steel handled cant hook, their ATV log skidding arch and their tree-felling jack. I work my own wood bush on my own.  The items I mention are intended to be appropriate to your readership, meet your criterion and provide value of service.

Additionally, I would be remiss not to mention the Crosscut Saw Company.  This is for the chainsaw adverse,  the purist, the “quiet minded”, or the fuel deprived. They are located in Seneca Falls, N.Y.
Regards, – Lee of the North

James,
Another great source for American made wood cutting tools is Snow & Nealley Company in Bangor, Maine. I’ve used one of their splitting mauls for many years. The quality is unparalleled. They know a few things about logging tools in Maine. Regards, – Granite Guy from Vermont



Economics and Investing:

Alt-Market reports: International Monetary Fund Recommends Stealing Americans’ Wealth Now!

3D Printed Gun Inventor Embarks on New Project: Dark Wallet

Today, America’s Foodstamps Program Gets A 6% Haircut: What Happens Next? (Thanks to B.B. for the link.)

Items from The Economatrix:

Medicare docs face 24% pay cut … again

Manufacturers Shake Off Effect of Budget Impasse

Manufacturing in U.S. Expands at Faster Pace Than Forecast



Odds ‘n Sods:

Next on my reading pile is Richard J. Johnson’s book Redoubts: Paleopopulism at Twilight. Though ranty in spots, this looks like a cogent collection of essays.

   o o o

Several readers mentioned a propaganda piece in the Washington Times that quotes Chinese military planners boasting about their nuclear strike capability on the United States. In my estimation this blustering is more about China’s economic goals than it is about actual military plans. China aims to crush the United States economically in the long term, but in the near term they need the American consumer market, to keep their many factories busy. Their immediate goal appears to be undermining the reserve currency status of the US. Dollar. (And as long as the US Treasury and the Federal Reserve are using Ma and Pa Kettle math through Quantitative Easing, they are contributing to the demise of the Dollar.) The latest nuclear braggadocio of the Chinese plays into this, subtly boosting the gravitas of their Yuan/Remnibi. A recent $57 Billion Chinese currency swap agreement with the ECB is further evidence of a coming sea change, as is China’s very aggressive buying of gold.

   o o o/

I heard about a company called Hidden Hybrid Holsters. By neatly blending Kydex with a comfortable leather backing, their concealment holsters are some of the best on the market. My query to the company confirmed that their holsters are made in Ohio, with local materials and craftsmanship: Their leather pieces are made in Ohio by the Amish, and they make their own Kydex shells and assemble everything in house, in Ohio.

   o o o

The Second Amendment Trumps (at least in Florida): Sheriff Reinstated After Jury Acquits. (This appears to be a good example of Jury Nullification.)

   o o o

Study: Bat-to-Human Leap Likely for SARS-Like Virus

   o o o

File Under: Ironic Surnames: Woman on Phone Drives Jeep into Herd of Cows





Notes from JWR:

Wow! The benefit Redoubt silver coin auction for Orange Jeep Dad in the aftermath of his traumatic house fire brought a high bid of $1,709! My sincere thanks for everyone’s generous bids. Since the bidding was so strong, I threw in a lot of bonus items, plus an hour of free consulting.

Today we present a guest article by Dr. Philip J. Goscienski. I’m sure that this article will be controversial, because there are two sharply divided camps in American prepperdom regarding vaccines. The continuing threat of vaccine contamination and the strange side effects (which are sometimes sudden) and anaphylactic reactions are of concern. And despite the repudiation of Wakefield’s research, the autism correlation debate is continuing, including some troubling data in a peer-reviewed journal on links to aluminum. (But of course correlation does not necessarily mean causation.) Contamination with mercury, squalene, SV40, and unintended live strains have been cited by opponents. You would think that vaccine purity and safety would be paramount, but even a proposed ban on mercury in vaccines was controversial. Furthermore, the widespread suppression of information is also a concern to me.

Because my family lives a largely isolated life at a remote ranch, we decided to forego all immunizations except for tetanus. For us, as skeptics, the risks of contamination outweigh the benefits. (But your mileage may vary.) I strongly recommend that SurvivalBlog readers fully research this subject so that they can make an informed decision for their own families.



Immunization: Your First and Last Defense at TEOTWAWKI, by Philip J. Goscienski, M.D.

If the nation’s infrastructure should crumble at TEOTWAWKI more than two centuries of medical advances in immunology will go down with it. The loss of the power grid in a massive solar flare or EMP will eliminate our capacity to make vaccines that protect us against serious, often fatal illnesses. The physicians who survive will face infectious diseases that they have never seen because they have been eliminated by vaccines.

Survivalblog readers are aware of the need to stock up on beans, Band-Aids and bullets but it is vital to acquire a supply of immune substances within the body. We may eventually run out of the three Bs but the protection provided by vaccines can last for years, perhaps a lifetime.

A SHTF scenario can take many forms, will probably affect various parts of the globe differently and the degree of recovery will depend on factors that are at present unpredictable. An example of how it might affect a vaccine-preventable disease occurred when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991. Some regions of that country have always suffered from health standards that are quite low compared to most Western nations. Diphtheria, a disease that has been virtually absent in the United States since the middle of the 20th century was not unknown in the USSR. There were 839 cases of diphtheria reported there in 1989, two years before the implosion of the communist way of life. When the country fell apart so did their public health system. There were no funds for vaccines, including the one for diphtheria. The bacteria that cause diphtheria are always circulating within the population. The vaccine – the D in the DPT vaccine that children usually receive during the first 6 months of life – protects against a toxin produced by the germ and has no effect on the bacterium itself. As the unimmunized population grew so did the incidence of diphtheria. In 1994 50,000 persons developed the disease and 1,700 died. By the time a massive immunization program brought the epidemic under control more than 157,000 cases had been recorded and more than 5,000 persons died. Those numbers may not have told the whole story, since record-keeping also suffered during the years that followed the collapse.

This example explains why immunizations must continue even when the diseases that they protect us against have been nearly eliminated. Nearly is the key word. With the exception of smallpox, every other vaccine-controlled virus or bacterium lurks within every population group on the planet, suppressed but not eliminated. In order to maintain low levels of disease it is necessary to immunize 85 or 90 percent of the population. This is known as herd immunity, wherein there are so few susceptible individuals that outbreaks of disease are unlikely. At TEOTWAWKI herd immunity will diminish rapidly and the diseases that our great-grandparents feared will return in epidemic form. To put this in perspective the list below shows the average number of cases that occurred every year in the United States prior to the vaccine for that disease and the number that occurred annually within approximately five years after a vaccine’s introduction.

Pre-vaccine                             Disease                                               Post-vaccine

48,000                                       Smallpox                                                     0
175,000                                    Diphtheria                                                    2
16,000                                      Paralytic polio                                             0
500,000                                    Measles                                                     116*
150,000                                    Mumps                                                     266*
48,000                                       Rubella (German measles)                       23*
800                                            Congenital rubella                                        3*
20,000                                       Hemophilus meningitis, epiglottitis       181
150,000                                    Pertussis (Whooping cough)                    7,500

* – Many of these victims came here from countries with low immunization rates. Some belong to communities that do not immunize children based on religious beliefs. A growing number represents children of parents who refuse immunization.

A graph originally from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention web site shows the dramatic decline in the incidence of measles that followed introduction of an effective measles vaccine. Nearly identical declines have followed for vaccines such as mumps, rubella, polio and Hemophilus.

There was a surprising surge in the incidence of measles during the period 1989-1991. Subsequent analysis revealed that nearly half of the cases were in preschool children and that vaccine coverage was low in this group. Ninety percent of victims that died had not received the measles vaccine. There was an increased susceptibility among infants below the age of one year who were born to mothers whose immunity occurred from having received the measles vaccine, not natural infection.

Infants who are born to mothers who have experienced natural measles receive protective antibody through the placenta and they are relatively immune to the disease for about one year. That’s why children do not receive the MMR (Measles-Mumps-Rubella) vaccine until they reach the age of 12 to 15 months. If the vaccine is given before maternally-derived antibody has fallen to very low levels, the vaccine will not “take.” However, women who were born before the introduction of the measles vaccine in 1963, and therefore might have had measles, are almost all beyond childbearing age. Just about all mothers who give birth today have had the measles vaccine, not the natural disease, and their infants do not have year-long immunity. If an outbreak of measles were to occur today, pediatricians are encouraged to give the MMR vaccine to children older than 9 months or even earlier. That option will not be available when the SHTF and no vaccine is available.

There are several reasons for the seemingly high number of victims of pertussis even though a vaccine is available. The responsible organism maintains a constant reservoir within the community. The illness that it causes in adults resembles bronchitis and it is not recognized as whooping cough. Infected adults can spread the disease to very young infants whose immunity is poor. That lack of immunity is partly because their mothers have never had the disease and cannot transmit protection across the placenta or via breast milk. Although immunization for pertussis begins at about 6 weeks the vaccine does not confer protection until at least two, usually three doses have been given. Unfortunately, infants under the age of one year develop the characteristic illness known as whooping cough. Although the mortality rate is low, about 1 percent, the disease is agonizingly painful and often causes seizures.  

A disaster that takes down the grid for a prolonged period will have a severe effect on vaccine production, distribution and administration. Each of these elements will be affected by loss of the cold chain when refrigeration systems are no longer operable. It is the unreliability of the cold chain that challenges immunization programs in the developing world.

Making a vaccine is impossible without refrigeration and freezer capability. Many vaccines must be held at low temperatures from the final step of manufacture throughout the delivery to destination clinics or physicians’ offices. Even recently there have been instances of vaccine failure because vaccines were stored in areas of a refrigerator such as a door shelf, where the difference of only a few degrees eliminated their potency. Vaccines that are now being stored in refrigerators and freezers of pharmaceutical warehouses and pharmacies will become worthless when the grid goes down and backup generators run out of fuel.

Nature provides the most effective vaccines but they come at a frightful price. Those who survived smallpox never had to fear the disease again but 30 percent of its victims did not survive. Smallpox was eradicated from the planet because late in the 18th century an astute physician overheard dairymaids comment that they were unafraid of contracting smallpox because they had developed cowpox in the course of their milking chores. Edward Jenner inoculated fluid from cowpox lesions into the skin of his gardener’s son. The child did not become ill upon later inoculation with fluid taken from a smallpox victim.

Sometimes nature’s vaccines are gentle. During outbreaks of paralytic polio in the first half of the 20th century physicians noted that the disease affected children of the wealthy at higher rates than children of the poorer classes. Sanitation among the latter was often marginal and allowed exposure to germs within human waste. These included viruses that were similar to the poliovirus but that caused only mild illness, if any. Infection with these sewage-borne enteroviruses stimulated the production of antibodies that could block infection with the related poliovirus.

Vaccination causes an artificial disease that is mild or without any symptoms at all but protection from subsequent exposure to the natural disease may not last for a lifetime. For various reasons the antibodies that develop after vaccination gradually decline, making it necessary to give one or more booster doses. For instance, boosters are recommended for all the disease noted in the comparison table above. (Hemophilus may be an exception but it is a relatively new vaccine. Healthy adults rarely develop meningitis or other life-threatening diseases caused by Hemophilus.)  Childhood immunization against diphtheria and tetanus can last for many decades but persons over the age of 50 should have a booster shot. As in the post-collapse Soviet Union, diphtheria may become widespread in TEOTWAWKI. Tetanus will be a greater threat when survivors return to an agrarian lifestyle. The dreaded “lockjaw” will become more common than it is today and there will be no treatment.

There is a little good news for persons who have been immunized prior to the loss of vaccines in the future. Later exposure to a wild virus during TEOTWAWKI may provide nature’s own booster effect. This phenomenon has not been studied extensively and will not apply to every microorganism. It’s another compelling reason, however, to take advantage of all the opportunities for immunization that are available. Even if a vaccine does not completely prevent disease, which occurs in about half the patients who receive the shingles (zoster) vaccine for example, the subsequent illness is milder and is much less likely to produce severe complications.

Some vaccines do provide lifelong protection. Hepatitis A is a disease that is usually food borne and that will likely increase when municipal sanitation facilities decline or fail in TEOTWAWKI. The incidence of hepatitis B is not likely to increase and may even decline when drug addicts, its common victims, no longer have access to intravenous narcotics. There is no vaccine for hepatitis C. Twinrix® is a vaccine that protects against both hepatitis A and hepatitis B but it requires three doses over a 6-month period. It has virtually no side effects and provides nearly 100 percent protection that will likely last a lifetime. TEOTWAWKI might occur at any time, so don’t delay getting this vaccine. You might not have 6 months to become fully protected.

Most vaccines have side effects but these are so inconsequential compared to the real disease that fear of some kind of reaction is not justified. All vaccines are delivered via a needle. (Oral poliovirus is no longer used in the U.S. because of the occasional occurrence of vaccine-associated paralytic poliomyelitis. The intranasal influenza virus is limited to certain age groups.) Needles obviously can hurt and when even a small amount of fluid is injected into muscle or into the tissue beneath the skin it’s likely that there will be a little pain. The good news is that needle technology has become so sophisticated that sometimes there is no sensation of needle entry at all.

One cannot discuss the subject of childhood immunizations without addressing the issue of vaccine-related autism. Autism Spectrum Disorder affects thousands of children and there is as yet no established cause. More than a dozen studies have shown that there is no connection between vaccines and autism but the fear persists. Much of this is because of Dr. Andrew Wakefield, an English physician whose research on the subject has been declared fraudulent. His published paper was retracted by the journal in which it was published and the British Medical Society has revoked his medical license. He has emigrated to the United States where he continues to promote his theory.

This article is not the proper venue to defend or deny Wakefield’s assertions but there are a couple of points about autism that should be considered.

Childhood vaccines have not contained thimerosol (ethyl mercury), the alleged cause of autism, for more than a decade but the incidence of Autism Spectrum Disorder continues to rise. When Japanese and English parents, fearful of autism, stopped vaccinating their children, diseases such as measles, mumps and pertussis skyrocketed even as the incidence of autism did not slow down but continued to rise. In 1974 there were more than 100,000 cases of pertussis in the United Kingdom. There were 13,000 cases of pertussis in Japan in 1979 and 14 children died. When TEOTWAWKI arrives these effects will be multiplied many fold.

Autism is a terrible affliction but pediatricians like me who have watched the agony of a child suffering from pertussis for a month or more, with multiple episodes of severe breathing difficulty, choking, seizures and finally dying of the disease prefer to look at the benefits of immunizations, not their relatively infrequent and rarely fatal side effects.

Notwithstanding the low incidence of serious problems associated with current vaccines there have been some devastating tragedies directly related to childhood immunization. With modern technology it’s not likely that any of these will ever happen again. I include them for historical perspective. My concern is that in the recovery from TEOTWAWKI the processes for vaccine production will not meet the standards of today, and tragedies like these might occur again.

In 1928, poor quality control resulted in contamination of a batch of diphtheria vaccine with Staphylococcus aureus bacteria and 10 children died. There were no antibiotics in the 1920s and some or all of these children might have survived with penicillin treatment. There will be few or no antibiotics in the years after the SHTF.

In 1930 in what has become known as The Lubeck Disaster a virulent strain of tuberculosis contaminated a batch of tuberculosis vaccine. Of more than 200 infants who developed tuberculosis, all less than 10 days of age, 72 died.

Sometimes administering a vaccine has a terrible outcome because the recipient unknowingly has a serious immune deficiency. When smallpox vaccination was routine, immunodeficient children sometimes died when the usually benign vaccine virus overwhelmed them.

Many older readers of SurvivalBlog will recall the Cutter incident of 1955. Cutter Laboratories, a manufacturer of Salk polio vaccine produced a quantity of virus that had not been adequately inactivated. More than 200 children developed paralytic poliomyelitis either directly or from exposure to an infected sibling or playmate. There were 10 deaths.

When a child develops a high fever, seizures, a skin rash or other complication of vaccination there is something that is overlooked. It’s possible that such a severe reaction is an indicator of susceptibility. In other words, if the child had been infected by the wild form of the germ, he or she might have been one of the unfortunate fatalities. A vaccine side effect may reveal who might have been a victim, not a survivor. Perhaps that will be some small consolation to parents who have had to watch their child experience a vaccine-related illness.

As our population ages more of us are losing the immunity that we received either from natural infection or from vaccines. As noted earlier, persons over the age of 50 should receive tetanus and diphtheria boosters. Everyone over the age of 65 should receive the pneumonia (pneumococcus) vaccine because the risk of invasive disease is high among seniors, especially those with a history of smoking or asthma. Boosters at this age will give truly lifelong protection.

The influenza virus kills tens of thousands of people, mostly the elderly, every year. The virus is peculiar in that it undergoes frequent genetic transformation. Adequate protection requires a dose of vaccine every year that is designed for the virus du jour – or perhaps de l’année if my French is correct. It’s extremely important to note that perhaps as many as half of influenza-related deaths are not due to the virus itself but to secondary infection with bacteria such as Staphylococcus aureus. That germ is particularly dangerous to victims of influenza for two reasons. It is a common cause of hospital-acquired infections and current strains are often resistant to most antibiotics. Persons who have received the influenza vaccine are very unlikely to have severe disease if they become infected. They will avoid hospitalization and thus will not be exposed to bacteria that take the lives of nearly 100,000 persons every year.

At this point some readers are thinking “The influenza vaccine gave me the flu.” That’s a common perception and it’s easy to see why, even though it’s not correct. First, the vaccine contains only killed virus, except for one live-virus vaccine that is not the most common one in use. The injection causes a little soreness and sometimes a low-grade fever but nothing else. Some older readers may recall becoming quite ill from vaccines that were used in the 1950s and 1960s. These were what I call “dirty” vaccines whose production was not as refined as today’s methods. They didn’t cause influenza but they certainly made people miserable.

Second, illnesses that are labeled influenza are often caused by other viruses. There are hundreds of candidates and many of them produce the cough, fever, chills, headache and muscle aches that occur in influenza. There are several strains of influenza virus and they produce a wide variety of symptoms, sometimes involving the gastrointestinal tract or nervous system. Only laboratory testing provides an accurate diagnosis.

Another reason for the misperception is that most people wait until an outbreak has been in progress for a few weeks before getting the vaccine. While sitting in the doctor’s waiting room among patients who really do have the flu they are inhaling the virus from the person alongside them. The incubation period of influenza is much shorter than the time the vaccine recipient needs to form protective antibody, so symptoms begin before immunity kicks in.

Bioterrorism is a prospective factor in TEOTWAWKI but it’s not as much of a threat as an EMP or worldwide financial collapse. Even sophisticated bioweapons delivery systems are likely to cause problems in relatively small regions, not globally. Anthrax incidents, though serious and sometimes fatal, are examples. Smallpox is a fearsome threat but the disease is easily identified and we have vaccines and antiviral agents that can limit the damage. Food supplies and water reservoirs are potential targets for bioterrorists but barring destruction of the grid such contamination can be identified and managed.

A worldwide pandemic of influenza or some new infectious disease is always a threat but we have learned a great deal from outbreaks of SARS, avian influenza, Ebola virus and others.

The best recommendation that we can make is to keep your vaccine status up to date. These biological materials are not cheap but it’s possible for anyone at any age to build up their immunity to the maximum possible for less than the cost of most handguns.

There will never be a perfect vaccine and some persons will be the unfortunate victims of a serious complication. To help keep things in perspective, more Americans die in a single week in motorcycle accidents, (average: 80) than die in a year from vaccines. Antivaccine groups will dispute this but history tells us otherwise.

About the author: Philip J. Goscienski, M.D. is a retired pediatric infectious diseases specialist and the author of Health Secrets of the Stone Age, Better Life Publishers, 2005. He has archived more than 425 of his weekly newspaper columns, The Stone Age Doc, at www.stoneagedoc.com



Letter Re: Hand Wood Splitting Tools

James,
I concur with your desire to purchase items made in America, but I have had some trouble finding wood splitting items made here that are of the same quality as made in Europe.  I also split my wood by hand and I have found these items very helpful:
 
This great maul, and
 
this Gränsfors splitting maul, and
 
The spiral twist in this wedge makes it very effective with increased mechanical advantage.
 
If you know of any American made wood splitting devices that are of the same quality as these, please let me know, because I would like to purchase them.  I have not yet found them.
 
Thanks for your help and great site, – Jim S.

JWR Replies: I am indeed a big believer in buying American-made products. I am principled about this but not dogmatically absolutist, so I do make some exceptions, namely:

  • When an imported product is more safe to use.
  • When an imported product is the only one available.
  • When an imported product is of better quality.

If I can’t find a good American-made product, I first consider products from our traditional trading partners, like Canada and European nations. Failing that, then Mexico and Taiwan (free China.) I only buy products from mainland China as a last resort.

The spiral Gränsfors wedge (made in Sweden) is indeed quite efficient.

Not all of the best wedges are made in Sweden. There are indeed some other innovative wood splitting wedges–but not many are American-made. These include:

The Estwing E-5 Sure Split Wedge is made in USA. This wedge has side fins that make them more efficient. I have used these, and recommend them.

But the traditional Barco wood splitting wedge is made in USA, and you can buy four of them for the price of just one Gränsfors. And if you ever need to split a long straight log transversely (to make split rail fences, for instance), then you will need a set of six of seven of the traditional straight wedges.

Be advised that many of the other brands of wedges, axes, sledges and mauls are imported. For example, the Truper brand is made in Mexico. And most of the red-painted and green-painted wedges that you see in hardware stores are made by Shandong Jinfu, Laiwu Zhongtie, and other companies in China. And even Jorgensen brand–a company that has the temerity to still publicly proclaim “four generations of quality”–now sources many of their tools in China, including their wedges and their bench vises.

The Roughneck Wood Grenade (marketed by Northern Tool, and other companies) is made in Taiwan, and has had good reports.

There is a “no name” equivalent to the Wood Grenade that is made in Mexico.

But beware that the widely-sold “Timber Blaster” segmented wedges are all made in China.

Perhaps there are SurvivalBlog readers who know of some other American-made equivalents to the tools that you listed.



Letter Re: Advice on Family Preparedness

Sir,
I’m a suburbs dweller, living about 25 miles out of Milwaukee. I’ve gotten my mom–who lives nearby–into prepping. (Loaning her my copy of your “How to Survive the End of the World as We Know It” book worked!) So what do I do next, to get her farther down the road [to prepping]? I bought her a Kat[adyn water] filter. She has no clue about storage of foods. (We aren’t one of those “canning” families.) I bought myself a bunch of MREs and Mountain House foods, but she can’t afford to [do likewise], since she’s a retired school teacher. Do you have any advice on how she can store her own food, and not break the bank? Thanks, – G.H.C.

JWR Replies: The Rawles Gets You Ready Preparedness Course (now priced at less than $20) would be a good gift to put in the hands of any relatives or friends who are interested in prepping, but don’t know where to start. In the course I describe shopping at Big Box stores like COSTCO as one of the most time-efficient and cost-effective ways to stock up on staple foods. There is also some information in the course that is useful for advanced preppers.



News From The American Redoubt:

Fascinating Maps: Deserted America: The maps that show how 60 years of white flight and brain drain have sucked the population from the Midwest. It will be interesting to see migration patterns in the next 20 years. I predict that most of the Redoubt will continue to benefit from net in-migration.

   o o o

Reader Tom L. mentioned: Mayor Mike Bloomberg sends $1,000 campaign contribution to Moscow. (Idaho, that is.) Needless to say, Chaney, who is running for re-election, is one of the handful of members of Mayors Against Illegal Guns in the American Redoubt region. I’m tired of seeing pushy out-of-state money injected into local politics. These statist gun grabbers deserve to be un-elected.

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I noticed that Skinner Sights in St. Ignatius, Montana has added several new products to their line.

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A great new TTabs flying video in eastern Washington, showing some nice fall colors: Sullivan Lake Washington – An Autumn Run

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Wyoming now has its first bourbon whiskey distillery. (Note: I don’t drink, but some folks would consider any state without such a distillery unprepared for partition.)

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CBS Sunday Morning covers the State of Jefferson partition movement: Rural America has no Voice



Economics and Investing:

Ed in Michigan suggested: Paul Singer: Obamacare rollout a ‘fiasco’. (In a recent parody, even Hitler was furious.)

Man throws away $500,000 in gold to spite ex-wife

Meet the American Nomads of Walmart’s Plentiful Parking Lots

Items from The Economatrix:

Are Constitutional Conservatives Really The Boogeyman?

Weekly Consumer Comfort Index Tumbles To Lowest Since October 2012

Initial Claims Miss As California Catches Up With Claims Backlog



Odds ‘n Sods:

Sometimes, the “crude, but effective” approach will work: How to open a can without a can opener

   o o o

Diana V. pointed out this important article: In United States v. Bond, The Supreme Court Could Be Ruling On The Safety Of All American Rights

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Does this look familiar? “Strawberry” sent us a video link, showing a couple of carags casting off. (You can skip the first minute or so.) A carag is of course featured in my most recent novel, and shown on the cover. Note that gas engine carags tend to be much more noisy than the diesels.

   o o o

Steve C. flagged this news item: Mosquitoes known to carry dengue, yellow fever seen in California. Steve notes: “If the Aedes aegypti mosquito becomes established it is expected to become a major nuisance, but in a collapse scenario without [mosquito abatement and] proper medical care it could be deadly serious business.”

   o o o

I noticed that we are approaching the milestone of 60 million unique visits. Please keep spreading the word about SurvivalBlog. Thanks!

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R.B.S. sent us a Nanny State Britannia update: Jam will be reduced to ‘coloured mud’ under plans to cut sugar levels which spell the ‘end of the British breakfast as we know it.’



Jim’s Quote of the Day:

“We have staked the whole future of America’s civilization, not upon the power of the government, far from it.  We have staked the future of all our political institutions…..upon the capacity of each and all of to govern ourselves according to the Ten Commandments of God.”  – James Madison



Notes from JWR:

Last day! The benefit Redoubt silver coin auction for Orange Jeep Dad in the aftermath of his traumatic house fire ends today at 2:58 PM PST. ( Monday, November 4, 2013.) You can be assured that 100% of the gross proceeds will go to OJD’s family. The auction ends at 2:58 PM PST on Monday, November 4, 2013. Thanks, folks, for your very generous bids for this worthy cause. Note: Once the bidding got up above $1,200, I decided to also include three autographed books and two of the SurvivalBlog Archive DVDs as bonuses for the winning bidder.

UPDATE! Monday (PM): Once the bidding so generously advanced above $1,500, (far above the spot value of the 20 ounces of silver), I decided to also add a few more bonus items and goodies to the auction lot: a Cold Steel knives “Never Unarmed” DVD set, a subdued Bennington Flag embroidered patch, five original Zimbabwean $50 Trillion bills, a SurvivalBlog fridge magnet, and 10 ounces of BU Stagecoach silver bars, in a mint-sealed 10-pack sheet, made by Northwest Territorial Mint. These ingots are specially incised to allow them to be divisible into 1/4-ounce pieces, if need be, for barter purposes. This addition brings the silver in the lot up to 30 Troy ounces. Thanks again for your generous bids to help OJD’s family! Those bonuses are not mentioned in the auction listing page, but the winning bidder will receive them in the same box as the Redoubt coins. I am also now shipping the box fully insured, at no extra charge.

I noticed that we’ve now archived more than 3,000 SurvivalBlog Quotes of The Day. Thanks for sending so many great quotes, folks!

November 4th is the birthday of Medal of Honor recipient John Basilone. He was born in 1916, in Buffalo, New York. The tale behind his medal illustrates that he truly was an American hero.



Choosing a Retreat Locale: Dela-Where?

I was recently hired by a consulting client from Wilmington, Delaware. Like most of my other clients, we had our conversations by phone. He spent a lot of time quizzing me about various towns and microclimates in The American Redoubt. He was stunned when I mentioned that the county where I live has less than 20,000 residents, yet it is larger than the entire state of Delaware, which has around 917,000 residents.

To put the demographic differences in focus, the following are some comparisons. For privacy reasons, instead of my own county I’ll use Idaho County, Idaho as a point of reference. (And BTW, I formerly owned a 160 acre ranch Idaho County, with an adjoining 160 acre grazing permit on BLM land.)

Delaware:

Land Area: 1,948 square miles

Population: 917,092 (estimate for 2012.)

Population Density: 460.8 people per square mile

Median income for a household: $58,415

Idaho County, Idaho:

Land Area: 8,502 square miles. (More than three times the size of Delaware, and almost equivalent to the size of New Jersey.)

Population: 16,308 (estimate for 2012.)

Population Density: 2 people per square mile

Median income for a household: $36,706

Note: There are 4,431,720 acres (6,924.5 square miles) of land administered by the US Forest Service within Idaho County. But that still leaves nearly “a Delaware’s worth” of private land area in the county.

The crime statistics for Idaho County look far more like the law-abiding “Mayberry RFD” end of the spectrum than then they do the dangerous Wilmington end.

Bottom line: Your family can earn almost twice as much money, on average, in Delaware. But it costs more to live there. And you couldn’t pay me to live there!