Letter Re: Western Nebraska as a Retreat Locale

James,
As a regular SurvivalBlog reader and a prepper, I would like to say western Nebraska is as close to the American Redoubt without being there. I have considered the reasons you have not include Nebraska, and though they are valid for eastern and central Nebraska, I believe if you stick to the western section, the Platte River Valley and the Sand Hills offer an attractive option.

The main things I find appealing, inexpensive fertile crop land, good plentiful clean water, a plethora of wildlife (Elk, Mule Deer, Whitetail Deer, and Turkey) great fishing holes everywhere, and few people per square mile. Having relocated here from western Montana, I discovered many folks are a hardy lot, and for the most part rugged individualists.
 
I started building my local retreat in 2001; I purchased five acres of pasture land with a tree belt and a shallow well for watering critters. The cost was $20,000. I have it pretty well established, and was getting settled in to ride out the coming storm. In September, on an outing to view some merchandise offered in a classified, I stumbled on an opportunity to good to pass up. I ended up negotiating for a small 40 acre farm (that includes 5 acres of woods) with an old propane heated 5-bedroom farmhouse, a 40′ x 60′ steel “Chief” building with concrete, electrical and water. The place is all hog wire fenced, broken into different size parcels, with a corral, all steel fenced with chute and 3 heated water bunks. It has a nice 30′ x 40′ wood barn, a 6-stall horse enclosed stable with tack room, two hay barns, a chicken coop with run, a rabbit hutch with run, out house, garden shed, and full water rights off the North Platte River. I ended paying less than $200,000 with 3.75% 30 year financing, it was an affordable option.

After living three years debt free it was difficult to jump back in to debt, but we have rented the new place on a short term month to month agreement, and it covers the payment. We plan on hammering the mortgage hard and having it paid off three years, with the plan of building a newer “off grid” home and selling the current “off grid” home by 2015. Since it is 15 minutes from our current home, we believe worst case scenario, we can be on the place and make it work, if need be.

These types of deals are out here, and Nebraska has a low unemployment rate, so if you want to work there are jobs to be had. The biggest negative I see and feel every year, is the tax rate. Though I don’t think there are too many more years it will be a huge issue. When the wheels come off the applecart, most “revenuers” will probably be wary of old “gun totin farm folk”.  I just wanted to give your readers a bit of  ”Husker” perspective. By the by, two other things I find advantages to Nebraska over Montana, are the severity and length of the winters, and the length of the growing season. My gardens produce earlier and longer, and as Nebraska is the number two cattle producing state, fertilizer is readily available, in bulk and at the local cafe.

In closing, I finished “Survivors”  (and loved “Patriots”) and have passed it on to family members–folks that I still hope to bring along as time permits. I sometimes feel like a lone voice in the wilderness of complacency, but I keep plodding along aware of the normalcy bias, and hope for the best. Keep the faith! – Scooter in Nebraska



Letter Re: How to Drain an Abscess

Mr Rawles,
The letter from Lonestar Doc about skin abscesses is both appropriate and essential. I would like to add a few points that may not have been clear.

1. Never squeeze (pinching between fingers with force) an abscess trying to get it to pop (remember your mother’s admonishments about pimples?) Squeezing may be successful in getting pus to come out, but you force the bacteria and toxins into deeper tissues and possibly blood vessels which may cause distant secondary infections. In certain areas like the face, it could be a lethal complication. If an area seems to be draining, Gently push (“palpate”) down on either side of the area – if more fluid drains then continue to use other conservative methods or get definitive drainage.

2. If an area is red and hard, but not yet full of fluid (“fluctuant”) and if the origin is bacterial, it will become an abscess without treatment, whether antibiotics or drainage. But if there’s nothing to drain yet, what do you do? Go ask your grandparents – in drug stores of the past a staple item was “drawing salve” – something that you smeared on the affected area and cover with a bandage. After a few days the area would drain pus, relieving the problem. Medically, what is occurring is that the white cells in the area are being encouraged to migrate to the surface where the salve is applied, liquefying and thinning out the overlying skin until the area can drain naturally. This prevents the abscess from extending into deeper tissues with all the associated risk. Drawing salves are over the counter and can still be found today or ordered by the pharmacist. They have names like coal tar salve, homeopathic drawing salve, and a brand name is Ichthammol Drawing Salve Ointment, available on Amazon.com.

3. Hot compresses – a tried and true method for treating infections in the skin, simply take folded cloths in hot, but not boiling, water and apply them to the area. When the cloth becomes room temperature, place a fresh one. The hot, moist cloth increases blood flow and again encourages the white cells to get to the surface instead of deeper, and the abscess will drain with time and patience.

Abscesses are serious business even today, and before the antibiotic era accounted for significant amounts of deaths and morbidity; in short, an untreated scratch could literally kill you, if the infection migrated to the vital organs. With careful attention to keeping clean and not ignoring the early signs you will improve your chances significantly. – Doctor Prepper



Economics and Investing:

Jim M. sent me this: Citi: Euro Collapse Would Spark Global Depression, Push Unemployment Above 20%

G.G. sent this: MF Global fallout delays U.S. farm seed, land deals

Copper theft becomes a crisis for public agencies. (Thanks to reader S.B. for the link.)

Daniel M. suggested a sobering piece by John Stossel: Ten Years to Greece
 
Standard & Poor’s to Eurozone: Fix It or Else…

Items from The Economatrix:

USPS Slowdown, 100,000 to Lose Jobs

Many Americans Already Done with Holiday Shopping

Soros:  Global Financial System In “Self-Reinforcing Process Of Disintegration”

Jim Willie:  “The Public Will Not Wake Up Until At Least One Million Private Accounts Are Stolen



Odds ‘n Sods:

Grace H. pointed me to a wonderful mapping site for soil surveys.  This is an ideal tool for anyone researching retreat locales. Just type in a locale name. 

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I was doing some web wandering and found an interesting piece: Former “Seasteaders” Come Ashore To Start Libertarian Utopias In Honduran Jungle. And from there, I found a link to this fascinating page: A Map Of Where All 7 Billion Humans Are Cramming Together. Note that the dot sizing used is counterintuitive–the larger the dots, the fewer people. (This illustration certainly adds credence to my exhortation to Go West when choosing retreat locales.)

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Emergency Essentials is again running their Holiday Giveaways. The current prize is a Katadyn Hiker Microfilter. All giveaway entries will be eligible for the Grand Prize – their “Traditional 1200” One Year Storage Food Supply.

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For those that bemoan the lack of affordable handguns, SurvivalBlog’s Mike Williamson pointed out a great deal on Kel-Tec PF-9 (9 millimeter) handguns being offered by Cheaper Than Dirt, with your choice of gray or black grips. Yes, this design has a single-stack magazine, but that makes the gun very slim and concealable. Disclaimer: Cheaper Than Dirt is a SurvivalBlog advertiser, but they did not solicit this mention.

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Over at the Paratus Familia blog: Operation Organization. (This was posted coincidentally with a reorganization of all of our medical supplies and vitamin supplements, here at the Rawles Ranch, with the assistance of a friend (and fellow blogger) who shall remain nameless. If you are like me and have been prepping for decades, it is easy to lose track of what you have. The only proper way to maintain fresh and well-balanced supplies is to do regular inventories.)



Jim’s Quote of the Day:

"Decency, security, and liberty alike demand that government officials shall be subject to the same rules of conduct that are commands to the citizen. In a government of laws, existence will be imperiled if it fails to observe the law scrupulously. Our government is the potent, the omnipresent teacher. For good or for ill, it teaches the whole people by its example. Crime is contagious. if the government becomes a lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for law, it invites every man to become a law unto himself; it invites anarchy. To declare that in the administration of the criminal law the ends justify the means would bring terrible retribution." – Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis



Note from JWR:

Today we present another entry for Round 38 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The prizes for this round include:

First Prize: A.) A gift certificate worth $1,000, courtesy of Spec Ops Brand, B.) 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, and C.) Two cases of Mountain House freeze dried assorted entrees in #10 cans, courtesy of Ready Made Resources. (A $350 value.) D.) A 9-Tray Excalibur Food Dehydrator from Safecastle.com (a $275 value), and E.) A $250 gift certificate from Sunflower Ammo.

Second Prize: A.) A Glock form factor SIRT laser training pistol. It is a $439 value courtesy of Next Level Training. B.) A FloJak F-50 hand well pump (a $349 value), courtesy of FloJak.com. C.) A “grab bag” of preparedness gear and books from Jim’s Amazing Secret Bunker of Redundant Redundancy (JASBORR) with a retail value of at least $300, D.) A $250 gift card from Emergency Essentials, and E.) two cases of Meals, Ready to Eat (MREs), courtesy of CampingSurvival.com (a $180 value) and F.) A Tactical Trauma Bag #3 from JRH Enterprises (a $200 value).

Third Prize: A.) A Royal Berkey water filter, courtesy of Directive 21. (This filter system is a $275 value.), B.) Expanded sets of both washable feminine pads and liners, donated by Naturally Cozy. This is a $185 retail value, C.) A Commence Fire! emergency stove with three tinder refill kits. (A $160 value.), and D.) Two Super Survival Pack seed collections, a $150 value, courtesy of Seed for Security.

Round 38 ends on January 31st, so get busy writing and e-mail us your entry. Remember that there is a 1,500-word minimum, and articles that relate practical “how to” skills for survival have an advantage in the judging.



How to Drain an Abscess, by Lonestar Doc

Most of us have heard of them and many of us have had to creep surreptitiously to the nearest emergency room to have one drained. In a TEOTWAWKI situation, someone is going to have to do the dirty deed and take care of the darn thing. This is a short description on how to try to fix an abscess and to determine when do you really need to break into the antibiotic storage? I must warn you you up front, do not do this if there is any other option. If there is medical care available, they are the ones who do this. If this is a SHTF situation and you are on your own for who knows how long, this just might be something you need to know. I do not take any responsibility for those cowboys out there who jump in and do this when there is perfectly good medical care available. This is a survival blog and this should only be undertaken in a survival situation. Never should you practice medicine without a license. If the country/world collapses and there is no doctor or other medical resource, this is general medical information if this particular health problem arises. Proceed at your own risk .

Skin abscesses have become epidemic in this country. Go to any football locker room and you will see one or two with evidence of a previous abscess. What is it you ask? It is a collection of pus and bacteria and “inflammatory fluids” all collected in a space in the skin or under the skin. Yes, you can get an abscess deep inside, but unless you have previous medical training, you will not be able to get to those. And realistically, even those with previous medical training will have a hard time, without all the bells and whistles, getting to a deep abscess.  This short essay will help you deal with a skin abscess in a survival situation. Realize, this is simply for a survival scenario. If there is medical care available, you need to take advantage of their knowledge and skill set, but if not, pus under pressure needs to be opened up.

Most abscesses we see on or in the skin are caused by a few skin bacteria that normally live there and are given the opportunity by way of a small skin tear or nick to set up an infection. The first few days, it starts to grow and although it may start out as a pimple, it soon grows to a hard, red, hot lump that is very painful… It may even be surrounded by an area of redness; cellulitis in the medical parlance. The person sporting the lump may actually start to run a temperature and feel lousy.

One of the most common abscess forming bacteria we see nowadays is Staph aureus.  This bacterium comes in two varieties: Methicillin resistant “MRSA” and Methicillin Sensitive: “MSSA”.  The methicillin part refers to the bacteria’s character in response to a specific antibiotic. MRSA is the dreaded acronym everyone hears about from football teams to surgery suites. Although it is a bacterium you may associate with abscess, there are many more bacteria that can cause the furuncle or boil or “risin” (my personal favorite) that you see on your body. Whether the bug is MRSA or not, the treatment is the same and that is to open up the pus pocket, irrigate it out and then decide, do I really need antibiotics for this or not? Most of us will be hoarding our precious antibiotic supply in a SHTF situation and there are really good reasons for not breaking into an antibiotic supply for abscesses. 

Diabetics with immune systems that do not work so well are a special challenge. They often get an abscess that has multiple bacteria (polymicrobial) and in their particular situation, any infection is potentially life threatening. I don’t have an answer for this, in a SHTF situation. Even with modern medicine, diabetics lose feet and legs at an alarming rate from simple injuries like stepping on a needle or rubbing a blister on their heel. They can also get a rapidly moving infection that looks like an abscess and progresses in a few hours to a full blown septic shock that would be untreatable in a disaster situation.

So, you discover an abscess on one of your survival mate’s body, or they bring it to your attention or “Ruh row” (as Scooby so fondly says), you get one. The first decision is: do I need to open this up?  Not all lumps are abscesses. One of the giveaways is pus or purulent fluid draining from the lump.  If there is “pus in der”, you can be almost sure you have an abscess. Be sure to get a history about a possible foreign body like a sliver or shrapnel or thorn, etc. If there is pus, try to delineate the margins of swelling (we call it induration) and push lightly on the lump to see if it feels “boggy”. That is a sign that there is still inflammatory fluid, white cells and bacteria collected in a little lake under there.

The next decision is can I drain this? The biggest deterrent to drainage is what is under the abscess. I say this to caution you that if you go cutting into someone’s abscess, you better have an idea of what is under the thing and how deep can you go  without cutting any big blood vessels, nerves or structures your friend may need to pick up and get outta Dodge…

Have a medical book with you that show you what the underlying anatomy is. Frank Netter Anatomy is a great set of books to have where there is no doctor, but they are expensive and heavy. Look for a little anatomy book on Amazon or some other bookstore to keep with your medical supplies.  Just a note, Gray’s Anatomy is the book that seems to jump to mind for lay persons…I do not find that particular book very helpful. [JWR’s Adds: Here I should mention that the widely-available “Classic Collector’s Edition” reprint of the 1901 edition of Gray’s Anatomy is practically useless. It has sparse illustrations and the terminology is out-dated. I second the recommendation for Frank Netter Anatomy.] Browse a few books at the library or a medical library before the SHTF to find a book you can understand and find stuff in.

There are a few places where I don’t even cut, (e.g.: near an eye, around the anus or on the fingers), but if there is no other option and no hope of another option (emergency room or doctor) because the world fell apart, I would try at least to drain it with a large bore needle (like a 16 or 18 gauge needle) even if I would not frankly cut into it.

So, you have identified an abscess, you know it is not overlying any high price real estate like a carotid artery (look that up in your anatomy book-good practice for finding stuff in it) and it is red, hot, swollen , boggy and painful. Remember I said, not all lumps are abscesses, so be careful…Once you have identified it, put on some of your medical gloves and take about 4 ml of lidocaine from your stock supply and ask the patient if they are allergic to lidocaine or any other anesthetic. If they tell you “no”, then  clean the overlying skin off with your medical antiseptic ( chlorhexidine swab, iodine swab or alcohol), use a 27-gauge needle to  inject right under the skin, a line of lidocaine that welts up like a little road across the middle of the boggy part of  the abscess. You need to stay pretty superficial and the line goes right across the top of the abscess. Should look like a little “trail” across the top. Once you inject enough to make a little wheal, then remove the needle and direct downward into the abscess being careful not to go too deep into the underlying structures. Inject the rest of the lidocaine into the area performing a “field block”. You can inject at 12 o’clock, 3 o’clock, 6 o’clock and 9 o’clock using about ½ ml. Wait for about 10 minutes. Then take a scalpel and cut through just the skin right along the little wheal you made with the first injection. Once you are through the skin, hopefully the pus comes pouring out as it is under some pressure in there filling up the little lake under the skin. You can take a Q-tip and gently move around the pocket to break up little pockets in the abscess and then take a big syringe and fill with clean tap or purified water and wash out the wound like you would wash out the inside of a sink with the sprayer.  If the thing is bleeding, make sure you put direct pressure on it and hold that until the bleeding stops. Put several of your dressing bandages on top to soak up the rest of the stuff that will be draining out over the 24 hours or so.

Most newer information says you do not need to leave anything in the wound to keep the skin open. Once drained you need to decide, do I give antibiotics? The answer is no. Drainage is the treatment for abscesses. Antibiotics do not do anymore than drainage does so save them for someone who needs them because they will be really hard to come by in TEOTWAWKI.

Again, don’t cut any patient on the hand, right around the anus or near an eye. Barter with a doctor or medic to help you with that if there is one in the area. They have a better idea of what the stakes are if it is in a high rent district like that…..

If you were able to drain this effectively, the wound should start to look less red and swollen by the next day. The hardness (induration) should also start to get better. Once the pressure is taken off the surrounding skin by drainage, the person should also get some relief immediately once it is drained. Tell the patient to keep it covered while the residual pus drains out and to try to wash it twice a day in a stream of water that is clean or purified. You don’t need sterile water, but you don’t want to introduce a bunch of other dirty bacteria into the wound you just drained and irrigated.

Disclaimers: Remember, this is not to be used in the country we live in, on the present day. You cannot practice medicine without a license in this country or you could go to jail. If the SHTF, and there is no one around to get medical care from, you may have just learned a skill that can keep someone from getting really sick or dying.  This article does not constitute professional advice.  It is intended for general informational use only.   No doctor-patient relationship is implied nor otherwise established between the author and blog readers.

I am praying that you will never need to use this.



Economics and Investing:

B.B. sent this: UBS’ Advice on What to Buy in Case of Eurozone Breakup: “Precious Metals, Tinned Goods and Small Calibre Weapons”

Also over at Zero Hedge: Rumor Meet News: S&P to Put All 17 Euro Nations on Downgrade Watch. (Thanks to Keeley for the link.)

Lord Stevens: youth unemployment will fuel disorder on the streets.

Chris Martenson and James Turk talk about the Global Debt Explosion, Europe, and Derivatives. Martenson asks: “How do you un-wind $600 trillion to $1 quadrillion in derivatives?”

Richard Russell: Expect a Jolt in Commodity Prices in the Near Future

Items from The Economatrix:

Fed Hawks Say Central Banks Can’t Solve Fiscal Woes

Tens of Millions of American Families are Living on the Edge of Desperation–And the Economy is About to Get a Whole Lot Worse

Gold:  Will it Go to $12,500 – $24,000 – or $39,000/Oz. By the End of the Decade?  Here’s The Rationale For Each

John Williams Hyperinflation Warning, Preserve Wealth Value With Gold

Study Documents Desperate Conditions Facing The Unemployed In America



Odds ‘n Sods:

Texas Drought Visible in New National Groundwater Maps. (Thanks to L. M. for the news tip.)

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Pierre M. sent us a tale of the Hegelian Dialectic, Perfected: Documents: ATF used “Fast and Furious” to make the case for gun regulations

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File under Poor Choice of Targets: Mugger left bloodied after attempt on MMA fighter. (A hat tip to J. McC. for the link.)

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House Busters: Television Stunt Goes Awry, Sends Cannonball Rocketing Through Homes. Just because a technology is old doesn’t make it ineffective.

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Mary in South Carolina was the first of several readers to send this: Greeks Turn to WWII Starvation Recipes Cookbook to Survive Bad Economy.



Jim’s Quote of the Day:

"You cannot be defenseless against evil. To discard the means for people to defend themselves leads to the kind of holocaust we have seen over and over again."  – Alan Keyes



Notes from JWR:

Today marks Pearl Harbor Day — December 7, 1941, 70 years ago today. My Quote Of The Day comes from the lyrics of the song Smoke On The Water. (No, not the better-known song of the same name by Deep Purple.) This one dates from 1944, by Western Swing singer Red Foley. I suppose that many in the Kumbaya crowd would consider the lyrics politically incorrect.

With the World War II generation now nearly gone, it is time to reflect. I, for one, have not forgotten their sacrifice.

The following another entry for Round 38 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The prizes for this round include:

First Prize: A.) A gift certificate worth $1,000, courtesy of Spec Ops Brand, B.) 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, and C.) Two cases of Mountain House freeze dried assorted entrees in #10 cans, courtesy of Ready Made Resources. (A $350 value.) D.) A 9-Tray Excalibur Food Dehydrator from Safecastle.com (a $275 value), and E.) A $250 gift certificate from Sunflower Ammo.

Second Prize: A.) A Glock form factor SIRT laser training pistol. It is a $439 value courtesy of Next Level Training. B.) A FloJak F-50 hand well pump (a $349 value), courtesy of FloJak.com. C.) A “grab bag” of preparedness gear and books from Jim’s Amazing Secret Bunker of Redundant Redundancy (JASBORR) with a retail value of at least $300, D.) A $250 gift card from Emergency Essentials, and E.) two cases of Meals, Ready to Eat (MREs), courtesy of CampingSurvival.com (a $180 value) and F.) A Tactical Trauma Bag #3 from JRH Enterprises (a $200 value).

Third Prize: A.) A Royal Berkey water filter, courtesy of Directive 21. (This filter system is a $275 value.), B.) Expanded sets of both washable feminine pads and liners, donated by Naturally Cozy. This is a $185 retail value, C.) A Commence Fire! emergency stove with three tinder refill kits. (A $160 value.), and D.) Two Super Survival Pack seed collections, a $150 value, courtesy of Seed for Security.

Round 38 ends on January 31st, so get busy writing and e-mail us your entry. Remember that articles that relate practical “how to” skills for survival have an advantage in the judging.



Self-Sufficiency Gardening in Climate Zones 8 and 9, by David G.

Unemployment is rampant. The government is bankrupt. Foreclosures are everywhere. And one day soon, you may find your local grocery store has closed and shut off your supply of Hot Pockets. Most of us have never had to grow our own food. Those that have grown their own generally do it as a hobby – or as a way to get a vine-ripened tomato without selling a kidney..

Climate zones 8 and 9 [found in much of Arizons, parts of Florida, and the regions at the north end of California’s Central Valley] are not a gardening paradise. If you go further south, you can grow tropicals year-round (like papayas and mangos) – further north [or into higher elevations], and you get fewer destructive insects and more options (like horseradish, gooseberries, and European pears).

However, that’s not to say you can’t grow food here. You can grow plenty to eat. Most of the Southern US has many native edibles of varying quality: beautyberry, sumac (not the ones with white berries), hickory nuts, blackberries, shepherd’s needle, Chickasaw plums, mulberries and many more. Our long season allows gardeners multiple harvests as well, provided they can outrun the insect population and beat back the nematodes.

The trick to growing here is generally two-fold: water and organic matter. Droughts must be overcome with proper irrigation, and our sun-beaten sandy (and sometimes clayey) soils benefit greatly from mulching, manure and compost.

It’s been said that it takes thousands of square feet to feed a person for a year. In a small lot, this is often impractical – but there are ways to maximize your yield. Long-term planning will allow you to harvest tons of food (literally) from an average yard. The trick? Fruit trees and shrubs, along with edible perennial herbs. One peach tree can easily produce 40-100 lbs of fruit a year. According to the University of Arizona agricultural extension office, the average yield of a grapefruit tree is 350 lbs a season. Also according to the University of Arizona, an 8-year old pecan tree will usually bear 40-50 pounds of nuts at maturity. Of course, if you plant that tree in a 1/10th acre lot, you’ll kill your chances of growing sun-loving annuals forever. However, if you create a “guild” by planting a pecan tree, surrounded by a ring of smaller fruit trees, which are then interspersed with smaller fruit-bearing shrubs, you have created a high-density food factory that will out-yield – even taking into consideration some tree over-crowding – any garden and do it with much less work.

MULTI-YEAR CROPS
Good trees to consider include many members of the citrus family (though allegedly no longer recommended by the University of Florida due to the spread of greening and canker), loquats, persimmon, pindo palms, olives, chestnuts, walnuts, pecans, pomegranates and low-chill plums, peaches, pears and apples.

Shrubs include blueberries, blackberries, cattley and pineapple guavas, prickly pear and edible bamboos. A few notable vines could also be added: grapes, kiwi and passion fruit. Hops vines are another good addition if you’re going to start brewing when your work dries up and you can no longer afford to buy bottled beer. And if your hops “fails to thrive,” thanks to our warm climate, wormwood is a passable substitution as a bittering agent.

Among perennial plants, the herbs are king. They may not provide much in the way of food, but the spice they add and the medicinal benefits of their consumption make them invaluable to a survival garden. Sage, rosemary, mint, hyssop, lavender and oregano are excellent starting plants.

STORING HARVEST TO EAT YEAR-ROUND
Planning your crop planting to ensure yield over as much of the year as possible is a good idea. However, you’re not limited to eating dirt during the winter if your squash crop happens to fail.
Proper management of your harvest is key. We’ve all heard someone say “I have a ____ tree and it bears all at once… most of them just rot! We can’t give enough away!” People that say things like that have lost the ability to reason and will be the first to be eaten in the apocalypse. Preserving is not difficult. It can be done through drying, freezing, canning or fermenting.

The Indians dried fruit and meats to take them through the winter and you can do so, too. A dehydrator is an excellent investment – and building a solar dehydrator is also worthwhile in case the electrical grid is rendered inoperative by an EMP strike, fuel shortages, a labor walk-out, abnormal sunspot activity or other disasters.

Freezing generally requires blanching vegetables (to deactivate decay-inducing enzymatic processes) in boiling water. Fruits can just be frozen as they are, with seeding, skinning, pitting, chopping or whatever preparation you prefer done ahead of time.

Canning requires more work at the front end and some specialized equipment such as mason jars and lids. It’s a little-known fact that you can also re-use almost any jar from the store for canning. Look at the rubber seal under the metal lid of the jar. If it’s intact and the lid fits snugly, you’re good-to-go. Despite the manufacturer’s instructions, mason jar lids can also be sterilized and reused. Just make sure that the pop-top seal is intact when you pull your preserved bounty off the shelf in the future. If the seal compromised–as evidenced by a popped top–then throw it out. Because another thing that mixes poorly with survival is Clostridium botulinum. And while on the topic, a pressure canner is superior to the water bath method in its ability to destroy potential pathogens. Boiling water is fine for high-acid foodstuffs (fruit), but don’t do green beans or corn that way. It’s not worth the risk.

Fermentation is probably the least utilized and most misunderstood method of preservation. In fermentation, you’re actually encouraging the growth of beneficial organisms and letting their excretions preserve your food. Wine and beer are yeast-based ferments – a sugar-to-alcohol conversion that renders the final product less appetizing to decay-inducing organisms and more appetizing for partygoers. Acid-forming bacteria were originally the preservers of sauerkraut and pickles. And various other molds and sundry animalcules have played their part through human history in the creation of cheeses, miso, sauces and other delicious foods. Without refrigeration, fruits and vegetables break down quickly. Encourage the formation of the right species of microorganism via brining, oxygen inclusion or exclusion, or other methods and you’re well on your way to ditching the fridge. Not to mention the major health benefits incurred by consuming the beneficial species that colonize your fermented harvest.

WHAT TO GROW           
When considering what to plant in a garden, the first question that is often asked is “well – what do you like?” That’s a good start; however, in survival gardening, the first question should probably be “what can you survive on that requires the least input to the highest yield?” If your answer is “okra,” you may just want to go ahead and starve.

Sweet potatoes and cassava are two of the best root crops for our area, yielding well even with low care – and they also contain a high caloric load. Sweet potatoes beat cassava on nutrition – and their leaves can also be used as a green. Cassava leaves are edible too, but only after steaming. Otherwise, you’ll be ingesting cyanide. Cyanide and survival are generally at odds with each other.
Grains are less useful in the home garden, except as perhaps a cover crop or animal forage. The yield to input/work ratio is poor and the space required makes their cultivation impractical for home-scale agriculture.
Cabbage and other members of the crucifer family are excellent choices, with cabbage being the king thanks to its ability to be turned into sauerkraut.

Winter squash is another good choice. Many of our squashes, such as the “Hubbard” squash, were originally popular because of their ability to keep for six months or more in non-refrigerated environments.

Planning an area for blackberries is also an excellent idea. Thornless cultivars such as Ouachita and Natchez grow well in the hot south and will out-yield many other crops. Children love them. What other recommendation is needed?

Tomatoes are also easy to grow and may actually improve in flavor when canned or dried. Peppers are another member of the solanaceae family that does well in this region.

Tobacco, though a little difficult to start from seed, is a worthwhile addition (addiction?) to your home garden even if you don’t smoke. The leaves will be an invaluable bribe to smokers suffering from the shakes. The flowers are attractive to hummingbirds and the leaves can be distilled into a nicotine insecticide that devastates aphid populations.

Beans are another good choice. The “yard-long” or “asparagus” varieties thrive in the heat and will out-yield most other pole cultivars. Bush beans do well also. Peas will grow in the early spring and add valuable nitrogen to the soil as they grow.

Forget about asparagus, celery, rhubarb and head lettuces [in Zone 8 or 9]. They are a waste of time.

PLANNING           
Keep your friends close – and your garden closer. Putting high-maintenance plants in a raised bed at the back end of your yard is a recipe for failure. Keep them where you can immediately be aware of any pest or water issues. Right by the back door is usually perfect, with your compost on the other side of the garden from your house. Doing so allows you to easily discard spent plants and apply compost without enlisting the aid of a wheelbarrow, a grandchild, a pack animal or a catapult. Work smarter, not harder! Make sure a water source is nearby and that you also have vehicle access, if possible, to allow you to bring soil amendments, fertilizers and mulch right to your garden.

Using heavy mulch in your garden will eliminate most weed issues. Gather leaves in fall and winter, along with grass clippings, pine needles, rotten straw or other organic matter and put it alongside your garden space for use as needed. A heavy mulching in fall will keep cool-season weeds from emerging and also allow worms to stay moist and breed in the soil, bringing valuable oxygen and nutrients from the surface into your beds. Cover cropping in winter with peas, lentils and various crucifers also adds organic material and is a cheap way to keep the soil intact – not to mention providing some vegetables for the table when the main harvests are done.

Plant trees as soon as possible. If you’re limited on space, stick to smaller varieties. Again, the square-foot yield you’ll receive from a mature tree requires little input compared to an annual vegetable bed. Leave space for trees – you’ll be glad you did – and remember: the best time to plant a tree was ten years ago.

CONCLUSION
Now is the time to start planning and growing. Do your research and experimentation before you’re required to live off your land. And if there’s a miraculous turnaround and you never need to go farther than the supermarket to stay fat and happy – great. You’ll at least get some delicious preserves from your fruit trees and will have learned a bit more about food production. Finally… relax. If you can’t manage to grow enough vegetables, you’ll certainly be able to subsist on the grasshoppers and hornworms attracted by your efforts.

Editor’s Note: David is in the Florida Master Gardener program in North Central Florida.



Letter Re: Seasonal Reminder: Popcorn Tins for EMP-Proof Storage

Jim,
Just a quick note to those interested in obtaining a simple cost-effective Faraday Cage-like enclosures to protect small to mid-size electronic devices. As has been mentioned in SurvivalBlog before, the large steel cans of popcorn sold at the large box stores this time of year make great EMP-proof storage containers. After emptying the popcorn just place your electronics into the can and place the lid on top. No need to ground the container.

I place my Fluke multimeters, spare Solar charge controllers, spare handi-talkies and mobile radios in these tins. Thanks for all you do. – Larry D.



Economics and Investing:

Central Banks Dollar Liquidity Only Prolongs The Euro Debt Crisis.

J.B.G. sent this: Desperately Seeking Capital: Berlin May Have to Nationalize Giant Commerzbank.

By way of Glenn Reynolds at Instapundit comes this: China to Prepare for Social Unrest.

Jim Rogers: US Falling Into ‘Deeper Trouble,’ Faces 2013 Depression. (Thanks to B.B. for the link.)

G.G. sent this: Anxious Greeks Emptying Their Bank Accounts

Items from The Economatrix:

MF Global Proves Enron-Era Accounting Lives On

Central Bank Intervention:  Much Ado About Nothing

Analyst:  Earnings Outlook May Be Deteriorating Rapidly

Analysis:  BofA Close To Its Limit For Share Issuance



Odds ‘n Sods:

Andrew Price (who is well-known for his Dryad Bushcraft and A-Z Bushcraft web sites) plans to make a film in New Mexico: TEOTWAWKI – a fictional documentary. I’ve corresponded with Andrew since before the days of SurvivalBlog, so I can vouch that this won’t be a typically Hollywood hatchet job.)

   o o o

Camping Survival has added a new closeout items section, with some amazing bargains.

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F.G. flagged this: Disaster preparedness leads the way in holiday shopping this Christmas season.

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Consider the recent headline from Japan about the Eight Ferrari pileup. The amazing thing is that the Japanese national debt piled up faster than the value of those wrecked cars in the time period that it took to clean up the mess. (And here in the U.S. of A., we’d need to wreck a fleet of Ferraris every hour for the equivalent, since our own National Debt is increasing at the rate of more than $1 million per minute.)

   o o o

Congrats to video blogger Cody (a.k.a. “Wranglerestar”), who moved his family to a new 50+ acre retreat in the Cascades that features a 100 year-old ranch house. BTW, I recommend subscribing to updates to his collection of videos.