Note from JWR:

Today we present another entry for Round 29 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The prizes for this round will include:

First Prize: A.) 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 between $500 and $600, and B.) Two cases of Mountain House freeze dried assorted entrees, in #10 cans, courtesy of Ready Made Resources. (A $392 value.) C.) A 9-Tray Excalibur Food Dehydrator from Safecastle.com (a $275 value), D.) A 500 round case of Fiocchi 9mm Parabellum (Luger ) with 124gr. Hornady XTP/HP projectiles, courtesy of Sunflower Ammo (a $249 value), and E.) An M17 medical kit from JRH Enterprises (a $179.95 value).

Second Prize: A.) 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 $400, and B.) two cases of Meals, Ready to Eat (MREs), courtesy of CampingSurvival.com (a $180 value).

Third Prize: A.) A copy of my “Rawles Gets You Ready” preparedness course, from Arbogast Publishing, and B.) a Royal Berkey water filter, courtesy of Directive 21. (This filter system is a $275 value.)

Round 29 ends on July 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.



A Survival Suburban Homestead: A Prepper’s Twist on the Homestead Movement – Pt. 1, by D.M.T.

Swimming in a Sea of Humanity
A homestead will not survive isolated in a sea of desperate humanity.  Nor will man survive in a desert void of it. 

For many of us surviving in place (the suburbs) is going to be a fact.  With it carries tremendous risk and dangers yet imbedded within it, also a cornucopia of resources and individuals with critical skill sets and life saving knowledge.  Unlike urban areas, there is a small enough degree of separation between people, enough so to actually define and scratch out a living independently.  Current Homesteaders have proven it is possible to not only provide for your family on 1/10th of an acre, but to also support a larger economy with the surplus.  The question becomes, given marginal localized security, what can be done to assist in the re-emergence of stabilized society from a cascading chaos, which will be essential to survival in the suburbs?

Disasters are amplified by the weakness of civil society and the absence of the rule of law.  After a few days of living within a failed food and water supplied system and without a sizable government assistance response, people will begin to lose hope that assistance will come…  as this hope disappears, real desperation will set in and people will take extraordinary measures to fend for themselves and seek an outlet to vent their anger and fear.  

Violence and the threat of criminality will have to be addressed, before any homesteading can take place in the open, which it must for it to succeed.  Recognizing that looting and rampaging vandalism flares where authority is lost and history has shown repeatedly that where a community takes extraordinary measures to organize and secure itself, it can re-instate a semblance of authority and civil control.  It is from under this protective wing of security that the commerce of survival can begin to flourish.

While it is nice to have your neighbor’s complaisant agreement for mutual security, the quality and viability of such may leave much to be desired.  As such, other arrangements should be planned for and arrangements made.  Whether this is in the form of friends and associates you know and trust, or from an outsourced service providers, security and consequently authority surrounding your local homestead needs to be established and is not something that I would leave to others, as they may have very different agenda than your altruistic view.   

People have always been drawn together in desperate times, and history has continually shown where looters and pillagers gather strength in numbers, so too can communities and to do so communities will need two things; a belief in a better alternative to their plight and leadership who is determined and prepared, which can be accomplished by the following;

  1. An active and determined neighborhood watch (which is motivated by having the following at stake)
  2. Establishment of Individual homesteads throughout the neighborhood (individual stake)
  3. Create neighborhood community farming initiatives (a greater collective stake)
  4. Empowering others for widespread, parallel efforts in surrounding areas.

Clearly the better you know and trust your neighbors and they know and trust you, the faster and smoother neighborhood safety and security measures will naturally formulate.  It is unlikely that neighbors will be willing to formulate or support neighborhood cordon operation, establish roadblocks and conduct patrols until their individual stake and survival possibilities are strengthened, which is why homesteading teams should be created as soon as a loose security measures and agreements are initiated. 

Homesteading teams should be formulated and divided up into specific organizational groups to specialize and concentrate upon three critical components for each homestead; establishment of front yard gardens, rain water cistern catchment basins, and water treatment and purification systems (individual slow sand filters). 

Front Yard Gardens
Most suburban homes can easily accommodate gardens in their front and back yards.  I would initially prepare only the front yards collectively and allow the homeowner to prepare the back yards, which typically will be trickier, as private spaces tend to be more developed than public sided spaces of private property.  The front yards will also be easier to restore and therefore compliance will be easier obtained early on.  The same is true for neighbors who have vacated the area, having to explain to a returned neighbor that you’ve torn up their back yard will be more difficult to explain than if you just focused on the front lawn.   Additionally from a security standpoint front yards are vastly easier to observe, patrol and secure by the community.

Rain Water Cistern Catchment Basins
Rain water cistern catchment basins, can be readily developed and are far superior to a barrel system, as quaint as they are.  The most simple is an excavated pit or trench lined in plastic, which will be limited in size due to soil conditions and its ability to retain its shape.  A more effective basin is a simple wood framed crate, lined and sealed with visqueen (large plastic sheeting), which is partially counter sunk and bermed into the soil for stability and support.    The basic volume of these cisterns can be calculated, based upon their geometry, a simple box (LxWxH) and then multiplied by 7.4 (the number of gallons of water in a cubic foot) to derive the water storage volume.  A simple 4’x8’x4’ cistern will hold about 950 gallons of water, as compared to nineteen 50-gallon rain barrels. 

Slow Sand Filter
Having a firm grasp on the principles of slow sand filter is a critical component for water filtering and purification.  Slow sand filters use biological process to cleanse water, require little or no mechanical power, chemicals or replaceable parts, simple to use and operate and only require periodic maintenance.  It is recognized by the World Health Organization as being not only the least expensive and simplest, but also the most efficient method of water treatment.  The biggest drawback is in the lag associated with the start up time, about two weeks.  Keep in mind this is a biological filter (living organisms) and they have to be established.  This doesn’t mean that water can’t be run through the system to filter it (separate solids and particles), it just means it will also have to be purified afterwards through boiling or chemical treatment.           

Homesteading Armory
To accelerate the neighborhood homesteading process, ensure its success and for about the cost of an battle rifle (which I would need several to defend my property otherwise), you can amass a small collection of assorted basic garden and construction tools, supplies and equipment and seed stores in bulk that you can arm your neighbors with onto the road to self sufficiency.  (This list of supplies would incorporate the major elements associated with the project above).  These supplies are both a helping hand to your neighbors and a planned and concerted effort to create a safety buffer around your homestead.  The logic is the same as acquiring a small armory of firearms to arm your friends and neighbors who’ll join you at your retreat.  In this case, instead of arms, its gardening and farming equipment and supplies.   Weapons for personal and property security, gardening tools for food and water security. 

The next time you’re in a big box home improvement store, ask yourself how far will $1,000 would go in establishing these projects.  In the general example I’ve listed above, I estimated that each homestead would take about $200 in basic supplies, if purchased new, at retail prices…  with lumber being the largest component of that (for the cisterns).  That’s five homes, without putting any creativity into alternative supply acquisition.  By removing the lumber component from that list (I plan on having at least one as an example) you can stretch those supplies to include ten homes.  You may likewise decide that every homestead doesn’t need a slow sand filter and that a neighborhood one would suffice or that your community may already have the resources available, such as sand filtered swimming pools.  By generally observing (google map of your neighborhood) you can assess how many swimming pools are in the area…  then ask yourself what percentage are sand filters?  If it’s high, you don’t need to purchase sand for the slow sand filters…  What you’ll normally find is that if you’re resourceful , you’re really left with is visqueen, some basic hand tools and bulk quantities of seeds and in that case $1,000 really does go far, well enough to develop every house, along your average suburban street.  The point is to observe your suburban neighborhood and look at what resources are there and plan accordingly. 

Side note:  From observation of the basic outlined above example and for about $300, including lumber, you can acquire all the basic elements you would need to establish your own small homestead, which can be readily stored and placed out of the way, in the garage or shed.            

Community Initiatives
A follow on number of community farming initiatives should also take place after the individual homestead have been established, the most obvious being the cultivation of crops in formerly open public spaces.  Suburban areas are replete with communal public areas that can be integrated into co-opted farmed areas.  If none truly exist, it is possible to utilize the sidewalk green space and a four foot wide section of the crown of the road and to go down the center of the street’s length, boxing in the transported topsoil, which only needs to be about a foot in depth.  Parking lots can be developed the same way to great effect for even larger community parcels. 

Question of crops
The crops in open public spaces should focus on two types of crops; grain crops, due to the required foot print size and primarily large scale planting of basic root vegetables, as they are a dense nutritional source, that are naturally made into stews and stock.  The root vegetable crops should supplement the neighborhood homesteads and to attempt to feed the greater population by establishing a simple soup kitchen.

Directing humanity
A number of types of people will be drawn to these initiatives, those seeking work, those seeking food and displaced people looking to survive will eventually be drawn to such efforts, and should be integrated into the community initiatives, as labor is a major component to these endeavors and work for food will be recognized as established level of fair trade.  This is also an opportunity to empower others for widespread, parallel efforts in surrounding areas, furthering your physical and food security buffer.   Amongst those that these efforts touch will surely be skilled professionals with critical life-sustaining knowledge and skills that you may one day desperately need.      

With that consideration in mind, I would plan on storing a large quantity supply of grains, which can be purchased in bulk.  Third world food in bulk is cheap security to keep the masses at bay from your homesteading practices and occupied by laying the inroads to their own survival.  It can also be used as currency, to pay for services you or your community may sorely need, but are unable or unqualified to perform.  Beyond that basic rationale even in temperate climates, and depending upon the season, a simple crop will not come in for several months, and this food supply is to help sustain that population. 

This food should be stored in at least thirds (or more), two thirds in separate caches, and the distribution third, held in community trust at a food distribution point.  At no point should your homestead be the location point for public food distribution or seen as the storage facility.  Remember you are working at establishing anonymity by hiding in plain sight.      

Guerilla Gardening
While aspects of guerilla gardening should be implemented for food security, the majority of the efforts should be centralized and consolidated to aide in securing and protecting the communities efforts.  Decentralized and dispersed holdings will be easy targets for the desperate and have a poor ratio of labor to output rewards.  You should also have a reserve seed supply that is not utilized, but kept in reserve should the first plantings fail or fall short. 

Community Nursery
Beyond the individual and community gardens several group projects should also emerge.  A simple yet critical community project is the community plant nursery.  Utilizing methods established in commercial nurseries would vastly increase the quality, volume and success rate of the community garden areas, as well as being a resource for surrounding communities (trade generator).  It also provides work opportunities for those that cannot perform manual labor.   

Community Chicken Coop
One of the most important projects in the community initiative concept I believe should be that of a  community chicken coop.  It’s an aspect of farming that is quickly expandable, yields quick results, is non-seasonal and can utilize many of the aspect found in intensive chicken farming, which makes the area utilized for this quite small.  A contribution of a brood of chicks would rapidly create this, and is one of the reasons why I believe every established homestead should have a rooster and a few hens specifically for breeding purposes.  The ramp up time, chicken availability and chicken feed being the critical determinants for this project.

Community Water
All of this will be to no avail unless large quantities of water are acquired.  A larger scale version of a roof based rainwater catchment is one that utilizes the street and its storm water collection.  Most streets in suburbia are designed to collect and direct a large amount of storm water.  Creating a makeshift culvert is a simple process and can interrupt the normal directional flow of water (prior to it going into municipal culverts) and redirected into large community cisterns or ponds.

Siphon Tubes
Transferring water supply will be a critical factor and having a supply of large diameter tubing will be an asset for siphoning, whether it’s for water transferring from a catchment area to a retention area or for irrigation purposes.  Like gardening, utilizing siphoning principals in the field is a little trickier than one would first assume, but centers on two critical points, the first that the final reservoir is lower in elevation than the supply reservoir and that the siphon tubing is primed (filled with water) before the tube is placed over the intermediate obstacle for it to start to reliably transfer water.   The key is to seal the supply end and fill the tube with water until you’re fully ready to activate the system. Otherwise you will need to utilize a siphon pump to start this procedure.  A third issue is to ensure the supply end tube stay submerged in the reservoir to remain operational. 

The value of the siphon tubes are that they tend to be very inexpensive, do not require precision to layout and utilize and can be relocated from one location to another based upon need and use (non-permanent installation).  To regulate flow into or from an area will depend upon the gauge of the tubing and the number of siphon tubes used.  Obviously, more tubes, greater volume of flow.  

A major concern with cisterns and ponds is their open nature as they will be breeding grounds for pests which will carry disease and debris that will rot.  Ideally these ponds or cisterns need to be covered to prevent this.  While circular shapes contain a large footprint/volume, linear shapes will be easier to cover as the majority of building materials are also linear in nature.  A Series of parallel deep and wide trenches lined in plastic are readily covered and will be a safer option than a larger circular open volume cistern. 

While not all of the water collected by the community needs to be potable, having a large water purification system in place will be a tremendous asset.  The slow sand filter system devised for the homesteads can be applied directly here at a much larger scale.  In fact these types of systems are still utilized at some municipal level facilities in a number of countries and as recently as the mid-50’s here in the United States.

Obviously communities and homesteads that are able to implement strategies of municipal utility and food supply replacement the smoothest will fare the best, which will be critical for social and civil restoration.   The upside is it is vastly easier to have a first world nation create third world infrastructures than it is the other way around.  The downside is that most people have no real causal understanding of the way our infrastructure works.  People are dependent upon strangers and a system they don’t really understand. By reversing this trend, by learning self sufficiency amid mounting uncertainty will make people feel more in control.  This will be even truer for the enormous desperate plight of people seeking any manner in which to survive in a catastrophe.  They will take a hand-out, but will need more and that more should be followed by a hand up, in the form of a means to contribute to their own survival.  By providing purpose, direction and motivation you can achieve authority and credible leadership to get a large number of people to actively and willingly participate in their own survival, which ultimately will assist you in yours, as otherwise they would become a threat risk.  One of the fastest ways to establish this authority and trust is to demonstrate competence in homesteading.  Competence you can learn and develop today when the practice is inexpensive and painless.  The harsh reality is that survival in the suburbs will require a community of people supporting and acting on mutually beneficial shared values and it will be wishful thinking expecting a differing result to let a crisis and societal collapse resolve itself.
   



Letter Re: Learning From an OPSEC Failure

Letter Re: Learning from an OPSEC Failure

Hello Mr. Rawles,
The shopper who had a badoperational security (OPSEC) experience at the grocery store is not alone. Here in Canada I had the same thing happen to me in a slightly different way. It was a tax free weekend at a major store and I stocked up on everything subject to both provincial (state) and federal sales tax. Big (12%) savings on every item that wasn’t food. I provision a family of seven, I wait for these weekends. For the first time I noticed I was stared at by other shoppers by hour two of my shopping trip. No matter the deals, I still need to count each item and decide for value against my budget and current inventory.

In Canada we tend not to comment so much, but four times !!! I had people mention about my big load, two even had the audacity to say my shopping trip looked expensive. Most of the expensive items were little: sunscreen, toiletries, cleaning products, etc. The bulky items: sacks of rice, 5 gallons of oil etc were relatively cheap. As to the comments, where I live that is simply not done. There were a lot of half full carts around me, but I was the only one filled to the top. I live in one of the most expensive towns in Canada, it was shocking to me. In general, to me it feels like the nerve of people seems to have changed slightly in the past two years.

To increase OPSEC I hve been switching to online shopping, scheduling ‘in person’ shopping for more than twice per week, and taking my inventory planning even more seriously. If it is on sale I will now consider two or more trips split between my husband and myself to stock up. If hubby can’t shop and I do take two trips to the store to load up on specific items I will make sure to split my visits between morning and evening to lessen the number of times shift staff sees me, and I will vary my methods of payment, debit, cash and credit card. I will also, of all things, switch between wearing a suit, high heels, make up and ‘done’ hair for work, and my ‘shlubby’ clothes, a pony tail and a very casual look. Most people never notice dressing option 2, and clothing option 1 may be noticed but consigned to ‘working Mom’ category. If people need to label me, I’ll take advantage of it.

Those are my best options for being invisible in a crowd at the grocery store. I would love to hear of other options from other preppers.



Letter Re: Some Experiences With Propane and White Gas Campstoves

James,

I am a Scout Master in a local Boy Scout troop. After years of camping with Scouts it has become apparent to me that most propane camp stoves have a very short life span, even the name brand units. They work great for the occasionally camp out but they start leaking around the connections and they are not field serviceable. Many years ago, I was given an old Coleman white gas stove. I cleaned it up and have used it extensively over the last 30 years. Other than replacing the few parts, which are field serviceable, the stove is still going strong. I also purchased a propane adapter so that I could run the stove on propane in addition to white gas. I believe that the fuel flexibility and ruggedness of the Coleman white gas stove are two characteristics that are valuable considerations for anyone looking for a camp stove. Just recently, I found a Coleman white gas camp stove on Freecycle. I replaced the only part that was keeping the stove from working, a leaking cap on the gas tank. Now I have a second stove. If your readers have opted for a propane camp stove they many want to consider changing to the rugged, field serviceable white gas model. Thanks for all you do. – J.S.R. in Kalifornia



Economics and Investing:

G.G. mentioned a Rear Clear Markets video clip that echoes something that I’ve been stressing for several years: Legendary investor Jim Rogers says that silver is an attractive commodity while gold remains at an all-time high.

Courtesy of Brian B. comes this link: The US is Pushing Its Debt Towards a $57 Trillion Hole

Yishai sent us this (by way of Glenn at Instapundit): Don’t Fear Inflation, if It Comes. (Oh, really? I guess he’s never visited Zimbabwe…)

Brian H. flagegd this: China’s Desert Ghost City Shows Property `Madness’ Persists

U.S. May Follow Britain’s Lead and Pass Bank Tax. Oh, and the Brits are also discussing bumping the capital gains tax back up to 50%

Items from The Economatrix:

New Home Sales Plunge 33% with Tax Credits Gone

CA, FL, Other States to Get More Housing Aid

Fed to Keep Rates Low to Support Weak Recovery

Deepwater Horizon: The Worst Case Scenario

T Minus 7 Days to a LIBOR-Induced Liquidity Crunch?

Harrisburg, PA, Other Cities Overwhelmed by Economic Downturn and Debt

Why Many Analysts See Gold Going as High as $10,000

Taxes Coming Due for $1 Trillion in Commercial Real Estate



Odds ‘n Sods:

Reader Jamie D. mentioned that the government’s own documents show that the FSA program’s food warehouses are effectively empty. Jamie notes: “Government still hasn’t begun to replenish actual reserves of food. This is mandated, funded, and empty. If the gulf disaster results in toxic rains that impact crops, the government will have no reserves of wheat, corn, soy, et cetera.”

   o o o

Chavez pushes Venezuela into food war. (Thanks to Matt D. for the link.)

   o o o

G.G. flagged this: Knoxville City Council approves backyard chickens

   o o o

Keith B. spotted this: Brazil to end foreign land purchases.



Jim’s Quote of the Day:

"It has always seemed strange to me… the things we admire in men, kindness and generosity, openness, honesty, understanding and feeling, are the concomitants of failure in our system. And those traits we detest, sharpness, greed, acquisitiveness, meanness, egotism and self-interest, are the traits of success. And while men admire the quality of the first they love the produce of the second." – John Steinbeck



Note from JWR:

Today we present another entry for Round 29 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The prizes for this round will include:

First Prize: A.) 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 between $500 and $600, and B.) Two cases of Mountain House freeze dried assorted entrees, in #10 cans, courtesy of Ready Made Resources. (A $392 value.) C.) A 9-Tray Excalibur Food Dehydrator from Safecastle.com (a $275 value), D.) A 500 round case of Fiocchi 9mm Parabellum (Luger ) with 124gr. Hornady XTP/HP projectiles, courtesy of Sunflower Ammo (a $249 value), and E.) An M17 medical kit from JRH Enterprises (a $179.95 value).

Second Prize: A.) 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 $400, and B.) two cases of Meals, Ready to Eat (MREs), courtesy of CampingSurvival.com (a $180 value).

Third Prize: A.) A copy of my “Rawles Gets You Ready” preparedness course, from Arbogast Publishing, and B.) a Royal Berkey water filter, courtesy of Directive 21. (This filter system is a $275 value.)

Round 29 ends on July 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.



How to Create a Risk Mitigation Plan for Hard Times, by J.A.

We are a family of five living in Houston, Texas. Within the past several years, we have faced several dangerous situations where we were caught blindsided. Among those where several hurricane evacuations, and most recently, we experienced a forced evacuation from our home, after a chemical plant leaked and exploded nearby. Prior to these incidents, we had no thoughts of survival skills, prepping or preparing for disaster. While these experiences were very unpleasant, we are actually thankful for them because they served as a huge wake up call for our family to prepare.

One of the most important things we did was to write out a “risk mitigation” plan to help us through the upcoming hard times. This was a very basic plan of action that would help our family better weather any crisis, whether it be an economic, job loss, or any other natural disaster. This article is a synopsis of our plan.

Risk mitigation is the process of assessing certain risks, and developing a plan to minimize the impact of those risks. Your plan should include three basic steps:

Step One: Identify and assess which potential risks threaten your family. Examples of risks that you may want to consider are accidents, job losses, crime, acts of violence, natural disasters, economic collapse, long term unemployment, food shortages and medical crises.

Step Two: Prioritize the risks and determine which are more likely to occur. Do you live in an earthquake prone area? Do you have a chronic medical condition? Do you live in a large metropolitan city? Are you financially stable? No one likes to examine their weaknesses, but it is critical that you take a realistic look at your present situation, to find your weak areas. These are the cracks that may later grow into huge problems. It is better to work through them now!

Step Three: Develop a coordinated plan to minimize, monitor and control the impact of the risks.

I am going to share a basic overview of the basic plan that we came up with for our family. While it is not comprehensive, it will provide some readers an opportunity to see what our family is doing, and perhaps encourage others to get started. We recently had to put our plan to the test after we faced a huge setback – a job layoff! We were so thankful to have been prepared to help us navigate safely through the crisis!

We divided our plan in to four main categories:

1. Financial Security

2. Food Security

3. Home & Personal Security

4. Health Security

Financial Security

· Our first priority was to get and stay out of debt. If you are like most Americans, this will be a huge hurdle, but not an impossible one. We used the principles set out in Dave Ramsey’s web site and attacked our debt aggressively. We are Christians and committed our plan to God. He empowered us – miraculously – to pay off a huge debt that seemed like a bottomless pit. After years of struggling and feeling hopeless, we can say that “Nothing is impossible with God.” We are now living debt free. We follow Biblical principles with our money management and trust God to provide.

· We set aside a cash savings for emergencies. It is important to have funds accessible in a crisis. The amount isn’t as important as having something set aside. In a crisis, the ATM machines will likely be out of order or nonfunctioning. We experience this during Hurricane Rita. Make sure you have some cash.

· Eliminate as many extra bills as possible. We focus only on the basic needs of our family such as food, clothing and shelter. We have given up cable, fitness clubs, and instead read, garden and have learned new skills.

· We examined our investments and made some changes to better protect our assets. This included moving a larger percentage of our investments into gold, silver and precious metals.

· We save as much money as we can every month.

Food Security

· We started to maintain a three month supply of food in our home, at all times. This is our short term supply. Most of this is ready to eat or food with a shorter shelf life. We stock up on basic items and have built up our pantry.

· We slowly built a reserve of freeze dried foods for long term storage. This is costly so we are taking it slow, buying only what we can when we have the extra money. We would like to build up to having a year of food storage. Again, this is a work in progress.

· We store a two week supply of water, and have resources for purification in an emergency. We have purchased a Big Berkey water filter, water purification tablets, store extra bleach.

· Most importantly, we have become avid gardeners, and have started growing our own food in our backyard. We have several fruit trees, and several raised garden beds. We have planted foods that our family enjoys to eat, and have learned how to plant, grow and harvest heirloom garden seeds.

· We have alternative methods for cooking our food, should we lose power. We have a camp cook stove, propane, Sterno fuel and purchased a Volcano emergency cook stove.

Home & Personal Security

· Car Safety. We keep our cars well maintained, stocked with basic emergency supplies, a first aid kit, a tool box and maps. After watching the runs on gas stations during the Hurricanes’, we learned to keep our vehicles filled up with gas at all times. We maintain at least ½ a tank at all times, and store a small gas reserve in our garage.

· Personal Security. We took a class on gun safety and learned how to shoot a gun. This was very difficult for us, as we have never owned a gun. We have secured our home with alarm system, property lighting, guard dogs and a weapon for self defense. We are alert to our surroundings and are learning new evacuation routes using back roads.

· Bug out Bags. We have them packed and ready to go on a moment’s notice. They contain food, clothing and basic supplies for 3 to 5 days away from home.

· We have started saving to buy land and secure a retreat in the country. This is a long term goal for our family. We desire to become as self sufficient as possible.

Health and Well Being

· We focus on eating right; taking vitamins, exercising and getting proper rest.

· We are Christians and maintain an active relationship with our Lord, Jesus Christ. We attend church, read our Bibles, and surround ourselves with fellow believers who offer encouragement and moral support. We cast our burdens on God, and pray for wisdom in decision making.

· Due to a chronic medical condition, we store extra prescription medications. We have also assembled a large and well stocked first aid kits. We keep one in each vehicle and one in our house.

In conclusion, risks are always changing and you may never be fully prepared to face all of them, but that is not a reason to ignore them! Take some time to write down what dangers your family might face, and do your best to mitigate the damage by preparing for them now. Use all the resources available in the SurvivalBlog archives and start doing something today!



Letter Re: Learning From an OPSEC Failure

Dear Mr. Rawles,
I read your site daily and am very appreciative of your work and that it is from a Christian perspective. Thank you so much.

I wanted to relay a personal operational security (OPSEC) failure that happened last week that your readers may learn from.

My Husband is gone on an extended business trip and before hand I had convinced him to allow me to “prep” for his being gone. We have several young children and I didn’t want to have to go shopping regularly. While my Husband is not a prepper, he is slowly listening to me and allowed me to take a dry run for his business trip.

However, due to extending hospitality and several illnesses I had to run out to restock. The way I did it was a big mistake. I drew attention to myself and I had honestly never thought about that before. First, I filled my cart to overflowing. My thought process was I have several young children who I could tell were about to get sick, I was starting to come down with something and my Husband is away for a few more days. I figured get it all and get it home and then at least I don’t have to run out with sick kids in a few days. While this is a good way to manage my time and errands, something very uncomfortable happened.

People were staring at me. This was at a big box store, it should have been common place there…but it wasn’t. I haven’t left the house much in the last several months, but people’s carts were very empty. As I was going to the check out line a woman who worked at the store gave me a dirty look and loudly demanded to know “Where do you work that you can fill your cart up like that? I want your job” Several people shook their heads in agreement. I started to realize the situation and just wanted to get out of there.

In the line, people started asking me why I was buying so much (I honestly wasn’t…we are talking mostly one of each item and not more than one cart full..that is why this was so freaky). I told them I don’t get out much with young children.

I had planned to pay cash because we are teaching our children about using cash when we realized they kept playing grocery store using a “card” (I use a debit card). I had brought enough cash with me and it was a significant amount. I told the cashier I wanted to pay cash, and she gave me a double take. The people around me already staring started watching in earnest now. I realized I needed to get out of there and needed to not look like I had cash on me. I acted like I forgot the money then asked her to run my card like a credit card. I then got the heck out of there.

The cashier then made a big deal about how I needed someone to help me to my car. I had just one cart! She insisted that I had purchased so much I needed help. Then the manager insisted I accept help. I honestly didn’t know what the heck was going on. I wasn’t taking a sofa out. I just had a cart of some things. It was embarrassing, but it was also getting a bit scary. It brought everyone around me to watch me leave.

This was very, very strange. I by no means live in a low income area, in fact, quite the opposite. But I noticed people watching me, watching what I bought and what I paid for it. I have never had that happen.

I have decided that I will purchase more things either by themselves or online. I am trying to cultivate sources for things that are local and can be paid for cash, but this is very hard. However, I will not fill my cart again at one of these stores. It seems the economy has caused people to become very curious when someone is buying things..and possibly jealous.

I hope this might help another reader. I actually got a bit scared from all the attention and have never experienced that in my life. I am by no means rich, but I will be sure to look a a lot poorer next time I go out.
Thank you, – Mrs. R.



Three Letters Re: Surviving With Pets

Mr. Rawles,
Alex’s post on dogs in a post-SHTF world was very informative but I think he dismissed cats far too easily. I’ve been both a dog and cat owner my entire life and though my dogs throughout my lifetime have been wonderful hunters, protectors, and companions none have been quite as useful as my cats in keeping the mouse, squirrel, and roach (especially important having a retreat property in the deep south) population down to a minimum. Not to mention cats have a far lower daily consumption of food and water and take up less room in a bug out vehicle.
Sincerely, – A Southern Prepper

Mr. Rawles:
While I appreciate Alex C.’s recommendations for dogs in his “Surviving with Pets,” submission, I’d like to respectfully add some insight for him and others who may think like him. He wrote, “…it’s hard to see the value of a cat in a post apocalyptic world other than as a companion animal…and to alert to possible unseen threats….” Here are 15 reasons why cats (and I am referring to domesticated cats) will be valuable in a post-apocalyptic world. And while I sometimes contrast cats to dogs in my analysis, I am in no way trying to diminish a dog’s value after TSHTF, in my opinion both cats and dogs are always important assets.

1. The number 1 pragmatic, post-apocalyptic value to cats is their ability to control the rodent population (which is why barns always come with a barn cat or two). During times when access to modern rodent control methods may be in short supply, keeping one’s living space, food storage and harvest preserved from rodent infestation and diseases will be critical to survival. Furthermore, even pre-TEOTWAWKI, I don’t believe any modern rodent control method has yet managed to supersede the ability of a cat. While there are some dog breeds which are useful for killing rodents, I daresay none come as naturally equipped as the cat. This reason alone justifies keeping them around after TSHTF, but for those of you unconvinced, I continue.

2. Cats do not require much food, water or space–a good return on investment when everything is in short supply.

3. Though not as hygienic as owner-provided food, cats can manage to supply their own food–see above “rodent control.” Self-sustaining is always a good thing, right?

4. Cats are low maintenance which frees the owner for all those other needful TEOTWAWKI tasks. Cats need less (if any at all) training, attention, supervision, caution around strangers, exercise, bathing, grooming, medical care, “chewing management,” poop clean-up, kennel clean-up, and yard restoration (for diggers) than dogs.

5. While many dogs, by nature, foolishly rush in where angels fear to tread, getting into significant trouble at the wrong time (remember “I Am Legend?”), cats by nature are extremely cautious and stealthy. They would wisely rather let you go first and check it out. This trait unburdens owners from pet-created snafus.

6. Cats are safe companions. They do not attack unless provoked and cornered. Even in circumstances where they do attack a human, they are not a fatal threat to a human’s life. Neither do they form packs which threaten a human’s life. A cat may hiss, strike out and bite a person because they feel threatened (which, I admit, for some injured or ill cats may just mean coming within striking distance of them), but after making a brief show, even feral cats will always choose to flee and hide rather than to persist in subduing, maiming or consuming a human. This predictable, evasive behavior is an asset under TEOTWAWKI circumstances–in other words, you can trust your cat to remain a “safe” companion. A dog can unpredictably “go bad” and pose a threat, even to its own familiar human community. Now all of us intend to train our dogs so well that “this could never happen to us,” but the truth is aging, malnutrition, pre-programmed genetic instinct, lack of exercise, lack of stimulation, illness, stress, the introduction of another dog, etc. can trigger an unforeseen catastrophic attack–the dire impact of which will be multiplied under teotwawki circumstances where medical care is hard to come by.

7. Cats usually manage their own safety and can survive various threats without assistance from their owners. A cat evades threats on its own, which leaves its owner to focus on family safety. Hopefully, the cat will be retrieved once calm has been restored. While cats tend to stay out of the way, dogs, however, in the heat of an untrained-for circumstance, and in their eagerness to add value, can add a complicating, even fatal, factor to the fray. To be fair, I must add that dogs can also be a life-saving asset in such circumstances as well. Alex wisely advises that training is essential to minimize the negative contingency and maximize the positive, but my point is that with cats, one doesn’t need lengthy training because they are naturally evasive and non-confrontational.

8. Critical for OPSEC, unless meowing for food, in a fight, or in heat, cats are the embodiment of quiet, stillness, and “hiding in plain sight”–especially when they sense danger.

9. Critical for OPSEC, cats do not need to be let outside for bodily functions.

10. Critical for OPSEC, cats do not need to be let outside ever, whereas a dog needs outdoor activity for health and sanity. A dog moving around outside quite easily garners the notice of anyone within sight.

11. With their having perfected the art of relaxation, their lap-sized dimensions, ability to conform to your body, desire to sleep most hours of the day, their charm, beauty, purr, soft fur and warmth, cats have the ability to soothe and relax human companions like no other animal–an extremely valuable commodity under high stress conditions. Doctors have been known to prescribe owning a cat in order to lower blood pressure or reduce other effects of stress. Conversely, playing with a cat can be highly entertaining, eliciting much-needed comic-relief and laughter. Thus, add a cat to your TEOTWAWKI medicine chest.

12. As Alex mentioned in “Surviving with Pets,” cats are valuable for post-apocalyptic companionship. Like dogs, they are intelligent, affectionate animals which bring happiness and minimize loneliness for adults and children.

13. Also, as Alex mentioned, cats, like dogs, are able to detect unseen threats, but unlike dogs, they usually alert their owner without auditory vocalizations–another OPSEC benefit. Cats instead use an amazingly effective body language to convey alarm and they do it infrequently enough so that whenever an owner sees his cat in an alarmed state, he knows to pay attention. And if a cat’s visual cues to its owner are not enough, the cat will resort to “tactile” alerts in the form of firm, prodding claw pokes to the owner’s skin whenever the cat thinks the circumstance warrants it.

14. While it would be extremely rare for a cat to sacrifice itself for its owner as dogs are known to do, cats, probably due to their instinct for self-preservation, have been known to wake their sleeping owners to house fires or other emergencies–thereby saving the family. Although not guaranteed, one more potential safety factor I don’t mind having around now or then .

15. Survivalists should have some level of respect for the cat as the “ultimate survivor.” Who else gets the reputation for having “nine lives?” Maybe there’s something important we can learn from them.

Sincerely, – L.G.

 

Mr. Rawles:
I had to comment on Alex’s “Surviving With Pets” article. He was misinformed. I am not an expert, but my significant other and I train hunting dogs to the expectations of the AKC, UKC, NAVHDA, and the breed standard. We also train other various breeds for obedience. We stress to our clients that not every dog is “Hunting Material”. Some dogs just don’t have the instinct or the drive to become a dog you can hunt over. This is going to sound very opinionated, but it would be a ridiculous amount of work, if not impossible to train say a rottweiler to hunt upland game or track a deer you shot that took off. I speak from experience. I had the notion I could train some of our German Shepherds to hunt with our German Shorthaired Pointers and it was like trying to teach a pig to fly. They will hunt, stalk prey, and usually catch it. The problem comes in with trying to get the game from them. Their prey drive kicks in and they try to run off and find a quiet place to tear into it and eat it. They wont bring it back to their master. These are dogs that would retrieve a bumper thrown for them all day long. Something they consider a meal for themselves is a different story. Trying to get it from them is not an easy concept either. Also, Sporting breeds are trained to have a soft mouth. I have dogs that can retrieve an uncooked egg off the floor and fetch to hand without cracking it. the majority of “Non Sporting” Breeds are going to have a hard mouth and bite down with their back molars and crush small game, like rabbits, pheasant, quail, squirrels and you will be picking bones out of breast meat or trying to clean dirty intestinal contents off of what was usable meat.

The letter stated “Almost every breed of dog can be trained to hunt.” I’m sorry but this is very far from right in my opinion. I believe only dogs that fall into the the Sporting, Hound, and Gun dog variety as labeled by the AKC, UKC, CKC, and various other kennel clubs can actually be trained to hunt. Which is why so much research and work went into dividing the various breeds into different groups by these organizations.

I’m assuming the author has never trained a dog to hunt or track. It was kind of obvious they had no knowledge of how much time goes into this training. Most dogs have it breed into them through their pedigree. Into their working bloodlines. I think every sporting dog breed has this controversy between Field Trailers and Show Homes. For example, Shorthairs. We have breeders that breed to show quality. You could go five generations back into their pedigree and have not one hunter. Then attempt to put one of their Show dogs on birds and it has no interest. The instinct has been breed out of them. A lot of Sporting dogs bought in pet shops have this problem also. They were breed by backyard breeders who have no concept of improving and bettering the breed and sold to a pet shop to make some extra cash.

Alot was said in the letter in regards to Dry dog food and how to preserve it and so forth. If you were using your dogs to hunt for food for yourself and your family, why would you not just place it on the raw food diet? Hello? Wolves, coyotes, wild dogs and so forth eat their fresh kill. Most hunters feed their dogs a raw food diet or grind up beaver or venison and feed that cooked with rice to their dogs.

Regarding the discussion of barking dogs, it’s becoming a fairly common practice nowadays that vets are removing the voice boxes on dogs to eliminate barking. It cuts down on the amount of dogs owners have to relinquish due to their neighbors complaining to the homeowners association or police department about the noisy dog dog next door.

This author knew so much about a dogs nose, but nothing about the time and work and expense that goes into training a hunting dog. To take a pup at six months and put it all the way through the various tests and end up with a finished AKC Master Hunter that’s qualified to be a guide dog at a hunt club roughly cost $10,000 which includes your birds, tests, time, and proofing. Do a web search on “Buy a Master Hunter quality dog” to check out the prices a finished dog sells for.

The author also referred the readers to contact their local pet store for classes. Seriously? That is bad advice. Stores like Petco and Petsmart will just refer you to the local humane society. Maybe the readers should refer to their Breed Club, or the local dog Club who usually offer classes taught by qualified instructors who have finished numerous dogs. Another option would be to hire a professional handler. In which case the dog gets sent away for six months to a year and comes back finished. – Christine in Illinois



Economics and Investing:

G.G. suggested this: Niall Ferguson: Two year time horizon for US fiscal crisis

Andrew H. spotted this piece over at Jesse’s Café Américain: Silver leaving the COMEX. Andrew asks: “[I]s there a reason why some of these well-heeled investors suddenly want their silver, and are either going in person to get it or arranging for armored car delivery? It makes one wonder what might be coming our way in the coming weeks.”

Brian B. sent this: The Associated Press: Canada’s economy is suddenly the envy of the world

Thanks to Brett G. for flagging this: NIA Releases 2010 U.S. Inflation Report

Items from The Economatrix:

Stocks Fall After New Housing Sales Drop 33%

Oil Prices Slide As Stockpiles Build

Bob Chapman: Fiat Money and Schemes Collapsing

Cost of Seizing Fannie and Freddie (financed properties) Surging

Financial Overhaul 101: Protecting US Consumers

Battered Eurozone Vulnerable to Crisis

Rise of the New Gold Rush

Gold’s Good Times

The US Dollar Falls By Fall





Jim’s Quote of the Day:

“We should do well to remember that, since time immemorial, gold has successfully acted as the ultimate extinguisher of debt — until it was forcibly removed from the international monetary system in 1971. Since 1971 governments have pretended that paying debt in U.S. dollars extinguished it, too. But in fact it did not. Debt was merely transferred from the debtor to the U.S. government and kept accumulating. Debt accumulation has a natural limit. This limit has now been reached.” – Dr. Antal Fekete, What You Always Wanted to Know About Gold



Note from JWR:

Today we present another entry for Round 29 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The prizes for this round will include:

First Prize: A.) 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 between $500 and $600, and B.) Two cases of Mountain House freeze dried assorted entrees, in #10 cans, courtesy of Ready Made Resources. (A $392 value.) C.) A 9-Tray Excalibur Food Dehydrator from Safecastle.com (a $275 value), D.) A 500 round case of Fiocchi 9mm Parabellum (Luger ) with 124gr. Hornady XTP/HP projectiles, courtesy of Sunflower Ammo (a $249 value), and E.) An M17 medical kit from JRH Enterprises (a $179.95 value).

Second Prize: A.) 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 $400, and B.) two cases of Meals, Ready to Eat (MREs), courtesy of CampingSurvival.com (a $180 value).

Third Prize: A.) A copy of my “Rawles Gets You Ready” preparedness course, from Arbogast Publishing, and B.) a Royal Berkey water filter, courtesy of Directive 21. (This filter system is a $275 value.)

Round 29 ends on July 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.