How to Get to Your Retreat, by Tony Y.

You have spent large amounts of time and money getting prepared for the day that we all hoped would never come.  You have found a retreat, kept it stocked and have been prepared to leave when TEOTWAWKI strikes.  It’s now here, but have you prepared how to get to your retreat? One of the most critical tasks for survival in TEOTWAWKI is getting to your retreat in a safe and efficient manner. 

I was a US Army soldier who completed two year- long tours in Iraq working convoys.  I have written the following for civilians with no military or tactical experience to help them reach their retreat.  This is real basic information, so basic that much of it can often be overlooked. 

Navigation:
  You have prepared everything you could possibly think about for this day.  Have you prepared how to get to your retreat?   The closer your retreat is to your current location or home, the easier this will be on you.  It will be crucial knowing how to get to your retreat by memory and landmark identification.  During TEOTWAWKI, your cute GPS system may not be functioning.  This will also be the same with car assistance such as On Star.  Practice getting to your retreat without the aid of any type of electronic navigation system.  Know it by heart.  Know additional routes.  Knowing which one is quicker during certain parts of the day or which routes are under construction and are blocked off can mean the difference between life and death.  Have routes that take you out of the city or heavy urban environments and also routes that keep you off of main throughways including highways and freeways. 

There are several ways to do this.  Having a map of the area and along the routes to your retreat is ideal.  I would recommend having a military style map with grid patterns.  The reason behind this is if your retreat takes you out in the middle of nowhere, your vehicle becomes disabled and you need to walk it out, these maps are good for navigation on foot.  Having a city map of streets, parks etc are also going to be another way to get this done.  Knowing which street you are on or where you need to go is a must.  This will also help you with urban landmark association.  Both maps are good for their own reasons, having both will make you more aware of where you are.

Vehicle Preparation:
 Preparing your vehicle for this critical move is can be an overlooked task.  Having a proper vehicle to get you to your retreat also needs consideration.  We live in the land of Sport Utility Vehicles (SUVs) and they should be considered for the task.  Driving to your retreat you may have to drive off road, in mud, ice or snow.  It would be one hell of a time to find out that your car could not do this.  Travel to your retreat during all seasons and weather conditions can give you a better idea of what to expect.  Having an SUV also provides a tougher vehicle to use to push through road obstacles or barriers.  Trucks are also a good source, but this is going to depend on who you are transporting and what type of equipment. 

Make sure that your vehicle receives its scheduled services.  Any problems that you have with your vehicle get it taken care of immediately.  Make sure simple things such as fluid levels, batteries and belt conditions are always full and in top condition.  Also check light bulbs and take care of your tires.  Your tires can make or break your trip.  Always get your tires rotated during services and replace them according to the manufacturer’s recommendation.  If you see any wear and tear in them or loss of air, do not even bother with tire sealant products.  They will just delay the inevitable. 

Necessary equipment that I would recommend:

  • Jumper cables-can make or break your journey
  • Spare tires – Plural.  Chances are that you will be driving through absolute chaos which will include debris in the roadway and subjection to gun fire.  Also consider a tire sealant product which is a very very distant second choice.
  • Extra Fuel- This is a no brainer.  Depending on how far your retreat is located.  This is where recon of the route will help you determine how much extra fuel is needed.
  • Vehicle Fluids- Water, Radiator fluid, oil.  Be prepared for these fluids leaking during your journey.
  • Vehicle spot light-This can be helpful if you need additional lighting to help you navigate. They are simple to use and can even plug into your cigarette lighter.  

Know how to change your tires and what tools are required.  This will help you if you need to change your tire in a hurry with all of the TEOTWAWKI chaos around you.  If you have several people who are physically able to assist you in the event, assign everyone a task to reduce the time and effort.  Always leave someone in the driver seat in case you need to leave the scene and to ensure that no one takes your vehicle.  I would also recommend in taking some mechanical classes to help you understand how your vehicle works and to assist you in fixing or repairing your vehicle. 

Equipment:  Hopefully during this time, you are not packing your entire house.  I would highly recommend packing as little as possible.  When you do load your items, you need to consider securing, without them being able to move or shift around.  In the event you get into an accident, your items will shift and even fly around within your vehicle.  This can cause obvious injury but you can also lose them as they break through a window.  I would recommend bungee cables or even tow straps for large objects.  Just because you have a large item, does not mean that it will not move around. 

Roof racks are great and they save a lot of interior space.  However, during this journey, you should consider not advertising what you are transporting.  This will show everyone that you have those ten cases of MREs and water.  I would recommend if you are going to use roof racks or secure an item on the top of your vehicle put items you can afford to lose.  This is TEOTWAWKI, people will be in pure chaos and that will include ripping your items off of your vehicle.  As soldiers in Iraq can attest, the Iraqis would take anything off of your vehicle and get away with it.  This included climbing on truck ladders and getting boxes of water, MREs and even oil drip pans.  If it is not bolted down or inside of your vehicle, then consider it gone. 

Also keep in mind that if you are packing items in your trunk, make sure that you have easy access to spare tires and tools to assist you during a vehicle break down.  Having to unpack your car just to get to a spare tire and then repack your car when you are done is just dim-witted.  Prioritizing your items in what you absolutely need and what you don’t will help you in the event you need to bail from your vehicle and hike it out.  Keep your priority items easily accessible in the event you do need to bail.  This means don’t put them at the bottom of the pile!  Having a “Go bag” or “bail out” bag will expedite the process in the event that you need to leave.  Have all of your survival items in a back pack and grab it when you leave.

Convoy movement: 
If you have the luxury of traveling in a convoy here are some simple considerations.  Be advised that convoy movement is an entire book in itself.  This is real basic considerations for the non military type of person.  Your first vehicle is going to be the “leader” or “navigator.”  This person knows where they are going and will lead the rest of your group there.  It would be helpful and smart if everyone else knows where to go but the lead vehicle is the best at this job.  The lead vehicle should be tough and durable and will be used as a battering ram to whatever obstacles are encountered on the roadway.  Vehicle should have minimum amount of people inside. 

Vehicles that are in the middle of your convoy can be used as support vehicles if you feel comfortable.  If you have enough vehicles and expertise, you can have dedicated vehicles for specific tasks.  Such as a mechanic vehicle that is responsible for fixing or repairing other vehicles.  The use of medical vehicle can be very helpful.  A medical vehicle can be used to help people within your convoy or others that you may encounter. 
A weapon vehicle could also be considered.  Take this into consideration, if you are not familiar with guns or shooting, shooting from a moving vehicle is a completely different skill.  Bottom line, you will not hit anything.  Having a gun for personal protection in your vehicle is ideal, but shooting and driving is not.  If you have a vehicle dedicated to security they can be responsible for addressing possible threats while stopped or moving. 
Make sure there is constant communication with the other vehicles via radio.  You can also develop signals using your vehicle lights, turn signals and hazard lights.  Have a solid plan and make sure that everyone knows it. 

Driving behavior:
Depending on the situation is going to dictate how you drive.  However, you will always drive defensively.  If complete chaos is everywhere, then drive more aggressively.  Be aware of your surroundings and what people are doing.  This is not the time to stop and help everyone.  You need to be extremely cautious and protective of you and your vehicles.  You will see old guerilla type tactics being used during times of desperation.  The most common tactic will be to have you stop your vehicle.  This is used with children walking into the roadway to get you to stop.  Once you are distracted with the child, several armed subjects will attempt to rob you, or take your vehicle.  This can also be accomplished with obstacles in the roadway.  Another common insurgent tactic is to disable your vehicle and then attack while you are busy repairing your vehicle.  I do not believe that during this time you will have to worry about Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs).  They are used to destroy vehicles, and destroying your vehicle would be no benefit to anyone.  However, they can be used to keep people off of a certain roadway.

For those of you contemplating adding some sort of armor or fortifications to your vehicle there are things to consider.  First off, this can take an extremely long time. If you add slabs of metal or other material you still have to secure it in a manner that would not be dangerous if you got into an accident.  Adding more heavy material can create too much weight for your vehicle and dramatically slow you down and hinder the vehicle performance.  My recommendation would be individual body armor, or bullet resistant vests.  They are much lighter than your vehicle additions and can be worn outside of the vehicle.  During TEOTWAWKI defense during driving is going to be your driving.  Drive straight and fast and cautious. 

In conclusion, this is a straight forward approach to get you to your retreat.  This is geared more towards people with no military training or tactical experience.  The more people you have in your convoy the better coverage and expertise you can add to your team.  There are many things that you can add to this.  Just because it sounds good does not mean that it could work.  If you would like further information on convoy driving you should refer to the US Army Convoy Leader Training Handbook.



Letter Re: Out of the Wild: The Alaska Experiment Documentary Series

JWR:
Thanks for your great work! The following video series is available through Netflix and with a membership can be viewed instantly on your computer. Very good stuff. Normal people in a wilderness survival situation. Shows how important mental attitude is in such a scenario. Here is a description from Netflix:

Out of the Wild: The Alaska Experiment (2009 TV-PG 2 discs / 8 episodes)

"Deserted in the harsh Alaskan interior, nine outdoor enthusiasts must rely on their resourcefulness to make it back to civilization alive, foraging for food, building makeshift shelters and battling plummeting temperatures along the way. Over the course of one grueling month, several team members give up completely while the others valiantly struggle to overcome their crippling hunger and exhaustion."

Thanks again! – David S.



Letter Re: Fit to Survive, Part Two: All the Other Stuff

Mister Rawles,
I really enjoyed reading a fitness article that made sense to me from a prepper’s perspective. But building sensible body mass is important for much more than fight, flight and health reasons. In a collapse situation jobs will be at a premium and equal opportunity hiring will truly be a thing of the past (as will most desk jobs). If you find yourself needing work, you’ll want to be bigger and stronger than the guys around you. Also, it will be apparent to any employer that you are no stranger to toil and self discipline. In short, you’ll be wearing your resume. Kindest regards, as always. – The South Aussteyralian



Economics and Investing:

Joseph C. sent a link to this: Why U.S. debt matters to you

Trent H. flagged this: For Some Homeowners in Foreclosure, a Rent-Free Approach. Trent’s comment: “This attitude is astonishing and disappointing. The attitude that ‘the banks are crooks’, and thus its okay to behave similarly is frightening.”

From Brian B.: Federal debt tops $13 trillion mark. (And that doesn’t include the massive future obligations like government pensions)

Why a ‘new euro’ could be the saviour of the European dream. (Thanks to L.R. for the link.)

Items from The Economatrix:

First-Time Jobless Claims Drop for Second Week

Retailers’ Reports Show Tepid May for Shoppers

China Ready to Say Good-Bye to the Dollar

Iran to Dump 45 Billion Euros for Gold Bullion and Dollars

US Mint Out of Not Only Silver But Gold American Eagles as Well

Chronic Joblessness Bites Deep



Odds ‘n Sods:

Jeff B. reminded me about this useful article by Grandpappy: How to Preserve Food for Future Consumption Using Three Simple Old Fashioned Methods.

   o o o

Phoenix-area hospitals fight highly toxic ‘supergerm’. (Thanks to S.M. for the link.)

   o o o

Douglas wrote to mention a Guatemalan web site that has downloadable examples of pedal power that can be harnessed which would otherwise require electricity or hand power (which is far more effort). Pretty neat stuff.

   o o o

Bill M. thought this article would be of interest: Vanishing Farmland: How It’s Destabilizing America’s Food Supply

   o o o

Fellow blogger Leon Pantenburg reviews the book Bug Out.



Jim’s Quote of the Day:

“The LORD knoweth the days of the upright: and their inheritance shall be for ever. They shall not be ashamed in the evil time: and in the days of famine they shall be satisfied.” – Psalm 37:18-19 (KJV)



Notes from JWR:

A reminder that the special sale on the Rawles Gets You Ready Preparedness Course ends on June 21st. Get your order in soon!

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.



Fit to Survive, Part Two: All the Other Stuff

In Part One of this article (posted on May 16th) I tried to emphasize the importance of strength and what roles it played in survival.  I want to reiterate that strength is the cornerstone of all human physical ability.  The stronger you are the faster you can run, the further you can jump, and the harder you can hit.  However strength is not everything and being satisfied with only developing strength is like only focusing on purchasing guns for your SHTF scenario, it’s very one dimensional.  After a period of time, up to a year, it would be wise to take some time off of hard strength training by stepping into a program that will maximize your ability to maintain the strength you’ve worked so hard to obtain while at the same time developing other necessary physical attributes like speed, agility, coordination, balance, and endurance.  This is much easier said than done since the ability to run long distances (i.e. more than 5 km at a go) and be very strong (Dead lifting double your bodyweight) are generally mutually exclusive in their training methods.  Long runs are usually performed at a pace that isn’t challenging enough to induce an adaptation, but is challenging enough to compromise our ability to recover from your heavy lifting workouts.  Despite the inherent difficulty in programming for strength maintenance and proper conditioning it is a fairly simple process.

During your time gaining strength you will have probably noticed that you were very hungry and ate everything that stood still long enough for you to catch and shove in your mouth (at least if you were doing it correctly).  It is understandable and desirable that you will probably put on a healthy amount of body fat while developing strength and building muscle.  I would hate to think that anyone would be put off of a strength building program because of a little body fat accumulation, especially since a healthy amount of body fat is necessary for survival.  Some of the first people to fall out of a long walk/patrol, and some of the first to starve to death, are the people who have those well defined “six pack” abdominal muscles.  It is nearly impossible to maintain physical effort for long periods of time without a store of body fat for our internal systems to derive energy from.  That is why in my first installment I recommended that people of certain heights weigh certain amounts.  In my opinion, any man above 5’10” tall and weighing less than 200 lbs is underweight. 

It is a shame that all of the so called health magazines and publications today are urging people to become skinnier and skinnier when, in most Third World countries and most of western history, burly men and curvy women are the most desirable and the healthiest.  It is a shame that we have been led to believe that if we cannot see our abdominal muscles that we are overly fat.  We have been led to believe that if a woman weighs more than 110 lbs that she is fat, and that a man who weighs more than 180 lbs is either a muscle head or a fat body.   The fact of the matter is that it is very difficult for a man to maintain a low enough body fat percentage to see his abs year round.  It was easy for Gerard Butler and the rest of those “Spartans” [in the movie 300 ] to look that good because it was for a very short time period. It was reported that Gerard Butler was so overworked that he had to take eight months off from almost all physically strenuous activity for his body to finally recover from his nearly 12 hours per day of workouts/ fight scenes and the insufficient amount of calories he had to consume to look that “good”.   It’s even worse for women who get their body fat low enough to have abs that are visible.  Women typically have about 7-10% more body fat than men in similar condition.  Since women don’t produce testosterone like men do (thank God) they don’t have similar muscle mass and so they can never have the high resting metabolic rate that a man is able to, and that high metabolic rate is necessary for such a lean body composition.  Women also need the extra body fat to help their bodies cope with the stresses of carrying and delivering a baby.  A woman who is so lean that you can see her abdominals in sharp relief is in a very unhealthy state; at this point she has usually lost her menstruation because her ovaries have stopped producing estrogen.  This can happen because of too much exercise, too few calories, or a combination of both.  When this happens it is called Secondary Amenorrhea and is most often seen in female athletes.  The bottom line is that we are built to carry around a certain amount of fat and it is actually healthier to have a slightly padded frame than a bone thin one.  Couple low body fat with low body weight and you end up looking like someone out of a refugee camp. 

I want to take the time now to say that this is not meant to give anyone cart blanche permission to pig out and get as fat as possible.  There should be a relation between how much you weigh and how strong you are.  If the numbers on the scale keep going up and the numbers on the bar don’t, then you are probably eating too much junk food and not lifting hard enough.  I urge you to take this seriously because it won’t do you any good to be as strong as an ox only to die of a heart attack from all the Ho-Hos and Cheese Wiz.  We always have to pay attention to the law of diminishing returns.  At some point we all have to admit that the amount of ammo we have stored is hurting our ability to store food, and there’s also a time when we must realize we have gotten as big and strong as we need to be and now it’s time for a jog.   If it’s hard to get in and out of your car, the waitresses at the buffet put on riot helmets when you walk in, small children simply point and stare when you say hello, and you become short of breath while combing your hair you have, my friend, violated the law of diminishing returns. 
Now that we have gotten that out of the way how do we address our need for development of all the physical attributes that will help increase our chances of survival?  As I said before it is a simple process, but it is not easy.  There is simply no substitute for hard work and hard work is what we will have to resign ourselves to if we want to have the highest possible chance of survival.  Again I want to say that it is the simple and the basic that will help get us to our goals, not the complex and the complicated. 

Pareto’s Principle– more commonly known as the 80/20 rule–states that we will get 80% of our results from 20% of our effort.  If we can master the basic 20%, we will already be above the curve.  What I mean when I refer to simple is this: basic compound movements that involve as much of the body at one time at possible.  There are many different modes that we may use to achieve the results we need and want, however we all need to remember that our bodies develop specific adaptations to specific demand (you can’t get stronger without picking up heavy objects, and you cannot become a better runner without running), and so we need to identify not only what we most enjoy doing but what we see as a real possibility in a SHTF / TEOTWAWKI scenario. 

There are five basic spheres of athletic development: strength, speed, balance, agility, and endurance.  Yes there are other sphere’s I could name like coordination or power, but they are simply combinations or abstractions of the core qualities in my basic list (power is the combination of speed and strength and coordination is the combination of balance and agility).  Balance and flexibility are more than taken care of while performing your daily exercises if you perform them with a full range of motion.  We have already discussed strength at length, so that leaves us with speed and endurance. 

Speed and endurance are mutually exclusive concepts.  I say this because you cannot run fast for very long, and you cannot run long very fast.  However they can be trained at the same time if some care is given to the division of labor during the week.  I want to caution here that endurance does not simply mean the ability to run for long distances.  Endurance is the ability to sustain prolonged stressful effort or activity.  We must train for more than just endurance running.  Speed carries the same stigma in that when I say speed, most people think of running.  Did you know that jumping is a product of speed?  The ability to jump relies on how fast we activate a muscle.  Olympic lifting is also a product of speed (married with copious amounts of strength).  So when we think of endurance we must think in a three dimensional manner. 

Speed is developed simply by doing things fast and explosively, while endurance is developed by doing things for longer than you would normally enjoy.  If you enjoy running then you can simply split your runs into fast run (i.e. 100, 200, 400, 800 meter sprints), and long runs (I would recommend no more than 5-to-10 km).  Hiking and heavy Ruck marches are very applicable and functional ways to develop survival endurance.  Pushing a car is another good way to develop functional endurance.  Laying down on the ground, either on your stomach or back, and seeing how fast you can achieve a standing position (or a shooting position) is a very functional way to develop some practical speed (I call these Pop Ups).  Long hill runs, or fast hill runs, are amazingly effective ways to develop serious endurance and speed, respectively.  Exercises like star jumps, burpees, mountain climbers, plyometric pushups, deck squats, box squat, and box jumps all can be used to develop both muscular endurance and speed.  Basically any exercise, even weight lifting exercises, can be used to develop speed or endurance, its simple the volume that determines what adaptation is encouraged. 

On a day that we choose to work on speed development we will be placing a lot of stress on our central nervous system, since this is the part of our physiology most responsible for speed development.  When we place a lot of stress on our central nervous system it is harder on the body and thus harder to recover from.  This is solved by simply doing less.  While it’s okay for us to run 5 miles at an 8mph pace, doing that at a 15 mph pace would kill us.  If we are going to run as fast as possible we must only run as much as we need to, and no further.  Never do a speed exercise to your limit because it will hinder your training for up to a week, so stressful is this training on the body.  For instance, most Olympic sprinters and Olympic weight lifters training sessions are frequent but they are very, very short.  A good way to measure your speed workouts is by your actual speed; when you can no longer perform your chosen exercise as quickly as when you started it is time to call it a day.  You must also take large rest periods because you want each effort to be a maximum effort.  For instance, let’s say you decide to perform five 100 meter dashes’ for your workout.  It would be a good idea to take a five minute break between efforts, so that you may maximize each one.  After your fifth sprint, go home and rest.  If you chose something like Star Jumps or Burpee’s, it is a simple matter to perform X number of the movement every 30 seconds and then rest for 1 minute.  The first time that you fail to complete X number of reps in the given 30 seconds the workout is over. 

Endurance is probably the simplest and most difficult to train because it takes a lot of time if done improperly.  I don’t know many people who have the time to run or hike 10+ miles per day, and I can’t imagine dedicating 1-2 hours of my life every day to endurance training.  However it is very simple to develop endurance without taking unholy amounts of time.  Running is a fairly simple exercise, which is why a well trained person is able to do it for an hour or more at a go.  However if you add in a few steep hills what was an hour long run only takes 20-30 minutes.  From personal experience a 30 minute hill run makes the occasional one-hour flat runs a breeze.  You could also add weight to your runs, turning them into hikes or ruck marches.  These will typically be long workouts, and can last up to 20 miles for people who can really focus themselves.  It is good to perform a long workout once every couple of weeks so you know what it feels like, but it isn’t necessary every day, or even every week.  You can easily sustain your endurance with 5 km runs or less, 10 km hikes, and appropriate weightlifting and callisthenic exercises.   For instance, have you ever tried to do 20-30 full depth squats with your bodyweight on the bar?  I can tell you from personal experience that I have never seen someone do this without meeting Jesus (the praying starts around rep 12).  These are a good way to develop endurance.  Remember Dan John, whom I mentioned in my last article?  He once, on a bet, squatted 300 lbs 61 times without putting the bar down.  Doesn’t that sound like functional endurance? 

When it comes to programming, your imagination is your only limit.  I would however caution that working out more than four times per week is usually counterproductive.  Here are a couple of sample weeks in what I would call a typical training plan:

Week One:
Monday: Heavy Day, Dead lifts and Military Presses.  1×5, 1×3, 1×2 (sets x reps)
Tuesday: 5km run, 8 minute mile pace
Wednesday: rest
Thursday: Sprints, 5x200m
Friday: rest
Saturday: Bodyweight training (various callisthenic exercises, like Pop Ups, Star Jumps, Sit-ups, Pushups, etc)

Week Two:
Monday:  10km run, 8 minute mile pace
Tuesday: rest
Wednesday: Heavy Day, Squats and Weighted Pull-ups. 1×5, 1×3, 1×2 (sets x reps)
Thursday: Calisthenics for 20 minutes
Friday: rest
Saturday:  Hill Sprints, 5×40 seconds

This is just a sample program format that can be used.  I would recommend at least 48 hours of rest between a heavy lifting day and a sprinting day.  Long runs and calisthenics days can be treated as “easy” days where the work can be done at a moderately challenging pace.  Your calisthenics days may also replace your sprinting days if you want to or need to.  Just remember that speed is fast, hard, and short while endurance is slow, moderate, and long. 

I sincerely hope that this has helped with your survival preparedness.  It’s folly to spend so much time and money making sure we have enough if we aren’t willing to invest some time and money into our own health and well being to insure that we are able to use and enjoy what we have set aside.  Physical health should definitely take top priority in our list of prep needs, simply because none of our food, water, and ammo will matter one whit if we die of a heart attack or stroke, or are crippled by mistreated and unused joints, muscles, and ligaments.   No matter who you are or where you physical health is right now, you can do something to improve your situation.   For some it will start with a walk around the block, for others who have been doing this for while it may mean a new challenge on the horizon.  At one time in all our lives we all had to face the reality of needing to prepare and not knowing where to start.  Those who have been preparing for years know that the most important thing is to just start and worry about the details along the way.  It’s the same with our physical health; the most important thing is to start.  Whether prepping or training or exercising, I think we can all agree that if you haven’t already, now is the time to start. 

JWR Adds: All the usual disclaimer about rapid changes to your exercise schedule and consulting a physician apply.   



Letter Re: The A.N.T.S Network– Institutionalized OPSEC Naivete

James Wesley:
Do you want to see a serious breach of operational security (OPSEC)? Then go to the “ANTS Group” web site and click on their map. Zoom in on some of the names and addresses of folks with supplies just waiting to help others. I’m glad to see folks (“ants”) ants willing to help [others], but I’m sorry to see folks getting setting themselves up [as targets] for the [the depredations of the] not so trustworthy or “Golden Horde” (a.k.a. Grasshoppers)! Regards, – M.T.

JWR Replies: Thanks for sending that illustration of how not to keep a low profile. The naiveté that they display is astonishing, in this day and age. I agree that charity is a very important Christian duty. But please folks, use some common sense!



Economics and Investing:

SurvivalBlog reader H. in Quebec asked me to summarize my view of the current economic situation, and asked what is coming next. In essence, the recession will likely turn into depression that may last for decades. What is ahead? This is what I wrote in early 2008: “The current financial instability is just the beginning. Before this is over, the debt crisis will start an avalanche that will bankrupt countless individual investors, institutional stockholders, hedge funds, stock trading companies, municipalities, banks, S&Ls, and insurance companies. Since the magic money tap will be turned off, both residential and commercial real estate may decline–absent overall consumer inflation–by as much as 70%. Stock markets will collapse, and economies will be plunged into prolonged depression. On and on it will go, as the trillions of dollars worth of bad debts that have been winding up for the past two decades are gradually “unwound.” This unwinding will be an incredibly painful and protracted process that is punctuated by some massive layoffs, strikes, and social unrest. Dan Ackroyd said it best: “Real wrath-of-God type stuff.” I suspect that the debt avalanche will destroy entire currencies and possibly bring down governments. (We should remember that the Asian financial crisis of 1997 led to the ouster of the 30+ year Suharto regime in Indonesia.) My only hope is that one of the institutions that is replaced is the private banking cartel called the Federal Reserve. Inevitably, we need to replace fractional reserve banking with proper warehouse banking, and replace the fiat currencies with ones that are freely redeemable for precious metals.”

Reader Jonathan C. highlighted this article: Bond New Issues Shut as Bank Default Swaps Rise. Jonathan’s comments: “Since the current GDP growth is dependent on non-sustainable government spending , the only hope for real economic expansion must be the private sector. However, as this article shows, corporations are unable to fund their businesses through bonds and with the increased volatility in the equity markets they will also have trouble increasing capital through equity sales. In terms of small businesses that don’t have the option of public equity sales, a bank lending freeze all but guarantees a contraction in the small business sector which constitutes around 50% of U.S. employment and 80% of new job growth.”

JP Morgan Cazenove: UK must sell bailed-out banks to save AAA rating. (Thanks to G.G. for the link.)

More Friday Follies: Three more banks bite the dust. (Perhaps bank sign painting businesses will be the shining stars of the nascent depression.)

G.G. sent us this: Gold Is an Inflation-Proof Deflation Hedge

Items from The Economatrix:

10 Companies Back From the Brink

Trade Group Says Service Sector Grows in May

Fed Boss Pushes Loans for Sound Small Businesses

Job Hopes Rise as Layoffs, Productivity Decline

Freddie Mac: Mortgage Rates Up From Yearly Lows







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.



Studying TEOTWAWKI: Why the “Smartest Men in the Room” are Worried, by F.S.

The purpose of this article is to lay out the intellectual underpinnings of what I will call the neosurvivalist movement. The target audience is those individuals either beginning, or considering to start, preparations for broad societal emergencies. The intended result is to demonstrate that far from being a fringe or extremist movement, neosurvivalism is rational and has emerged as a natural result of broader social, cultural, and technological circumstances grounded in specific historical and contemporary thinking.

This movement goes by many names, including survivalism, prepping, emergency preparedness, and so-called “offgrid” or “resilient communities.” Businesses and governments are likewise investing in continuity of operations plans, disaster mitigation, and disaster response. Everyone it seems is concerned about the permanency of civilization. While the focus of these groups varies – some are more “green” and “sustainability” focused, others are profit motivated, still others fit the traditional media stereotype of militant and self-defense orientated loners – all are worried about the fragile and interconnected nature of modern society and understand that the interconnectedness of our civilization is its major weakness.

In recent American memory the fundamental game changers were the dual warnings of 9/11 and Hurricane Katrina. These two events demonstrated that man-made and natural disasters could seriously disrupt a modern society, and that governmental plans were insufficient to respond quickly to large scale events. These events have spawned a large and growing body of work on emergency response and mitigation. The flagship publication is the Journal of Emergency Management, an excellent source of articles running the full gamut of neosurvivalist concerns, a mission shared since 1993 (in the wake of the governmental failure to properly respond to Hurricane Andrew) by the Federal Emergency Management Higher Education Program, itself designed to research and educate in areas of emergency planning concerns.

During the Cold War national attention was focused on fallout bunkers and bomb shelters and there was little public interest in broader problems associated with societal collapse until the mid-90s. That it has now reached a point of near universal concern at operational and strategic planning levels is most evident in the last couple of years. While the nuclear Civil Defense Programs of the 1950s and 1960s are well-known, there was little focus by federal planners on other societal threats until the creation of FEMA in 1979, which slowly expanded from almost purely nuclear civil defense to the current focus on “full spectrum” and or “integrated all-hazards” disaster response. Prior to this it was assumed local and state agencies would lead disaster response, and they often did not. Cold War preparations assumed a Federal-Individual partnership, in which the government assisted individuals by preparing “self-help” programs for citizens’ protection. The classic example was the backyard bomb shelter for individual families, a mitigation program continued today with state block grants usable for individual family safe rooms or in-ground tornado shelters. To highlight the American public’s general unwillingness to prepare, at the height of the Cold War fewer than 3% of the population had taken any personal measure to defend against radioactive fallout. Current assessments (following the U.S. Government’s introduction of the “Ready” preparedness program in 2003) of those likely to prepare for disasters typically include the following characteristics:
1. Pays attention to the news
2. Aware of and concerned about socio-environmental threats
3. Has personal experience with disasters
4. Has children in the home
5. Has strong community relationships (church, civic organizations, etc.)
6. Has disposable income available to make preparations
These characteristics are important because the surge in neosurvivalism is often attributed to religious, suburban professionals with families. These are the people, to be frank, with the awareness, good sense, and money necessary to make preparations capable of producing a meaningful result.

As much as government agencies and private industry have embraced a general preparedness philosophy in recent years, it often seems as if academia largely undermines civil defense strategy. Books such as The Imaginary War, One Nation Underground, and Bracing for Armageddon seek to ridicule and discredit preparedness concepts in general, arguing the government cannot be trusted to deal truthfully with the public on such measures (a mantra most obvious in the media frenzy over the “duct tape and plastic” advisement issued by the new Department of Homeland Security in 2003). That this view often emanates from those corners which often wish for more government and more governmental control – a schizophrenic position perched perilously on the anti-nationalism ideas of Eric Hobsbawm and Ernest Gellner, and the liberal-democratic faith in deterministic concepts of man’s inevitable progress. It’s important to consider that media treatments of private individuals engaged in preparedness typically attack along these lines – suggesting that preparedness is a statement of little faith in the government to handle emergencies, and that individuals that do so are dangerous or at least hold dangerous ideas. At the same time, the media typically depicts governmental agencies and programs as necessary, particularly if their budgets are cut. Often journalists interview academics who seem to invariable fall in line with depictions more appropriate for Cold War interpretations of governmental malfeasance than the day-to-day realities of a post-9/11 and Katrina world. This and raw political partisanship explains much of the disconnect the average American feels about his place in society. That this can manifest in profoundly important political ways (such as the “Security Moms” so often depicted in the media in 2004) only adds to the lack of clarity in the general consciousness of the population.
Fundamentally, Americans having been asking themselves questions such as “Is it wise to prepare for disaster? If so, how much is enough? To what degree should I believe the government or the media?” Journalists and leftist academics generally provide a negative reply.

It’s important to understand that the above actually represents a very small contrarian academic view, and that generally academic specialists support the conclusions of neosurvivalism. Researchers such as Tainter, Diamond, and Zartman all find the modern state as an incredibly imperiled and fragile edifice. Joseph Tainter’s The Collapse of Complex Societies follows in the footsteps of earlier historians such as Oswald Spengler’s Decline of the West and Arnold Toynbee’s A Study of History in that it predicts that societies do not enjoy “progress” endlessly, that eventually societies reach a point of diminishing returns when solutions to their problems invariably cost so much that they create more serious problems. This is an assessment shared by Vaclav Smil in his book Global Catastrophes and Trends. Smil foresees a connection between global stability and energy consumption; military and economic engines are powered by the energy source of the nation, a reduction in which can create substantial geopolitical problems. Peak Oil researchers will find much to agree with in Smil’s work.
Jared Diamond is a Pulitzer Prize winning academic whose work Guns Germs and Steel was followed by his equally impressive Collapse: How Human Societies Fail or Succeed. Diamond comes down on the side of environmentalist fears as a major threat to human civilization, though to his credit he’s more than willing to entertain a joint effort at sustainability with corporations. That Diamond’s Collapse has received positive reviews buttresses the idea that societies can indeed fail, and that human action or inaction can cause that collapse. Posner’s book, Catastrophe: Risk and Response, comes to similar conclusions as Diamond, and his exploration of events which can wipe out humanity and how we should rationally respond to them is a remarkable read.

William Zartman’s book Collapsed States uses post-colonial African Nations as the subject for his study of how nations cannot easily be put back together. Once a polity collapses, he ominously predicts, only a powerful outside force can reestablish its authority, and even the success of such operations is spotty at best (as U.S. adventures in Iraq and Afghanistan can attest). The typical result is ongoing instability, tribalism, and intranational violence. Zartman is supported by R.J. Rummel’s work on what he calls “democide” in his book Death by Government, which demonstrates that failed states are generally highly active in either perpetrating or supporting genocide. Mary Kaldor comes to similar conclusions in her work, including her excellent book Old Wars, New War. Fearing one’s government as an agent of violence against its own citizens is not paranoia – it’s an academically supported position, and a cause célèbre of the Amnesty International and its supporters.

Finally, consider the concept of societal collapse, something that Mr. Rawles and many others write about. This too is a well-studied and supported concept in academia. George Mason University economist Robin Hanson has this to say about it: “While there are many kinds of catastrophes that might befall humanity, most of the damage that follows large disruptions may come from the ensuing social collapse, rather from the direct effects of the disruption.” He also goes on to say that “if individuals vary a lot in their resistance [to disaster], however, then it may pay to increase the variance in such resistance, such as by creating special sanctuaries from which the few remaining humans could rebuild society.” Archaeologists Harvey Weiss and Raymond S. Bradley have said that “The archeological and historical record is replete with evidence for prehistoric, ancient and pre-modern societal collapse. These collapses occurred quite suddenly and frequently involved regional abandonment, replacement of one subsistence base by another (such as agriculture by pastoralism) or conversion to a lower energy sociopolitical organization (such as local state from interregional empire).” Thomas Homer-Dixon’s work, such as Environment, Scarcity, and Violence maintains (as an extreme simplification) that environmental scarcity results, ultimately, in violence (something Smil and many other scholars have concluded). That these scarcity issues cannot always be solved is something Homer-Dixon explores in his book The Ingenuity Gap. The result is fragmentation and destruction, if not extinction.

What I have attempted to do here is layout the academic and intellectual work that has been done in support of neosurvivalism. This is necessarily only a short introduction to the topic, and it focuses only on the academic research angle, the books published largely through academic presses such as Oxford University Press, MIT Press, and Princeton University Press. These books are read mostly by policy makers and planners, generally not by journalists or non-specialists. The reason I have focused on these is to inform the general neosurvivalist community of the immense support that government and academia provide for them as they make individual contingency plans. When faced with family members and others who are dubious about the practice of emergency preparedness, a library stocked with the texts I listed above may be the very best tools available because they may help convince loved ones of the importance of emergency preparedness.

In closing, the U.S. government has been urging American citizens to prepare for nuclear war since 1947, for all-hazards emergencies since the late 1970s, for terror attacks since 1999, and for national health disasters, such as pandemics, since 2006. Every U.S. state has a disaster management agency, which often has funds available for disaster mitigation in individual homes. The Red Cross urges emergency preparedness as well, including the requirement for two weeks of food at home and one gallon of water per person per day, as well as the packing of an evacuation bag, with three days food and water in it. The reason people do not prepare is because they do not match the criterion I listed above – they either do not have the disposable income (meaning they choose to spend family funds on other priorities) or they are unaware of the dangers to which they are exposed. In addition, academic researchers from the best universities have produced copious evidence to support any number of rational preparation schemes, to include preparation for total societal collapse. Following the recommendation of the government disaster planning agencies and the scholars who specialize in studying disasters is the result of neither paranoia nor foolhardiness. It is prudent, logical, and rational. Pretending none of this is an actual threat, and refusing to make even the most basic preparations, is lunacy.

The following academic texts may prove interesting to the general survival community. These are not “how-to” survival texts, but nevertheless are books very worth the reading because they help the reader to understand the potential survival situation which may result from a disaster or societal collapse. (And this alone is an invaluable service for emergency planners, institutional or individual.) Those marked with an asterisk are, in the author’s opinion, especially useful:

David W. Orr, Down to the Wire: Confronting Climate Collapse
Johan M. Havenaar, Toxic Turmoil: Psychological and Societal Consequences of Ecological Disasters*
Robert A. Stallings, Methods of Disaster Research
Havidan Rodriguez, Handbook of Disaster Research
Piers Blaikie, At Risk: Natural Hazards, People’s Vulnerability and Disasters*
Maxx Dilley, Natural Disaster Hotspots: A Global Risk Analysis
Robert D. Putnam, Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community*
Greg Bankoff, Mapping Vulnerability: Disasters, Development and People
David R. Montgomery, Dirt: The Erosion of Civilizations
World Health Organization, The Management of Nutrition in Major Emergencies*
Richard A. Posner, Catastrophe: Risk and Response*
Michel Agier, On the Margins of the World
Karen Jacobsen, The Economic Life of Refugees
Mohamed Gad-el-Hak, Large-Scale Disasters: Prediction, Control, and Mitigation
United Nations Human Settlements Programme, Enhancing Urban Safety and Security
Vaclav Smil, Energy: A Beginner’s Guide*
Nayef Al-Rodhan, Neo-Statecraft and Meta-Geopolitics
Nick Bostrom, Global Catastrophic Risks
Dmitry Shlapentokh, Societal Breakdown*
Michael Bollig, Risk Management in a Hazardous Environment
Carl Sagan, The Cold and the Dark: The World After Nuclear War*
Jerome H. Barkow, The Adapted Mind: Evolutionary Psychology and the Generation of Culture
Azar Gat, War and Human Civilization*
Henrik Hogh-Olesen/Azar Gat, Human Morality and Sociality
Glenn M. Schwartz, After Collapse: The Regeneration of Complex Societies*
Herbert Gintis, The Bounds of Reason: Game Theory
Daron Acemoglu, Economic Origins of Dictatorship and Democracy
Douglass North, Violence and Social Orders*
Mark Juergensmeyer, Terror in the Mind of God
Marc Gopin, Between Eden and Armageddon
Kenneth D. Rose, One Nation Underground
Colin S. Gray, Another Bloody Century
Robert D. Kaplan, The Coming Anarchy*
John Robb, Brave New War*
Fathali M. Moghaddam, The New Global Insecurity*
Kaldor, Old War, New War*
Tainter, Collapse of Complex Societies*
Jared Diamond, Collapse: How Human Societies Fail or Succeed
Walter Dodds, Humanity’s Footprint: Momentum, Impact, and Our Global Environment
Goudsblom, The Course of Human History: Economic Growth, Social Process, and Civilization*
Bill McGuire, A Guide to the End of the World
Vaclav Smil, “Limits to Growth Revisited: A Review Essay”
Vaclav Smil, “Energy at the Crossroads”
Vaclav Smil, Global Catastrophes and Trends: The Next Fifty Years*



Letter Re: Two-Legged Snow Mobility

Jim and All:
As I got off the plane and headed out from the airport parking garage I realized that actually getting home could be a challenge. The blizzard of February 2007 which was coming to an end had dropped a significant amount of snow and the high winds had been producing white out conditions. A phone call to a friend who lived in my area quickly told me I might have to walk if I plan on getting home. Normally I would have just stayed at a friend or relatives home until the weather lifted and the roads had been cleared. This really wasn’t an option for me as my wife had been snowed in for three days alone with my 11 month old daughter. My daughter’s medical conditions required she be on a ventilator during the night and have 24 hour observation. With the roads impassable, our daughter’s nurses who normally came to the house 16 hours a day hadn’t been able to help out.

The plan was to use the buddy system with two four wheel drive vehicles to see if we could find a back way through the country side to the house. As a plan B, I stopped and picked up some cold weather gear and boots before I left the city. I should have already had this in my truck, but you know what they say about hindsight. After getting one truck stuck in the snow at a time and pulling each other out, the only real option was to get as close as possible and start walking. As close as possible turned out to be about two and half miles.

With the wind at my back I started down the snow drifted road on foot. After about a 100 yards, I quickly realized that this was going to be a challenge like nothing I had ever experienced. After a mile of trudging and crawling over snow drifts I started to get a severe spasm and cramp in my lower back. At this point it took everything I had to go 50 yards and I would have to lay down and stretch out my back. It took me around three hours to get home. My snowshoes were sitting at the back door when I got there. Three days later the snow plow came down the gravel road.

The next time I would see a winter like this would be the winter of 2009-2010. The snow falling in early December was a welcome sight as we normally do not see significant snow this time of year in the Midwest. This foot of snow and major drifts made it quite difficult for the deer hunters trying to fill tags during the gun season. Luckily I had already filled tags during the archery season and could sit this round out. The few that did get out and brave the elements were trudging through knee high deep snow at a snails pace. How they got the deer out of the field if they were lucky enough to get a shot was a little work to say the least. Others were pulling snowmobiles on trailers to retrieve the downed animals from the fields. As a result of the heavy snow that stuck around, the gun season deer harvest was extremely down.

I kept a close eye to the on goings of the late season and weather due to the fact that I had a few tags for a January anterless season. The snow kept coming and the drifts kept growing. By the time the late January season rolled around we had record snow fall for the season with no end in sight. We lost track of how many days we had been snowed in. Usually area farmers got the roads passable with tractors before the county road maintainers could get to them.

I could have said the heck with rest of the deer season, but had already paid for the late tags and couldn’t stand to watch them go to waste. Finding the deer this time of year was not an issue. Getting to them and getting them out of the field was. Horses were a thought, but the snow was even too deep for them to be effective. With snowshoes strapped on, rifle, pack, and sled in tow I set out from the farm for an adventure. My buddy was not as equipped for the deep snow and put in ten times the effort to walk 20 yards. We were fortunate to fill all of our tags within 3/4 of a mile or less from my farm. The trek back to the house with a sled full of quartered venison was still a workout despite the snowshoes, but was still easier than simply walking without them.

The snowshoes I purchased six years ago were a leisure item that I hadn’t really considered a necessity at the time. I can’t imagine going through another winter like we had in 2009-2010 or walking through another blizzard without them. Aside from the deer hunting, I used them on a daily basis from walking to the mailbox, bring in firewood, to feeding the horses and chickens. During a winter of TEOTWAWKI transportation would most likely be by horse or foot unless you want to use snowmobile and stored fuel. Even then a horse or snowmobile can be difficult if the snow is too deep.

There are many different styles of snowshoes based on the application and your physical size. Keep in mind the extra clothes and gear you will be hauling when wearing snowshoes. This is critical when selecting what size you need which is based on a load rating. The pair I have are a tad undersized, but I did drop about 20 lbs through the winter which I have to attribute to the added physical activity and the snowshoes. This was also an “economical” set as I wasn’t sure what I would actually use them for at the time. My next pair will be a more rugged and higher quality set as well as a higher load rating.

Buying snowshoes after the snow hits is like trying to find a generator after the power goes out. I will be getting an additional set for myself as well as the rest of the family, not too mention a few more sleds. I will also be sure to keep a set in each vehicle during the winter with the rest of the cold weather gear. – R.M. in Iowa