"By a continuing process of inflation, government can confiscate, secretly and unobserved, an important part of the wealth of their citizens." – John Maynard Keynes, in his book "Economic Consequences of Peace"
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Note from JWR:
Today we present another entry for Round 34 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The prizes for this round 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 $795, and B.) Two cases of Alpine Aire freeze dried assorted entrees in #10 cans, courtesy of Ready Made Resources. (A $400 value.) C.) A 9-Tray Excalibur Food Dehydrator from Safecastle.com (a $275 value), D.) A $250 gift certificate from Sunflower Ammo , and E.) An M17 medical kit from JRH Enterprises (a $179.95 value).
Second Prize: A.) A Glock form factor SIRT laser training pistol. It is a $439 value courtesy of Next Level Training. B.) A “grab bag” of preparedness gear and books from Jim’s Amazing Secret Bunker of Redundant Redundancy (JASBORR) with a retail value of at least $300, C.) A $250 gift card from Emergency Essentials, and D.) two cases of Meals, Ready to Eat (MREs), courtesy of CampingSurvival.com (a $180 value).
Third Prize: A.) A Royal Berkey water filter, courtesy of Directive 21. (This filter system is a $275 value.) , and B.) Expanded sets of both washable feminine pads and liners, donated by Naturally Cozy. This is a $185 retail value.
Round 34 ends on May 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.
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Pareto’s Law and How I Survived a Real Disaster With a Survival Cache: Learning How to Learn, by David H.
In cold weather climate emergencies, one does not have the luxury of bumbling around with unfamiliar, time consuming, or downright questionable strategies for securing shelter, food and water. One’s gear must not be delicate or high maintenance, and one’s plan must be founded in strategies that have been thoroughly tested and improved upon. If one is ill-prepared or caught off guard, the cold will quickly strip away heat, water, and life.
Among some friends, there is a yearly tradition of heading to Quebec, over in Canada, where we go winter camping for about 2-3 weeks or so. Childhood friends now scattered across North America, we would call each other in early December, and ask if each other “were going”. That was it. That’s all that was said. Seven years running, the logistics had never changed. Since the first year had gone so smoothly, every subsequent year was identical. It was simple, really; everyone knew what they were responsible for bringing because it had been the same for years. This year, however, would be very different.
Enter the Ice Storm of 1998.
Freezing rain, as we know, is falling snow that passes through a warm layer of air in the atmosphere and turns into rain. When it passes through another colder layer of air nearer to the ground, the rain super cools and freezes on contact. Normally lasting minutes and not causing problems, this year it would freeze rain for a little over 3 days straight, covering everything in about 1.5-4 inches of contour formed ice, depending on location. Imagine your arm from the elbow down to the fingers lying flat on a desk carrying the weight of 4 inches of vertical ice. Now pick up your arm and move it around. Heavy, yes? The power lines and trees at the time would agree with you.
With around 35,000 utility poles and 1,000 electrical pylons (yes, steel) crushed under the weight of the ice, millions were without electricity for up to 3 weeks. Millions. In the dead of winter this meant no heat and no running water for people on grid. Luckily for me I was off grid on the start of a camping trip. Not lucky for me, I was by myself. The nature of my trip would shortly change from recreation, to survival.
I would learn later about the extent of the damages; that the major cities declared states of emergency, and that 15,000 troops were deployed to aid the 100,000 people frozen out of their homes. Since measuring damage is always easier in a dollar amount; this disaster would cause $5 billion worth of damage. It is so hard to imagine this sort of number. In my line of work, I often need to describe such large numbers, so imagine walking as children often do; the heel of your next step touching flush with the toes of your planted foot. Step by step, walking heel-to-toe, heel-to-toe. Imagine doing this for 189 miles. For every step you take, you get a dollar. To reach $5 billion dollars, you would have to walk the 189 miles heel-to-toe, a whopping five-thousand times.
At the time just before the rain came, I had been driving in my car without a radio, unaware of the storm coming. My responsibilities for the trip had always been to bring the beer, poker chips and a warm sleeping bag. Done. 10 x 24 packs of beer later, I was waiting for the others to arrive with the food, water, tent, and a years worth of stories to catch up on. I had made an embarrassing number of rookie mistakes for 7 seven years running, and nature would quickly teach them all to me. They say pain is the best teacher, but no one wants to go to his class.
After about six hours alone in my car trying to call my three friends, and calling my apartment to see if anyone was there, I was getting frustrated that I wasn’t being connected anywhere. Starting the engine for heat every 35 minutes or so, I was blissfully unaware that anything was amiss as I munched out of a small convenience store bag of trail mix, and drank water out of my nalgene. That evening, I cracked a single beer, and curled up in my sleeping bag in the backseat, listening to rain patter on the roof.
When I woke up late, I jerked my head around to look out the windows to see if my friends had arrived through the night, but the car windows and windshield were suddenly heavily frosted. I grabbed the handle to throw open the rear door, but it wouldn’t move. After trying the other one, I laughed out loud; the car was sealed shut from freezing rain! Perfect. After an ego crushing session of exhausting attempts to simply muscle open the door, my throbbing shoulder demanded I stop, so I grew a brain and started the car to warm it up. With the heat on full blast, it still took about 40 minutes to be able to get out of my ice prison.
I ate another third of the trail mix shortly after my escape, but after 3-4 hours of fruitless phone calls, my stomach was once more expressing its impatience, and it demanded something more. I begrudgingly decided to drive the 120-150 miles back to a gas station (and nearest mailbox) to grab some sustenance, berating myself for not having brought more than I did. After tying a length of scrap utility cord to a tree to signal my presence in case the others arrived (from the other direction), I used a small cheap plastic scraper to remove about 1 3/4 inches of ice off of my windshield. Since the freezing rain was continuous, it proved very tedious to accomplish. In hindsight though, had I not previously been keeping the car warm in intervals, it would have surely taken many more hours, if been possible at all to accomplish with the low quality tool at my disposal, and the rate of ice replacement from the sky.
After starting the engine once more, and throwing the small car into gear, I was surprised to be sitting still after hitting the gas. Stepping out to examine the problem, before my eyes was a little over 2 inches around each tire. My car was fused to the ground. I used the scraper to remove the caked on ice, and upon returning to the drivers seat, found that I could only spin the front wheels. After attempting a more precise ice scraper surgery on the rear wheel situation, all degrees of gas pedal application still yielded only spinning in the front tires, and so no movement in the back.
I sat in the car for about 25 minutes racking my brains for possible solutions, with the gravity of the situation slowly rising up in some back room of my mind. Trying to place a floor mat near the front wheels for them to ‘bite’ into failed extremely consistently. The tire simply pulled the mat back around to the other side. My extremely flawed stroke of insight involved placing my nalgene by the dashboard heater to warm the remaining water, in hopes that by pouring it in the ice depression around the tire, it would melt the ice, bringing the front tires in contact with the gravel somewhere beneath. The front tires would then have enough traction to break off the remaining ice left on the rear wheels and pull the car out of its ever-so-slowly rising ice grave. Needless to say, thermodynamics were not on my side that late afternoon. Even after attempting the same strategy with about 15 bottles of beer (which I, of course should have thought of first), I could see no appreciable difference. Attempting the gas pedal would simply remove the rapidly cooling fluid from the cavity. It would be later explained to me that even if I had a garden hose expelling boiling water, there was most likely 1-2 feet of hard packed ice and snow under each tire, making my attempts futile.
I curled up that night slightly demoralized, weighing my options to either wait a little longer for the gang, or try the 90 mile walk back. I had no food or water save beer, and I fell asleep frustrated that it was still raining.
I would spend two more nights in the frozen shelter, with a door cracked, having decided that I would brave the walk once the rain subsided. At least my shelter had some heat from time to time. My days were spent making pointless phone calls to try to reach my friends. Not a single call was connected. I tried every number in my contact list. My calls to 911 were often connected briefly, but would drop after about 3 seconds. I panicked for some time after this. With the (unknown to me at the time) record setting peak demand on emergency service infrastructure at the time, even if I could have been patched through, I would have been triaged down to the bottom of the pile anyway, being one person in the middle of a forest during a storm made of freeze-on-contact rain.
After the skies cleared, the scene was frightening, but somehow beautiful. Four inches of pure ice everywhere the eye could see. I would find out later that some rural residents affected by the storm could skate on nearby grass fields. Every sapling and tree branch in view bent right over struggling against the enormous weight.
Four days and three nights in my car without food, water, communication or transportation left me weak and out of good ideas. I had to move. I didn’t know if bringing beer would hydrate me or dehydrate me, but I emptied several bottles into my nalgene and with my sleeping bag and a few more bottles in a grocery bag, set off.
About three hours into my walk, and not getting very far due to the poor traction, my phone rang! What? It was a man I had never heard of, so I interrupted his brief introduction and stammered out my situation, begging that he call 911, and contact some people for me. He calmly explained the extent of the storm to me and told me that my friends weren’t coming. Having heard the storm warning on the news, my friends had abandoned their plans, and sent out e-mails to confirm. I remained the only one that hadn’t responded, so they called me at my apartment number. Having already left, they spoke to my roommate who did in fact reach 911 with little consequence. Through his municipal connections, though, my roommate eventually tracked down the number of the nearest landowner to our yearly location. My hope vanished though, as he announced that he was calling me from Cuba.
He proceeded to describe the location of what he called a “cache” of supplies on his 400 plus acres of property. As he was describing the contents, I was put at ease, not at what he was saying, but by his calm yet confident tone. He told me I might be stuck there a while, so he got me to repeat back to him the instructions he just gave me on “hunting”. He could tell I just wanted to keep talking, so he emphasized that I best get at it soon. His deep, loud laughter at me describing the quantity of frozen beer in the trunk of my car instantly set my mood to excited and hopeful, and woke me up like a fog horn. My phone beeped at me about the impending cut off due to dwindling battery life, and I gave my repetitious thanks as we exchanged goodbyes. I estimate that we talked for about 20-25 minutes.
Walking/jogging back to the car took about two hours, and locating the cache was easy. It had been about 40 minutes up the road (in the other direction) from my car the whole time, which made me feel strange. Near a truck sized split rock about 50 ft into the ice abused woods, with new vigor I systematically broke the heavy ice using a rock and using my scraper, dug down to the ground making a patch of dirt about the area of a single-sized bed sheet. My heart quickening as I spotted the small piece of orange utility cord that snaked into the ice and allegedly, to a container, I feverishly broke the ice and dug the snow until I found what I was looking for.
The thick plastic garbage can top came off with surprising difficulty, revealing a strange spicy smelling sand that covered a thick black melt-sealed garbage bag with the following contents, the names of which I would later learn; 5 lbs of pemmican, 2.5 lbs of parmesan cheese, 1.8 quart Kelly Kettle, quiviut socks, ziploc freezer bag of birdseed, single shot crank pellet gun with about 300 pellets, 5 large rat traps, a large blue tarp, a green wool blanket, a compass, a whistle, a fixed blade knife and a medium sized ferrocium rod. I brought it all back to the car like a child wanting to be alone with a new toy.
Without attempting an extensive retrospective journal of what I did day-to-day for the next two weeks (16 days!), let it suffice to provide the following descriptions. The pemmican tasted like half-decent dog food and it, combined with some parmesan, initially energized me more that I had thought I needed. The remaining parmesan cheese was stinky enough to consistently attract the storm rattled squirrels into the traps. It was comically easy. The remaining pemmican rations and the squirrel kept me going very strong. The Kelly Kettle was absurdly simple to figure out and keep fueled, and the constant supply of water from crushed ice kept me feeling great. The birdseed was a little slower going, and even though I only nabbed 3 birds with the air rifle, it too was surprisingly thoughtless. The 146 miles (I would later calculate) on an ice road was very tedious to walk. At night, I would set out my sleeping bag on the folded tarp, and with the wool blanket covering me, I was cozy. The quiviut (musk-ox hair) socks proved invaluable, being (again, I would later learn) 8 times warmer than sheep wool! Happy feet = happy trails!
I made it back to the gas station almost effortlessly, the residents graciously putting me up in a bed and feeding me for another 6 days. I could have certainly kept going with squirrel meat, as the system I worked out was almost flawless. It seemed that I ended up having my fun camping trip after all, though very different than previous years. Almost two months later, I would finally meet with Carl, the great man who called me out of the blue and saved my life with his preparation, instruction, and encouragement.
The purpose then, of sharing my now-dated story, is not to teach lessons of cold weather survival, highlight specific equipment over others, or even emphasize the logic of caches or even the importance of charity. It is instead to highlight a heuristic (thought tool) that Carl used to make his cache, and that I have used to change my life and succeed in a rock solid career.
In a later meeting with Carl, I was incredulous as to his choice of equipment. While I simply marveled at his intelligence, he saw the opportunity to teach me an important skill, something that would later change my life; thinking with Pareto’s Law. Pareto, a controversial italian economist, once noticed that 20% of the landowners in his country controlled 80% of the land. Thinking nothing much of it at the time, he later noticed that 20% of his pea pods in his garden yielded 80% of his peas. This ‘rule’ or ‘law’ would later be applied to almost everything, making billionaires and industry leaders. A good example would be the english language. With hundreds of thousands of words in the English language, it typically takes a lifetime to achieve a masterful vocabulary. However to achieve fluency, you would only need to learn the most common 2,500 words. These are words like ‘yes, no, how, the, in, on, above, outside, over, under, he, she, we, etc’ In this case, 2.5% of the content is responsible for over 95% of the results.
The re-constructions of this thought process are almost endless. If you run a business, you could ask yourself which 20% of customers provide 80% of your income, and then pay special attention to them to adjust the ratio closer to the language example. You could also ask which 20% of customers waste 80% of your time, and reclaim your efficiency. So while similar to the “how would I do this if I only had 15 minutes to do it”, it is different in that it forces you to seek out the smallest changes that produces the biggest results, instead of trying to simply optimize strategy based on a smaller time line. Pareto’s Law assumes that there is a 20% of something out there that is far more important than the other 80% of something, because it provides 80% of the returns. Since it is very well documented that well over 80% of violent crime is committed by less than 20% of the criminals, it becomes wise to prepare against the 20%. We therefore need to ask ourselves what this 20% look like as a cohort if we are to prepare against anything.
Despite my previously detailed early college experience in the woods, I am actually rather new to the survivalism scene, having only recently explored the possibilities of governmental problems, etc. I work as a military resource analyst, and from some of the survivalism content I have read as of late, the prepping community could certainly benefit from thinking like this, especially since during disasters, they almost never have a logistical tail, unlike the military. Ask yourself better questions and save your money, time, and energy. Which 20% change in government would have the 80% of the worst effect. Is it already happening? Which 20% of land in your country would naturally protect you against 80% of environmental problems?
Carl could have had a tent, a sleeping bag, trail mix, iodine tablets, a water filter, some camouflage, a .22 rifle, an axe, a bow saw, a shovel, a flare gun, topo maps and 200 feet of rope in a cache, but he would then have been unable to set up another 13 caches on a whopping 10,000 plus acres, in a weekend at an absurdly minimal cost. Even though a tent and a shovel etc are great ideas for caches in some circumstances, the key is to do as little as necessary, not as much as possible. Like Bruce Lee said: “Mastery lends itself toward simplicity”. Survivalists almost always miss this. Amassing the equipment for 100+ contingencies is not cleverness. Especially not if it breaks the bank, creates anxiety, and leaves prepping as the sole focus of your life. God wants us to enjoy our life, not worry about it all the time. No one disagrees that having a Light Armored Vehicle would be great, but in reality it’s only the difference between 98% and 99% preparation. What, then, constitutes the first 80 or 90%?
As Mr. Rawles emphasizes; his writing contests are primarily in place for amassing ‘how-to’ skills. From my career in military logistics, I have streamlined hundreds of millions of dollars and improved efficiency in design, deployment, and repair of all things equipment. My contention therefore, is that the the most important primary ‘how-to’ skill, is how to process information with Pareto’s Law. Being media literate is not enough, spotting logical fallacies from news agencies, political figures and medical claims is not enough. We must learn how to actively seek out the smallest changes that produce the largest results, as any further ‘how-to’ learning rests on what we’ve chosen to learn. Choosing to learn how to flint knap, or store a printing press in cosmolene is misguided at best. Take care of learning the most common 2,500 words first, then move on to ‘serpentine’, ‘irrevocable’, and ‘mitochondria’.
The world is about to change dramatically. This is certain. But redirect the energies you waste on fantasies to learning the first and single most important how-to skill; automatically thinking in terms of Pareto’s law. It dictates the efficiency of all further learning and action.
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Letter Re: IWB Holsters and Negligent Discharges
Dear Editor:
You recently mentioned an article about a negligent discharge, involving a Glock pistol that was carried in a very worn-out holster of the inside-the-waistband (IWB) variety. It was titled: The importance of a good holster. To be fair, IWB holsters are very good. So are Galco holsters. So are Glocks. One must just identify the risk versus benefits of any holster. For whatever reason, the concealed carry crowd forgets that the IWB holster is NOT a tactical holster. The IWB holster is an excellent choice for those in the concealed carry group but it is not the only option. You get great concealment. Quick access and [safely and quickly] returning the firearm to the holster is problematic depending on your clothing. Those factors are dependent upon where you live and, your level of training. The problem is not the IWB holster. It’s awareness of the issues of your gear selection. I wouldn’t rule out an IWB holster because of this issue. You just have to be aware [of the limitations] while drawing and re-holstering your firearm. There are no free lunches with all things firearms related which includes firearms accessories.
The incident referenced in the article occurs often. It is possible that this same incident could have occurred with a kydex holster except the difference being that upon returning the firearm while seated in a car seat (i.e.: the individual is bent at the waist although compensating / maneuvering to get the gun in place…), the individual could have easily and accidentally caught just just enough clothing inside the trigger guard at the moment he slides the gun in place and bang!
Consider the risk / benefit of firearm selection and holster combination. The individual in question was carrying a Glock. Ergo, this incident was totally possible because of the [Glock design’s] trigger safety. With a Springfield XD, I doubt this would have occurred because of the external safety lever on[ found on most] XDs. A pinching leather holster or clothing being snagged wouldn’t have caused this incident. And for 1911s, same as the XD. A revolver? A this, a that? Just do some research. Kydex holsters come in various styles so look at the options. The best approach is once you get your gear, go to training dressed the same way you regularly carry. I know officers that show up to firearms training with true tactical holsters and go to work with IWB holsters and other holsters that are totally different from the aforementioned tactical holster(s). They do this because the tactical holster is more comfortable and easier to train with. Then, they go to work and the tactical holster gets tossed in the trunk until the next range day. Now everyone can see the the problem with that.
For 20 years as a law enforcement officer, I’ve used the same type of leather Galco holster. Every time I go to training whether it be tactical, qualification, long gun M4 or 12 gauge transitions to sidearm, [training with] outside vendors, et cetera, I use the same holster and same gun (a SIG P220). Find what works for you and avoid big changes. These lessons were first learned while on active duty infantry for over 5 years and it carried over all these years later. Finding out what works will be identified via training. You may end up buying more than a few holsters so do your homework to avoid wasting money. Having more than one holster is fine, just train with all the accessories you honestly use. One set of gear for training and the another set for ‘real’ IMHO creates unnecessary issues. Ironing out the issues via training yields positive results. You will fight like you train so train like you fight. Good luck.
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Economics and Investing:
Why Marc Faber Is Such a Bear.
Dimon Says a Hundred Municipalities in U.S. Won’t ‘Make It’ Out of Debt
G.G. sent us this: American’s feather nests with silver Eagles
Items from The Economatrix:
Solar Sunspot Activity and the Financial Markets
13% Of All US Homes Are Vacant
US Economy In The Greater Depression Confirmed By GDP Data
A List Of 28 Things That Will Make You Think There Is Something Seriously Wrong With The Country
Jim Rogers Predicts Soaring Oil Prices
China Economist Blasts Dollar Dominance On Eve of G20
$5 Fees May Be Coming To An ATM Near You
Stocks Rise After Unemployment Dips To Two-Year Low (JWR observes that P.T. Barnum was right: “There’s a sucker born every minute.”)
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Odds ‘n Sods:
Alan W. sent this item: Why North Dakota May Be the Best State in the Country to Live In
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J.H. mentioned an article with details on the latest malware threat: ‘LizaMoon’ Mass SQL Injection Attack Escalates Out of Control
o o o
One doctor’s view: The Experts Are Dead Wrong on Potassium Iodide for Radiation
o o o
Book review: Apocalypse soon? (A review of “How the End Begins: The Road to a Nuclear World War III“)
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Jim’s Quote of the Day:
“Brethren, my heart’s desire and prayer to God for Israel is, that they might be saved.
For I bear them record that they have a zeal of God, but not according to knowledge.
For they being ignorant of God’s righteousness, and going about to establish their own righteousness, have not submitted themselves unto the righteousness of God.
For Christ [is] the end of the law for righteousness to every one that believeth.” – Romans 10:1-4 (KJV)
Notes from JWR:
Great news! Lulu.com has extended their 20% off sale, for any product, through April 4th. That includes the 2005-2010 SurvivalBlog Archive CD-ROM! So if you’ve been “thinking about it”, here is your chance to save $3.99. Order now! To get the 20% discount, enter coupon code “SPLISH305“, during checkout.
—
Today we present another entry for Round 34 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The prizes for this round 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 $795, and B.) Two cases of Alpine Aire freeze dried assorted entrees in #10 cans, courtesy of Ready Made Resources. (A $400 value.) C.) A 9-Tray Excalibur Food Dehydrator from Safecastle.com (a $275 value), D.) A $250 gift certificate from Sunflower Ammo , and E.) An M17 medical kit from JRH Enterprises (a $179.95 value).
Second Prize: A.) A Glock form factor SIRT laser training pistol. It is a $439 value courtesy of Next Level Training. B.) A “grab bag” of preparedness gear and books from Jim’s Amazing Secret Bunker of Redundant Redundancy (JASBORR) with a retail value of at least $300, C.) A $250 gift card from Emergency Essentials, and D.) two cases of Meals, Ready to Eat (MREs), courtesy of CampingSurvival.com (a $180 value).
Third Prize: A.) A Royal Berkey water filter, courtesy of Directive 21. (This filter system is a $275 value.) , and B.) Expanded sets of both washable feminine pads and liners, donated by Naturally Cozy. This is a $185 retail value.
Round 34 ends on May 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 Single Dad With Kids, Prepping to Our Fullest, by Kurt G.
I’m a single dad (32 year old) of three amazing children, Aaron 12, Sarah 11, and Savannah 3, and this is our journey. In 2008 we had lost everything, my job, our house, our jeep, the truck and pretty much everything else. We did manage to keep our four door sedan as our source of transportation. We were fortunate to have family who had a 2nd home and welcomed us to use it. I had prepped a little here and there for the past10 or so years but was still learning and very naïve to what being prepared really meant. I know we still make many mistakes in our prepping and we are always learning something new but as life this truly is a journey. 2008 really opened my eyes to our economic and political situation and I began to educate myself on the basics. It wasn’t long before I began to understand the magnitude and severity of our current situation and the fact that it is no longer IF just when.
Here We Go
We made the move to a small house in a village in Georgia where space was an issue so my first step was searching out a storage unit that was affordable and suited our needs. I found a unit that was 30×15, and much cheaper than other units of smaller size. This was not only out of necessity for household things we just didn’t have room for but to also be used for storage and staging for our supplies. I began by designating a section of the unit for our supplies yet took care to make it blend in and make it look like just another storage unit full of household “stuff”. Our family has a small place in the mountains which is not ideal, yet is still better than where we live. The kids and I have began supplying this very small family cabin as it is currently our best bug out option and only an hour and fifteen min drive from here.
Defense, I had always enjoyed guns and shooting so this was an area I had a head start in. I already owned 10 battle rifles so it was just a matter of consolidating to common calibers and equipping appropriately. I also am a firm believer in force multipliers if at all possible! By this I mean what I call normal capacity 30 rd magazines, scopes, night vision (even if it isn’t top of the line), binoculars, tactical vest, two-way radios, smoke grenades, training, anything that will give you an advantage if TSHTF. My children all own Ruger 10/.22s and that’s what they started with. Sarah still prefers it she just had to modify a little bit to get her ergonomics right. She had me add a Tapco six-position adjustable stock and a small scope and she has become very proficient. Aaron saved and saved and eventually had me trade up for him to an Arsenal Inc. Bulgarian AK-47 chambered in 5.56mm NATO.
I work as a fitness trainer and have made friends with much of the law enforcement in town and have managed to get a local police officer to let me use a vacant piece of land he owns to train and practice with the kids. Keeping safety top priority we enjoy doing a lot of Run and Gun because of the competitiveness, yet we try to practice everything from shooting behind cover to peeling. Since I could not afford formal training I video tape our training and get some friends I know who are on the Terrorism Task Force or ex-military to critique our training and point out any mistakes and ways to improve. I must point out I do practice OPSEC and I live in a rural gun friendly town.
We have slowly built up our medical kit over the past few years. Using a big tool box I had we started gathering medicines, band aids, gauze, splints, suture kits, quick clot, Hemcon, antibiotics to tweezers. Also not forgetting literature to aid in this area should we ever have to use it. We have also built up a very small amount of antibiotics which we are still working on. A good bit of our medical kit was procured from Amazon.com and was pretty affordable.
Most of the bulk of our food supply has been stored in 5 gal buckets. In the event of a total collapse we do hope to begin our big garden. We have slowly been stocking up on Heirloom, non-GMO and non-hybrid seeds. The heirloom seeds made it a little more interesting for the kids because of the history behind some of the seeds. We are currently growing a small garden to educate and improve which I must say is fun and the kids love it. Oh I can’t forget to mention I have gotten all my buckets from the grocery store they are free where I live. Prepping as a family has been great but I must say out of all we do, the kids hate washing out the 5 gallon buckets the most, and they have washed a lot. We have also put back a small collection of traps that I had picked up here and there to help aid in food gathering. Small critters will be more prevalent than big game. I had in past Christmases bought bows for the kids. The kids just think they are cool and fun yet they serve a purpose and could be used to kill game and do so quietly.
Power and heat has been addressed by slowly saving up enough money to put together a small 60 watt solar kit and battery bank. I know this is not a big system but the small battery bank might make up for some of the low wattage. We don’t intend on using this to run an entire home yet just enough to have some light, a couple luxuries and most importantly recharge batteries for flashlights, tactical lights, night vision, and other items like radio or an MP3 player. This could have a huge effect on morale and make life a lot more bearable. I also wanted to mention having power for my hair clippers–I like my hair trimmed and had even found some manual hair trimmers on eBay for under $20. A tip I learned if you are interested is to buy the old antique clippers, they still work well and have a cool factor to them, the clippers currently being produced seem to be a nightmare, at least that was the consensus I found on some blogs. I have also put back about 10 kerosene lamps, wicks, and kerosene. These things like everything else had to be bought slowly and patiently. I made a habit of putting the kerosene jug in the car on the day I knew I was going to get gas and along with a gas can. I would put just a couple dollars of each in each and then add them to my stockpile back at home until the next trip.
Silver
A while back I saw an old 1988 Isuzu trooper on the side of the road, it didn’t have a for sale sign on it but the man who owned it was willing to sell it for $600. The trooper didn’t run but I had some friends who through church liked to help families out. They got the trooper up and running with me paying for the parts and we were blessed to have our 4×4 bug out vehicle. It wasn’t ideal and I wish parts were more plentiful but it’s a tough little rig and very off road capable and most of all it seemed like that’s what God had put in front of us at that time. The kids all loved the Trooper which they had named Mr T., yet still enjoyed the luxury of the last item of our former life, our black on black with leather heated seats sedan. I soon informed the kids that I would be selling the car, and they seemed fine with it until the day we sold it. I think we were all sad in a way, not just because it was luxurious but I think just a final goodbye of our old life. We watched the new owner drive off knowing that our car would serve them well and that for this there was a reason and that all would turn out well. I decided to purchase as much silver as I could with what was gained from the sale of the car which was about $3,000 dollars worth. This is about the only savings we have but it is growing as silver continues to rise and shows no signs of stopping anytime soon. This has also been a lesson in being humble for the kids which will most definitely help shape a strong character. We have the small family cabin in North Carolina where I can go if it gets to bad but I also thought as our economy gets worse and the real estate market continues to decline that buying or trading some silver for a small parcel of land might be possible. I realize this would take careful timing and is also a gamble but could still be another advantage of owning some silver or gold.
There is so much that we do that I can’t get it in a short letter but here are some miscellaneous things that I wanted to mention: Where I live I am able to obtain 55 gallon drums which have so many uses, such as water storage, make shift water heater, wood stove (with $45 conversion kit sold on Internet), food storage, laundry wash barrel, and more. We have learned to go to as many yard sales as possible. In the event things breakdown shoes or boots will be very important and in high demand, especially when you have children that grow like weeds. We save everything and hand it down as well as pick up as many cheap boots as possible so every one has a couple spare pairs and sizes to grow into. Don’t forget little things like soap, toothpaste, shampoos, toilet paper, laundry detergent, bleach, and so on. I like to have a change jar or several that can quickly accumulate and pick up quiet a lot of these things at the dollar store. Like I mentioned we live in a rural area and when we see a chicken house falling in or and old dilapidated farm house I try to approach a owner and ask if they minded if we took some tin off the collapsed roof or some pieces of wood. These type of things could be used to build an extra cabin, chicken coup, or make repairs. This is made possible by being able to store some extra materials at storage until I can transport them to the bug out location.
There is so much we have done, and yet haven’t done. As the past few years have gone by I have seen a transformation in all our lives, especially mine. I can see how God has guided me and worked so strategically with the people, adversity, and forks in the road. My faith has grown so so much, and it is amazing how God has worked in our lives. As we got back to a simpler life and prepared for dangerous times here, we were becoming closer to what was truly important and especially for me laying the real preparation and foundation for eternity. It is all so clear now, as we make mistakes in preparing and learn and grow, so do we in life. As we prepare to avoid death of us and our families in scary times, so we do in our faith, so that we may have life after this. As we witness to others about economics, politics, or prepping we must also try to help prepare others with our lord. I had been saved many years ago but I had truly lost my way. God used prepping among many other things to bring me back to life. God had placed two women in my life which happened to be mother and daughter. Two ladies hired me as their personal trainer almost two years ago. The mother who just turned 80 this past Sunday has had an enormous impact on me with her wisdom, sound advice, and rock solid faith. I am so thankful that they never gave up on me. I will always love and appreciate them .They have done more for me and my family than anyone will ever know. You must understand, these ladies are the best preppers I know. This has been my family’s journey yet ironically it feels like it has just begun.
Letter Re: Silver Dimes Rather Than Quarters for Barter?
Dear Mr. Rawles:
I have read your excellent blog for years and truly enjoy the unique mix of practical advice and news you provide that is not often found elsewhere.
I wanted to comment on your recent article titled, "Precious Metals–When to Begin Reducing Your Holdings." Your article was quite thoughtful and I would encourage anyone who failed to read it when originally posted on March 29th to go back and read it now.
There was a minor point that I did disagree with. Near the end of the article you wrote, "Here in the United States, pre-1965 silver quarters (25 cent pieces) are the ideal coins for barter." As of March 31st, the spot price for silver was $37.62 per ounce, giving pre-1965 US silver coinage a value of 27.2 times over face. At this rate, a 90% silver US quarter is worth $6.80. At "your interim target of $41.90 per ounce," a 90% silver quarter would be worth $7.58. At $50.00 per ounce (which I believe we will see by the end of January, 2012), a 90% silver quarter would be worth $9.04. When buying a dozen eggs or other small purchases, I think the quarter is too valuable. Of course in a post-SHTF barter economy, the market will determine price.
I do think that the dime would be a better choice for the ideal 90% silver coin for barter. It is currently worth $2.72 and would be worth $3.03 and $3.62 respectively, at the spot prices mentioned above I do own 90% silver quarters, but I have at least ten times that amount in dimes.
Sincerely, – Dean R. in Alaska
JWR Replies: Your logic is sound. However, silver dimes are typically worn much more heavily than quarters and half dollars. Have you ever stacked 100 typical circulated "junk" silver dimes, and stood them next a stack of uncirculated dimes? The circulated stack will often be 10 or 12 millimeters shorter! That is how heavily-worn dimes get. That may not sound like much, but when you buy a $1,000 face value bag and receive only 660 to 680 ounces of silver instead of the nominal 715 ounces, you will feel cheated.
If and when it comes time to do some serious barter, I believe that heavily-worn dimes will trade at a discount. Therefore, I buy quarters rather than dimes, unless I can find dimes that exhibit minimal wear. (This usually means getting all Roosevelt dimes rather than the older Mercury dimes.)
Two Letters Re: Update on Pending Berkey Water Filter Price Increase
Captain Rawles,
I have just received the following update on the Berkey water filtration systems. The Stainless Steel Berkey systems are on a serious backorder as they have been grossly oversold. The Berkey Light Systems are the only ones that are in stock no matter what the “Estimated Shipping Date” or “Quantity in Stock” notices say online. Also the previously reported 20%-30% price increase has been changed to 10% due to Berkey not wanting make an already bad economic situation worse, but they will not be able to give away the freebies any longer. They may consider another “Price Adjustment” in the future though, but for now it will only be the 10%.
As has been mentioned many times before, it is better to do what you can than do nothing waiting for the “perfect situation”. Having clean water can save your life. I would love to own the Crown Berkey, but it is not in my prepping ability at this time, nor they are they presently available, anyway. The filter elements are what do the job, so for me and my family it is a 4-filter bucket system as you and others have described building. As one of my Company Commanders at boot camp used to say, “If you can do something about it, then do it. If you can’t then deal with it and don’t cry about it. That is just a waste of energy anyway.” Thank you for your continued efforts to help turn sheeple into shepherds. God Bless, – Brad M.
JWR,
Thanks to Brad M. for the Berkey price increase heads-up!
I found what needed and placed an order through Directive 21. (At a bargain price.)
However, in my online price checking I came across the Bucket Berkey for $135 you get two pre-drilled buckets that screw together, two Black Berkey filters, a spigot, and necessary washers. From what I found the Berkey filters run $99 a pair, a Berkey spare parts kit runs $25~30, and good luck finding food grade buckets that are threaded to screw together. To me, it looks like the perfect purchase for the folks planning on building a DIY Bucket Berkey because from what I can tell it costs about the same but takes less time and energy to assemble and the lower bucket is less susceptible to re-contamination thanks to the threaded design.
Also, I’d like to remind my fellow readers that Snow Peak Titanium outdoor cookware is made in Japan. I don’t know if the supply shortages will affect them but, if you want some in your gear bags now might be the time to order it. – Elite T.
Letter Re: IP Address Finding Software
Dear Mr. Rawles:
Gibson Research Corporation offers a free [PC] utility called ID Serve that will quickly tell the user the IP address of any web site, as well as some other info. It can also look up the domain name using the IP address. This is useful to help SurvivalBlog readers find the numerical IP for their favorite web sites in case of domain name mischief at the hands of government or private hackers. IP Serve can be downloaded here free of charge. (As a bonus, it is tiny–just 26 kbytes–and fast. It is not “bloatware”). – Sincerely, D.V.B.
Economics and Investing:
B.B. suggested this: Chart of the Day: Silver Coin Mania. Clearly, more folks are now distrusting the U.S. Dollar and hedging into tangible silver.
D.I.W. suggested this over at the Secular Trends blog: Current Real Unemployment is 16%
Foreign Banks Tapped Fed’s Secret Lifeline Most at Crisis Peak. Is this supposed to give me a warm, fuzzy feeling?
Items from The Economatrix:
Massive Capital Wave Approaches Gold
MyBudget360: Federal Reserve Silently Grows Balance Sheet to Approximately $2.75 Trillion
Buying Silver and Avoiding the Sharks
Odds ‘n Sods:
Pastor Chuck Baldwin posted his reaction to my “American Redoubt” proposal.
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Some humor posted over at Survival Mom: You Might Be a Survivalist If…
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Tamara over at the View From The Porch blog had a link to this important Glock safety tip: The importance of a good holster. That is one of the reasons that I’m a big believer in stiff Kydex holsters!
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U.S. admits that Mexican cartels get military weaponry from Central America
Jim’s Quote of the Day:
“In thee, O LORD, do I put my trust: let me never be put to confusion.
Deliver me in thy righteousness, and cause me to escape: incline thine ear unto me, and save me.
Be thou my strong habitation, whereunto I may continually resort: thou hast given commandment to save me; for thou [art] my rock and my fortress.
Deliver me, O my God, out of the hand of the wicked, out of the hand of the unrighteous and cruel man.
For thou [art] my hope, O Lord GOD: [thou art] my trust from my youth.” – Psalm 71:1-5 (KJV)