SurvivalBlog Writing Contest — Announcing the Round 33 Winners

We’ve completed the judging for Round 33 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest!

First prize goes to K.M. for What is a Well-Stocked First Aid Kit?, which was posted on March 15, 2011. K.M. will receive: 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 round case of 12 Gauge Hornady TAP FPD 2-3/4″ OO buckshot ammo, courtesy of Sunflower Ammo , and E.) An M17 medical kit from JRH Enterprises (a $179.95 value).

Second prize goes to Stefan M., for The Process of Preserving Meat by Curing: From Curing Salt to Finished Bacon, which was posted on February 12, 2011. He will receive: 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). Also, for this round only, we are adding a special Bonus Prize: One G5RV 80-10 Dipole antenna kit, kindly donated by Martronics. (A $50 value.)

Third prize goes to The Former South Aussteyralian for Strategic Relocation in Australia, which was posted on Tuesday, March 29, 2011. He will receive: 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. (SurvivalBlog will cover the extra postage costs to get his prizes to him in Tasmania.)

Runner-up prizes go to an unprecedented 20 writers:

Each of these writers will receive a $30 Amazon.com gift certificate.

Note to all prize winners: Please let me know your e-mail addresses for the Amazon gift certificates. (Those will be sent via e-mail.) I’ll also need both postal service and UPS addresses for the top three prize winners.

Today we begin Round 34 of the contest. Round 34 ends on May 31st. Here is the first entry:



Beginner Prepping for Students by Mat R.

I’m a college student living in the western U.S.  I have been interested in prepping ever since I got my Emergency Preparedness Merit Badge in Boy Scouts when I was about 12.  My parents thought it’d be a phase, but it has always been a way of life for me ever since.  I have had a lot of fun even with it, and it’s not as hard as it can seem, especially for those who are still in school.  I’d like to share a few things that I have picked up over the years that can help any who are on a limited budget, lack space or just want to get started.

1. Time to Learn.  You might be asking, ‘learn what?’  Well, learn about what interests you.  Learn about your state and local areas and what scenarios that you should prepare for.  Getting a buddy who is local can can get you all sorts of info, like where to find a good local thrift store, bargain grocery, or outdoor gear store.

I know that on our campuses we are force fed all sorts of information in what most people think of as learning.  But you can use that to your advantage, the campus, not the other stuff.  Many have classes about things like first aid, rock climbing, backpacking and mountain biking.  Have you ever wanted to try rafting?  See if there is a class for that.  Do your future plans involve eventually owning a farm or ranch as a getaway?  Take classes that could be useful to your farm like welding, Diesel mechanics, or basic veterinary skills.  Take physical education classes like basketball, swimming, or karate in order to help you stay fit if you lack personal motivation to work out.

Learn about local threats.  Find out the emergency plans for your university and if there is one for the city where you live.  By joining a CERT or Search and Rescue team you can add more knowledge to your mental tool box.  Get skills, because they are a lot easier to move than your big screen television.

Gather as much information as you can.  As you are reading this site, you have a good start.  Look for things to get you started like ‘Prepping on a Low Income Budget’ and ‘Beginning Prepping’ or other similar themes. 

2. Plan.  Make a plan about what you are going to do.  Now is the time when you put your prior acquired learning to use.  Remember to consider the law, as most disasters are not the end of the world as we know it.  As much fun as it is to talk with buddies about your plan for the rising of the zombie, an earthquake plan in California or a hurricane plan in Florida are more likely to be needed.  Do you live in an apartment in the Midwest with tornados?  Where do you go for shelter when the alerts go off?  These are just a couple of things you may want to consider.
I suggest having at least two plans.  One is your “hunker down” plan, or your short term plan.  This is the plan I will use for things like power outages, most bad weather, and when my apartment complex shuts off water for the hundredth time.  Most problems will be a short term scenario.  Your other plan is an evacuation plan.  I have only used my evac plan once, when I lived in a hurricane area in Florida.  Often we think of an evacuation as an adventure, but it is really boring.  Long hours in traffic, long lines for gas, long waits for the ok to go home is what you have to look forward to in most evacuations.  Granted, we still all hope for the adventure. 

3. Gear Up.  As a student with limited space and money, I strongly suggest not blowing all your cash money on cool gear.  I know this hurts many young dreams, but hang on for a minute.  First, see what you can get for free.  Do you have a buddy who loves buying the latest gear? Then see if he has any old gear that he is replacing.  Did you grow up in an outdoors family?  See what you can take back with you after your next trip home.  Again, this is when your learning can pay off.  Knowing where local army surplus shops, or bargain outdoor stores, even regular gear locations that are having a sale or gear swap can pay off.  Thrift stores are a good bet, too.

Gearing up is also more than packing a bag full of PAW goodies.  Remember, space is limited in an apartment, so let’s plan wisely.  What is under your bed?  If not much, then we have a location.  You can also buy or build bed risers to increase the available room.  I’ve seen some people put their beds on cinder blocks to really get some room. 

When it comes to survival food, store what you enjoy eating.  A case of MREs can last you a long time, but if you hate MREs, they won’t do you much good.  Get things like soup, stew, rice, and pasta.  The trick is to get what you like to eat.  If you are still a kid at heart and can’t get enough of Spaghetti-O’s or Chef Boyardee, stock up on it.  Find out if local stores have case lot sales to get it on the cheap.  This is when you stock up on the classic beans, bullets, and band aids.  Start with food and water for a week, and then build it up to two.  Keep adding as you have room. 
Just know, bigger is not always better.  Don’t buy in bulk if it will spoil faster than you can finish it.  Don’t forget water.  Bottled water can be pricey, and you probably don’t have the room for one of the big blue barrels that many preppers have in the garage.  If you are a soda fiend, buy your sugar fuel in bottles, and wash and refill them.  Two liter bottles, if washed out thoroughly, can hold water really well, because they were made to hold the very acidic soda for years. One liter bottles will work, too.  Plan on two liters for drinking, and another two for cleaning, per person per day. 

The easiest way I have found to do this is what I call the “one on – one off” idea.  For everything you are using or plan to use soon, have another extra waiting in the wings.  I do this with soap, toilet paper, cans and other containers of food.  I have one box of rice open on the shelf, one off in my storage.  Then when I use up the one on the shelf, I open the one in storage and buy another.  This is handy because you never run out of things you need at an inopportune moment.

Again, follow any rules that you have to in your contract, at your university and the local laws.  If it will get you busted, don’t run out and buy an awesome gun that looks like it belongs in an action movie.  Guns are great, but get things like food and water first.  They are also expensive and gun laws differ state by state.  It would really blow chunks if your new toy (or its magazines) had to stay at Other State University when you return to your parents house, or vice versa.  Many Universities have very strict rules about fire arms on campus, especially in campus housing.   

For self defense, a baseball bat is low key, and if you want to be even lower key, find an old baseball glove on Craig’s List or at a thrift store and carry the bat and glove together. People will just think you like baseball.

4. Get Active.  If your plan involves hoofing it 20 miles and you look like a blob, good luck.  A fellow student who works in the recreation field shared with me a story of a man who wanted to climb a mountain near where my classmate worked.  He did his research on outdoors sites, gathered his information, and posted on a forum that was dedicated to climbing that mountain.  He also weighed nearly 400 pounds.  When he asked veterans of that mountain what he should focus on, they were united in the statement, “Lose 100 pounds.”  He insisted that he was in shape, and a former football player.  He said the weight was mostly muscle.  (It wasn’t.)  He had to be pulled off the mountain barely a quarter of the way up.  Don’t let this happen to you.  Your university can be used to help on this.  Most schools have gyms, tracks and other facilities available for student use for free.  Put your tuition money to work!

Find simple ways to be more fit during the day, such as taking the stairs in place of elevators.  Drink more water instead of soda or cruddy energy drinks.  Get enough sleep every night and add fruits and veggies to your meals.

5.  Roommates can be a pain.  If you have to live with roommates, I highly recommend having a private room.  I can’t say how many times I and other friends have had roomies steal food, not pull their weight, or make a huge mess.  I even had one roommate who thought a strainer was a bowl and lost most of his food all over the counter.  Then he refused to clean it up. 

Roommates can also “spill the beans” about your preps, and that could mean too many people at your place when SHTF, or they could demand that you share.
This depends on your roommates.  Despite of all the bad roomies, I have had others who were great and have had a lot in common with.  If you can pick your roommates, and you have friends who are like-minded, then try to get together.

I hope that these tips can help you get started down the road of preparedness.  You never know what can happen or when it will hit, so having a basic start can help set you ahead of the pack when the world doesn’t follow the plan in your Smartphone or on your Facebook event page.



Letter Re: Traces of Radioactive Iodine in the Milk Supply

Sir:
It would appear that very low levels of radioiodine (I-131) have been detected in Western US milk, as could be expected.

Presently, the contamination from Fukushima is taking over a week to cross the Pacific, and that time, combined with dilution effects, reduces the contamination from the Fukushima disaster to point far below the level of concern. At the present time. It also appears that the fukushima fallout plume is not rising high enough at present to become entrained in the jet stream

However, reports from Fukushima, and analysis of the data available, indicates that a containment breach may have already occurred, and that it is possible that re-criticality events have already occurred in the melted reactor cores. Assuming that the emissions of radioactive material from the former Dai-ichi nuclear plant do not significantly exceed their present rate, it is likely that this will remain a largely regional horror. The Japanese continue to place their power plant workers, and military and construction teams assigned to the Fukushima site, in harm’s way to attempt to prevent this from further deterioration. And these people continue to be willing to risk their lives and suffer significant exposures to do so. Take a moment to keep these people in your thoughts and prayers; they are truly heroes.

However, should the re-criticality inside any of the damaged reactors accelerate, and make the immediate area around the plant unsurvivable, the spent rod pools (#4 is at greatest risk) will dry out, and could also melt and suffer re-criticality (keep in mind that there are over 800 tons of recently used spent fuel rods stored on site, with another 6,000 tons of older used rods stored in a common fuel storage pool.) The spent rods have no robust containment at all.

The radioactive release from such an event would dwarf Chernobyl, and while the fallout from such an event would probably not be serious here in the USA, (absent a large enough plume to be carried across the Pacific in the jet stream,) the deposition of Sr-90 and Cs-137, which substitute for calcium, would pose a potential health risk, especially for children and women of child-bearing age. If you have not already purchased a supply of powdered milk, I suggest you consider it, especially if you have small children in your household. – L.M.W.



Letter Re: Getting The Family On Board

Dear Mr. Rawles,  
First, I want to thank you for the work you do and the time and effort I know it takes to provide all of us the wealth of resources and information you do.  I have been steadily preparing for bad times only for the past two years.  Prior to that, my family and I were all about the “Good Times” – Working for the weekend, staying tuned into the television shows, enjoying the “American” way of life. 

I became involved in stock market trading a few years ago and took several classes with a gentleman who woke me up to the coming collapse and recommended your Patriots book.  I freaked for a while, began planning and purchasing for an economic collapse.  My family members began giving me “the look” when I tried to talk to them about these things.  Even dear husband and kids would roll their eyes when helping me unpack groceries or bringing in packages from UPS. 

Reading “One Second After” helped put things on a personal level for me and my family while at the same time, freaked me out even more.  My family did help me build the chicken coop, put the family garden in, plant fruit trees and vines, cart the old pot-belly stove home from my dad’s old shed and even recently helped with a redesign of the closets and unused, unfinished spaces of our home to aid in storage, but gave each other the rolling eyes while doing it.  Last October, when I went off to the medical training mentioned in your site, they chuckled at my “girls weekend” and wanted to know why I needed to learn to put a cast on someone. They complained about attending an Appleseed shoot last year–although they have enjoyed learning to shoot.  It wasn’t really until dear husband recently subscribed to NetFlix and I put the Jericho television series into our queue that I finally got through to them though. 

The first DVD came, I asked who wanted to sit down on a Friday night to watch with me and got no takers.  Within the first 10 minutes, though, the entire family was lined up on the couch.  We watched all of the first four episodes on that disc that night and the kids were begging us to get it in the mail so we would get the next one. While the acting and some of the scenarios were a bit over the top, the point was repeatedly driven home of how essential it is to be prepared for these times.  My teenage daughter remarked to me the other night how she now understands what I have been doing and that I’m not completely crazy!  Bringing home shopping bags and unpacking, the kids now ask “Cupboards or Armageddon Closet?” 

The rest of our family still responds how “God will take care of them” and refuse to prepare, spending time and money as if it will continue to always be there.  This saddens me and I continue to prepare for them as well, hoping I am wrong and they are right, but knowing in my heart and mind, it is coming.  I don’t think I will ever be prepared enough, but know that with each passing week, my preparations are steadily getting better and better.  My husband and children are prepared for crisis both away and at home.  Watching the earthquake and tsunami in Japan, the kids gave me their scenarios for what they would do if that happened here.  How many 10 and 12 year olds think like that?  I don’t want my children growing up afraid of the future – if they are properly prepared, the fear is replaced with confidence.  Again, thank you for your service to the preparedness community and to your many followers who supply the awesome advice and information.  God Bless, –  Carolyn C.



Letter Re: More About Storing Nickels

Hi James,
Just following up on my last letter about stacking nickels in the “Standing Shotgun Shell” configuration.  I’ve continued experimenting and have a few tips I’d like to add that might come in handy. Luckily, I’ve been able to order quantities of nickel boxes from my local bank [at face value] and have been making a studied process of stacking them, trying to improve with each box.  BTW, a cardboard box of nickels such as delivered by Brinks weighs 22 pounds.  I have figured out that by sliding the thumb in and pushing in towards the empty cardboard box, the Bricks boxes easily come apart.  These, I stack on top of one another and save, just in case someday they might come in handy.  I think that possibly in 20 – 30 years, perhaps those boxes might add novelty to the rolls and they are there, so why not save them…

I stack four full 22 Lb. [$100 face value, 50 rolls] cardboard boxes on a stainless steel rolling cart from Sam’s Club and stack several of the .30 caliber ammo cans on the bottom shelf.  Standing, with one ammo can on the top shelf, I open the empty ammo can with the hinge to the left and the opening catch to the right.  I put one roll of nickels under the outside left bottom of the can while the lid is fully extended open to the left.  It’s surprising, but the one roll of nickels under the can gives enough tilt or angle to cause the rolls to lean back ever so slightly to the right inside the cans, which means that they will not fall over. This came as quite a revelation, thankfully.  I hold my left hand on the two rolls just placed inside while reaching into the cardboard box to the right and complete a roll of four inside the can.  I load two rolls at a time with my right hand and get into a rhythm with it so that the rolls quickly add up and soon I’m at the end where the three rolls will need to be added.  Here’s a good trick:  I have a steel rod that measures 3/4″ diameter by 9″ Long.  Sometimes the final row just isn’t right, and with the rod, always, I can even it up so that the three rolls easily fit in. A little prying and the rows line up like magic. If not, a little persuasion tapping downwards on the recalcitrant roll with the rod causes that last unruly roll to go down correctly.    After the two layers of 47 rolls each are in the can, I tap the rolls lightly, then roll the tops with the rod just like using a rolling pin and amazingly, it all lines up beautifully and professionally.  The steel rod is definitely the trick.  If the ammo can is not full, I stuff a paper bag in to hold the rolls in place until the next stacking session.

Beyond that, a few facts.  A .30 caliber ammo can holding $188 worth of nickels weighs about 45 pounds. I found that using a small, heavy duty dolly, stacking 10 (450 lbs., $1,880) is about all that the traffic will bear.  Being 61 years old, I can push the dolly along and gather speed and be able to steer about wherever I want it to go, barring unforeseen obstacles such as thresholds, etc.  I stack the ammo cans often in groups of threes (side by side with one flat on top). This serves as a great cardio workout with lots of huffing and puffing.  Of course, I have pallet jacks and hand trucks, etc., but what fun would that be, LOL!

I found a local guy who sells ammo cans on our gun forum and at local gun shows.  Since I buy a lot, (20 or more cans at a time), he has been very accommodating, and is happy to meet me in the town where we each drive about 30 miles.  Fortunately, his cans are really clean and he sells them for $6 apiece.  I think about how those cans will someday become a great investment.  As each can becomes full I feel a great sense of satisfaction of having done a good job packing them and moving them.  Now I’m working on where they will live for the next few decades, and I have let my one son who humours me about it know where they will be should anything happen.  I’m pleased to be able to “park” some money this way, and my wife and I muse at the prospect of going through all of them in our old age, or during cold nights by the fire.  I hope some of these ideas from an aging craftsman/machinist will help anyone starting out stacking nickels to enjoy it more. – Mr. M.



Economics and Investing:

M.E.W. flagged this: Gross Echoes Buffett Saying Treasuries Have ‘Little Value’ on Debt, Dollar

Greg C. spotted this: Ripples in Japanese supply chain will be felt here. Greg’s comment: “This will end up being a major case study in the weaknesses of “Just in Time” (JIT) delivery.  It won’t be just car parts that will be affected as you will see when you read the article.”

More economic suicide news from Zimbabwe: Implats, Aquarius fall on Zimbabwe indigenisation news.

Items from The Economatrix:

Gold, Silver Now Legal Tender in Utah. (But is is too bad that Utah also recently caved-in, on illegal immigration.)

Buying Silver to Combat the Vampire Craze  (The Mogambo Guru)

March Auto Sales Up, But Gas Prices Weigh  

US Consumer Confidence Sinks As Prices Soar  

Telecom Stock Push Market Higher, Payrolls Gain  



Inflation Watch:

Pierre M. was the first of several readers to send this: Wal-Mart CEO Bill Simon expects inflation. Reader Joe P. noted: “I can’t think of any private or government entity in a better position to recognize inflation than Wal-Mart.”

Reader Mark F. reports: “I went to our location Tractor Supply Store this week to buy some T-posts to put up some more fencing for my livestock and I got a surprise. Last May I paid $3.69 for 6 foot posts. Those same posts are now $4.79 apiece.”

Food Commodities Surge Seen Swamping Consumers with Inflation. (Thanks to Bryan E. for the link.)

The Washington Times reports: Gasoline up 100% under Obama.

Eurozone inflation jump bolsters rate hike view.

India’s food inflation at 9.50 percent year-on-year on March 19.



Odds ‘n Sods:

Clever! W.S. sent a link to a video of a gent that built a solar cooker. W.S. describes it: “He put some chrome decal material on a satellite dish on which he had fabbed a little arm at the focal point of the light reflection, to hold a pot. Interesting idea for a last resort redundancy in the event that your first choice for a cooking method is unavailable.”

   o o o

Conservatives Now Outnumber Liberals in Deep-Blue States. (Thanks to Marilyn R. for the link.)

   o o o

Reader Jared B. sent a link with some more about demographic shifts: New census data shows which areas of America are growing, shrinking

   o o o

My friend Bob G. recommended the article Combat Accuracy. (It was written by Roger Phillips, a Suarez International Specialist Instructor.)

   o o o

California drought officially ends after snowy winter. (There has been 59 feet of snow recorded at Squaw Valley!)





Notes from JWR:

Notes from JWR:

Until midnight on March 31st, Lulu.com is offering a 20% off sale, for any product. 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 the final two entries for Round 33 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 round case of 12 Gauge Hornady TAP FPD 2-3/4″ OO buckshot ammo, courtesy of Sunflower Ammo (a $240 value), 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 33 ends on March 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.



Traditional Womanly Arts for Austere Times by Sue of Suburbia

Sometimes I ponder what it means to be a woman in our society of hyper-consumption.  If you watch television or read today’s women’s magazines, you are led to believe that the activities most preferred by a woman are shopping, poisoning her nails, getting her hair yanked around in a salon, zapping packaged foods in the microwave, and ingesting a concoction of prescription drugs to stay sane through it all.

I tried some of these things in the past.  Each time, I was left with an utterly unfulfilled feeling and thinking, “There has to be more to being a woman than this!”  I stopped reading women’s magazines about 11 years ago and stopped watching television about five years ago.  With both of these moves, my life has changed dramatically.  I have been able to focus on the true meaning of being a woman, not the image fed to me by advertisers.  In the process, I have acquired a set of traditional womanly arts that I will never lose.  I began acquiring these skills first while living in a condo and have expanded my skills set here on my ½ acre suburban plot.

Many of these traditional womanly arts are also necessary skills during periods of austerity, and have been used by generations of women and mothers before us.  I practice them for the feeling of fulfillment I get from them, knowing that I am taking good care of my family and my land in the most healthful way.  When TSHTF, it will be necessary for us women to go back to our roots doing what our bodies, minds and hearts were designed to do.  Our primary function is to be selfless and nurture our families in a mindful way.  Succumbing to pressures from advertisers to be selfish and to consume their products does not achieve this and holds us back on so many levels.  Why spend $20 getting our nails done when we could use that money to buy a used book and a video on knitting or sewing?  Why spend $150 on getting our hair yanked around when that money could be spent more wisely on a whole library of books on gardening?  It is time to invest in ourselves as women in a real way.  Learning these womanly arts now will prove to be priceless and will help our families stay healthy when TEOTWAWKI occurs.  It will be necessary for a woman to be a “Jill-of-all-trades” and those trades do not include pushing a shopping cart, parallel parking an SUV, or operating a television remote. 

These are by no means an exhaustive list of traditional womanly arts, but they are what I love to do the most and what I have found – as a mother and wife – to be most valuable in my household:

  • Cold-process soap-making:  This is an art that has been in my family for generations.  Both of my grandmothers and the generations before them practiced this traditional womanly art.  It skipped a generation with my own mother, but I am happy to say that I have nearly mastered this skill and will pass it on to my own two daughters.  This type of soap-making involves mixing fats and lye under strict temperature conditions to produce soap.  Soaps sold today in stores are chock-full of petrochemicals, unpronounceable ingredients and fragrance additives.    Making soap at home allows me to create cost-effective, healthful bars of soap from real fats that won’t poison my family.  It is a great way to use up some of the less-desirable cuts of lard from a slaughtered pig too.  For anyone interested in learning cold-process soapmaking, I like Anne Watson’s book Simple Soapmaking
  • Raising poultry for eggs and meat: I have been raising chickens for eggs and meat for awhile now, without needing any help from my husband, which frees him up to do other things.  Chickens and other poultry are simple for a woman to handle by herself, as they are relatively easy to herd and carry when necessary (unlike larger livestock like pigs, goats and cows).  They provide two very dense sources of protein: eggs and meat.  Slaughtering chickens is a task a woman can do alone as well.  I am deeply satisfied by raising healthy poultry for my family’s consumption.  I have pretty good carpentry skills, so I have been able to build coops to house my chickens, which has saved us a lot of money in that department as well (no need for a handyman or expensive pre-built coops).  YouTube is a great resource for any woman looking to learn more about this skill.  I particularly like all of Virginia farmer Joel Salatin’s videos.  He is a self-proclaimed Christian libertarian environmentalist capitalist and his philosophy will intrigue you and get you thinking.  This video will get you started (and maybe even hooked on Joel Salatin!): 
  • Knitting: I find this activity to be much more relaxing and productive in the evening than watching television.   It is a better example to set for my daughters than watching television as well.  Whenever I pull out my knitting needles, my 4-year-old daughter sits right next to me with hers and pretends to knit something.  When she gets older and her dexterity is good, I will teach her this valuable, productive skill.  There are tons of videos on YouTube for beginning as well as experienced knitters.  I find a video to be much more helpful than a book when learning a new knitting skill. I really like the Cyberseams series on YouTube
  • Sewing:  Learning to sew clothes is time better spent than aimlessly wandering aisles in clothing stores and swiping credit cards.  When I produce clothes for myself and my family, I have created an heirloom that can be passed down to the next generation.  Who does that with store-bought clothes made in Chinese sweatshops?  As women, knowing how to sew also allows us to repair our worn clothing, giving it new life.  It gives our clothes meaning and allows us to express our womanly desire to craft with our hands.  I love the pieces of clothing that my mother sewed for me as a young girl, and I still have them at-the-ready for when my oldest daughter can fit into them.    Again, YouTube is a great resource to learn this skill.  A good place to start is the Puking Pastilles Learn to Sew 101 series.
  • Elbow-grease cleaning: I prefer to use good, honest elbow grease to clean my home rather than purchasing packaged, designer cleaning supplies that are toxic to my family and my earth.  A woman only needs a few ingredients to have a clean home: baking soda, vinegar, lemon essential oil, borax, soap (home-made of course!) and water.  An added benefit of this is that there is no longer a need to go shopping for a certain specialty product when it runs out.  I just buy all of my basic cleaning ingredients in bulk maybe once or twice a year.  The homemade product I use most in my household is a simple mixture of equal parts white vinegar and water in a spray bottle.  I use this to clean most of the surfaces in my home.  Advertisers want you to believe that you need a separate product for each surface of your home.  You don’t.  A great resource for both basic and fancier recipes is Annie Berthold- Bond’s Better Basics for the Home.
     
  • Making personal care products:  This is one area in our household where we save a lot of money compared to conventional households.  I spend literally pennies and a few minutes making a whole tub of body lotion that is safe for all of us to use, even my infant daughter.  I cannot express in words how much more fulfilling it is to craft a high-quality, chemical-free batch of sunscreen in my kitchen than it is to hop into the car to buy a little tube for $12.  I do not feel cheated; instead, I feel like a goddess.  You need not spend $3 a tube for lip balm when you can make it for 3 cents.  I also make all of the deodorant, diaper rash cream, baby massage oils and hair treatments in our household.  I estimate that we have saved thousands of dollars over the years from my learning this womanly art.  Annie Bertholdt-Bond’s Better Basics for the Home is a great resource in this area, as well.
     For fancier recipes in this area, you can try Stephanie Tourle’s Organic Body Care Recipes.

  • Edible gardening:  I know so many women who love to garden, but unfortunately their efforts are wasted on non-productive plants like roses and lilacs.  All that effort put towards a highly productive edible garden would be time much better spent.  It is in our DNA as women to nourish our families, and what better way than with edible gardening?  Learning this womanly skill now will prove invaluable in a SHTF situation and provides literally endless fulfillment.  I recommend The Vegetable Gardener’s Bible by Edward Smith.
    I get nearly all of my heirloom  and/or open-pollinated seeds from Baker Creek.
    For information on time-saving and work-saving perennial vegetable gardening, I highly recommend Perennial Vegetables by Eric Toensmeier.

  • Baking/cooking from scratch:  this is a skill that is strongly associated with women.  Unfortunately, in today’s hyper-consumer culture, this skill has been reduced to hopping in the car, buying a bag or box from the freezer section, and zapping it in the microwave.  I dare say that a loaf of bread baking in the oven or a slowly simmering soup made with ingredients from the garden and the coop give the home a warm coziness that is not achieved with supermarket microwaveable junk foods.  It is yet another fulfilling activity for women and can be easily passed on to future generations.  When TEOTWAWKI comes, it will be essential to be able to make use of whatever is on hand when there are no more fully-stocked grocery store shelves.  Using simple ingredients to make nutritious, delicious meals is a key skill for any woman interested in traditional arts.  I recommend Alice Waters’The Art of Simple Food: Notes, Lessons, and Recipes from a Delicious Revolution. I also love Sally Fallon’s Nourishing Traditions: The Cookbook that Challenges Politically Correct Nutrition and the Diet Dictocrats.
  • Natural/herbal healing:  learning which medicinal herbs to use to heal sicknesses in our families is a traditional womanly art that has been practiced by mothers for generations.  Unfortunately, it skipped my mother’s generation because of the onslaught of prescription drugs manufactured by big pharma in the last 50 years.  Sitting bedside, healing and nursing the sick is part of our genetic makeup as women.  Knowing the basics of herbal healing and when to quarantine is of utmost importance and should be part of our instincts.  This is an important skill to learn now, before a crisis situation occurs, as it takes much time to develop the confidence and knowledge to be able to apply it in a practical way.  I am by no means an expert in this vast field of ancient medicine and am constantly learning, but I find this area tremendously useful and fulfilling as a mother.  I recommend Encyclopedia of Herbal Medicine: The Definitive Home Reference Guide.
  • Lastly and perhaps the most important of all womanly skills is teaching.  In order to preserve these womanly arts for future generations, it is of utmost importance for a woman to include her daughters, nieces and/or young friends in all of these activities such that they become a way-of-life from an early age.  I have no doubt that the future holds much more austerity than what we know now.  We humans are using resources too quickly and we are not replenishing them.  Our current way of life in the U.S. is not sustainable for even another 20 years.  Teaching our daughters these skills now, while they are young and while resources are still abundant, will ensure that they have the capacity to care for their families in the hard times awaiting us. 

For good reading on the philosophy of homemaking, I recommend Radical Homemakers: Reclaiming Domesticity from a Consumer Culture by grass-fed cattle farmer Shannon Hayes.
While not specifically aimed at women, this book dives deeply into the fulfillment that traditional domesticity offers, and it aims to drive people away from the consumerist lifestyle into a more satisfying life of production.  I believe women of all walks of life can benefit greatly from this type of reading.



Fully Ready But Not Fully Prepared, by Expat D. in Japan

Where We Were
In Kogoshima, in the southern part of Japan, residents know that when the active Sakurajima volcano finally erupts with its full force, they will most likely be killed. Some of them even know that it will be the quaking and the toxic pyroclastic flows that kill them rather than flowing lava.

Similarly, living just 15 miles from the heart of Tokyo, we have always been aware that Tokyo is past due for a major earthquake. When it hits, it will cause suffering on a scale that will make Kobe and Mexico City seem as if they got off easy. Yet, when the ground shakes, as it does fairly often, we’ve become complacent. Guessing how strong a quake was before the official report appears on television is one of our family games.

In Japan, you see, it’s very easy to become nonchalant about disaster.

We lost our nonchalant attitude on March 11, 2011 at 2:46 p.m. Despite some intense shaking that drove my family outside for several minutes, we were, and remain, relatively untouched. Our problems are mere annoyances compared to the survivors in the northeast, but those annoyances exposed huge gaps in our disaster preparation and planning.

A few years ago, a major earthquake hit the Chuetsu region of Niigata Prefecture near where my wife is from. It caused substantial damage and shook radioactive water out of the spent-fuel storage pools at the nuclear plant in Kashiwazaki. As a result, we bought a survival kit consisting of a silver backpack, some food, some water, some non-stormproof matches, a first aid kit, a water carry bag and a small cutlery set. We added a bit more food, a bit more water, and some towels. Yet, when we ran outside during the quake, none of us thought about grabbing the emergency kit until the shaking was almost done. This was probably for the best as, although not even a single book was knocked off our apartment’s shelves, the emergency kit was pre-buried under the detritus of life and school. In fact, I wasn’t even sure at the time if it was in the closet or on the floor in front of the closet. If our complex had collapsed, I probably would have been caught in our first floor apartment looking for our emergency kit.

As a result, as we stood in the parking lot, we had no spare clothes, no money, no food, no way to make fire and no water. We didn’t even have the keys to our car, which were hanging on the door. All we had in hand were our cellphones, which proved to be useless. During the Great Hanshin Earthquake in Kobe, and just a few weeks ago in Christchurch, cellphones had been a literal lifesaver for some people. Yet, in Tokyo they became, as described in Rawles Precept #3, like cars stuck in traffic as everyone tried to contact their loved ones. This meant we also didn’t have any means of communication.

After we went back inside, we heard news about the tsunami and the reactors at Fukushima Number 1. I tried to assess our situation. We had a couple Maglite flashlights but few spare batteries. I had two Swiss Army knives and a Gerber multi-tool, but they were scattered around and would have been inaccessible after a collapse. We had no form of portable shelter. We had food but it was all old. We had bottles of water, but no way to purify water. We had no spare clothes ready for a quick escape. We had only one way to make fire and no small pans to cook with.

Nonchalance returned, however, and we tried to settle back into a normal life. Two days later, however, with rolling blackouts scheduled, I went online to try to get supplies. Batteries and flashlights were already sold out and I felt the first chill of concern creep up my spine. Also sold out, or delayed, were the Japanese versions of MREs. I tried to order several things, including AMK Spark-Lite firestarters, stormproof matches and a proper utility knife. Oddly, despite Japan’s strange laws about knives (more on that later), the knife (a SOG Trident Tanto) arrived along with a waterproof match case and a roll of faux paracord. The entire rest of the order was cancelled and I was forced to order goods from the United States.

By the time the crisis in Japan was over, I figured, I’d be ready for it.

Where We Are
Two weeks after the quake we are much better prepared for it.

There have been compounding problems: rolling blackouts have forced people to take cars when normally they’d take trains. This and damage to a major refinery have led to fuel shortages. The government continues to issue garbled information about the radiation from the reactors without providing any context, which has led to a run on bottled water. We are fortunate that my wife’s family own a farm and have been able to send us vegetables, rice and other goods. Which means we are also fortunate that the post office and private delivery services are still running. That said, it is still easier to buy steak and vegetables in our area than a flashlight and batteries.

Despite the fact that our neighborhood has not, to this point, suffered a blackout, we haven’t gotten complacent. We have assembled a much more robust survival kit. We have one way to purify water (Sodium chlorite) tablets with one more, Aquamira Frontier Filters, on the way. We have three ways to make fire. We’ve updated our food and water supplies. We have emergency blankets, more flashlights and money and spare car keys hidden away.

Also, after being forced to walk six miles when the trains were abruptly stopped after I got to work, I now have an Everyday Carry (EDC) kit. I carry medicine and bandaids; some of the faux paracord and a couple carabiners; three ways to start a fire; a couple snack bars; water; a flashlight; and a phone card as, after the cellphones crashed, the old-fashioned phone booths were suddenly back in fashion. Just in case, though, I also carry a cellphone charger.

Knife and “Sword” Legalities
I would like to carry a knife; however, this poses some interesting problems. Japan, after a series of knife attacks, expanded its ban on swords to include carrying any non-folding knife with a blade longer than 2.36 inches (6 centimeters) “without a reason”. Going fishing is considered a valid reason to carry a knife but self-defense is not. (In fact, in Japan, people defending themselves against an attack have to be careful of using excessive force or they will get in trouble as well.)  A folding knife can have a blade up to 3.15 inches (8 centimeters) but the entire knife, with the blade extended, cannot be longer than six inches (15 cm). This means my new SOG and my Swiss Army knives are classified as swords and are not street legal. For this reason, I’ve also acquired a Leatherman Squirt PS4 which, nonetheless, has to be carried in a backpack or bag and not in my pocket.

Where We Hope To Be
In the future, our goal is to have a proper G.O.O.D. Kit. To accomplish that, we plan to buy a new and proper backpack for our B.O.B. The current one is not designed for a family of four and is not designed to be carried long distances. Also, it is bright silver with the Japanese words for “Emergency Carry Out Bag” in bright red letters. Although the Japanese have, with a few exceptions, been very calm in this crisis, this is only because in most areas food is still plentiful. I’ve seen the Japanese unleashed a few times, mostly during after New Year’s sales, and it’s best not to have something that attracts attention.

We are looking to acquire another good folding knife, some solar charged flashlights, a portable water filter with a pump, some cooking gear and some American style MREs. Despite the lack of space in our apartment, we also plan to stock a lot more emergency food and water. We still need something to serve as a portable shelter.

More importantly, though, we are slowly developing a bug out plan. We have enough supplies in our emergency kit to get by on, but we don’t yet have a plan for what we will do in the case of another large quake or an evacuation order. What will we do if we have time to gather things before we leave and what will we do if we have less than a minute? We have yet to decide several small details and this puts all our other preparations in jeopardy.

For example, one detail we’ve yet to resolve involves shoes. The Japanese don’t wear shoes inside the house and, because we sleep on the floor on a futon, we can’t put shoes under our bed. The silver bag would be good for carrying shoes in case we can’t get out the front door and have to switch to Plan B. Of course, since we don’t have a Plan A, we need to do some thinking. We also need to make sure our two young daughters know what to do when and if the ground starts shaking again.

Also, as a foreigner, I found myself standing outside without a passport or any other form of identification and with no way to prove my wife was my wife and my children were my children. We now plan to scan all our important documents and keep copies on a thumb drive in the emergency kit.

All in all, we are finally prepared to face a disaster. It’s sad that it took a disaster to get us into a survival mindset. We were fortunate, though, that the disaster didn’t effect us before we were ready.



Letter Re: Free Homeschooling Curricula

Mr. Rawles,
There were several letters recently concerning homeschooling.  I homeschool my four children ages 3-12.  I wanted to mention two web sites that offer free downloadable products on either a weekly or daily basis.

CurrClick.com offers a free product every Monday.  You simply download the curricula from their site. The majority of offerings would be most appropriate for the elementary crowd.  We did a wonderful semester long study of rocks and geology a few years ago from material I downloaded from Currclick.

HomeschoolFreebieOfTheDay.com offers a free product every wee day (Monday- Friday).  They offer a wide range of homeschooling helps including support materials, audio books, classic literature, and curricula.  I check these sites on a regular basis and save what is useful to me on a USB memory stick.  If I did not have access to new curricula for whatever reason I would have  lots and lots of educational material for the children.  The best part is – it’s free! Best Wishes, – S.T.H.



Letter Re: Seven Common TEOTWAWKI Misconceptions

Jim,

The recent article by Brian T. regarding common TEOWAWKI misconceptions is largely true as relates to the bad boy bikers, drug addicts and such. He is particularly correct as relates to BOBs. Where will they go, and can they carry it? What will they do when and if they get there? He’s accurate with regard to traffic jams and all that surrounds that subject.

What he has failed to address, however, is the broader definition of who the “golden hoards” actually are. They are actually your friends, family and unprepared next door neighbors and theirs, and theirs, and theirs. They will be the ones at your doorstep, if they know you have food and other supplies.

Can you turn them away? Will you shoot them if they won’t leave? Will you risk sacrificing the lives of your family by joining the rest of the lemmings in the G.O.O.D. traffic jam? These are the big questions that need to be dealt with by those who are conditioning their minds for the realities of such events.

My personal belief is that preparation for survival in place is the only viable option that the majority have available to them. In the case of the recent Tsunami, that wasn’t really a good option; but for most of the likely events, it is the only option. Do you really think that their BOBs would have saved any lives when the wave came? I doubt it, unless the bag contained scuba gear.

I write this letter for the sole purpose of bringing practical reality to the table. If you are prepared with food, water and weapons (etc, etc, etc) you are better off than not having prepared at all. It can be done easily and quickly if you are motivated to actually do it. Sadly, most are not motivated or willing. Can you be completely self sufficient? Probably not, but don’t let that reality stop you from actually preparing and trying. If you do let it stop you, you do so at your own peril.

The recent article by JWR, regarding timing, is probably right on the money. Time is short. Do it now! – T.H. in Utah



Economics and Investing:

Latched on to the Federal teat: A First in American History: 2011 Federal Aid Set to Overwhelm State General Funds. This is the master stroke of Federal statism. If the 50 states get more than half of their revenue from the Federal government, there is no way that they can forcefully insist on 10 Amendment rights.

The U.S. Mint has set April 4th as the deadline for public comment on new metallic compositions for U.S. coins. Clearly, the days are numbered for U.S. 5 cent pieces (“Nickels”) that are 25% nickel and 75% copper. Stock up!

Pierre M. mentioned this op-ed piece by Neil Barofsky: Where the Bailout Went Wrong

Items from The Economatrix:

Home Price Declines Deepen in Major US Markets  

Stocks Gains as Confidence Falls Less than Expected  

Inflation Worries Push Consumer Confidence Lower  

Silver Price Suppression:  How, Why, and Effect  

The Silver Perspective