Letter Re: The .357 Magnum: An All-Around Survival Cartridge

Mr. Rawles,
I have been reading your blog for a couple of years now and it is something I look forward to every day. I have even persuaded my wife to open her mind and start preparing as a result of many of the articles on SurvivalBlog.  

Regarding the article on the .357 Magnum, I agree with most of what the writer had to say regarding the performance of the round. But there are a couple of  points I feel compelled to make.  

1) To take advantage of the ballistics he refers to in comparison to other cartridges (specifically, I refer to the comparison to the 10mm Auto), you absolutely must reload. I can’t remember the last time I saw .357 factory rounds in a 200 grain JHP. The most common bullet weights in [commercially-loaded] .357 are the 125 and 158 grain.  

2) That leads me to another point. Cartridge availability is not what it used to be for the .357 Magnum. I remember that the .357/.38 Special used to be touted as the ultimate survival round because it was the most common cartridge around next to the .22 LR. (There would always be plenty of it available) This I believe is no longer the case as most police departments have adopted semi-autos. A case in point would be that during the recent ammo shortage, I couldn’t find .357 Magnum anywhere but I was occasionally able to find .40 S&W at somewhat inflated prices. Even now after the acute shortage has supposedly ended, .357 Magnum is only available in limited quantities. (And at a healthy price, I might add). On the other hand, I’ve found that .38 Special was somewhat more available. Possibly due to the current fad of CCW “snubnose” revolvers.   I love the .357 Magnum. I own a Ruger GP-100 with a 6″ heavy barrel, and if as the old saying goes, I could only own one handgun, this would probably be it. But, that being said, while it will not do everything as well as some other guns/cartridges, it will continue to be an important part of my survival battery as well as my primary go to gun for the outdoors.   Keep up the good work.   Respectfully, – Ken S.



Letter Re: Limitations of Square Foot Gardening

Jim:
I too had a problem getting vermiculite here in Houston.  There was no way that I was going to pay that much in small bags for as much as I needed.  I then got a tip to look for it under insulation as used in new construction.  I found a local firm that sold it in very large bags for $7.50 each, cash.  My 10 bags totally filled up the back of my F-150 pickup truck.

You can get your materials from salvage.  My raised beds came from my fencing that was blown down by Hurricane Ike.  The size of my beds are 6′ by 3′ since the recovered fence boards were six feet long. The beds are 15 inches deep.

The time to start is now!  The near future may be too late.  Start small and build more as you get the experience and practice.  Square foot method is indeed a great start for putting your garden together.  The recipe in the book is great to use as your starting base.  Over the years you can add more compost, earthworms, and whatever to improve your soil.  Seed saving is your responsibility, just use the book as a resource and guide. – Ken L.

JWR Replies: I must add one proviso. Do not accept any offers of any “used” vermiculite insulation from buildings that are being torn down. Up until 1990, one of the nation’s largest vermiculite mines up in Montana produced countless tons of vermiculite that were contaminated by asbestos. That vermiculite from that mine was shipped all over the country.



Two Letters Re: Mushrooms: Surviving Survival Food

Dear Editor:
The submission by Roy H. on mushrooms bothers me on a survival skills level.   It bothers me because mushrooms are a poor source of calories.  Just 4 calories for the white button kind ranging up to 22 for Portabella mushrooms.  They’re mostly air and spores.  Yes, they have lots of vitamins in them – but I could spend all day foraging for mushrooms and end up expending more calories than I gain.  Let’s assume I find enough to pay me back for finding them, if they’re the white caps we’re familiar with and I spent 1 hour gathering them (hypothetically) then I expended somewhere between 200 and 300 calories finding them.  divide 300 by 4 and you’ll have to eat 75 of the things to make it worth your effort.  Given that most of the calories I burned were basal metabolism, it still gives so little return on effort to be useless in a survival situation.    Oh, and then there’s the whole “Will eating this thing kill me?” and if it wont kill me, will it make me throw up all the food I’ve eaten today and dehydrate me?  The risk, is too high.   I don’t care if you’re an expert or not, if you’re foraging for mushrooms you’re not looking for threats.   Mushrooms don’t grow on the plains, they grow in the shade (wooded areas) in general and your ability to scan for threats is directly limited by the terrain that mushrooms grow in.   Okay, so take a buddy to stand guard.  Now that’s two people that need their calories replaced.  

I’m being as candid as possible here because I consider it risky behavior for a survivalist.  Flavoring for our food occurs in so many other plants that the benefits of mushroom gathering for variety’s sake is negated.    I suppose it’s nice to know what mushrooms are poisonous, or not, but in any grid-down scenario it’s not worth the risk.  It puzzles me that the appearance of the mushroom article appears in a survival oriented web log.   The paragraph on eating mushrooms should be included with the paragraph on jumping off of cliffs, don’t do it.  Further, in any scenario where you are down to either eating mushrooms or starving, then I posit that if you know what mushrooms are good because you spent your time learning about them, then you have failed utterly at surviving.  The time you invested in finding and identifying edible mushrooms in your area could have been spent delivering pizza (nods to Dave Ramsey), taking the money you earned from that and buying a pail of hard red wheat.  I don’t study other useless topics, and I don’t consider learning about mushroom foraging as beneficial in a grid-down survival situation.  If I am just sitting around with nothing to do and want something productive to do, there are always plenty of tasks to expend energy on that don’t involve poisoning yourself.   There’s a reason you don’t ever see any of the pseudo-survivor reality television shows personalities eating mushrooms when they get dumped in the wilderness, the reason is that it’s a bad thing to show people to do and they didn’t want to risk getting ill themselves.   In his article he talks about stumping a mushroom expert with a photo and description of a mushroom, and this is supposed to instill confidence in us for eating them?    All that being said, mushrooms are cool and tasty – but not a survival food. – Jim in Colorado    

Hello,
There are a few points I’d like to make. I am an avid mushroom hunter and have been for years; but that doesn’t give me any more qualifications than still being obviously alive.

First I’d like to stress that I do not consider mushroom a valid survival-diet constituent. As the author said, many, many species will kill you or make you very ill, and even a benign bout of diarrhoea isn’t as benign when you are at risk of dehydration. In addition, it stinks more than regular feces and you won’t be able to bury it properly. All of this for “food” that, unlike what is stated, holds very little nutritional value: only water and some minerals. They would have an utility as flavoring, to avoid this appetite fatigue that has been mentioned several times recently, but that’s that.

The tips given to identify the edible species vary widely by location, but here are some I know from experience: Many boletes with red pores are edible, at least as many than those that aren’t. Several are extremely tasty, too. As for blueing, it has absolutely nothing to do with toxicity, and none of the most toxic species (here in Europe where none will bring anything more serious than strong bowel upset) blues at all. From my experience, none of the species that grow on acidic soil are really toxic, either. Soil composition and tree species growing around are the 2 main factors to find most species, since most grow in symbiosis with roots or on specific rotting wood.

Morels contain a substance that will destroy your red blood cells and are called hemolysins. They are destroyed over a certain temperature, so you are safe as long as you cook them thoroughly and for several minutes. Better know that if you’re on your first mushroom hunt and find any!

Most species have gills, and many are edible indeed without any sinister twin to fool you. Just dumping a whole group of species because they share one characteristic with the few deadly ones is a bit short-sighted, especially if you’re planning on relying on them for survival (you won’t, they’re barely “food”.) A spore print itself will give you very few clues about the species, apart from the fact that they did have a round cap and  gills arranged in a wheel pattern. Different species have white, beige, pinkish or brown spores and various colored gills, but the actual spore color will only show when the mushroom has reached maturity and may be rotting on its foot and crawling with worms. Even looking at the spores shape with your survival pocket field-microscope will only give you some more clues to narrow down your choice.

Even with limited knowledge, you will quickly be able to tell if you’re sure enough of your identification to eat your find. Getting an exhaustive guide and perusing it at leisure will quickly make you see which clue to look for, and which section of the book to search when you’re in the woods. I wholeheartedly agree with the advice given: “If you ever have any doubts whatsoever about the identify of the mushroom you’ve found, then don’t eat it.” I’d even go further and advise not to pick it up, and carefully wipe your hands after handling a specimen. From my experience, the common advice to go show your haul to a pharmacist holds very little utility: most of them don’t know mushrooms and will look it up in an old guide showing a couple of species and giving few indications about the botanical identification clues. Unless you are blessed with a professional who takes a personal interest in the matter, the only use in asking a pharmacist is that they may have some of the chemical substances used to find a particular component. Once again, it is only useful if you know what to search for beforehand. – Frenchy



Economics and Investing:

The latest video from the NIA is excellent: The Day the Dollar Died

Regular link contributor B.B. sent this: Holidays about survival as jobless benefits end

Also from B.B.: Russia’s central bank to invest reserves in Australian dollar.

Reader J.B.G. sent this: Jeb Bush: Some States Already ‘Bankrupt’

Items from The Economatrix:

The Euro Game Is Up  

Euro, Stocks, Spanish Bonds Fall On Concern European Debt Crisis To Spread  

New Phase Of Debt Crisis Striking Now!  Despite Rescues!  

Global Sovereign Debt Default Bankruptcy Bailout And Contagion Risk Assessment  

Huge Drop In Credit Card Users 



Odds ‘n Sods:

Tim. R. was the first of several SurvivalBlog readers to mention this: 10 Skills Needed to Thrive in a Post-Collapse World

   o o o

Jeremy C. sent this item: Madison County [Indiana] to evict man from camper.

   o o o

Simon J. mentioned: The R2B2 pedal-powered kitchen appliance concept.

   o o o

Reader Don W. forwarded this: Mystery Surrounds Cyber Missile That Crippled Iran’s Nuclear Weapons Ambitions. Oh and speaking of scary computer technology, Laura C. sent this: Race Is On to ‘Fingerprint’ Phones, PCs

   o o o

Captain Bart sent this news from England: Millions endure second nightmare journey home from work as forecasters predict EIGHT INCHES of snow tonight. Bart’s comment: About their cold, snowy weather. The temperate is –6 C (which is about 21 F) so it isn’t all that cold but with the snow, the country is at a standstill and food stocks are running out, if you can even get to the store.” Meanwhile here in the U.S.: Snow Strands Hundreds of Drivers in Western New York. (Thanks to Marie K. for the latter link.)



Jim’s Quote of the Day:

"A fiat-money inflation can be carried on only as long as the masses do not become aware of the fact that the government is committed to such a policy." – Ludwig von Mises



Note from JWR:

The Rawles Gets Your Ready Family Preparedness Course is only rarely offered at a discounted price. Until Monday December 13th, the publisher is running a special sale, with a $50 discount. Don’t miss out on the chance to get a copy for yourself, or to give one as a Christmas gift.

Today we present the first entry for Round 32 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The prizes for this round will include:

First Prize: A.) A course certificate from onPoint Tactical. This certificate will be for the prize winner’s choice of three-day civilian courses. (Excluding those restricted for military or government teams.) Three day onPoint courses normally cost $795, and B.) Two cases of Mountain House freeze dried assorted entrees, in #10 cans, courtesy of Ready Made Resources. (A $392 value.) C.) A 9-Tray Excalibur Food Dehydrator from Safecastle.com (a $275 value), D.) A 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 “grab bag” of preparedness gear and books from Jim’s Amazing Secret Bunker of Redundant Redundancy (JASBORR) with a retail value of at least $400, B.) A $250 gift card from Emergency Essentials, and C.) two cases of Meals, Ready to Eat (MREs), courtesy of CampingSurvival.com (a $180 value).

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

Round 32 ends on January 31st, so get busy writing and e-mail us your entry. Remember that articles that relate practical “how to” skills for survival have an advantage in the judging.



Mushrooms: Surviving Survival Food, by Roy H.

I’m not a mushroom expert. But I still gather and safely eat several types of wild mushrooms, and have done so for years. Wild mushrooms are a tasty and nutritious addition to any diet, and the ability to identify and gather a few safe species is a great asset to any set of survival skills.

The keys to wild mushroom safety are learning and admitting your limitations, religiously sticking with a few guidelines, and seeking out expert help to increase and enhance your knowledge.

Before starting to gather wild mushrooms in your area, read some good books like Mushrooming without Fear: The Beginner’s Guide to Collecting Safe and Delicious Mushrooms or even North American Mushrooms: A Field Guide to Edible and Inedible Fungi, and seek out an actual mushroom expert, also known as a mycologist.

Where I live, in the Ozark Mountains of western Arkansas, I have the good fortune of having met a mushroom expert who’s served a term as the president of the American Mycological Association. He puts on a wild mushroom lecture in the fall in a local state park, that includes slides, actual mushroom samples, a mushroom hunting hike, and a “Cooking with Wild Mushrooms” segment that involves actual cooking and eating of wild mushrooms. This particular expert has proven very helpful, even to the point that he doesn’t mind me e-mailing him digital pictures of new types of mushrooms I’ve found, and identifying them as best he can. For the rest of this article, I’ll refer to him as “Dr. Mushroom.”

That said, even this man, with a Ph.D. in mycology, is sometimes totally stumped by the digital pictures and descriptions I send him.

Read those words again.

Several times, a man with a Ph.D. in the study of mushrooms has been unable to identify a mushroom based on the digital pictures and closely-written descriptions of where I found the mushroom, what kind of plants were growing nearby, what kind of leaf litter was on the forest floor, how close to water, and all sorts of other possible indicators.

Again, this is man with a Ph.D., who’s been the president of the national society for people with doctorates in mushrooms. Sometimes, even he can’t tell.

In some cases, the only way to really tell exactly to what species a mushroom belongs is to make a “spore print” of the mushroom. Making a spore print means cutting the cap off the mushroom, and placing it overnight atop a sheet of clean paper. The spores fall out of the cap, and leave distinctive colors on the paper. The specific color of the spore print helps nail down the specific species.

If it’s a mushroom that requires me to make a spore print, I’m not eating it, or anything that even looks like it.

Understand that gathering wild mushrooms for food can very easily kill you and anyone else who eats that fatal meal with you, including your wife, your kids, your friends, your kids’ friends, anyone.

Think about that very clearly and carefully before you start collecting wild mushrooms to eat.

And do not think for a second that what keeps me safe in the Ozarks of western Arkansas will keep you safe in the hills of Northern California, or the wilds of Appalachia, on the Great Plains.

You must consult an expert for the specific area where you intend to gather wild mushrooms for food. You must do your own research. To paraphrase Davy Crockett’s advice, be first absolutely sure that you are right, and then go ahead.

Whatever you do, don’t put several types of mushrooms into one bag, or one basket. Carry a separate bag or container, and put only one type of mushroom into each to avoid possible cross-contamination, just in case you pick a bad one by mistake, and don’t’ realize it until you get back home.

BASIC MUSHROOM ANATOMY

Edible mushrooms can be broken down into two basic groups. Those with caps and stipes, and those without.

To understand cap and stipe, draw a mushroom, or a mushroom cloud, or a mushroom shaped like a mushroom cloud. The stipe is the “stalk” of the mushroom, or the long skinny part of the mushroom cloud rising up from the ground. The “cap” is the dome-shaped top of the mushroom, or the mushroom cloud. It’s the classic mushroom shape, and the reason why a “mushroom cloud” had the “mushroom” part in its name.

Lots of edible mushrooms have stipes with various types of caps. However, lots of deadly poisonous mushrooms share this exact basic anatomy.

Confusing the two can kill you.

Other mushrooms like puffballs and black trumpets or shelf fungus don’t have stipes or caps at all, but other structures.

IF IT’S GOT GILLS, IT KILLS

“If it’s got gills, it kills” is a little saying that I created for myself, and beyond which I never venture when I gather wild mushrooms for food.

The “gills” are structures on the underside of the cap that look like fish gills, or a ring of playing cards turned on edge, or skinny blades of flesh arranged in a circle. It’s hard to describe gills, but once you see them either in the photos of good mushroom book, or in person, you will know exactly what gills are.

There are many types of perfectly edible, very tasty mushrooms that have a stipe and a cap with gills. In fact, if you go to the grocery store and look for the whole mushrooms in the produce section, you’ll see commercially-grown mushrooms with stipes, caps, and gills. Wonderful Portabella mushrooms have stipes, caps and gills.

However, the really nasty deadly mushrooms from the genus Amanita also have stipes and caps with gills underneath. These nasty ones have common names like “Death Cap” or “Spring Destroying Angel” or “Destroying Angel.” Did you notice the pattern in the common names? Death? Destroying? Did you know that the only way to survive some of these mushrooms is to get a successful liver transplant in time, and sometimes not even that works?

There are several species from the Amanita genus that are allegedly very good to eat, as well. I say “allegedly” because I have never, and will never taste any of the wild varieties because it’s hard for even experts to tell the difference between the tasty ones, and the deadly ones.

For some of these species, the only way to really tell is to make the spore pattern. Again, if a mushroom requires me to go the trouble of making a spore pattern to tell it from a deadly-poisonous look-alike that can kill everyone in my family, then it’s simply not worth my trouble.

Even though I may miss out on some really tasty wild edibles, following my little saying of “If it’s got gills, it kills”also keeps me from eating a Death Cap or a Destroying Angel.

START LOW AND SLOW WITH THE LOWLY PUFFBALL

The first type of mushroom that everybody starts with (at least everybody who lives beyond his first wild mushroom gathering) is the lowly puffball.

Puffballs are the easiest to identify of the edible wild mushrooms. They are exactly what they sound like, roundish, fleshy balls of mushroom. There are no deadly species of puffball where I gather, although there are species that just aren’t good to eat because of bad taste or disagreeable textures.

Be sure to check with an expert where you live to make sure there that puffballs there are safe.

To really be safe with puffballs, you have to cut them open down the middle after you gather them. What you want to see is a formless, featureless white expanse inside, like a slice of white bread. If the flesh is any other color than white, don’t eat it.

Puffballs eventually turn dark and release their spores in dark “puff” clouds when you step on them. They just aren’t edible once they start to turn color.

The other reason you must cut puffballs down the middle is because that some deadly forms of Amanita mushrooms form puffball-like pods in their juvenile stages. They look like puffballs on the outside, but when you cut them open, you can see the “larval” stage of the stipe, cap, and gills inside the little pod mushroom. If you cut open a “puffball” and see structures inside it, pitch it.

Again, what you want to see inside a puffball is a blank, featureless whiteness, like fresh, undisturbed snow, or a slice of white bread.

The best part about puffballs is that you often find a cluster of them together. They grow just about anywhere. I have gathered them off the lawns and green spaces of the college where I teach English. I’ve had folks tell me I’m crazy for gathering puffballs, but I just smile, and give them silent, crazy-faced look.

In my experience, puffballs have more flavor than store-bought white mushrooms, either fresh or canned, but aren’t as good at Portabellas. Puffballs are tasty sauteed in butter with garlic, but what isn’t tasty sauteed in butter with garlic? I mostly use sliced or chopped puffballs in scrambled eggs, or in spaghetti sauces. Don’t try to dry or save puffballs. If they’re blank and white on the side, cook ‘em up and eat ‘em.

BLACK TRUMPETS and CHANTERELLES

After gathering a eating puffballs for a few years, the second type of wild mushroom I added to my menu in large quantities were members of the order Cantharellus: Black Trumpets, Golden Chanterelles, even the little bright hunter-orange Cinnabarinus, that have a peppery hotness when raw, and taste awesome sauteed or spread across homemade pizzas. Another favorite way I prepare chanterelles is in a cream and wine sauce, and ladled over fresh pasta. Absolutely heavenly.

These types of mushrooms are low to the ground, and trumpet shaped to varying degrees. Some kinds of them have “false gills” which really aren’t gills, but little folds or rolls in the flesh of the mushroom. There are some types of toxic gilled mushrooms that superficially look like chanterelles, according to my Dr. Mushroom, but most chanterelles and trumpets are fairly easy to identify once you’ve had a few types of them positively identified for you by an expert. There’s also the “Devil’s Urn” which superficially looks like a Black Trumpet, but that grows on dead wood, but once you see them side by side, it’s really hard to confuse the two.

Once you’ve had a little help from an expert, and gotten your hands and your nose on chanterelles, they’re another “can’t miss” variety, almost as easy to identify as puffballs. Only they taste and smell a lot better than any puffballs.

In the Ozarks, Black Trumpets grow almost year round, although they are most plentiful in the spring after good rain, and in the fall. In some years, Black Trumpets are astoundingly abundant, and then heartbreakingly scarce in other years. These mushrooms dry well. If you dry them in a food dehydrator, use the lowest setting you can. I usually just spread out some paper towels on little racks from an old hibachi grill, and just let them air dry. I’ve used dried Black Trumpets and Cinnabarinus mushrooms a year after I harvested them. All I did was put them in water, and let them plump back up for a few hours, before putting them in pasta sauce, or using them in stews or on pizzas.

STEP UP TO BOLETES

After getting some confidence and experience gathering puffballs and chanterelles, lots of mushroom hunters take a step up the food chain and add boletes to their menus.

Boletes are mushrooms that have the classic mushroom look. They have a stem leading up to a cap, but they don’t have gills on the bottom side of the cap.

Instead of gills, boletes have pores or tubes. Again, consult a good mushroom book with quality photos and illustrations. The underside of the cap will have lots of little round holes, or look like a sponge, or like a slice of bread, but will not have any gills at all.

Where I live, in the Ozarks of western Arkansas, there are no known species of deadly boletes, at least according to the mushroom expert whom I consult.

There are plenty of species of boletes that will give you projectile vomiting and projectile diarrhea, to the point that you might wish the mushroom would just go ahead an mercifully kill you. But in my particular area, there are no known boletes that will destroy your liver, or cause your kidneys to fail, and otherwise kill you graveyard dead.

To avoid the “gastric upset” inducing boletes, there are few little guidelines that Dr. Mushroom taught me, which I follow religiously.

1) I avoid all boletes that have pores or tubes that are red or bright orange. While there are some edible boletes with red or bright orange tubes on the undersides of their caps, there are enough boletes with red or bright orange pores and tubes to make it just not worth the risk.

2) Before I eat any bolete, I pinch off a bit of the cap, and also slice the whole cap in half, and wait 15 minutes. If the flesh of the cap bruises or stains black or blue, I don’t eat it.

According to Dr. Mushroom, in my region, the boletes that can cause bad upset stomach aches have red or orange undersides on their caps, or they stain or bruise black or blue when pinched or sliced. Some take a few minutes to change colors when pinched or sliced, and some do it immediately. I don’t know what it’s properly called, but I encountered an attractive tan bolete this past summer that when I pinched off a little chunk of its cap, it stained a startling, almost electric blue within seconds.

The color change was so striking that I actually looked for this type of mushroom just so I could pinch off little pieces and watch the flesh turn from white to blue. But I made sure to never eat it, and wash my hands thoroughly before picking any mushrooms that I planned on eating.

I treat boletes like the mushrooms I buy at the grocery store. I saute them. I break them up raw for salads, especially the ones with attractive, earthy odors. I dry some of them to crumble into soups.

I have learned the hard way that some types of boletes smell great when gathered, but get a strong, funky “unwashed feet” odor when sauteed in butter. They still taste okay, they just stink up the kitchen quite a bit.

MORELS

The holy grail of mushroom hunters, especially in the Ozarks, are the various species of morels. Morels have stipes, but their caps are crinkly and wrinkly and hollow, without gills or pores. They look all the world like little stalks with clumps of brains atop them.

And they taste awesome sauteed in butter. That’s the best way to eat morels, in my opinion. Just simply sauteed for a few minutes in butter, and eaten without any further adornment, because they simply don’t need any enhancement.

There is the “false morel” to watch out for, but for the most part, once you get an idea of what a morel looks like, from either a good book or from an experienced mushroom hunter, you simply can’t mistake them for anything else.

Here in the Ozarks, folks who know where morels reliably appear typically protect their morel hunting grounds with the same type of intensity that female saltwater crocodiles defend their eggs. In fact, morels are so popular around here, that when you say “I hunt mushrooms” many folks just assume that you mean morels, and nothing else.

If you find a good morel patch, look for the delicate morsels of heavenly mushroom goodness to appear in the spring.

So far, I’ve been lucky enough to find only a handful of morels, and they’ve all appeared around the same tree. And I’m not saying where it’s located, either.

SHELF FUNGUS

Shelf fungus are pretty much what the name sounds like. They appear to be little shelves of fungus growing off of trees, or on dead logs, or even up out of ground. Several types are edible, and many others are non-toxic, but so woody and chewy that you’d be better off trying to eat pine sawdust.

Where I live, there are various kinds of shelf fungus that are quite good to eat, one of the most commonly-known being “Hen of the Woods.” The Hen is called such because in its splendiferous adulthood, it looks all the world like a pile of gray hen feathers. And it tastes good.

I have found a few small hens of the woods, and was totally heartbroken this fall to find an enormous one in my regular deer-hunting spot, only about a week too late. It was huge, and blackened and rotting and infested with ants and several other kinds of bugs. I had to stand over it for a moment of regretful silence, but I have marked the exact spot, and plan to make more regular checks in the future.

By educating yourself with good books and by consulting experienced, trustworthy experts, you can add several types of wild mushrooms to your menu, enhancing and expanding your ability to use wild foods in a survival situation. And so long as the world as we know it doesn’t end, you can also really jazz up your recipes and impress both friends and family with the wonderful delicacies that nature offers in the form of edible fungi. Just be sure to educate yourself, seek out experts.

Safety Proviso: If you ever have any doubts whatsoever about the identify of the mushroom you’ve found, then don’t eat it. No mushroom, no matter how tasty it might be, is worth dying for.



Letter Re: Feed Corn for Family Food Storage?

James Wesley,
I am starting to store food for the future and have some wheat, beans and rice.  I would like to store corn to make into cornmeal, however I haven’t seen any available for this purpose.  I live in the southeast ands there is lots of corn we use to feed deer.  Is this suitable or can I get seed corn from the local feed store?  Any help you can provide would be appreciated.   I read your site each day and have learned a great deal from you and your readers. Thanks, – Gary M.

JWR Replies: Unfortunately, a substantial portion of the “feed corn” or “deer corn” that is typically sold at grain elevators and at farm co-ops in the U.S. is treated with fungicides, herbicides and pesticides in high concentrations. These often make it unsafe for human consumption. Furthermore, the standards for allowable levels of aflatoxins are much more lax, especially for “deer corn.” (Which is not even approved for livestock feed.)

True food (“human consumption”) grade whole corn is available in sacks or in 6 gallon food grade plastic buckets from a number of reputable vendors including Ready Made Resources, Walton Feed, and Honeyville Grain. OBTW, if you end up buying any grains in sacks, I describe how to to re-package the grain so that they will be safe from insects and vermin in the Rawles Gets Your Ready Family Preparedness Course. (Currently offered by the publisher at $50 off. This sale ends soon.)



Letter Re: Readiness for Winter Driving Emergencies

Hi Jim, and Readers;    
Winter is here! After all of the winter preparations around the house, trying to winterize the chicken coop.  The snow has come, and to date in the last better than two weeks we have had a total of about four feet of snow already. Wow!  I now have about nine hours behind the snow blower, and snow plow already. I consider this work “Better than mowing grass any day in the heat”. I try to keep my driving to a minimum, especially on our local highway as much as possible. (The only way to any town in either direction)  When our first big snow a little more than two weeks ago, we were on the way to church, and passed seven vehicle slide offs, and one rear end collision, all in a stretch of just twelve miles. Today we were on the way to the local hardware store 25 miles away to purchase a toboggan for our grandson who is coming to visit Monday. Within the first ten miles into the trek we passed one slide off, and one semi trailer rig overturned into the ditch with about five emergency vehicles around it. Forget the toboggan, it was time to turn around and head home. 

Not more than an hour after returning home, I got a phone a call from our friends. They were still a hundred miles from their home, but just ten miles from us. the husband asked: “Dave, will you bring some wrenches to our mile marker?” Now the friend who called is a mechanic, and wrecker driver. After apologizing over and over, and saying he knew better, but he didn’t put a tool box in his truck. On the way to their location, I came up on a vehicle stopped on the road, no blinkers on, and smoke coming from under the hood. I pulled around them and pulled over about fifty yards in front of them and turned on my blinkers, got out and ask what the problem was.  One of the young men asked if I had any duct tape. I went back to the car and looked in my emergency 10 day pack and found no duct tape. Yes, I know better too.

Where I live we have snow on the ground from November until June, or sometimes even July. Now I always keep my “ten day bag” in that car, plus road flares, tow strap, a good come-along, heavy duty jumper cables, water,  snacks. I also carry other assorted items including engine oil, transmission fluid, power steering fluid, brake fluid,  o course the spare tire, jack, and tire irons. Now I don’t normally keep a small tool kit, but after today, the small tool kit, and duct tape, some heater hose (two sizes), hose clamps, large ones that can clamp all the way down, and capable of fitting any larger hoses in the vehicle. I of course have and end wrench to insure they are tight.  Now, here in this part of the country I do my best to always keep the fuel tank not less than half full even though we keep two large fuel tanks at the retreat.  We always carry window antifreeze, and antifreeze for the radiator (50/50 mix). 

I also keep a blue tarp, and two blankets, two parkas, warm gloves, two pull over wool caps. and a set of ice cleats for our boots. A military first aid kit, the kind issued for military vehicles . We also carry a good shovel, axe, saw, a pick would be nice, but here the shovel is adequate for most of the terrain we travel. (The dirt is all pumicy, volcanic ash.)  This pretty well takes up about one third of the rear compartment of our 4×4 Ford Expedition. Now the two vehicles we use most in the winter are a small Ranger pickup, and the Expedition. Our “snow plow” Blazer  is used only on our own own road, to clear for a few neighbors, and out to the highway from our home about two tenths of a mile. So I don’t carry any preps in it, Except a come along, and rope. And if I am using it, I am already bundled up warm. I have another large pickup that only is used on the road in the non-snowy season that is fully prepped in the Rawlesian way. It is a dually and quite squirrely on icy pavement. I do chain it up and keep chains on it through the winter, but it is just used for emergencies in the winter. And it is also our towing vehicle for  the G.O.O.D. trailer that is more than prepared than anything else.  Now, I have absolutely no intention in getting out of Dodge,  because I already live out of Dodge. Anyway the nearest big city is over an hour away on a good day.  Days like today it’s two three or four hours away.  But if I ever need to G.O.O.D., then I am ready.

I guess where I’m going with the preceding is that now is the time for all prudent preparedness folks to double check our emergency kits, and supplies in our vehicles. Think of the worst case situations, prepare for them, and hope for the best. Here where I live, we are soooo far out in the country that it could take hours for emergency vehicles to get to you if your in a slide off, or accident, because they are all occupied somewhere else up and down the highway.

In two of my vehicles I keep ham radio sets. I would love to install one in the big car, but keeping my wife happy is important too. So a good handheld will do until her mind is changed on her own.   That usually takes a real eye opening experience and the Lord changing her mind. I do recommend if you don’t have a ham radio license, please consider studying up and getting one. Or at least get a CB set and have one available in your vehicles. If for no other reason than to listen to the truckers and gain some vital intelligence when your on the road, about weather conditions, accidents, road blocks, and detours.

Drive carefully, especially on icy roads. And God’s blessings to you all. – Dave M. in Oregon



Letter Re: Hunting for Canadian Silver Coins

Hello Mr. Rawles,
I’m a newbie to investing in junk silver and no nothing about coin collecting, but some questions at my local coin shop in Calgary, some research on Wikipedia have yielded some information I thought your readers might find useful:

1920 – 1967 Canadian minted coins seem to be the most commonly collected and follow this general rule:

Any combination of $1 face value 1920 – 1967 Canadian minted coins contain 0.6 Troy Ounces of silver (said coins have 80% silver content), with the exception of dimes and nickels.

In 1967-1968 it appears there were 50% silver dimes introduced alongside the 80% silver dimes, and in 1968 the 80% silver coins were discontinued.  If post-SHTF barter is your intention, I’d say not to take the risk with dimes minted after 1966.

Only 1920-1921 Canadian nickels had 80% silver content (and thus, 0.6 troy oz to the dollar).  Prior too, 1858 – 1919 nickels had 92.5% silver content.  Any later nickels are either nickel, steel or copper.  Current circulation Canadian “nickels” are 94.5% steel, so I can’t imagine the same rule with American nickels applying to current Canadian nickels.  Either way, Canadian nickels are, for the most part useless – and I’m not going to bother trying to search my pocket change for them.

The 1920 – 1967 nickels, dimes, quarters have a very similar appearance as current circulation coins (except for a different monarch, God Save the Queen, eh?)  The other coins (half dollar and silver dollar) are no longer in circulation.

One other interesting observation is that prior to 1920, with all Canadian coins having 92.5% silver content, each $1 face value contains 0.693 Troy Ounce of silver.  However, these coins don’t appear to be as common as the 1920 – 1967 coins, and I think in a SHTF situation, I believe either too few people will recognize these coins for what they are or the people who do will realize they have collectors value above the silver content.

Either way, I believe that “junk” 1920 – 1966 Canadian dimes, quarters, half dollars, and silver dollars are what you should be looking for, if you are a Canadian.

Here are the Wikipedia links for each Canadian coin:

Canadian Nickels

Canadian Quarters

Canadian Silver Dollars

I hope the foregoing proves useful.

Thank you for the work you do, and God bless you! – Nick L.



Economics and Investing:

Those pesky derivatives again: The Next Shoe To Drop: European Insurance Companies – Assicurazioni Generali CDS Explodes. (Thanks to J.B.G. for the link.)

Another from J.B.G.: US Ready to Back Bigger EU Stability Fund: Official.

John R. sent these two items: EU Outlines Bond Restructuring Plan 

Also from John: EU rescue costs start to threaten Germany itself. “The escalating debt crisis on the eurozone periphery is starting to contaminate the creditworthiness of Germany and the core states of monetary union.”

Mounting calls for ‘nuclear response’ to save monetary union. (Thanks to J.B.G. for the link.)

Dr. Housing Bubble reports: The mini face of foreclosure. Oh and speaking of mini houses: Tiny house movement thrives amid real estate bust. (Thanks to Jon A. for the latter link.)

B.L.W. flagged this: Theft of nickel from city warehouse has international implications

Items from The Economatrix:

The US Economy:  Stand By For Worse News  

The Madness Of A Lost Society  

Nine Shocking Examples Of Black Friday Violence:  Is This A Foretaste Of The Economic Riots We Can Expect When The Financial System Collapse?  

Global Debt Crisis Implosions, Use Gold And Silver To Protect From The Big One, Coming Soon 



Odds ‘n Sods:

This news story from U.S.A. Today sounds like something out of a novel I once read wrote: More families, friends move in together. They even refer to it as “doubling up.” A hat tip to Jeff S. for sending us the link.

   o o o

I recently placed a small order with L.L. Bean Company. When it arrived, I was disgusted to see that they are now selling some clothes that are made in mainland China. My advice is that if you place an order with them only do so by phone, and insist that they omit any items made in China. (See my previous post about the laogai prison factory system in China.)

   o o o

Dr. G.S. found the web site for the El Paso Energy Association. “There are multiple resources for off grid energy resources, including links to external sites devoted to straw bale house construction, et cetera.”

   o o o

House May Block Food Safety Bill Over Senate Error. This is good news. Please contact your Congresscritters and ask them to stop this bad piece of legislation via “blue slipping” or any other means! (Among other things, the Senate version violates Article I, Section 7 of the Constitution.)





Note from JWR:

We’ve completed the judging for Round 31 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. And the winners are…

First Prize goes to T.K. for his article: Bugout Base Camp: My Solar School Bus, which was posted on Nov. 15, 2010. He 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 between $500 and $600, and B.) Two cases of Mountain House freeze dried assorted entrees, in #10 cans, courtesy of Ready Made Resources. (A $392 value.) C.) A 9-Tray Excalibur Food Dehydrator from Safecastle.com (a $275 value), D.) A 500 round case of Fiocchi 9mm Parabellum (Luger ) with 124gr. Hornady XTP/HP projectiles, courtesy of Sunflower Ammo (a $240 value), and E.) An M17 medical kit from JRH Enterprises (a $179.95 value).

Second Prize goes to Naomi M. for her article Using the Grain You Have Stored, which was posted on November 24, 2010. She will receive: A.) A “grab bag” of preparedness gear and books from Jim’s Amazing Secret Bunker of Redundant Redundancy (JASBORR) with a retail value of at least $400, and B.) two cases of Meals, Ready to Eat (MREs), courtesy of CampingSurvival.com (a $180 value).

Third Prize goes to A. for her article Keeping Secrets in Suburbia–Constructing Our Hidden Basement Room, which was posted on October 20, 2010. She will receive: A.) A copy of my “Rawles Gets You Ready” preparedness course, from Arbogast Publishing, and B.) a Royal Berkey water filter, courtesy of Directive 21. (This filter system is a $275 value.)

There were so many great entries in Round 31 that an unprecedented twenty Honorable Mention prizes are being awarded. These articles were:

These authors will each receive a $30 gift certificate from Amazon.com. Congratulations. Keep in mind that you are still eligible to win one of the top three prizes for any future entries.

Note to prize winners: Send us an e-mail to let us know both your snail mail and UPS address (for the top three prizes), and just your e-mail address (for the Honorable Mention prize winners.) Thanks!

Round 32 begins today. (We didn’t have room to post all of the entries that were received for Round 31, so those will be posted in the next two weeks, for consideration in the judging for Round 32.) Remember that articles that relate practical “how to” skills for survival have an advantage in the judging. Round 32 ends on January 31st, so get busy writing and e-mail us your entry.

Note: One of the contest prizes is changing for this next round of the writing contest. Because the Fiocchi 9mm ammo is about to sell out, a 250 round case of 12 Gauge Hornady TAP FPD 2-3/4″ OO buckshot ammo will be substituted. This prize is courtesy of Sunflower Ammo (a $240 value),