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Notes from JWR:
Glenn Beck is going to be covering “food storage for hard times” on his television show on Fox today. (Thursday, November 18, 2010). Don’t miss it.
—
Today we present another entry for Round 31 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 500 round case of Fiocchi 9mm Parabellum (Luger ) with 124gr. Hornady XTP/HP projectiles, courtesy of Sunflower Ammo (a $249 value), and E.) An M17 medical kit from JRH Enterprises (a $179.95 value).
Second Prize: A.) A “grab bag” of preparedness gear and books from Jim’s Amazing Secret Bunker of Redundant Redundancy (JASBORR) with a retail value of at least $400, 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 31 ends on November 30th, so get busy writing and e-mail us your entry. Remember that articles that relate practical “how to” skills for survival have an advantage in the judging.
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Survival Gardening, by Delia L. in Oregon
As we near to the end of the days of the dollar as reserve currency for the world, feeding our families becomes much more important. Most gardens go in over a late spring weekend with little thought given to trying to keep a family fed during the winter. My focus is on growing food year round with an emphasis on nutritional content. There are ways to keep tomatoes growing later in the season, or trying to keep greens growing year round. What can we grow that can be stored without electricity or canning. What can we save seed from in order to become more self reliant. Gardening can save you a lot of money while improving your health. Talk about a win-win situation! We use small raised bed garden areas for winter gardening 4′ wide with almost a foot of elevation. We live in Oregon and the winters constant rains can flood everything drowning your dinner. I use ½” PVC sections cut 10′ long and hooked onto short rebar sections beat into the dirt and covered with clear plastic to keep off the produce rotting rains and help keep it a few degrees warmer inside the hoop house. The ground stays a bit warmer anyway so low to the ground hoops work well. I also save gallon jugs filled with water to use to hold the plastic down and act as a heat sink to help keep things from freezing. So fold the plastic in and put the jugs inside the hoop. Spinach, lettuces, cabbage, carrots etc will all take some light freezes. This gives you some fresh foods coming in all winter long.
For winter focus on spinach, mustards, dandelions and other nutritious greens. Many started mid-summer can be kept growing slowly under a cloche in the winter. Low levels of light drastically limit plant growth rates. So pre planning and spacing become vital. I start planting for winter harvest in July. when the heat is on, few of us think about starting seeds. July is a good time to start carrots, cabbage, broccoli, lettuce and potatoes for overwintering. I also like to start Walla Walla onions and garlic in September. If you have never had fresh, home grown garlic you are in for a treat. It is up there with home grown tomatoes and corn for taste improvement over the store bought veggies. It is important to keep the winter garden seeds moist while germinating, which can be a little tricky when it is hot. I bought a new timer from Bi-mart that has a 6- hour setting. It worked quite well keeping my seeds moist. This works on batteries so put away several or set up a battery charger you can crank by pedaling a bicycle, or get a small solar charger. I try to automate as much as I can. You will want to get most vegetables planted by the beginning of August, depending on the maturity dates of the varieties you select. Varieties that have around a 60 day expected maturity can go in as late as mid August. I like to try to plant spinach and lettuces every two weeks almost year round.
Potatoes and carrots can be kept out in the garden and harvested as needed all winter long. I grow a lot of garlic and onions to store in a cool dry area, One of the best things to grow are winter squashes. Acorn squashes are high in vitamins and minerals and are easy to store for the winter, there are many winter squashes our grandparents used to grow to have food for the winter. Sweet meat, pink banana delicata the list goes on. All are nutritious, easy to grow, easy to store and easy to save seeds from. Cabbages can be grown for winter use and kept in the garden under a plastic cover for quite some time and get sweeter with frosts. Or they can be piled in a card board box in a cool garage or basement. When one starts to go bad you can slice it up for sauerkraut or kimchi fermented food have additional health benefits.
I have a shelves in my garage and pantry about 18” apart. I get card board boxes and use an X-acto knife to cut holes for ventilation and fill them with onions, squashes, apples, beets, pears and other food that stores in a cool dry place. Carrots, potatoes and other root crops can be stored in damp sand in a plastic barrel or tub if you need the space open for your winter garden. The winter garden needs more space than a summer garden because sunshine is at a premium. Space is also needed in order to allow ventilation to avoid mildews. A spray of baking soda and water can be used to treat mold and mildew. I use a table spoon of baking soda in a quart spray bottle. My secret weapon for amazing plant growth is manure tea I use a cheap aquarium pump with air stones in a barrel with a bit of manure (I use horse manure, since we have loads of it,) and water. Using this I would have orchids bloom for months on end. Things got too hectic to continue with my normal garden activities and I started using a store bought fertilizer and my orchids quit blooming.
The planning is most important and often not done. How much of what do you need to feed a family for a year? How much space will it take to grow it? How much space will be needed to store it? What conditions are needed for the best storage cool/dry? Cool moist? Say for instance you want to have cabbage every week so you need to grow 52 cabbages. Do you need to plant them all at once? A long season cabbage? Or do you grow a 60 day variety? Do you plant out 6 every month and then plant enough to get you through the winter July 15? Will you cover them with a plastic hoop house and store them in the garden or put them in card board boxes and create a type of root cellar storage area? How many winter squashes and of what kind? I plant acorn squashes in the middle of a section of field fencing formed into a circle, the vines climb the wire and keep the squash off the ground and save a lot of space. If you want to have squash every week you will need to grow 52 of them! Maybe 10 acorn and 10 pink banana 10 sweet meat 10 pumpkins 10 Butter nuts and 10 sweet potato squash. I grow most of my squashes even pumpkins on fence rounds I grow cucumbers on them and tomatoes in them. The holes are big enough I can get my hands in for picking, they hold the fruit up off the ground and save space. I will get 10 acorns off 2 fence sections depending on the growth style if the plant is a vining type I can grow three plants in one fence section. You must stake them down I use regular T posts beat into the ground.
I cover my garden area with black plastic to warm the soil and cut down on weeding. I have drip tubes on a timer under the plastic to help block them from the UV rays so they last longer. These go on automatically. I have the same set up for my orchard. I have a gravity fed spring with a holding tank and high water usage mid summer when water production is lower. My timers go on in the middle of the night when everyone is sleeping and water usage is low. The tubing is black so I worry if the water went on mid afternoon the water would come out to hot it would harm my plants. I have built a test solar heater out of black 1 ½ “ abs pipes glued together and laid on the ground with a small tank on a chair to see if we could heat water that way, how long it would take etc. It heated water surprisingly quickly. So I started worrying about the black drip tubing scalding my plants after that! So for acorn squash I can plan on two fence sections for growing area and 1 card board box on the wooden shelf will hold 10 squashes and they generally will last till they are eaten. Pink banana squash are delicious and easy to grow. The label says not for the space conscious it should say when planted in Oregon some vines may reach Kentucky! Plant them on the edge and watch them go they are very productive. They are also quite large so 1 squash would feed many people or have leftovers that could need to be canned or? If there is no electricity and we were having to make due without refrigeration. So with every pro; big feeds a lot. There is a con; may need to can up leftovers. If the SHTF and the refrigerator is kaput! In the winter we could use a plywood box in the back of the house (north side under the firewood storage area) as a refrigerator. I don’t know how far along you are in your long term survival planning. Try to think of as many things to be ready now.
If you want the most bang for your buck plant fruit trees. A few fruit trees can be placed quite close together and provide a lot of food every year with little work. I surrounded my fruit trees with a fence to keep deer out and my chickens in! My coop is located on the edge of my orchard so my chickens act as pest management and dropped fruit clean up system. Many fruit tree pests will go into a larval stage and be in the dirt at the base of the tree where the chickens can scratch them up or climb up the trunk where the chickens can pick them off. I use a heavy oil to help smother other bugs and avoid most poison sprays. Also berries, I have blueberries and grapes and as many other foods as I can incorporate into my landscaping. I also have planted nut trees a good protein source once they start producing. Also consider medicinal herb plants. Witch hazel and cramp bark are two good ones to have witch hazel helps clean wounds and kill germs, and cramp bark is good for menstrual cramps or cramps from wounds or back strain. A preppers knowledge should incorporate medicinal herbs in plant form. God makes better medicines than men. It is high time we learned how to use them, before we really have to.
A myth has developed that you can not grow food from vegetables grown from saved hybrid seeds. That is not quite accurate. The fact is a seed taken from a hybrid tomato will grow a tomato just not necessarily a tomato the same as the one it came from. When you are hungry even a lousy tasting tomato is food. If you plant several seeds you can get several different tomato plants growing. Save one of the best tomatoes from a plant that grows and plant seeds from it. In three generations it will grow true. You can plant garlic or potatoes from the store and get starts that way. They are often treated with an anti-sprout chemical but at some point nature will over ride the chemical and if that is all you have use it. I have done this with sweet potatoes as well. Not great sprouting results but once you get some growing you can save starts from them. The most important thing is to get going! The sooner you start the more prepared you will be.
Vegetable Seeds
I agree with an earlier SurvivalBlog posting on the hybrid seed issue they do grow well. I have a friend that has grown his own seeds now for five years and his garden is amazing all the plants now have been bred specifically for his micro climate so if you have some hybrid seeds save them for when you can not get food and must grow some to survive. Practice now growing your own seeds!
Some good seed suppliers:
- SuperSeeds.com
- ParkSeed.com
- TerritorialSeed.com
- GoodwinCreekGardens.com (A good place to get medicinal herb plants)
I am attempting to grow my own varieties of seeds so we will see how that works out this spring, I also have other seeds saved just in case. I store my seeds in a gallon jar in the pantry cool dry and I put baked drywall cubes in as a desiccant. You can store beans rice etc in trash cans lined with plastic bags with a bowl of baked drywall cubes in it secure the plastic with a metal twisty after sucking out excess air. To make baked drywall cut drywall into 1” cubes and bake on a cookie sheet for 20 minutes at 350. Beans stored this way last for decades. If you read any of the survival blogs from Argentina when Goldman Sachs and Citibank looted their country privatizing the profits and publicizing the debts (sound familiar?) They all say I wish I had more food! Buy food think beans and wheat, since gold and silver are worthless when you are starving.
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Letter Re: Bernanke’s Absurd Quantitative Easing Jobs Claims
JWR,
You can’t make this stuff up. Seriously. Ben Bernanke claims that the $600 billion QE2 will create 700,000 jobs. Even if he’s right, that’s $857,142.86 per job created. Even if you believe the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS, more appropriately called the “BBS”) thei figure of 14.8 million currently unemployed Americans, that means that the U.S. would need to have just over 20 more infusions of $600 billion to employ all of our unemployed. 20 x $600,000,000,000… (drumroll, please)… $12 Trillion! I think that it’s doable. Let’s get QE3-to-QE22 underway. Maybe SurvivalBlog readers could start a grassroots movement to get this thing rolling… Somewhere, a very fat lady is singing. – N.I.M.
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Economics and Investing:
John R. sent a link to a map that shows the global race to the bottom: The global debt clock
Panel sounds foreclosure warning, industry downplays. (A hat tip to B.B. for the link.)
John R. spotted this post over at Karl Denninger’s site: The EU’s Lies Blow Up In Their Face.
B.B. sent: Poverty in America, The Big Picture
Euro under siege as now Portugal hits panic button
Matthew Lynn asks: Who’s next? First Greece went bust. Now Ireland is on the brink of a bailout from the European Union and the International Monetary Fund.
Items from The Economatrix:
New York State Manufacturing Plunges
Wal-Mart Investors Set Low Bar in US Stores
Stocks Sink On Asian Inflation, Euro Debt Fears
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Odds ‘n Sods:
The folks at Everlasting Seeds have added a new product. They call it their “EverGreens” assortment, specifically prepared for sprouting, although they could be used for planting just as easily. The “EverGreens” assortment two pounds of Organic Alfalfa seed, a half pound of Organic Waltham Broccoli seed, and a half pound of Organic Radish seed. They are running a special just for SurvivalBlog readers for only the next week: A 10% discount for the new “EverGreens” product, and a 5% discount on all their other products. This EverGreens assortment is not yet described at their web site, so either e-mail gardener@everlastingseeds.com or phone (530) 389-2595 for details.
o o o
T. mentioned a one day online Nullification Seminar. I consider nullification measures (especially jury nullification) just as vitally important as both passive resistance and the exercise of the Second Amendment, in maintaining our liberty.
o o o
Dan T. sent this: Brian Aitken’s Mistake A New Jersey man gets seven years for being a responsible gun owner. Don’t move to New Jersey. And if you already live there, then vote with your feet!
o o o
Steve Quayle kindly hosted this key document: Nuclear Detonation Preparedness Communicating in the Immediate Aftermath. If nothing else, this will let you know when you are hearing a “canned” message. The steps outlined are rudimentary, and show a reliance on “official” post-attack or post-accident pronouncements. Thus, you can see the importance of having properly calibrated dosimeters and rate meters, and knowing how to use them. A calibrated Geiger counter for checking spot sources is also important. With those tools you can draw your own conclusions, rather than waiting for Uncle Sugar’s pronouncements that may or may not come!
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Jim’s Quote of the Day:
"The history of government management of money has, except for a few short happy periods, been one of incessant fraud and deception." – Friedrich Hayek
Note from JWR:
Today we present another entry for Round 31 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 500 round case of Fiocchi 9mm Parabellum (Luger ) with 124gr. Hornady XTP/HP projectiles, courtesy of Sunflower Ammo (a $249 value), and E.) An M17 medical kit from JRH Enterprises (a $179.95 value).
Second Prize: A.) A “grab bag” of preparedness gear and books from Jim’s Amazing Secret Bunker of Redundant Redundancy (JASBORR) with a retail value of at least $400, 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 31 ends on November 30th, 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.
The Art of the Cache, by James C.
I am sure many of you have planned for the possibility of a wide scale disaster, but you cannot carry all of your equipment when you get out of dodge. So caching is the best option however your cache cannot just go anywhere. Obviously certain locations experience heavier traffic, so in time of natural disaster, large scale riots, or terrorist attacks, it is good to choose locations away from this traffic. These caches also need to be on your bug out route, so if you have not prepared an escape route, do not plan your cache locations yet. These locations should be marked with things that most people would overlook. For example you can mark your cache site with a cross, giving it a resemblance to a grave, or a memorial. Depending on the location most people might overlook this. But in certain areas this may draw attention to the site. So work with what is in the area and use your best judgment.
Location
Next is the actual location of the cache. When choosing it, as mentioned above, remember to choose a site on your bug out route or a place you will visit long after you bug out. As a hunter I have come in contacts with hundreds of private and state forests where the area is perfect. One example is Rock Rimmon State Park, only 400 acres; the park is heavily wooded and located near a pond. On top of this consider the land elevation; is there a hill that you could observe from? The site you cache needs to be secure without showing how secure it is. Other areas that can work are the back wooded edges of cemeteries, while this is consecrated land I believe God will understand the situation at hand. Your first cache should be within a five to ten day hike of your home or current location. This should equal out to somewhere between fifty to a hundred miles. What seems like a long distance, but in the events previously mentioned all you want is distance. While I recommend this it is also possible to place your first cache in your backyard, however if you keep a well stocked G.O.O.D. Kit this shouldn’t be necessary.
Preparation of the storage container
First and foremost your container needs to be large enough to carry all of the supplies you have selected for the cache, a .50 caliber ammo can might be enough to fill your needs, but a twenty-five gallon tote may be more your size. Either way you need to properly prepare the canister. With the ammo can you can simply use a tar sealant, or similar waterproof sealant along the outside because it is made of metal, but the tote is much more challenging. First everything you put inside the tote should be in either ammo cans sealed against water, or double bagged in heavy duty black trash bags. Then you should fill the empty space in the tote with some kind of insulation, whether you just fill it up with paper scraps or pink panther, it is up to you. Then take the tote seal the edges with duct tape or spray foam. Finally end by double bagging the tote and insulating the inside bag. The insulation should prevent freezing of the supplies inside the newly made cache container.
Supplies need for preparation:
1 Tote (25 gallons or up)
2 Fifty Gallon trash bags
10-20 Five to Ten gallon trash bags
1 small insulation roll
1 small spray foam tube, with applicator
1 container tar or water sealant
# any number of fifty caliber ammo cans (as you deem necessary)
Supplies for your Cache
The supplies you place in your caches are very important, especially your first cache, they can easily determine if you live or die. Now you can have different caches that specialize in certain supplies so you can visit reload and rebury, but I suggest that you stay away from that because chances are the one item you will need the most just won’t be there. Everyone you talk to will have a different list for you so I settled down to give you just a couple examples. The following includes comments from one of my writing collaborators.
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# |
Item |
Comments |
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1 |
Combo .22/410 (Allows greater variance then a straight .22) |
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150 |
.22 rounds |
(1) I think since this is a buried cached, I would tend to up the ammo a few rounds. .22 is not large, and a few more boxes may fit in when it is all said and done. |
|
25 |
.410 Shells #4 Shot |
(1)Here is your ‘bulk’ in ammo, but I think you have the .410 ammo dialed in there. Maybe a few more slugs would fit later on. Definitely would work for emergency defense against most Earth creatures. The slugs would be really nice to have a few more of. |
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10 |
.410 Shells Slug |
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10 |
.410 Shells 000 Buckshot |
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1 |
Leatherman type tool (Gerber Multi-Tool) |
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1 |
Bowie Type Knife (K-Bar) |
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1 |
Sharpening Stone |
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1 |
Flexible Saw |
(1)Try a ‘Sven’ saw as they pack small and do not easily break, but they will still allow you to cut large trees. Wire saws simply break after 5 minutes of use. |
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1 |
Bottle multi-purpose (3 in 1) oil |
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1 |
Flashlight, AA (Mini-MagLite) |
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4 |
Batteries, AA |
(1) Ok I think I would do the same with the batteries. Add a few more to the cache. |
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2 |
Bulbs, Flashlight, Mini-MagLite |
(1)I noticed you have two extra bulbs and I know the bulbs are small, but you don’t have enough batteries to really be worried about burnt out bulbs. |
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4 |
Candles (plumber type) |
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1 |
Small Radio (AA) |
(2)On the subject of radios. I have a very small one that uses little headphones that plug into the ears. I wear a single earphone and have an ear open to hear the environment. A radio speaker can be heard quite a ways off in a quiet woods. If you need the magnet, you can snip off one of the ear plugs and still have one that works. |
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5 |
Spare Flints for Zippo type lighter |
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1 |
Bottle Lighter Fluid |
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1 |
10′ Duct tape (wrapped around water bottle) |
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1 |
25′ Para Cord |
(1) I might up the length of the para cord as well. I know cause I just ran out yesterday, and had to get more. Definitely had what I thought was enough, but its incredible what you can do with that stuff. Make sure you get the type with 7 to 10 individual fibers in the center of the core. |
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1 |
Compass |
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1 |
Local Area Map (Waterproofed) |
(1)You might want to throw in a few common highway maps or State or USA map. |
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1 |
Generic Dark Colored Nylon Shoulder Bag (waterproofed) |
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2Large, lawn type Trash Bags (Black or green)
1Sheet of plastic 10′ x 10′
1Emergency Blanket
1Towel
1Bar Soap
1Bottle Bug Repellent
1Bottle Foot Powder
1Roll Toilet Paper
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1 |
Poncho |
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1 |
Pair boots/Spare Socks |
(1) Triple up on the socks. No feet, no move. I suggest natural wool actually, even in the summer. Good place to throw in some moleskin or mole foam too. Small and fits anywhere. Spenco second skin is small too and great to have for emergency hot spots on your feet. |
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1 |
Set of clothes (Dark colored [not camo]) |
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1 |
Hat (Bush type) |
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1 |
Mess Kit |
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2 |
Water Bottles (1 Quart) |
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1 |
Metal Cup (Sierra) |
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1 |
Spoon (Large) |
(1)Trust me on this one, throw in several extra disposable spoons. |
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1 |
Roll Aluminum Foil |
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1 |
Bottle Water Purification Tablets |
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1 |
Rice small bag (in mess kit) |
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1 |
Dried Split Peas small bag (in mess kit) |
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2 |
Packages Raman noodles |
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1 |
Salt (in mess kit) |
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1 |
Sugar (in mess kit) |
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1 |
Bottle Multi-Vitamins |
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1 |
Tobacco Can with Tobacco |
(1) Definitely think before you light up. I can smell tobacco a long way in the wilderness. I agree in packing smokes though. We don’t need a nicotine fit now do we? I think stress should be combated with familiar practices. |
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1 |
Spare pack Rolling Papers |
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4 |
MRE’s |
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1 |
Bag of Hard Candy |
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1 |
First Aid Kit |
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1 |
Fishing Kit |
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1 |
Snare Kit |
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1 |
Fire Starting Kit |
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1 |
Sewing Kit |
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(1) Few suggestions, throw in some butterfly bandages or cat gut. Also see above about moleskin or second skin. One last suggestion would be some antibacterial soap like Phisoderm or similar and a wash cloth or two. Then you could ditch the bar of soap from above. |
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Fire Starting Kit (Film Canister) |
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1 |
Small Lighter (Bic) |
(1)Once again, I would get several of these for the Cache. It will set you back a big $3.00, but its nice to have several lighters in your equipment. |
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1 |
Set of Matches (waterproofed) and Striker |
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1 |
Small Piece of Sandpaper |
(1) Waterproof the sandpaper as well or use wet/dry paper Automotive sanding paper) |
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1 |
Small Magnifying Glass |
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1 |
Cotton balls |
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1 |
Piece of Steel Wool |
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(1) How about a few trioxane bars? Or Hexamine tablets? Wet rotten wood that you will find is not easy to get going with cotton, or a candle. The lighter fluid or Everclear would help, but you really need a prolonged heat source. |
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(1)I like this idea. Snares make a lot of sense. Piano wire can be bent right? Or is it like spring steel? If it can be bent, I could find a lot of uses for it. |
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Fishing Kit (Film Canister) |
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10 |
Hooks varying Sizes |
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1 |
100′ fishing line 15lb |
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2 |
Small Bobbers |
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5 |
Plastic Worms (no time to dig for them) |
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Sewing Kit (Film Canister) |
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10 |
Needles varying sizes (Leather Needle) |
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1 |
Roll heavy thread |
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1 |
Roll light thread (Sutures) |
(1)I see you have though this through. 😉 Cat gut or Ethilon comes with the Curved needle attached and in small foil packets as well as being sterile. |
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5 |
Razor blades |
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1 |
Threader |
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1 |
Piece of Silk (to magnetize needles) |
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The List shown above is a perfect example of a large and extensive cache that will supply you for a small time until you can get longer lasting supplies. Now obviously when it comes to ammo if you are packing a .45 and a larger caliber rifle or shotgun (.308, 12 gauge, .30-06) then pack that ammo and other specific needs you may have, adjust and overcome. Good luck on the making of your caches.
JWR Adds: I do not recommend using plastic tote bins for cache containers. They are very difficult to seal and they are not rodent proof. If you want something that holds nearly the same volume, then buy 20mm ammo cans. These have a time-proven seal design. Paint the exterior of the can with either two coats of Rust-Oleum or one coat of asphalt emulsion. But first attach a sacrificial zinc anode
, to minimize corrosion. (Be sure to leave the zinc unpainted)
Letter Re: Ship Captains as Source for Prescription Medicine Stockpiles
Dear Jim,
Having discussed with my doctor (seldom seen in 12 years – since I’m mostly healthy) a “blizzard cupboard” of useful medicines to have on hand – he said “great idea”. I live in a rural area – about a 5 hour drive round-trip to doctors and drug stores, and we have been snowed in for as long as 4 days. I took several “wilderness medicine” courses, then returned to him two years later with a list of prescriptions I wanted. He said “no way” – that he was the doc and I was not. He is moving to New Zealand soon – so I’ll have to find another.
Alternative source – if you happen to have a friend who has a ship captain’s license. There are marine medical suppliers that will sell prescription drugs to captains “for use only on shipboard with the direction of a physician or a captain”.
One source of a kit is Marine Medical International – contains a small quantity (typically 1 course) of a variety of over-the-counter and prescription drugs in a kit which costs $1,000. I do not recommend this one – since there were seven discrepancies in the quantity listed and actually received (3 less, 4 more). There were two prescription drugs that were short: antibiotic Keflex 500mg (supposed to have 40, actually had 30 per the inside label) and a pain medication Toradol (or Ketorolac 10 mg – supposed to have 20, actual bottle label said 10).
Other negatives: – web description says “over two dozen prescription medicines” – actual was 14, the rest are over the counter (OTC) drugs. – Many misspellings of drug names – indicating poor attention to important details. – High price – No organization (hint – alphabetical – or by disease – or something?) – the list was somewhat alphabetical depending on which name you use, but this did not match the order in the kit, nor the order of the drug information sheets in the book.
The book contains a printed copy (inserted in a plastic sleeve) of information about each drug from a web site (which you can access for free. (This particular one has information on Amoxicillin)
The kit looked great – except there were six plastic boxes squashed inside the kit – so squashed that half of them were broken.
I assume there are other choices – some of which might be better. Just thought my experience might be of some help to those who have captain friends.
Sincerely, – S.J.
Economics and Investing:
Gary Shilling Sees `Significant’ Stock Selloff Within 12 Months
From Dr. Gary North’s e-newsletter: “There is a cartoon video all over the Web that discusses “quantitative easing.” It is a riot. This is very, very bad for Bernanke. When the public starts laughing at a senior government bureaucrat, he is in trouble.”
John R. sent this: Nassim Taleb Says Fed Doesn’t Understand Risks of Quantitative Easing
Items from The Economatrix:
Stocks Finish Mixed As Dollar Gains
Retail Sales Rise Is Led By Higher Auto Purchases
Credit Card Writedowns Continue Decline In October
The Worth of Gold and Silver During Crisis
BofA is in Deep Trouble, and There May be Financial Disaster on the Horizon
Odds ‘n Sods:
F.G. spotted this video clip: An overview of the deFNder™ Medium Station — a remote-controlled .50 Browning Machinegun. Makes me wish I was wealthy…
o o o
A reader sent a link to a farmer that has an interesting approach to home-made biofuels: Farm Grown Diesel Fuel. This gent has a lot of do-it-yourself ingenuity, but he desperately needs a spell checker…
o o o
Pegging the Absurdity Meter: Taurus Tactical Operator. Are they serious? Methinks this is the ideal gun for someone who is totally ignorant about .410 shotshell ballistics. Crud, when I have to lug around 6-1/2 pounds, it will always be a proper carbine. Better yet, I would three pounds and carry an L1A1. Now that’s a practical, versatile weapon. (Well, if concealment were a must, in a non gun-friendly locale, perhaps I’d tote a Glock 21 and a small pile of loaded magazines.)
o o o
On Wednesday: EMPact Welcomes Lt. Col. Tony Shaffer and Michael Del Rosso to EMPact Radio – Two 45-Minute Shows in One.
Jim’s Quote of the Day:
"When a government is dependent upon bankers for money, they and not the leaders of the government control the situation, since the hand that gives is above the hand that takes… Money has no motherland; financiers are without patriotism and without decency; their sole object is gain." – Napoleon Bonaparte
Note from JWR:
Today we present another entry for Round 31 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 500 round case of Fiocchi 9mm Parabellum (Luger ) with 124gr. Hornady XTP/HP projectiles, courtesy of Sunflower Ammo (a $249 value), and E.) An M17 medical kit from JRH Enterprises (a $179.95 value).
Second Prize: A.) A “grab bag” of preparedness gear and books from Jim’s Amazing Secret Bunker of Redundant Redundancy (JASBORR) with a retail value of at least $400, 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 31 ends on November 30th, 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.
Survival Through Adaptation, by Jason G.
Regardless of what you may or may not believe about evolution, it’s hard to argue that the organisms best able to adapt to changes in their environment are generally the ones that survive. While organisms with less intelligence do this over generations, we humans were gifted with the ability to think and adapt on the fly. Sometimes this is not a good thing when we are manipulating currency on the fly or making decisions that can adversely affect our survival. But dealing with those circumstances with adaptive ability is the other edge of said sword.
After TSHTF neither I, nor anyone really can make any educated guess as to how long it would take to adapt to the new circumstances. Some of us will do better than others. Some will refuse to even try, giving up on the spot. The psychological side of adaptation is speculative at best. Some of us will, some wont and trying to ferret out how or why is a job best left to someone other than me.
The more physical side of adaptation such as adapting skills and physical objects to the circumstances is easier to talk about and outline. But the first task is trying to determine what we take for granted that simply won’t be there in the case of TEOTWAWKI.
Water
In a good deal of North America water is pretty easy to find. But finding potable water may be a different matter altogether. The usual sources are easy to get to. Rivers, lakes and streams may provide better water after a collapse due to less pollution. However the opposite could very well be true as proper sanitation and care is taken during this period.
The truth is that for many days, weeks, months or even years, fresh drinking water will not be out of hand as long as human habitation occurred where you frequent.
I don’t advocate looting but positively identified abandoned houses or industrial buildings may have water stored in the pipes in the walls and in hot water heaters. The bad news is that you will need tools to get to the water.
In houses the copper pipes can easily be beaten through with a hatchet, axe or even a hammer. You would just want to be ready for the deluge once the pipe is breached. A better idea would be a well-placed nail into a pipe, creating a small hole. Industrial building sprinkler systems are usually iron pipes so you will need a few good wrenches in the appropriate sizes.
None of the water from these sources should be assumed to be clean. It should be chemically treated or boiled before drinking.
Food
The second concern and one I think will be immensely more difficult to secure in most of the country will be food.
There are several schools of thought as to the game population once TSHTF. Some people think that due to lower human populations there will be more game. Some people believe that more hunting will wipe out the forests quickly. I’m not sure what to believe in this regard.
Small game will provide a one or two meal situation but killing a whitetail deer, elk or other big animal will provide a good deal of meat for a while but only if you know how to properly preserve the meat.
The same goes for a garden. Usually certain crops ripen all at once even with good succession planting. So again, the key is preservation.
When TSHTF many people will be prepared to can. However, with unstable supplies of fossil fuels and very few wood cookstoves around these days, can we be sure we can do this effectively? I submit that the answer to vegetables is drying and that the answer to meat is salting, jerking, drying and smoking.
It will be quite easy for someone to adapt a small amount of materials into a dryer or smoker quite easily. A small box can be built easily out of scrap wood and screen material from windows can be used to keep the drying vegetables well drained. Then a small window itself can be used to cover the box and keep the heat in. Paint the sides black or make a reflector out of any shiny metal such as ductwork from your house (you might not be using your central air at that point anyway).
For meat you will want to use the simplest methods first and build from there. Jerking meat is pretty simple if you have salt. Simply slice it very thin, salt it well and put it in the solar dehydrator I described above. In the absence of a solar dehydrator you can make biltong.
I learned about biltong from The Survival Podcast. Its been made in South Africa for decades. You simply douse thick-slicked strips of meat with vinegar then salt, coriander and black pepper. Hang the meat where it is protected from insects, moisture and light. In a few days the meat will turn hard and essentially mummify. Done properly and tested by consuming small amounts, there is no real limit to how long this can last.
A smoker can be adapted very easily as well. I think cold smoking is the best method for preservation, especially for fish. You’d simply need to have a metal barrel half or other metal box or container open at one end and closed at the other. Dig a hole that the container will fit in. Remember the ductwork I talked about earlier. Run ductwork from a hole in that container to a box at an elevation higher than the first container. The second box can be made of wood. Take care to close and seal any gaps or cracks in any container or the duct. Build a fire and toss on a lot of wet deciduous wood like hickory, apple, pecan, etc. Put the metal container over it. Use the ducting to connect the metal container to the wooden box. Hang thin strips of meat in the box and allow the smoke to work its magic.
Another method of preserving fruits and even some vegetables is to make them into wine. Alcohol is often thought of in terms of the detrimental effect that it has on our society. However, it has so many more uses than as a mental impairment.
Making alcohol is pretty simple. All you really need is some sugar or honey and a fruit or vegetable and water. If you have yeast, its better to use it, but many fruits such as grapes have yeast that grows naturally on the ripe skins. The key to making wine is keeping the air away from it as it ferments. If you fail to do that you may get vinegar which, when pasteurized afterward can be almost as good as wine. After all, where are you going to get vinegar to make biltong?
You could also adapt a pressure cooker, some salt and a length of small copper pipe and create a still for stronger alcohol to use for strictly non-internal uses.
Hunting and Fishing
I spoke above about preserving food once you get it. Adapting certain items to obtain food to begin with will present its own challenges-none of which are insurmountable. Many of these techniques are not legal and should only be practiced when lives depend on them.
Of course firearms will be around for a while and even a modest stock of ammunition should last for some time. However I believe we will find more primitive ways less likely to draw attention and good ways to save ammunition.
Longbows can be built surprisingly easily out of simple board lumber or of course split wood from fell trees. I recommend PoorFolkBows.com for information on how to do this step by step. Arrows can be made from bamboo or cane or small straight saplings. Making arrow points can be done with a glass bottle and a small nail. Dave Canterbury’s YouTube page illustrates how.
For those who don’t want to take the time to build a longbow or don’t have string or the aptitude an atlatl might be a better choice. The atlatl is simply a wooden handle with a knuckle at one end and a handle at the opposite. The dart-which is a long arrow-sets into the knuckle and the throwing action acts as a lever to propel the dart at near arrow speeds in some cases.
While normal fishing will yield decent catches sometimes adapting an old liquid detergent or clean bleach jug into a jug line makes a lot of sense and will allow you to catch fish passively while you work on other methods of getting food or water. [JWR Adds: Of course consult you state laws before using a set line or any sort of multi-hook line.]
Though highly illegal, old crank telephones or car batteries can be used to shock fish up.
There are also several wild plants in North America that can be adapted into a poison that will stun fish into submission where they can easily be scooped up. If you’ve watched the show Beyond Survival with Les Stroud this should not come as any shock. The natives he spends time with as well as the ones on our own continent had ways to use these poisons to get food. The good news about the poisons on our continent is that many times they are not as dangerous to humans. I do not recommend using any poison you don’t know the origin of. Chemicals that are not safe to humans can ruin a body of water or leave you severely sick if you eat the fish that result.
While most people think of fishing as an activity only for catching fish, there are many more edible creatures in water besides fish. In many lakes, mussels cling to underwater rocks or wood. When the water levels go down you can swim down and harvest. Or if you have a boat and a good spot, simply sink a log and pull it up at timed intervals, break off the mussels and sink it again.
You can also adapt a 2-liter bottle into a crayfish trap. Simply punch some small holes in the bottom end and sides toward the end. Cut the top ¼ off and reverse it and wire it into place so the funnel points in. Place a small but heavy rock in the bottom and a piece of bacon or entrails from a recent kill (might want to tie it into place). Then sink it in a muddy flat. The crayfish will come inside, eat the meat and when you pull it up the crayfish will be trapped.
Medical
After TSHTF many of us will be doing activities we don’t normally do. The desk jockey may be pounding nails and the housewife may be butchering game. Anytime you bring untrained labor into new activities injuries will occur.
For a while after TSHTF medical supplies such as medicine and sterile dressings may be somewhat accessible. What to do when they run out though?
I mentioned an antiseptic above that was used from Roman times until the 13th century. Wine and vinegar both are not stellar antiseptics but in the absence of everything else, they could save lives. The alcohol obviously kills germs and other nasty things that could grow on a wound.
Finding sterile dressings will be hard but you can always boil fabric or soak it in wine or alcohol in the absence of fire to sterilize it.
Conclusion
There was a line from the movie The Book of Eli that stuck with me. The protagonist said: “We threw away things people kill each other for now.” I thought that was very insightful. After TSHTF we will have to learn that nothing is disposable. Pants that get torn and ripped will be cut off into shorts. When the electric grids fail we will use the wires from extension cords as rope or snare wire.
It’s hard to do it with our modern conveniences but we have to look at everything as if it is not what it seems. Sometimes the sum of the parts really is greater than the whole.