Ham radio: A fading hobby … until emergencies hit. (A hat tip to John M. for the link.)
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Mark A. was the first of several readers to mention this: Digital doomsday: the end of knowledge
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Joel S. sent us this: Bogota’s Bulletproof Tailor
Ham radio: A fading hobby … until emergencies hit. (A hat tip to John M. for the link.)
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Mark A. was the first of several readers to mention this: Digital doomsday: the end of knowledge
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Joel S. sent us this: Bogota’s Bulletproof Tailor
"I have also learned from experience that the greater part of our happiness or misery depends on our dispositions, and not on our circumstances. We carry the seeds of the one or the other about with us in our minds wherever we go." – Martha Washington, from The Life of Washington by Anna C. Reed, niece of a signer of the Declaration of Independence; first published in 1842 by the American Sunday-School Union, now called the American Missionary Fellowship (AMF).
Today we present another entry for Round 27 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The prizes for this round will include:
First Prize: A.) A course certificate from onPoint Tactical. This certificate will be for the prize winner’s choice of three-day civilian courses. (Excluding those restricted for military or government teams.) Three day onPoint courses normally cost between $500 and $600, and B.) Two cases of Mountain House freeze dried assorted entrees, in #10 cans, courtesy of Ready Made Resources. (A $392 value.) C.) A HAZARiD Decontamination Kit from Safecastle.com. (A $350 value.), and D.) A 500 round case of Fiocchi 9mm Luger, 124gr. Hornady XTP/HP ammo, courtesy of Sunflower Ammo. This is a $249 value.
Second Prize: 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 $350.
Third Prize: A copy of my “Rawles Gets You Ready” preparedness course, from Arbogast Publishing.
Round 27 ends on March 31st, so get busy writing and e-mail us your entry. Remember that articles that relate practical “how to” skills for survival have an advantage in the judging.
In every TEOTWAWKI circumstance shelter is of paramount concern. It’s actually a concern every day of our lives, but we seldom think about it – we take the roof over our head almost as a given right in country. Our houses or “castles” as some states call them are so sacred many states allow us to use deadly force – no questions asked – if someone illegally violates our home’s hallowed ground.
For a survivalist, “prepper” or even casually concerned citizen preparing for some sort of unknown future disaster, water, food, guns/ammo, fuel, backpacks, etc. are all high on the packing list. Depending on the geographic part of the US, some citizens may have chains saws and their associated spare parts. Some really prepared folks may have some hand tools, nails, and hand saws stored away. But how many people have stored away any building materials? If a can of beans is going to be hard to find after a natural disaster, how hard is it going to be to find a 2×4, or piece of plywood?
Obviously we can not predict the future or what disasters lay before us. History tells us weather and nature can do damage at any time whether it be a volcano eruption in Yellowstone, a snow-storm in the Rockies, hurricane on the coast, or a Midwest drought. We also know there are a lot of people in the world that wish severe harm on the United States. We don’t know when a terrorist will strike and to what degree – damage could be an internet attack, a dirty bomb, an device, a nuclear bomb, etc. Perhaps the disaster is economic and the financial sector of our country crumbles. In any case…and probably even more so during a disaster…a roof over our head is one of the basic necessities of life: water, food, and shelter.
Not everyone in this country is a carpenter and or experienced in home design, but most of us know what are homes are made of by seeing homes under construction, looking in the attic, or doing small remodel projects on your house. How many trips does it take to the hardware store to fix a leaky faucet? One, two, three? And that’s just a faucet. What happens if a tree falls on your roof, or the wind blows out a window, or the snow from a large storm causes a portion of your roof to collapse?
Preparing the Shelter
Starting from the earliest notions of preparation, prevention is clearly the best remedy to a structural failure during a disaster. If possible work with a reputable engineer to design a structure that meets and exceeds all of your possible worst case hazards – be it tornadoes, hurricanes, flooding, snow, extreme temperatures, gun fire, intruders, etc. Just about anything short of a direct nuclear blast can be part of the engineering equations used to design your house/retreat. (It’s not standard procedure but it can be done.) Even some seemingly severe hazards such as gun fire can easily and cheaply be negated with the use of proper materials.
For those of us that missed the boat on getting it right before it was built and have to deal with a house or retreat that is already built to some pre-existing building code or perhaps no building code, what can be done? Contact an expert engineer, builder, survivalist, home protection company and have them offer professional advice on ways to mitigate and or strengthen the structure for atypical situations such as gun fire. Some examples of “home improvements” include steel doors/bullet resistant doors, unconventional door locks such as hidden dead bolts/hinges and heavy timber braces, bullet proof window replacements, walk in safe roofs (easily done in a basement with CMU blocks), adding a standing-seam metal roof (snow slides off the roof and does not accumulate), underground escape routes, interior or exterior cisterns, additional bracing of existing walls and roof, and even steel window shutters (a mere 1/4” plate steel will stop many typical small-arms, handgun calibers).
Assuming your residence was either pre-built as a fortress or underwent some “upgrades” towards the fortress classification, what’s next? Supplies. Have spare materials on hand to fix potential problems. Besides the basic plumbing, heating, electrical spare parts, have some building materials stored. Have several 2×6’s, 2×8’s, 2×10’s, 2×12’s, and plywood or oriented strand board (OSB) pieces at least ½” or thicker kept covered and out of the weather. Generally the longer the piece the better; a 24 foot 2×12 can be cut into two 12 foot pieces, but it doesn’t work the other way around. If a window breaks, the plywood would be invaluable to seal the opening – same with the 2x material for a portion of a failing roof, wall, or door jamb. What if you had to replace a door jamb due to an attempted forced entry, or the loft post in the barn because you backed the tractor into it, or the toilet overflowed and caused the sub-floor underneath it to delaminate? Are you prepared – remember the hardware store is probably out of supplies, looted, and or closed. Several large heavy tarps and 10-to-20 bags or concrete and mortar are also highly advised.
Without tools the spare wood is close to worthless. The basic hand tools should be a given: hammer, nails, screw drivers, hand saws, pry-bars, etc., but it is also worth adding a few more such as large bow saws, two man cross-cut saws, large braces (hand drills) with self-drilling-threaded-tip bits, axes (large and small) adzes, chisels (wood and cold), draw knifes, block and tackles sets/come-along, sledge hammers, large sharpening stones, and or manually powered grinding wheel. Having an assortment of timber pegs ranging from ½” to 1 ½” in diameter would be helpful.
Common in the log home industry are a group of fasteners call “log home screws” sold under the brand names of Olylog, TimberLok, Log Home Screw, and GRK. These screws come in boxes and buckets of 50-500. They typically have a hex or torx head and are self drilling – commonly accomplished with a strong ½” drive power drill. They can also be installed by hand with a socket and ratchet wrench. These screws are the duct tape of the heavy timber framing industry and most are ¼ inch in diameter but scientifically perform like a 3/8” or ½” lag screw. They are very strong, versatile and can literally be used to bend wood beams. Have several hundred in various sizes on hand.
Fixing the Shelter
Up to this point it’s been all about preparation, be it home design, home modifications, tools or materials. What happens if something goes wrong after TSHTF and the lumber pile in the back yard isn’t enough? Trees! Assuming the plot of land on which the fortress resides has some trees, there is wood for the taking. In general standing dead trees are the most preferred wood source in the drier climate western states; in more humid regions healthy coniferous trees would be preferred. The subject of timber selection is a book in itself, but here are a few brief reasons for the aforementioned tree type selection. Wood, in general becomes stiffer as it dries. (Think of how flexible a living sapling is compared to a similar sized dead sapling.) Wet wood can also “creep” over time. This is a sagging of the wood under its own weight and once dry the wood will remain in the bent or sagged formation. Insects generally like to call living trees home – they may kill the tree in doing so, but most insect and fungal relationships with trees are parasitic in nature as they “suck” the nutrients away from the living tree. Once the tree is dead, this relationship ceases to exist. With standing dead trees in dry climates, the wind and sun keep the wood dry and as such eliminate future fungal attacks. Another issue with live trees is that once the tree is cut down and the wood begins to dry out, it shrinks – often significantly (species and climate dependant). This shrinking could be ½” in diameter for a 12” diameter log. Building or repairing a structure with wet wood could cause gaps, bad joints, and even structural failure if not properly addressed in the building design. In more humid parts of the country (coasts and east of the Mississippi), standing dead timber may be not be a sound choice. If decay is noted, move on. Decay or fungus is like an iceberg – only 10% of the potential threat is visible. In other words, if fungus is noted on the outside of the tree, the inside of the tree is probably 10 times as bad – at least on a microscopic level and structural strength level.
What about hardwoods or deciduous trees? Hardwoods are strong indeed, but often heavier, harder to work with, and seldom grow as tall and straight as softwoods (conifers, evergreens, etc.).
So the damage is done, for whatever reason a structural member in the house, barn, or garage needs to be replaced and a direct replacement isn’t available. How big of a tree should be cut? If the tree is standing dead without any cones, leaves or even branches, look at the surround living forest. Chances are the species is the same as one of the living trees. In most cases, species won’t be a determining characteristic as most people won’t be able to discern the exact species anyway. But stay away from aspen, birch, and alder. These species are of the “hardwood” variety (deciduous trees) but generally very weak and decay rapidly when exposed to water. Douglas Fir and Southern Yellow Pine trees produce some of the strongest wood available in the United States and both are conifers.
If insulating characteristics are the most important, go with a lightweight, non-dense wood such as spruce or cedar. If it’s bullets that need to be stopped, the heaviest and densest woods such as southern pine, oak, hickory, would be the best option.
The size of the tree should be close or bigger than the size of the wood member it is replacing. Unless there is a bio-diesel sawmill on the ranch, the tree probably isn’t going to be cut down to size in terms of width and thickness – only length. Look for straight, tall, trees with small branches (knots), no visible decay, and no visible gouges, holes, or sap pockets – all which decrease the strength of the wood. Spiral grain, often seen on standing dead trees with no bark, significantly weakens the structural strength of the wood. Straightness of the grain and knot size are typically the two most detrimental characteristics to a piece of wood’s strength. Strong wood has straight grain and few or only small knots.
The diameter of the tree should be big enough that the piece it is replacing could theoretically be sawn out of the tree. For example if the piece that is being replaced is a 2×12 (actual dimensions of 1 ½” x 11 ¼” ) the tree should have an average diameter of at least 11 ¼” for the entire length of the 2×12 it is replacing. The base of the tree will be slightly larger than 11 ¼ but the top of the tree could be 10 inches in diameter. With these guidelines the tree will likely be stronger than the 2×12 it is replacing. Many factors determine the strength of the wood and personal experience/expertise may dictate the use of a smaller diameter tree for a replacement beam (beams are horizontal members carrying load their entire length). For beams the critical dimension is typically the depth of the beam – in this case the 11 ¼” dimension. In general the deeper the beam, the stronger the beam.
Columns, posts, or vertical members carry a vertical load and do not act the same way as beams. A post should be replaced with a tree of equal or larger diameter – a smaller diameter post should not be used. The explanation for this is complicated, but if the post/column is too thin it will buckle. Think if a wooden yard stick and how easy it is to compress the ends and get the stick to bend out of plane (buckling), if that same stick was a 1”x1” square, it would be very difficult to get it to bend out of plane by compressing the ends.
After the tree is cut to the desired length the bark should be removed. Most insects and fungi attack the tree on its cambium layer (the living cell layer directly under the bark). Removing the bark allows the tree to dry faster and without moisture most fungi will die. Insects burrowed in the bark are also removed. As the tree dries it will shrink in terms of diameter and doing so will create cracks or checks in the surface of the wood. The cracks may be over ½” wide but are not a structural concern so long as the cracks are parallel to the grain and do not go all the way through the tree.
Building a New Shelter
If everything else fails, the preparation, and the repair, all is not lost. It is possible to build a strong, almost bullet, wind, storm proof shelter from the forest. This assumes access to some six-inch-plus diameter trees. Suffice to say, this short article isn’t the end all instruction manual for building a log home from scratch. Several books on the topic do exist, some more useful than others. Should this plan C option be of interest, it might be worth working with an engineer to design and engineer a structure you might build should the need arise. The blueprints could be kept on file at the retreat.
In any case a new structure needs to built – and in this case the only tool really necessary is a good axe and sharpening stone – every other tool just makes it easier and faster. It’s the quintessential log cabin; they’ve been built all over the county and even housed former presidents.
Start with the foundation. Wood decays when it gets wet and the ground is typically wet at least most of the year in most parts of the country. If the log cabin is known to be a very short term (6 years or less in drier climates and 2 years or less in wetter climates) structure, it could be built directly on level, drained and compacted soil. If some sort of longevity is desired a stone foundation would be a good start. Even if no mortar is used stones, rocks, and boulders can be stacked on top of one another forming a small wall 1-2 feet high. This would keep the rain, snow, and soil moisture away from the wood. The first course of logs is then stacked on top of the stone wall. Obviously if mortar is available, it may be used to strengthen the stone wall – even sand or mud could be used to block air flow through the rocks.
Trees are cut, using the aforementioned selection criteria in terms of species, dead or alive, etc. to the length of the structure. Larger diameter trees provide better insulation, bullet resistance, and require less trees to be cut, but are heavier and harder to work with. Smaller diameter trees are easier to maneuver, but don’t match up to the larger diameter trees’ other virtues. Size may be dictated by what’s in the local forest.
The trees need to be full length extending from corner to corner of the cabin, and a four corner cabin is highly recommended. (Corners are labor intensive and time consuming to construct.) For log stacking purposes make sure you have an even number of corners, e.g. even though a three corner structure can be constructed, the log courses don’t work.
The logs are stacked just like “Lincoln Logs” – yes, the kids’ toy. Lay the east and west logs down parallel to one another and then lay the north and south logs on top of the east and west logs. The strength and warmth of the structure are determined by the corners. At a minimum the log should extend approximately two times the log diameter past the corner notch – this extension is called a “tail” or “log tail.” The notch should be about ½ the diameter of the log and the deeper the notch the tighter the logs will fit to one another. Notches should be cut so they are facing down – if they are facing up, the notch will hold rain water and allow for decay. If no notch is used the logs will roll off of each other and there will be larger gaps between the logs. If an extremely tight fit is desired and time is on available, the logs can be “scribed” or custom cut to fit the log below it. This lessens and may alleviate the need for any chinking or insulating material between log courses.
The process is repeated until the desired height is achieved. Door and window openings are cut in with a chain saw or two-man saw after the entire square or rectangle structure is completed. Once the openings are cut, smaller logs are vertically positioned and fastened to the horizontal log courses around the opening to keep the wall logs from shifting or moving out of plane.
Some may wonder how to get 1,000 pound logs up to the top course, which may be eight feet high. It can be done with hand tools, rope, and a few strong men/horse. Logs are angled from the ground to the top of the wall (i.e. log ramps) and the new log is rolled into position up the angled logs. Ropes may be used to pull the log into place while some men push it up the log ramps.
As for the roof, the simplest design is that of a shed roof and single pitch. For example the south wall is made two feet taller than the north wall and log rafters are laid at an angle from the north wall to the south wall. The east and west ends are in-filled with smaller logs or plywood, or even pine branches. The steeper the pitch the better the weather protection as rain and snow will run or slide off a steep pitch roof. A tarp, pine bow, boards, etc. may be used to seal of the roof between the rafters.
Obviously the construction details previously listed for a log cabin are incomplete and overly simplified, but the point is that a new structure – should the need arise – can be built from materials (trees) that may be available on the land. With a good team of people, a simple rectangular structure could be completed in a few days. For more information check out the various log cabin construction books or speak with a knowledgeable professional.
All being said and done, clearly the Boy Scout motto of “be prepared” takes the center podium when it comes to shelter. If at all possible have the shelter pre-engineered to address the worst case loads it may face. If the structure already exists, then fortify it with the help of a professional. We talk about storing food, guns/ammo, first aid supplies, and even ourselves in our retreat or house, but what good does a two years supply of food do if the first storm blows off the roof and rain soaks the food supply?
Sir:
Do you know of any good web sites that list where you can buy just an acre or so of land in the woods, where people wouldn’t expect you to actually live? I live right on the Florida/Georgia state line so there’s plenty of land around. However, parcels are typically sold in 50 acres or 100 acre chunks. Or [with a lot] they expect you to turn it into a house with a mailbox and all that. I just want some woods. My goal is to excavate for an underground storage shed, with small sleeping quarters. I’ll then gradually fill it up with supplies. Thanks, – Rob C.
JWR Replies: One web site that I recommend watching is RealtyTrac.com. They specialize in listing foreclosed and otherwise “distressed” properties.
You should also ask a few real estate agents in your planned retreat area if they have any listings for any bargain parcels in any of these categories:
One other possibility (usually just an outside chance, in the more populous states) is to visit the County Assessor’s Office, and ask about any tax delinquent parcels–especially ones with access problems. Depending on the county and state that you live in, these can sometimes be had just for paying the back taxes, or not much more than that.
I believe that the current collapse in the real estate market will create some rare opportunities to buy distressed properties for the next five to ten years. Be vigilant and prayerful. Lord willing, you’ll find the right place at the right price.
George Gordon (“GG”) sent this news item: Largest-ever federal payroll to hit 2.15 million
Also from GG comes this link to a Seeking Alpha piece: U.S. Economy: Don’t Worry, Prosperity Is Just Around the Corner
Yet another from GG: Rising FHA default rate foreshadows a crush of foreclosures
Reader JDD spotted this over at The Daily Beast: The Dollar’s Scary Decline
Also from JDD: Obama’s Budget Has One Small, Missing Piece…. For $6.3 Trillion Dollars
Items from The Economatrix:
Unemployment Rises in Most Metro Areas
Roubini Sees “Very Dismal and Poor” US Growth Ahead
Bernanke Voices Economic Concerns as He is Sworn In
Deficit Brings US Closer to Brink of Bankruptcy
Colorado Springs Cuts Basic Services. More than 1/3 of streetlights to go dark on Monday, and that’s just the start.
No Help In Sight, More Homeowners Walk Away
The First Country to Leave the Euro? What About Germany?
US Deepening Debt Crisis, Be Afraid of Bernanke Reappointment
Growing Bubble in Commercial Real Estate; CRE Losses Could Wipe Out Banking System
I thought that the map at this web page: Electoral College Reform was fascinating. (But of course any such plan would be grossly unconstitutional–so I consider it nothing more than an intellectual exercise.) And ponder this set of graphics at the same web site: 50 States and 50 Metros. If nothing else, these maps illustrate just how lightly populated some of my recommended retreat locales are. (Thanks to Hal H. for the links.)
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The folks at Survival Bound just did a major expansion to their free manual collection. It was 5 gigabytes, but now it is 25 gigabytes!
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Ammo proves better than money in the bank: 308 Ammo in 1000 & 1500 round cases (A follow-up post on the second page explains where the ammo was buried, back when the Clintonistas were in power..)
"No citizen has any right to be an amateur in the matter of physical training… The instinct of self-preservation demands it likewise: for how helpless is the state of the ill-trained youth in war or danger!" – Socrates
Today we present another entry for Round 27 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest.
First Prize: A.) A course certificate from onPoint Tactical. This certificate will be for the prize winner’s choice of three-day civilian courses. (Excluding those restricted for military or government teams.) Three day onPoint courses normally cost between $500 and $600, and B.) Two cases of Mountain House freeze dried assorted entrees, in #10 cans, courtesy of Ready Made Resources. (A $392 value.) C.) A HAZARiD Decontamination Kit from Safecastle.com. (A $350 value.), and D.) A 500 round case of Fiocchi 9mm Luger, 124gr. Hornady XTP/HP ammo, courtesy of Sunflower Ammo. This is a $249 value.
Second Prize: 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 $350.
Third Prize: A copy of my “Rawles Gets You Ready” preparedness course, from Arbogast Publishing.
Round 27 ends on March 31st, so get busy writing and e-mail us your entry. Remember that articles that relate practical “how to” skills for survival have an advantage in the judging.
Here at the farm we had the first of a series of free and open classes on disaster preparedness on February 1st. One of the things I intend to talk about at the upcoming meetings are various options for joining a community.
When discussing disaster preparations, the first thing to decide is what you think is most likely to happen. If you think the world is a friendly place where snow means skiing and flowers always bloom, then a disaster is the electricity going out for a couple days if a tree happens to fall. You’ll need a case of bottled water, some soup and maybe a barbeque for cooking. With just that little bit, you’ll still be ahead of most of your neighbors and mostly be comfortable. But what if disaster means, ‘The End Of…Everything’? Then the preps you’ll need will be very different.
We’ve all watched the aftermaths of Hurricane Katrina/Haiti/Tsunami/wildfires and snows. Generally life sucks, then the cavalry comes. But what do you do if help never comes? Never. Ever. None. Can you provide for every single thing you will need for the rest of your life, and your children’s lives? Food, water, warmth, medicine, security, communication, civil order, sanitation, entertainment, livestock, eligible partners for your progeny, trade goods, tools and so much more? Can you walk into the wilderness right now with only what you carry, build house and barn, and be able to defend against whatever predator awaits, just as our ancestors did? Because that’s what TEOTWAWKI means. The end of everything as it now exists.
I believe we live in such a fragile society that if the electricity goes off for several weeks continent wide, it just as likely won’t ever come back on. Without power there’s no food, gas, medicine, order. Without the basics, too many people will perish. And since we have become so specialized in job skills, it will only take a few key missing knowledgeable workers for the whole system to permanently break.
Two generations ago there where many self-sufficient generalists. There are very few now. My Grandma saved seeds, kept chickens, put wood to stove, and pulled water from the well. And during the Depression she and her brothers sat on the porch at night, holding a shotgun, to protect the apple orchard. Are you ready and able to do all that? Can you fix or make every single thing you will ever need? We’ve all heard stories about the intrepid pioneers who carved out a life. But for every family that made it, many more failed. Most of them died.
So what do you do? It’s not so likely any of us will do well alone. There’s just too much to do. I believe the best, and maybe only, survival strategy is to join a community. Seems to me there are only several basic ways to do so. 1). Be in one before TSHTF. 2). Be close friends, or family, of folks in a community so you can join when you need, (and trust they will still let you in). 3). Bargain your way into a community with what you know and the skills you have. 4).Bargain your way in with the goods you carry.
Of course joining a community right now, (or yesterday), is best. There is so much to learn, acquire and establish that doing it now, while times are good, is much easier. It’s also much better to work out all the personality issues when not under maximum stress. I’ve have dozens of dozens of folks living here at the farm over the last 35 years. First impressions don’t always count for much. Some people are pleasant to live with, some really make things difficult. You don’t want to find that out when its too late. When it comes to survival, you really need to depend on and trust those around you.
There are actually quite a few communities already out there. You’ve probably already checked the “Finding Others” page on SurvivalBlog. But there’s also IC.org . On their home page, click on “resources”, then click on “reach book”. There are intentional communities all over the world. A lot of the ones listed are “love me, love me” type folks, but there’s also some pretty good ones. And of course talk with your trusted friends and at Church to see who’s doing what and what’s possible.
If you’re not already in a safe place, or set up to go to one, then you’ll have to walk up to the unknown “door” and ask to join. You’ll need something better than, “I’m hungry, my kids are starving”. That’ll maybe get you a meal, hopefully, maybe. But it doesn’t get you in. You’ll need skills. Everybody’s a babysitter/cook/computer programmer/garden weeder/ditch digger. Don’t really need you. Blacksmiths are surprisingly common, (gotta love America and all her hobbyists). What’s valuable is a really good herbalist/midwife, a veteran with experience, somebody who knows and can do the thirteen ways of preserving food, a trapper/skinner/tanner, a shoe/boot/wagon wheel maker, a weaver or tin smith. Be a veterinarian or nurse/third world doctor or dentist. Then you have usefulness in really basic times. If you can’t get to community now, acquire some of the more rare or valuable skills. You, and they, will need them. With knowledge, it’ll be harder to turn you away.
Another way into community is what you possess and can offer. If you have lots of antibiotics, treadle sewing machine needles, surgical instruments, maybe fish hooks, certain books, maybe bullets, the more rare tools for old time crafts and trades, copious amounts of food or a thousand spools of thread, most communities will consider you. The problem is some communities may like your goods better than you. Some might decide to “share” what you have then say bye-bye, (or worse). You might try to bury your goods, observe the community from a distance, then walk in and make a deal. But they better be kind hearted or you’ll just end up “sharing” again. And if you hunker down concealed in order to observe a community for a couple days to see if they are worth joining, you probably don’t want to join them anyway. If they don’t catch you, its not so likely they’ll catch the bad guys doing the same thing. With goods, you’re possibly valuable, but at a real disadvantage in deal making.
Then there’s the last unmentioned way of joining a community. That’s “joining” by not joining. For thousands of years there have been traveling tradesmen, craftsmen and peddlers. Folks with tools, goods, and skills who traveled from community to community where they provided items to trade, gossip and information from down the road, sometimes entertainment and amusement to break to sameness of everyday life in isolated villages, and needed specialty skills such as dentistry or pewterer. They’d stay for a short while, re-equip, rest up, then move on. Keeping to somewhat scheduled rounds, so they would be expected and welcomed at the next stop.
Peddling may not work so well in the first months or even year after TSHTF; the world may be too unsettled and dangerous. But for certain personality types, it may be a good option. It’s something to think about.
So, I suggest you give some real thought to how you will get into a community. My opinion is we survivors/thrivers will need to. I think it will get that tough. And that soon. Don’t know what’s going to bite us. If its a pandemic, being near a city might not be so bad, if the hordes die off fast enough and you don’t also get sick. If its EMP, then being anywhere within a couple weeks walk of a major city may really suck. And if certain people get re-elected, then we’re all toast. I don’t really know what will happen first and worst. But whatever it is exactly, I suggest you have a determined way to join with others in order to survive.
A few books that might be helpful, to add to SurvivalBlog’s already long list of suggested useful books, are:
The preceding list is just a few of the hundreds that are useful to have. Do searches on Barnes and Noble Used books, or Borders Used Books in subjects that interest you. Get them now. The world will become very small when the power goes out. Also, at YahooGroups there are hundreds of Groups of people with extremely useful knowledge on any subject, trade or skill you can think of. Get the knowledge before it is all lost. – Jim Fry, Curator, Museum of Western Reserve Farms & Equipment
P.S.: For those interested, see the posting at the Preparedness Groups Page for Feb. 1, 2010, about North Central Ohio. Free and open meeting for discussion of disaster preparedness. — If we can help you now to be prepared, you can help others later when charitable living will be needed.
My preparedness background started as a youth. My father took us camping often and had an amazing gun collection; I’ve been able to teach my kids what he taught me – great memories both then and now! In the 1970s, my mom and step-dad bought a little 2-acre farm in the middle of nowhere. We kept a dozen or so chickens, had a few garden spots (that seemed to grow and multiply with each new season), homemade soap, homemade root beer (an acquired taste!) a “sewing room”, a small orchard, solar heating, our own 250-gallon fuel tank, and a year supply of food (much of it canned at home) for a blended family of 10. In the late 80’s, I got married and had my wife encourage me to follow the counsel of a church leader “to be prepared for anything”. I did some homework, organized my gear and ended up teaching others for the last 15+ years the basics of being prepared. My greatest mentor has been Glenn Anderson, who I met from the Yahoo group PrepJr. (Check out his survival notebook section in the files). I have taught disaster education for the Red Cross and served as a police reservist in a couple of small towns. I enjoy ham radio, beekeeping, shooting, Dutch Oven cooking, serving in my church, backpacking/camping, canoeing, and delving into the many facets of being prepared and independent. After reading (in quick succession) Lights Out [a free e-book], “One Second After”. and “Patriots”, I’ve been taking it up a notch and inviting anyone who will listen to join me in a more advanced state of preparedness. I’ve bought extra copies of the books to loan out (or sent out links to acquire the e-books). In my church, I am responsible to help some of our local units get better prepared. During this process, I’ve thought how other churches might want to consider the same thing, and thought I could use this format to share what I have learned over the years. Being a “work in progress”, here are the thoughts that I’ve come up with so far to help a congregation get better prepared:
Initial goals for this year:
1. Basic “phone tree” functioning – map out and divide the church boundaries into geographical districts. Assign each family 2 or 3 other households within a district to do welfare checks, especially during a significant event where loss of phone service is minimal. Help your members become their brother’s keeper.
2. List of those with special needs – physical handicaps, mentally or emotionally challenged, critical medicines and/or durable medical equipment. Make plans on how they can be helped.
3. Define resources across your membership: specialized skill sets (medical, transport, security, heavy equipment & operators, “prepared”/food storage, etc.)
4. List of homes willing and able to take in refugees (consider list from #3). Consult the map to help determine closest options and alternate routing if needed.
5. Emergency Communications training – locate current ham radio operators across the area and establish a scheduled net to practice traffic handling and prepare to facilitate communications in the event of an emergency. Use their homes as focal points for the collecting of information. (If ham operators are non-existent, skip to item #7.) Also, consider befriending local hams and arrange the use of their skills and equipment until such time as you can provide your own Emergency Communications. Local church leadership can help coordinate assistance as information comes in from across the area.
6. Hold a “Preparedness Fair” to help motivate/kick start the basic concepts of home storage and self-reliance. Plan to hold mini-classes as members start to see the wisdom of being prepared.
Goals for next year:
7. Begin ham radio classes – encourage those in church leadership to at least obtain a Technicians license in order to allow “local” communications. It’s not that hard. Invite the membership to participate. As more members obtain their licenses, the geographical districts become more manageable and communication is simplified. Information sharing, especially health hazards, is absolutely critical in allocating the resources available. It is also a psychological boost to be able to share and learn about local conditions. Contact your local ham radio club(s) for assistance or go to www.arrl.org
8. “Disaster Communication” tree – those who choose not to get their ham radio license, make use of what is available outside of phones/internet: (FRS radios, CB, GMRS, car, bike, foot). Practice communicating without normal means and check on those in each district. Set up specific hours and frequencies and see how well the equipment works. For those who are unable to participate “electronically”, a runner will need to knock on the door. Might encourage more to consider other options. The goal is to be able to check on each member of your congregation. Use local weather events to activate communications (flash floods, snow storms, ice, etc). Encourage acquisition of NOAA weather radio with Specific Area Message Encoding (SAME).
9. Advanced prep classes (designed for those who have at least a couple of months of food storage and have a basic vision of preps):
Goals for the following year:
Other considerations:
– Any members with large tracts of land that would be willing to “invite” the membership and like-minded individuals to gather for safety (see point #10 & #11)
– Airplane/ultra-lite for recon
– “EMP proof” vehicles (plan to have necessary spare parts on hand)
– Those with farm animals, fuel storage, solar panels, wood lot/firewood
– Potential access to a pharmacy, backup refrigeration for critical meds
– Organized responsibilities: Medical, Security, Sanitation, Burial, Water collection/treatment, Hunter/Gatherer, Construction/Home repair, Firewood collection, Mechanical, Plumbing, Electrical, Communications, etc.
I have appreciated the opportunity to organize my thoughts as I am preparing to implement the plan above. I just recently discovered SurvivalBlog,\ and found that it is a treasure of knowledge. Thank you for your time and efforts to help us be better prepared.
Several times in items I’ve sent out or in live presentations I’ve mentioned the “Rocket Stove,” a simple stove concept worked on over the last 20 years or so at the Aprovecho Research Center in Cottage Grove, Oregon (and elsewhere) by Larry Winiarski and others. The goal in refining this stove was to create a wood or charcoal – burning stove that would use the absolute minimum amount of widely available fuel to boil a given amount of water, thus minimizing fuel use and waste, and also smoke that could contribute to health issues for those tending, or in proximity to, the stove. These are all issues in third world settings where these stoves have been tested over a number of years.
Many designs have been tested over the years. What you see at sites like this is the result of a great deal of trial and error. I have received Aprovecho’s newsletters for 15 years and have watched some of this honing process.
Aprovecho has found a manufacturer in China capable of producing a stove that incorporates this very efficient design and they have just begun selling them domestically at a very affordable price.
I have had a hand in working with homemade versions and it involves a bit of work to come up with an easily portable, efficient wood-burning stove. For $40 and shipping this is a unit that can potentially help a lot of people, and not just in the third world.
Besides basic cooking applications and boiling water consider its possible use for heating during a power outage: a covered coffee/paint can, metal pail, pot, or 4 – 8 quart Dutch oven filled with golf ball-sized stones or pebbles, can become a portable “heat sink” after being warmed up on such a stove to bring a source of heat into a makeshift tent you’ve set up inside your home, or just in a small room (place the hot container on non-flammable material like bricks and keep small children away from it ). Having just small amounts of fuel available can mean having hot water and food plus a means to stay relatively warm in an emergency.
Check out the video – the main video will access more info – videos on building your own stove and/or using Rocket Stoves. You can access a number of “rocket stove” clips as well directly off YouTube.
The link above will give you considerable information on the manufactured unit. Even if you already have a camp or backpacker’s stove this kind of unit is one to consider for emergency back-up because of the ready availability of its fuel.
A very small wood-burning alternative is the “Zipstove” for about $65. I’ve worked with and sold these units going back almost 20 years and they are a proven item.
If you have enough people interested you might consider a package shipment to obtain 200+# UPS discount rates.
Even if you believe you’ll have access to unlimited amounts of wood in an emergency don’t let that consideration keep you from a very cheap piece of insurance. – Greg L.
I warned you, folks! Coin Composition Change Included in Obama’s 2011 Budget. Have you socked away your nickels yet? Do so before they start making them out of stainless steel! Gresham’s Law is still in force. (Thanks to CRD for the link.)
Matt B. mentioned that the Geography of Recession interactive map has been updated. This is looking grim!
The Other Jim R. forwarded us a link to this Zero Hedge piece: Brace Yourself for the Coming Gold Shortage
GG sent this: White House to paint grim fiscal picture
Michael Z. Williamson (SurvivalBlog’s Editor At Large) flagged this: Obama’s 2011 Budget Proposal: How It’s Spent
Items from The Economatrix:
Obama Seeks $1.9 Trillion Tax Rise on Rich, Business
Britain’s Banks Downgraded by S&P
US Hunger for Gasoline Falls, Unlikely to Return
How Japanese Hyper-Inflation Could Turn the USD Into Toilet Paper
From Chad S.: Seed shortages could imperil home gardens. JWR Adds: Stock up on heirloom varieties before gardening season. I’m sure that our advertisers that sell non-hybrid seeds would appreciate your patronage.
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S.F. in Hawaii mentioned that John C. Campbell’s Folk School in Brasstown, North Carolina has expanded its course catalog. Some of the traditional skills taught there such as metalworking, spinning, and weaving would be important in the event of a societal collapse.
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Inadequate sanitation leads to disease in Haiti, just as predicted: Chaos eases as Haiti food lines focus on women. (Thanks to Russ D. for the link.) And, in the No Great Surprise Department, we read: Haiti food convoy attacked; UN warns of volatility. (Thanks to R.D. for the link.)
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Reader F.D. spotted this: New groups mobilize as Indians embrace the right to bear arms
“He who lets the world, or his own portion of it, choose his plan of life for him has no need of any other faculty than the ape like one of imitation. He who chooses his plan for himself employs all his faculties. He must use observation to see, reasoning and judgment to foresee, activity to gather materials for decision, discrimination to decide, and when he has decided, firmness and self-control to hold to his deliberate decision.” – John Stuart Mill, “On Liberty”