Notes from JWR:

The high bid in the SurvivalBlog Benefit Auction is now at $1,050. The auction is for a large mixed lot that includes:

A.) 15 brand new 30 round M16/M4/AR-15 magazines from JWR‘s personal collection. These include four scarce and desirable brand new HK steel “Maritime Finish” magazines, and 11 new USGI alloy magazines made by Center Industries. (Note that most of these were made during the 1994-2004 Federal ban, so most of them have restriction markings, but those became null and void after the ban sunsetted.) Even if you don’t own an AR-15, these magazines are great to keep on hand for barter. (Note: If you live in a state where full capacity magazines are banned, then you must choose to: refrain from bidding, or designate a recipient in an unrestricted state, or re-donate the magazines for a subsequent auction.) In today’s frenzied market, these magazines have a retail value of at least $460..

B.) A NukAlert radiation detector donated by at KI4U.com (a $160 retail value).

C.) An assortment of loose leaf teas, a box of Bellagio hot chocolate (25 individual packs), and your choice of $50 worth of ground or whole bean roasted coffee. (A combined retail value of more than $150), all courtesy of CMeBrew.com.

D.) A case of 24 cans of canned storage butter, courtesy of Ready Made Resources (a $110 retail value).

E.) A carton of 10 rolls of Hydrion fuel test strips, (with a retail value of $85), donated by UR-2B-Prepared.com.

F.) “Alone in the Wilderness” book and 2 DVD Value Set on the life of Richard Proenneke (a retail value of $51.95) courtesy of Camping Survival.com

G.) An EVAC Easy Roll Stretcher kit, (a retail value of $49.95), donated by FrostCPR.com.

This auction ends on December 15th. Please e-mail us your bid for the entire mixed lot.

Today we present another entry for Round 20 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The contest prizes include:

First Prize: The writer of the best contributed article will be awarded two transferable Front Sight  “Gray” Four Day Training Course Certificates. This is an up to $4,000 value!
Second Prize: A three day course certificate from OnPoint Tactical. This certificate will be for the prize winner’s choice of three-day civilian courses.
Third Prize: A copy of my “Rawles Gets You Ready” preparedness course, from Arbogast Publishing

Round 20 ends on January 31st, so get busy writing and e-mail us your entry. Remember that articles that relate practical “how to” skills for survival will have an advantage in the judging.



On Livestock and Self Sufficiency by TAS

Most of the readers of Survival Blog agree on at least the distinct possibility, if not the absolute certainty, of a collapse. This may come in a variety of forms – flu pandemic, economic depression, or an EMP attack are likely scenarios. Regardless of the form, the result will be very similar and our concerns are as well: How do we protect ourselves and our families and provide a living? While stocking up on beans, bullets, and band-aids is the initial response, further preparation encourages us to find a defensible, as well as productive retreat. But then what? So you have your retreat (or not), you’ve stocked up on seeds and a food mill, and “the event” actually comes. Are you prepared to provide for yourself when the food runs out or if society never returns to “normal”?

My family and I got a crash course in self-sufficient farming when my husband left the Air Force to fulfill my life-long dream (and eventually his, as well) of returning to the farming lifestyle of my youth. We made the highly idealistic decision to get out, not get a job, and learn how to make it. I might add, the farm of my youth was not a self-sufficient farm, so we had a pretty steep learning curve. And there is a lot to learn. When you have an established farm and have gained experience, pneumonia sweeping through your cattle herd would be a problem, but not insurmountable. Butchering chickens will no longer be an intimidating production. Reserves or other income will make poor beef prices a disappointment, rather than enough to drive you out of the business. It is vitally important you learn the skills necessary to provide for your family now, not when your survival depends on it.

The first thing you need to do is stop saving all your seeds, and plant them! (Keep enough in reserve in the likely case you are not able to harvest all your own seeds from your first gardens.) Even if you are in the city or suburbs, convert much of your manicured lawn to a garden. Without a lawn, there is still the option of container gardening and community gardens. There is a lot to learn about gardening, and even the most experienced gardeners are learning new things and still having unexplained crop failures. Square-Foot Gardening, by Mel Bartholomew is an excellent resource. Master Gardeners at your local County Extension Office, as well as free publications offered there, will give specific recommendations for your area. The most important thing, in my experience, is to get out there and weed and water, and harvest when the time comes. We are all busy, but consider it therapeutic, or part of your homeschooling curriculum, or family quality time.

So now you have your harvest, and no one can eat as much zucchini as your garden was kind enough to provide you. Even if you haven’t been able to grow your own, buy bulk produce and practice putting it up yourself. Save up, and invest in the equipment you need to preserve your harvest. It could be a freezer, which although not viable for long term if the grid goes down, is great for now. We have zucchini bread in January. Lehman’s is a great resource for food preservation equipment, but Wal-mart has all your basic canning materials, as well. Canning was very intimidating for me, but in the long run, it is not as difficult as I believed. Get a book, read it, but then do it. Head knowledge is never the same as actually gaining the skill by doing it. A pressure canner is next on our list, in order to preserve meat and vegetables safely, in case we lose our freezer.

Next, of course, is livestock and larger-scale farming. Many may feel this is not an option because of your location. The Memsahib has already written in great detail about keeping rabbits, both in town and in the country. Bees are a great option for in town, and in many locations, chickens are legal, also. Both bees and chickens will be helpful in your gardening endeavors. Chickens are great for eating garden pests; just make sure your plants are mature enough to withstand their scratching, and fence them out when your tomatoes and zucchini are mature if you want to get any!

As for location, is it really necessary to live in town? For some, it may certainly be. For others, you may need to consider it. Jim is an advocate for moving to your retreat, so I won’t belabor the point. If you’re there, you should be taking advantage of it. While there may be little time for full-scale farming, you must do a little on the side to learn the skills before your life depends on it. And if you don’t have a retreat, consider other options. Is a local farmer or rancher willing to lease you a few acres to put some animals on or grow some wheat? We have chosen to rent a small place with less than 10 acres to hone our skills on. The house leaves a lot to be desired, and we could be living in a nicer place in town, but this was the trade-off we made.

Once you have found your few acres, work it as efficiently as you can. We enjoy the books Country Life by Paul Heiney (unfortunately out of print; try your library) and Guide to Self-Sufficient Living by John Seymour for getting the most out of your acreage. Country Life is more of a motivator/idea provoker, whereas Seymour’s book is more “how-to”. And, of course, a must-have is Carla Emery’s Encyclopedia of Country Living, which is extremely detailed on the many subjects it covers. You Can Farm by Joel Salatin, while less self-sufficiency, is a fantastic book about farming, and getting the most out of your land, while putting the most into it. There are many examples where we are putting this into practice. What follows are what we have chosen, but the opportunities are diverse to becoming more self-sufficient. Research and choose what works according to your preferences and situation.

An easy choice was chickens. They provide eggs, meat, and several other services to improve our situation. Although there are different thoughts on this, we are still free-ranging our chickens until avian flu becomes more of a localized threat. They get plenty of protein from insects, the eggs are more nutritious due to the chicken’s high chlorophyll intake, they manage the horse and pig manure in the pastures by scratching through it, and all of this saves on feed costs for us. In addition, they keep down insects in the garden. In spring, we will hatch our own eggs. We could easily buy chicks, but believe hatching our own eggs is a skill to learn now, before we need to do so.

Our sow grazes out with our horses. Her grazing saving us feed costs, and if pigs are allowed to root, they don’t need minerals. It is not cost-efficient for us to keep a boar for only one sow, so we have learned how to artificially inseminate. In TEOTWAWKI, that will likely not be an option, but we pray by that time we will have enough land to keep a boar, as well as more sows. Not only are we gaining experience raising hogs, but are able to provide ourselves and extended family pork which is vegetarian-fed and antibiotic-free which we would otherwise be unable to afford. Also in the spring, we will turn part of our horse pasture (not that great, anyway) into a corn patch so we can at least supplement our pig and chicken feed. I have spent the last week digging up my last garden, and mixing all the great manure our animals have been kind enough to provide into it.

For a small acreage, hand tools are sufficient, although hard work. Although we have not expanded yet into growing our own grain, we stock up on tools as we can find them and afford them, and practice with them. We also have a team of Belgian Cross yearlings (from the mares we owned during our farming experiment), although I would recommend anyone new to horse farming buy an experienced team and get training. Doc Hammill in Deer Lodge, Montana provides numerous clinics as well as videos, and is very reputable. My husband will attend training next year to help start our colts right. Lynn R. Miller, also the editor of Small Farmer’s Journal, has several books which are great resources. Right now, the colts are hay burners, but we enjoy them. Since our goal is to have a large enough acreage to necessitate horses, we will keep them. Unlike tractors, you have to feed horses even when they are not working, but they can help make their own feed. And unlike tractors, they can make more of themselves when they wear out. They are also future transportation, if needed.

Next on our list will be to acquire a dairy animal. We have postponed this because of the time commitment involved and the requirement of daily milking. But we feel this is an important addition (especially considering the price of milk and the amount we go through!). Beyond teaching us the skills needed for keeping a dairy animal and providing artificial hormone-free milk, this will allow us the opportunity to learn to make butter and eventually, cheese. In addition, a milk cow’s calf will provide us with beef and extra milk will augment pig and chicken feed. Dairy goats are a better option for many people and deserve serious consideration.

I am not going to mislead you – this is a lot of work and money, too (although providing your own food saves money in the long run). My husband works a full-time job, while I homeschool our young, growing family, and we do a lot of things ourselves in the interest of saving money (cloth diapers, clotheslines, wood heat). That doesn’t give much time for self-sufficient farming, but we feel truly worth the current sacrifice. The argument I am making here is that there are a lot of skills that many used to know, that now nearly no one knows, and they are not that easy to learn! It has been a humbling experience for both my husband and I (a born perfectionist), who were successful in our careers, school, etc., to find we couldn’t do much of a practical nature! I prefer to learn now, rather than when my family’s survival depends on it. And we have a resource that many people in our society overlook – children. Children require a lot of love and care, but they do not require nonstop playtime. Our children are learning skills and do chores as their age and ability allow. I pray they will be much more skilled than we are. They are a force multiplier, particularly if you find something in which they are interested. Mom and Dad can’t be an expert in everything. For example, my #1 daughter wants to learn to spin yarn. So our plan is for her to become the resident sheep expert as well as the expert in yarn production.

Although it may be difficult to learn and find the time for, the ability to provide for yourself provides incredible rewards. If we should need to return to a less technologically “advanced” society, many people will not have the knowledge, skills, and determination to do so. A few forward-thinkers will. Which do you want to be?



Two Letters Re: Plastic Food Grade Buckets and Other Storage Food Issues

Hi JWR,
About the recent post on HDPE food grade buckets: Please note: Plastic food grade buckets are oxygen and gas permeable and will not store food for a long time by themselves. That is what a mylar liner is for, to greatly slow this process down (it will not stop it entirely).

Here is some data for oxygen permeability & plastics:

Material…………………………….ml o2/(day*mil*sq. meter*atm)
PE (polyethylene)…………………..6000-15000
HDPE…………………………………1500-3000
Saran………………………………….10-350
Mylar…………………………………..50-100
Foil laminate………………………….0
Plastic laminate………………………10-400

Regards, – Malcolm

 

JWR,
Just an add-on for Don in Ohio’s post: I live fairly close to a major soda bottler/distributor. Their flavoring comes in white food grade plastic 50 gallon drums and they readily sell them to the locals around here. You can get them for $8 to $10 . They are quite sticky inside due to the high sugar content in soda and need a good rinsing .

On another note, I own a trucking company and one thing that a lot of people don’t know is that some of ingredients in some things are hazardous to humans believe it or not, until the manufacturing process is completed. For example…The most popular sports drink in the US, the concentrated flavoring is considered HAZMAT when it’s being transported from the supplier to the bottler and is only safe after the bottling, dilution, and sterilizing process. So please read the labels even if you consider it “food grade”. Remember, food grade doesn’t necessarily mean edible in the current form. And I would also recommend reading the MSDS sheets that came with the original container. Just ask. Most people will be happy to supply them. – Gary in Kentucky



Letter Re: Feedback on Foodsaver Vacuum Packers

James,
Just a note of thanks. Years ago I purchased a Bosch brand food saver, which has worked well but died about a year ago,. Since it cost over $300 years ago I had not gotten another. When you mentioned the special sale on the FoodSaver v2830, I ordered one (Dec 1) which I just received. I strongly recommend these units, I just received mine yesterday, and it is every bit worth the $59. Thank you James! I love your novel, have read it 4.75 times now, (taking notes) and can see the truth of the story line being fulfilled in the news papers today. Get Ready, Get Ready, Get Ready, Physically, Mentally, and Spiritually. If I read my Bible (KJV) right it is going to get a whole lot worse before it gets better. – The M. Family, Up North.

JWR Adds: About 275 SurvivalBlog readers have already taken advantage of this special sale. Don’t miss out! (BTW, by doing so, you’ll be helping to support the blog, since we get a small commission on each sale. Thanks! These make a very practical Christmas gift.



Odds ‘n Sods:

Reader Scott D. suggested this piece on commentary: Constitutional Convention Sleight of Hand?

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Courtesy of Hawaiian K.: How a Zero-Electricity Fridge Will Bring Medicine to the Developing World

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From Sean M.: Money is not the only thing you can lose in a failing bank

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Ann M. sent this “must read” piece from Fortune magazine: Eight really, really scary predictions; Dow 4,000. Food shortages. A bubble in Treasury notes. Fortune spoke to eight of the market’s sharpest thinkers and what they had to say about the future is frightening. And to fully satisfy your RDA of gloom, the following come to us from Cheryl, our Economic Editor: US Households Cut Back on Debt for First Time EverKey Senators Reach Tentative Auto Bailout DealNew Unemployment Claims Surge UnexpectedlyCalifornia Faces Bankruptcy, $15 Billion in DebtOil Nears $49 as Dollar FallsUS Trade Gap Unexpectedly WidensClosing Time (A sobering assessment of what’s really going on…) — Foreclosure Storm Will Hit US in 2009 Amid Job LossFear Triggers Gold Shortage, Drives US Treasury Yields Below ZeroOfficially Scr**ed by Real Inflation (The Mogambo Guru) — Freight Haulers Slam On The Brakes

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Jason sent us a link to an excellent scholarly piece: All the Way Down the Slippery Slope: Gun Prohibition in England and Some Lessons for Civil Liberties in America.





Note from JWR:

I often get e-mails from students and retirees on fixed incomes that mention that they enjoy reading the blog, but that they can’t afford a voluntary Ten Cent Challenge subscription. This is perfectly understandable. One thing that they can do to help that costs nothing but a bit of time, is to spread the word about SurvivalBlog. For example, please mention SurvivalBlog in your annual Christmas letter. Hopefully, this will result in some of your relatives and friends getting “squared away”. (Which, BTW, is in your own best interest. Every individual that prepares represents one less that will have to depend on charity, when times get hard.)

Links to SurvivalBlog in your personal web page and/or in your e-mail footer would also be greatly appreciated. Again, subscriptions are entirely voluntary. If your budget is tight then please do not subscribe.



Letter Re: Plastic Food Grade Buckets and Other Storage Food Issues

Dear Editor:
Food grade plastic buckets can be found for free or fairly cheap ($1-$2 each) by checking with Dunkin’ Donuts, grocery store bakeries and restaurants. Some throw them away and will be happy to sell them. The fillings and glaze coverings for donuts all come in buckets. Fast food restaurants get their pickle slices in buckets (the strong pickle flavor/odor will be hard if not impossible to remove from the bucket-watch what you store in these, it will absorb that pickle odor).

When you get used buckets (make sure you ask for lids!!!) you will need to clean them out, even if they are clean. Take a butter knife and pry out the rubber gasket in the lid. Wash everything and then make sure it’s totally dry before using. Watch the thin plastic buckets, often more square shape, but sometimes round. You can almost see through these. They will get brittle and shatter (after 10 years or so) if dropped and faster if the sunlight gets to them. I wouldn’t necessarily pass them up, just be aware that they have this weakness. Buckets without lids should not be passed up, they will be needed to haul water, compost, during a harvest and a million other uses.
Have a reason for wanting a lot of buckets so that you don’t stand out. If you can get buckets from multiple businesses, this will spread the operation out and provide better cover than buying everything from one business. After you buy a bunch, the businesses will either start charging or charge more. You will create a market. They need to make a living, too. Compare what they charge to buying new buckets and you will still be getting an incredible deal.

Buckets could be buried if needed and they will last a long time underground. Only the handle is metal. Remove that and a metal detector won’t find caches of food and other supplies.

Another option is food grade [plastic] barrels. These can be filled with bulk food like rice and grains. While harder to obtain, they can be valuable to store bulk foods. I would suggest that a person use large food grade plastic bags to store multiple bags of food within a barrel rather than a full 55 gallon barrel of grain. A full barrel will weigh around 500 lbs (depending on what you store). Multiple bags helps you to be able to remove a smaller quality without exposing the entire contents to moisture in the air when you pull some supplies, and it’s easier to handle. Barrels can also be buried as a cache and a metal detector won’t pick them up (unless you fill them with lead, brass or blued steel). If you have a few barrels, invest in a hand truck (around $50 at Sam’s Club, Tractor Supply, Home Depot, Lowe’s, etc) so you can move them around.
A warning on storing rice. We have stored food for 20+ years. I have found some plastic rice bags to have the ink printing get sticky after 10 years. Somehow it breaks down and is a mess. The rice inside is edible, but removing it without getting that ink on it is tough. Is the ink poisonous at this point? I don’t know. It takes a lot to wash it off your hands. Break it down into clear food grade plastic bags to avoid this. – Don in Ohio



Letter Re: Is a .22 Rimfire Better than Nothing for Home Defense?






Mr. Rawles,

I am a junior college student on a quite limited budget. Right now, my only guns are a Daisy Model 881 pellet [.177 caliber air] rifle and a Ruger 10/22 [.22 Long Rifle semi-auto rifle.] I hope to buy an [M1] Garand [semi-auto rifle] that belongs to my uncle, but for now my “battery” is limited. (LOL!) Here’s my question: Will a .22 [LR rimfire] actually be sufficient, if I put enough rounds into a bad guy, to stop him? Thanks, – G.H.

JWR Replies: If circumstances dictate that you must use a .22 for self defense, then aim for neck and head shots. Because of the high volume of fire required to achieve a good stopping hit, I recommend that you buy at least one reliable 30 round magazine–and preferably several, if you can afford them. I particularly like the robust machined aluminum Ruger magazines made by Tactical, Inc., up in northern Idaho.

The following, quoted by Snopes.com, is a news article from 1988 that illustrates that with well-aimed shots, the puny .22 Long Rifle can, with good fortune, stop and even kill an attacker:

Switzer, S.C. – An 11-year-old boy who had been left alone after school shot and killed two men as they tried to steal a videocassette recorder from his family’s home, police said.

William Todd Knight, the son of Billy and Ann Knight, “acted very wisely,” said Spartanburg County Coroner Jim Burnett. “His life was in danger, he looked for an escape and could not find one … he was a very brave young man.”

Spartanburg County Sheriff’s Department Capt. John Blackwood said the boy was watching cartoons in his parents’ bedroom Monday afternoon when he heard noises at the front door of the family’s brick, ranch-style home.

Todd told officers he was scared, so he went to his room for the .22-caliber rifle his father had given him for Christmas and loaded four rounds.

He then went to the front door and saw a man he described as “rough” pounding on the door. The man finally left in a white Datsun.

Todd said he resumed watching cartoons and about 10 minutes later heard banging, this time at a dining room window.

He saw two men climbing through the dining room window. The boy said he went into the bathroom to climb out the window, but saw the white Datsun was parked in the back yard.

Todd told police he went back to the hallway, peeked around the corner into the den and was spotted by one of the intruders as they were taking the VCR.

Todd then fired three rounds at the men, who dropped the VCR and fled.

When police arrived, one of the dead men was found face down next to a woodpile in the back yard, approximately 50 to 75 feet from the house, while the second man was in the driver’s seat of the white two-door Datsun.

It has been said apocryphally that the .22 Long Rifle has killed nearly as many deer in America as the .30-30. That might be true.

If you don’t get that M1 Garand, then at least buy yourself an inexpensive military surplus bolt action rifle, such as a Mauser, Enfield, Mosin-Nagant, or a Schmidt-Rubin. (The latter is a novel straight pull design that I’ve always liked.) These are often available for $90 to $250 at guns shows and at some sporting goods stores. (Major sporting goods chains that sell guns include: Big 5 Sporting Goods–in the western US, or Bass Pro Shops–mainly in the Eastern US, or Cabela’s–throughout the US). OBTW, some of these guns are available from 1898 or earlier production runs, which makes them Federally “antique” and hence exempt from paperwork requirements in most states. (See my Pre-1899 Antique Guns FAQ for details.)



Odds ‘n Sods:

M. in the Dakotas sent us a link to an article on solar storms and possible damage to power grids.

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A reminder that Foodsaver vacuum packers are being offered at a special sale price, just during the month of December. You can buy a FoodSaver v2830 for $59.99 (originally $169.99) with free Standard Shipping for orders over $100, directly from FoodSaver.com.Use code L8FAV28 at checkout. This offer is valid during the month of December, or while supplies last.

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I just got an e-mail from our old friend “Trasel” (who will soon return from his umpteenth deployment to The Big Sandbox), alerting me that science fiction writer and SurvivalBlog regular Michael Z. Williamson has had his Wikipedia biography article maliciously flagged for deletion. If you have an existing Wikipedia user name and feel strongly about this (one way or the other), then please politely chime in.

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On the advice of SurvivalBlog reader Peter R., I will be doing some livestock slaughtering tests here at the ranch with Federal’s Tactical bonded Law Enforcement (LE) ammo. In .45 ACP, their catalog item number is LE45T1. Peter writes: “This ammo is a 230 grain +P bonded round that is hot, and the difference between gelatin and the real world, is gelatin is a single density material. As the bullet core and jacket spin out of the barrel, they rotate at the same rpm. When the bullet begins to strike clothing, windows, car doors, skin, bone muscle and the like, the jacket of the bullet begins to slow its rotation rate down much faster than the core inside the jacket (when they are not bonded) causing the bullet to break up much sooner and cause less concentrated damage. A bonded bullet tends to stay together longer giving you more uniform expansion and a far more devastating wound cavity. The best way to stop a person or animal is liquid out, air in. Hence, the bigger the trauma and wound cavity, the faster this is accomplished.” This ammo might be just the trick here in grizzly bear country, where we’ve long wanted both the deep penetration of full metal jacket “ball” ammo and the expansion of hollow point ammunition. The Federal Tactical bonded LE ammo sounds like a better compromise than the Federal Hydra Shok loads that we’ve been using.

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The latest economic Gloom und Doom, starting with a “feel good” press release that David B. forwarded: FDIC Reiterates the Guarantee of Federal Deposit Insurance (Oh, I feel so much safer now. Thanks.) And now, courtesy of Cheryl come these items: Auto Rescue Bill in Peril as More Republican Senators RevoltIs the Fed Taking First Steps to Selective Default and Devaluation?Forbes: Dollar Devaluation to Fix the Great Recession (Forbes calls the perpetrators of this mess “banksters.” A great term. I wonder where I first heard it?) — Interest on US T-Bills Falls to Zero0% Interest Rate Looms; Economy Shrinks Double SpeedWorst US Spending Slump Since 1942GMAC Rescue Plan Falters Raising Bankruptcy ConcernRio Tinto (Anglo-Austrian Mining Giant) to Axe 14,000 JobsWorld Economy May Shrink First Time Since 1945Maersk Shipping Line Warns Shipping Industry Needs LifejacketThe Boom Years are Over for Chinese ExportsUS Economy in Rapidly Accelerating FreefallAsian Trade in Freefall as Exports to West Dry Up — And top all that off , Eric sent us this: Bernanke ‘War Powers’ Undermine Fed Bank Presidents, and lastly, Ann spotted this reiterative evidence of the Fed “Turning Japanese”: Fed to cut rates again, maybe all the way to zero



Jim’s Quote of the Day:

"We must not let our rulers load us with perpetual debt. We must make our election between economy and liberty or profusion and servitude.
If we run into such debt, as that we must be taxed in our meat and in our drink, in our necessaries and our comforts, in our labors and our amusements, for our calling and our creeds… [we will] have no time to think, no means of calling our miss-managers to account but be glad to obtain subsistence by hiring ourselves to rivet their chains on the necks of our fellow-sufferers… And this is the tendency of all human governments. A departure from principle in one instance becomes a precedent for [another ]…
till the bulk of society is reduced to be mere automatons of misery… And the fore-horse of this frightful team is public debt. Taxation follows that, and in its train wretchedness and oppression. – Thomas Jefferson, Letter to Samuel Kercheval, Monticello, July 12, 1816



Note from JWR:

Do you have a few favorite attributed quotes? If so, send them via e-mail, and if they are apropos to SurvivalBlog, then I’ll post them as space is available as Quotes of the Day. Thanks!



A 1911 Dinosaur Turns Over a New Leaf — Switching to XD Polymer Frame Pistols

I have been shooting M1911 steel-framed Colt .45 ACPs for more than 35 years, and up until now, I’ve always considered myself a M1911 die-hard. But through those years, I’ve seen the price of Colt pistols and spare parts radically escalate. My first M1911-series pistol was a slightly-used Colt Commander that I bought in 1981 at a San Jose, California gun show, for $160. (In those days, you could pay cash for a pistol from a fellow private party, and walk out the door with it, sans any paperwork. Sadly, things have changed in California–and that was one of the main reasons that I migrated to a free state at my first opportunity.)

I have bought and traded my way through a dozen more 1911s, since the early 1980s. In the early 1990s, when stainless steel Colts became available, I sold off my blued-steel Colt pistols and bought a pair of stainless steel Gold Cup .45s, for around $350 each. I remember that The Memsahib was aghast when she heard that the price jumped to $505, just a few years later. More recently the retail price of the same pistols has galloped up to $1,116! In my estimation that is an absurd price, when you can buy a polymer-frame Springfield Armory XD .45 for around $500, or a polymer-frame Glock 21-SF .45 for around $550. (And even less, if bought used.)

The 1911 design is nearing its 100th birthday (sniff!), and although it is still a great design, I can see the wisdom of moving on to a more modern design with two-column magazine. And even though I have a lot of training hours and muscle memory invested in the M1911 platform, I consider it now well worth the time and trouble to transition to polymer. I can literally buy twice as many pistols if I sell off my Colts. I will also end up with pistols with considerably larger magazine capacity. (13+1 , versus 8+1 for the single-stack Colts.) The other advantage is durability. In so-called “torture tests”, the reliability of both the XD (20,000 rounds in one test) and the Glock (still shooting after insane levels of abuse) have been well documented.

Selling off my accumulation of spare parts (nearly a tackle box full), extra magazines (about 40), and various holsters and mag pouches will be time consuming, but again, I think that I’ll come out ahead.

Now that spare parts are becoming available for Springfield Armory XD .45s, I think that will be my logical choice. Speaking of XD pistols, I highly recommend that SurvivalBlog readers take advantage of the “Get a Gun” package deal at Front Sight, that was recently extended for a few more weeks. This training plus XD pistol plus field gear plus references package is a tremendous bargain. Effectively, you’ll end up with a free pistol. I’ve had overwhelmingly positive feedback from the SurvivalBlog readers that have taken advantage of this offer. I realize that he offer sounds almost too good to be true. But it isn’t a fantasy or some shyster come-on deal. It is a genuine offer, and hundreds of people have already completed the training and gone home very well trained as the proud owners of very reliable XD autopistols. (BTW, I’d like to hear from more of you. E-mail me your impressions of the training.) Don’t miss out. OBTW, the winter months are the ideal time to take a course at Front Sight. In the desert climate of southern Nevada, January and February can be in the 70s. You do not want to go there in July! The Memsahib and I both took the Four Day Defensive Handgun course, and loved it. It is truly outstanding training!



Letter Re: Dress for Survival Success

Jim;
That was a great article by George Haystack in Tuesday’s blog! I thought I was the only one [that carried so much survival gear around on a daily basis.] Mr. Haystack takes it further than I do. First, I could not carry [a concealed firearm] at my workplace being within the secure area of an airport. I generally carried a sturdy day pack, with the following:
(1) Lockback knife
(2) LED flashlights (9 LED’s / 3 AA batteries)
(16) spare AAA batteries
(1) regular AA flashlight
(4) spare AA batteries
The following are all OTC medications, of course
(1) small bottle aspirin
(1) small bottle acetaminophen (Tylenol)
(1) small bottle ibuprofen (Advil)
(1) small bottle naproxen sodium (Aleve)
(1) small bottle antihistamine allergy medication
(2) bandanas 1 blue / 1 red
(1) pocket AM/FM radio uses 2 AA batteries
several pens
(1) steno pad
(1) change of underwear/socks/t-shirt
(12) decaffeinated tea bags
(4-6) pop tarts/granola bars, or similar quick food
(1) metal mug (“grannyware” type camp cup)
(1) set of tableware, knife, spoon, fork, and a “steak knife”
(1) hat and gloves
(2-3) cigarette lighters
(2-3) books of matches
(2) “space blankets”

This is far from what my co-coworkers carried in to work each day. I still had room for my work papers, and such, which went in on the top, for ease of access, and to keep my preparations from “prying eyes”. I may not have carried my sidearm at work, but the items in my pack would have raised management’s eyebrows, and gotten me a talking to, that’s for sure. Luckily for me, the company was shut down, and I am currently an unemployed student. The only thing my co-workers knew was that if they had a headache or a cold, I was the “go-to guy” for an aspirin! Or the guy with the multi-tool to fix whatever is busted in the office! LOL!

On my person, I always carry at least the following, in normal pockets, or on my belt:
(1) cigarette lighter
(1) multi-tool on my belt
(1) Swiss Army knife
(1) LED flashlight
(1) Wallet, which is regularly thinned out to keep only what I’m going to use for the day/trip
(2) key rings, one for car keys one for house, general keys. Only frequently used keys are on the ring.
(1) spare set of car keys in an undisclosed pocket or in my backpack, as well.
(1) cell phone

Mr. Haystack is so right that most folks simply give no “tactical” thought to daily clothing choice. A few take the advice of frequent travelers and choose natural fibers, and loose-fitting, comfortable clothes for air travel, but many more simply wear the style of the day with no thought as to how hot that artificial polyester shirt or top will burn if there is actually trouble. How it clings to the skin like napalm, and burns severely. The problem with air travel today, is that the items I mentioned carrying in my pockets are now “prohibited items”, and so every year, I fly less. At work, only when I had to to keep my currency up for annual training. I’ll take a mode of transport that impacts my liberty and preparations a little less, thank you. Great article! – R. in the Northeastern US.