“If you think health care is expensive now, wait until you see what it costs when it’s free!” – P.J. O’Rourke
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Note from JWR:
I was pleased to see that Amazon.com has dropped their price to just $8.97 on my novel “Patriots: A Novel Survival in the Coming Collapse” . This must be one of those “economies of scale” benefits, derived from the huge re-order that they placed following the “Book Bomb” day last Wednesday. (Amazon sold more than 2,000 copies of “Patriots” in just one day!) Ulysses Press has ordered another 10,000 copy press run, to keep up with demand. Many thanks for your tremendous support of that event!
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The high bid in the SurvivalBlog Benefit Auction is now at $1,310. This auction ends on April 15th. It is for a large mixed lot, which includes::
1.) A Warrior Aid and Litter Kit, donated by Ready Made Resources. This is an advanced medic kit package that includes a Talon II 90C folding handle collapsible litter, which normally retails for $560, just by itself. This truly a “full up” tactical trauma kit! This sophisticated medic kit normally retails for $1,500.
2.) A “be ready to barter” box of 26 full-capacity firearms magazines, from my personal collection in JASBORR. This box includes: 4 – Brand new “smoke gray” polymer original Bulgarian 40 rd. AK-47 magazines, 10 – brand new AR-15/M16 USGI black Teflon coated alloy 30 round magazines with stainless steel springs and the latest gray anti-tilt followers, 6 – new condition original USGI M14/M1A 20 round parkerized steel magazines from CMI (the current military prime contractor) 6 – new condition original Glock Model 20 (10mm) 15 round pistol magazines–the latest production type with “SF” front magazine catch notch . All of these magazines are of recent manufacture (and hence are NOT legal to possess in New York.) These magazines have a combined value of approximately $750, in today’s market. 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.
3.) A large Bury ‘Em Tube (# 6L, 43″ x 6″ with a 5.1 gallon capacity), donated by Safecastle. (a $199.95 retail value)
4.) A NukAlert compact radiation detector donated by at KI4U.com (a $160 retail value).
5.) An OPTIMUS Terra Cookset for backpacking, tent camping or even WTSHTF, donated by Safecastle. It includes the ultra-compact Crux stove, plus a special small cookset–all very portable and lightweight. (Fuel canister not included.) (a $95 retail value)
6.) A fresh, sealed case of full mil-spec MRE rations with ration heaters, courtesy of CampingSurvival.com. (a $94.95 value)
Thus, this auction has a combined value in excess of $2,800. This auction ends on April 15th. Please e-mail us your bid. Your bid will be for the entire mixed lot.
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Letter Re: Viability of Central America Retreat Locales?
Hi Mr. Rawles,
I thank you sincerely for all of the great information that you have made available to us all, for all your years of experience and knowledge.
I have what I hope will be an interesting question for you. I am young, 25, and currently work for an NGO in Nicaragua and previously did the Peace Corps work here as well. I have been pondering over how reasonable Nicaragua would/could be as a retreat location, for numerous reasons, such as, in any given area:
- Rich topsoil and annual rains
- Extremely low population density (lowest in Central America)
- Low real estate prices
- Low real estate taxes
- An abundance of excellent [self-sufficient retreat] locations
These reasons make it seem to me, at least, as someone with minimal financial resources, as the best option, since preparing a retreat would be so much cheaper than in the USA.
There are, however, many downsides, such as:
- Lack of other prepared people
- Long distance from where I will be living (the USA)
- Lack of medical supplies, qualified doctors, etc.
These make me tend to believe that one would have to be of the lone ranger type…or at least accept that others that would accompany one would not bring any material resources to the table, only experience (especially in agriculture, animal husbandry, do it yourself repairs, etc.). Because a big plus in the Nicaraguan economy is that it is already very subsistence based – cooking is done with firewood outside of the cities, soap can be made, etc.).
However, I always ask myself this question: When TSHTF, if I am living in the USA, will I be able to make it to my retreat in Nicaragua in time? Since I love Nicaragua and speak Spanish, etc., for me it stands out as an ideal location, however, I want to ask your advice on this particular question: When TSHTF, would you leave yourself a long plane flight and [an additional] 100+ KM [by road] from your retreat location?
I hope this question warrants real interest on your part and that it is a legitimate concern that other readers of SurvivalBlog can learn from. – Daniel G.
JWR Replies: I only consider offshore retreats viable if you relocate semi-permanently, and don’t attempt to “time” your departure. That might work in a “slow slide” scenario, but unless you are an experienced blue water yachtsman and live within a few miles of where you keep a fully-stocked sailboat, it just won’t work in the event of a sudden-onset collapse. (Driving would probably be impossible, since borders will be closed, and flying won’t be an option since most international flights will presumably be grounded.)
Given the high crime rates in much of central and south America, it is important to find a farming community that is in a low-crime area. It is absolutely essential to learn Spanish muy rapido, and to develop close friendships with locals as soon as possible. Most of the Americans that I know that have made this transition successfully have either married into local families, or have set up companies that have employed a dozen or more local employees. (Thus, the employers have made themselves indispensable to the community.)
The financial crisis will becoming increasingly global, so don’t consider yourself insulted by merely living in a a rural community in Nicaragua. Arm yourself, get good firearms training, and if possible acquire a Starlight scope and a passive IR intrusion detection system, such as a Dakota Alert. (The latter are sold by Affordable Shortwaves–one of our advertisers.) Kalashnikov (AK) rifles are ubiquitous in Central America, so I recommend taking AK-centric classes, such as those taught by Gabe Suarez.
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Letter Re: Backpackers of the Apocalypse: Selecting and Ultra-Lighting Your Bug-Out Bag
Hello Mr. Rawles,
I would like to comment on the recommendations for Bug Out Bags:
Do not include an axe. It is a crude cutting device prone to making copious whacking noise while in use. Bugging out must be accomplished almost silently…
But do carry an Ontario 18″ Machete . It cuts branches up to 1.5 inches thick in a single cut when sharp. My Ontario Machete is now more than 30 years old. It has been thoroughly used during military operations and during a tour of duty in Africa with the Peace Corps. Get a good flexible sheath with a hard tip inside on the bottom to nestle the sharp end into.
Collecting wood should always be done quietly. Be like the indians and gather [what in less politically correct days was called] ‘squaw wood’. Wood that is dead and still attached to the tree. It will already be dried and aged. Perfect for a [small, low-smoke] campfire. In dry areas it can be picked up off the ground.
You can make a wood carrier out of a piece of old cloth tarp or heavy cloth. make it 24 inches square with a handle on opposite sides.
Lay the branches parallel to the handles and pick it up and you have a nice bundle of wood, easy to carry. You can also use this carrier as a ground cloth for laying out cooking utensils on.
During a bug out situation never burn up body energy cutting wood. [When moving quickly to get to your intended retreat,] you do not have the time nor the caloric reserves to do this.
Gather [cotton] lint from your home dryer and use it as fire starter. Store it [compressed] in a plastic bottle for inclusion in the bug out bag.
Bugging out must be accomplished silently and stealthily. No noise and stay out of sight.
Have a nice Easter. Cordially, – J.W.C. (A backpacker from the 1960s and 1970s.)
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Three Letters Re: Why Survivalists Should Buy Local Organic Food
Mr. Rawles,
Yesterday, you posted Chad L.’s submission concerning buying “organic” and/or locally produced food. In it, Chad made a few statements that are simply wrong. This is an example: “…factory farming requires the use of fertilizer made from oil, largely derived from the Middle East. ” This is a wholly ignorant statement, ignorant because if the author had bothered to check, he would have found that the USA produces nearly all of it’s nitrogen fertilizer from natural gas. Even if we did use oil as the source for ammonium nitrate, OPEC only accounts for about half of the oil we import, if you only count Iraq it accounts for 10 percent of that (or about 5 percent of all imports). We import more oil from Canada and Mexico than from any country we are current at war with. This sort of soft-thinking is impossible to support, but sounds nice to many who take such statements as fact without taking the time to check them. We don’t produce nitrogen fertilizer from oil, and if we did, the USA produces far more than it imports, so the “largely derived from the Middle East” is patently false. Heck, OPEC isn’t comprised only of countries from the Middle East. Venezuela as well as several independent African nations are lumped in too. Take them out of the equation and the total oil imported to the USA from the Middle East only about a third of the total OPEC imports we receive.
He also doesn’t point out that the majority of the world is fed by corporate farming, he even makes “corporate” sound like a dirty word. Any farmer I know who is making a profit, is incorporated. It costs approximately 1/3 to produce (by weight) a “corporate” tomato as it does an “organic” tomato – and the only purported guarantee you get is that no pesticides were used to produce it. If the world went “organic” the world would starve. Sure it’s a good idea to grow your own food, but to do so because you hate “corporations” or that non-organic food is somehow less safe (anybody remember the folks who died/got sick when they drank the “organic” Odwalla juices a few years back?) or more safe is living in a fantasy world.
Let’s not forget the offhand insult delivered to that ignorant guy wearing the NRA hat. Was it meant to say that the guy, being a gun-owner, should know something about a place he’d never been? Or, more to the point, was it simply an ad-hominem attack on some marginalized citizen (aren’t all ignorant rednecks, NRA hat-wearin’ types?) who had the misfortune to cross this man’s path?
Since he touts “organic” local farming as using, in his words, “very little oil-based fertilizer” where, exactly does he think they get their ammonium nitrate? Any farmer can make the claim to use “very little oil-based fertilizer” since nearly all fertilizer is made from natural gas (that we produce in the USA).
His arguments simply do not support the truth and facts about farming. He also knocks, “South American factory farms” and makes an incoherent statement about millions of low-income immigrants (the same incoherent statements made about the Irish, Italian and WWII waves of immigrants) who flee here because of economic conditions on South American farms. The last time I checked, immigration from Chile (the major source of our winter fruits and vegetables – remember, the seasons are reversed below the equator – not so with Mexico) was so small, they did not fulfill their maximum quota with the US department of state. In fact, with a 96 percent literacy rate, they are better educated than we are in the USA. And in fact, with a population of only about 16 million (most descended from european immigrants) they would depopulate very quickly if they did support his “millions” number. Corporate farming in Chile works well, they help feed the rest of the world. Argentina is a close second. Many of the farm workers in Chile, for instance, are multi-generational employees of the same evil “corporations” as their fathers and mothers. How do I know this? I visit there, and have several connections in their agribusiness community. He picked a poor example of “insuring national security”, most of the illegal workers in the USA do not work in agriculture-related industries, although this may not be readily apparent to a Californian (the breadbasket of the USA). This also casts unfair aspersions on the character of the human swarm he would have us fear as a “national security risk”, do you really think an illegal immigrant would countenance someone coming to the country he needs to work in to support his family as his side in a border crossing, if that person were to attack the USA? He would have you fear the “great brown horde” the same way people in the northeast were taught to slur those “swarthy grape stompers” from Italy.
His facts are either skewed, or wrong. His thinly veiled disdain for gun owners and their intellect is insulting. And he is ignorant about where ammonium nitrate comes from. – L.D.M.
JWR Replies: To bolster your position, I should mention that SurvivalBlog reader “3CanKeep” kindly did some research and found that only 3.1% of the U.S. natural gas supply comes from foreign sources.
Jim,
I really enjoyed Chad L.’s article from an organic farmer reaching out to the preparedness community. It was very well written with many bits of humor and many very relevant thoughts, such as, “if I’m lucky I just might get to be a farm hand if things go bad.” and”That requires knowing how to grow it, something that is well beyond even moderately accomplished hobby gardeners”,and “a book can be a great source of information, but it will likely never replace hands on learning from someone that knows what they’re doing. If you want to be able to grow enough food to live on you should know a farmer.”and, finally, “Much lore and utility can be learned from those that actually know how to do things and no thing is more important than being able to produce food.”
For some unknown reason, I’ve been really fired up during the last few weeks to learn as much about gardening and growing food, more than I have ever been during my last 50+ years. If this is Providential direction, I had better get my rear in gear!
Chad’s article is truly reaching out to those of us who, “have never really been to a farmer’s market because he thought it was full of overpriced vegetables and dope-smoking hippies”, and I commend him for his efforts and have a better idea as to how those prices may be not as high as I thought.
I just want to second what Chad is saying. Having been around production (factory), small scale and organic farming for about 40 years, it is clear most of the production farms and farmers will not survive times when oil and it’s associated fertilizers and pesticides disappear or are in very short supply, the same is true if credit is tight. The knowledge curve to change from production to organic farming is a multi-year process.
For the preppers having seeds in a can sounds good and may make some folks feel good but it is unlikely their first crop will provide sufficient food to make it till the next harvest. That also assumes they have knowledge to preserve the crops and an a appropriate place for storage. There are only two groups that might grow us enough food to survive, the small homesteading folks that are currently supplying food for their family and the small growers that are selling into the farmers markets and/or have Community Supported Agriculutre (CSA) organizations. Of these two only the small growers have the knowledge to rapidly scale up output.
Having been a conservative most of my life and having watched George W. take away many of our freedoms with the Patriot Act and Paramilitarization of the police force though the war on drugs, I now mostly try to ignore the far right, ‘christian’ right, far left, and other fringe groups and just focus on the individual people. There are many folks planning and preparing for tough times, it will be difficult enough to survive without using the knowledge of all of us.
Thanks for the blog. I just ordered your new edition of “Patriots“. – Riverrat
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Economics and Investing:
From Greg C.: Fed Said to Order Banks to Stay Mum on Stress Test Results
KAF forwarded this video link: Stop Spending Our Future – The Crisis
From Richard R.: Two more banks fail, lifting this year’s tally to 23
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Odds ‘n Sods:
Chester sent us the link to his “must watch” video Real Gunfighter Lance Thomas on Justice Files. The lessons to be learned: If you live in a bad neighborhood, then relocate, as soon as possible. But regardless, get the best self defense tools and training that you can afford.
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Bill Six spotted this: ‘Open season’ declared on Mason Co. criminals
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F.R. forwarded a link to a masterful piece of gray propaganda: Rightwing Extremism: Current Economic and Political Climate Fueling Resurgence in Radicalization and Recruitment. Its liberal bias is subtle but is a consistent drumbeat throughout the document. The authors appear to be in the Extremism and Radicalization Branch, Homeland Environment Threat Analysis Division (a cell within the Intelligence & Analysis (I&A) Branch of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS)), but I suspect that much of the content was outsourced. The authors made only a few factual errors (such as referring to same-sex marriage as a “radicalizing” issue in the 1990s–it wasn’t actually an issue until it was first legislated in Massachusetts in 2001.) But they have obviously fully embraced the innuendos, half truths, and urban mythos promulgated by leftist “watchdog” groups such as the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), the Center for New Community, and the Center for Democratic Renewal. It is sad to see public officials either duped by leftist pressure groups, or willingly co-opted because of their own political bias. If the report were actually fair and balanced, then it would have analyzed both the “rightwing” threat and leftists. (Other DHS I&A Branch publications such as the Domestic Extremism Digest have shown far less bias in the past.) But to the authors of this new report, and to those of their ilk, hard core conservatives are “radicals”, while assorted hard core left wingers are merely “activists.”) The only thing worse than a smear campaign is a subtle smear campaign.
Jim’s Quote of the Day:
"Those, who have the command of the arms in a country are masters of the state, and have it in their power to make what revolutions they please. [Thus,] there is no end to observations on the difference between the measures likely to be pursued by a minister backed by a standing army, and those of a court awed by the fear of an armed people." – Aristotle 384–322 BC
Notes from JWR:
Have a joyous Easter. Our Savior is risen!
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The high bid in the SurvivalBlog Benefit Auction is now at $1,260. This auction ends on April 15th. It is for a large mixed lot, which includes::
1.) A Warrior Aid and Litter Kit, donated by Ready Made Resources. This is an advanced medic kit package that includes a Talon II 90C folding handle collapsible litter, which normally retails for $560, just by itself. This truly a “full up” tactical trauma kit! This sophisticated medic kit normally retails for $1,500.
2.) A “be ready to barter” box of 26 full-capacity firearms magazines, from my personal collection in JASBORR. This box includes: 4 – Brand new “smoke gray” polymer original Bulgarian 40 rd. AK-47 magazines, 10 – brand new AR-15/M16 USGI black Teflon coated alloy 30 round magazines with stainless steel springs and the latest gray anti-tilt followers, 6 – new condition original USGI M14/M1A 20 round parkerized steel magazines, from CMI (the current military prime contractor) 6 – new condition original Glock Model 20 (10mm) 15 round pistol magazines–the latest production type with “SF” front magazine catch notch . All of these magazines are of recent manufacture (and hence are NOT legal to possess in New York.) These magazines have a combined value of approximately $750, in today’s market. 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.
3.) A large Bury ‘Em Tube (# 6L, 43″ x 6″ with a 5.1 gallon capacity), donated by Safecastle. (a $199.95 retail value)
4.) A NukAlert compact radiation detector donated by at KI4U.com (a $160 retail value).
5.) An OPTIMUS Terra Cookset for backpacking, tent camping or even WTSHTF, donated by Safecastle. It includes the ultra-compact Crux stove, plus a special small cookset–all very portable and lightweight. (Fuel canister not included.) (a $95 retail value)
6.) A fresh, sealed case of full mil-spec MRE rations with ration heaters, courtesy of CampingSurvival.com. (a $94.95 value)
Thus, this auction has a combined value in excess of $2,800. This auction ends on April 15th. Please e-mail us your bid. Your bid will be for the entire mixed lot.
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Today we present another entry for Round 22 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The contest prizes include:
First Prize: 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 22 ends on May 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.
Why Survivalists Should Buy Local Organic Food, by Chad L.
I know the name of the woman who raises the chickens that lay the eggs that I eat. Do you? I know about her daughter’s college plans and her vacations and how she got into the business of raising chickens. This might not seem so important from a survivalist perspective, but I think it is and I’ll explain why in the following paragraphs.
Now think about where you get your eggs. Chances are they come from a big chain grocery store. That means they are raised in a huge factory farm, staffed by underpaid workers of questionable legality, and overwhelmingly dependent on Chinese produced chicken feed. Which of these eggs do you think is better for the long-term goals of a preparedness minded individual? I thought so.
What I’m getting at here is that an American preparedness culture should be supporting small, local, organic farms whenever possible. In this essay I am going to avoid environmental arguments in support of local, organic foods. Although, I will confess that I believe that environmental issues are one of the largest threats to American personal and national security and that a dedication to environmental solutions will ease many of the problems that threaten us, especially including dependence on foreign oil and government corporate welfare in the form of unnecessary farm subsidies.
I started thinking about this topic because I work at a Farmer’s Market in Northern California and I rarely see customers that exhibit some of the tell tale signs of the “survivalist” crowd (Ruger hats, NRA T-shirts, etc.). However, many of the farmers can be seen wearing “the signs”. Small farmers are, as a whole, very hard working, practically minded, conservative leaning people who care deeply for their families. They would mostly fit right in at any Preparedness gathering; even the really Left of center politically leaning ones.
One morning a man walked up wearing an NRA hat and we got to talking. It turns out he had never really been to a farmer’s market because he thought it was full of overpriced vegetables and dope-smoking hippies. He was having a good experience and was really impressed by how knowledgeable the workers were about what they were selling. I could certainly offer no counter to his concerns over the hippies (it is Northern California after all. Although, to tell the truth there aren’t that many of them left). The counter to his cost concerns is more complex.
Organic food costs more than non-organic food. It is certainly more expensive to make food grow like this and the cost is passed on to the consumer. There have been plenty of recent big agriculture financed studies showing that there is little nutritional difference between organic and factory produced food which leads a consumer on a budget to validly wonder “why should I buy this if it isn’t better for me?” Even if these studies are true, they do not tell the whole picture.
Organic has become a major buzz word and a major marketing tool. Plenty of the stuff that’s labeled organic gains a lot of its cost from being shipped from South America and the big grocery stores (especially the big health food stores) are more than willing to tack on high prices for perceived value. It’s the same thing that goes on with the designer bags my wife covets. They might not do anything special (they hold stuff the same as my backpack does), but they look nice and are sought after by a particular and demanding consumer that is willing to pay extra for premium.
But this isn’t the whole story or even the segment of the food producers I’m suggesting we as survivalists support. There are huge hidden costs to the production of cheap factory food. First of all, cheap food requires cheap labor. When people in South America are sick of being sprayed by pesticides and working for next to nothing, where do you think they are going to go?
Your hard earned dollars should not be supporting factory farms that are abusing humans (a Christian issue if ever there was one if that concerns you) or creating an economic climate that gives incentive to millions of desperate people to illegally enter the country. The cost of supporting these South American factory farms is inestimable when you factor in all of the issues surrounding illegal immigration, issues that should be on the minds of all Preparedness minded citizens. |
Second, factory farming requires the use of fertilizer made from oil, largely derived from the Middle East. Ask anyone with a child serving in Iraq what the cost of oil is and you are not going to get a dollar amount. I’m not suggesting that we should not use oil or that our actions in Iraq are unjust or unnecessary, far from it. I am suggesting that supporting a food production model that uses very little oil-based fertilizer is in the best interests of Americans. Small, local farms that utilize crop rotation and sustainable practices do not destroy the land at the same rate (often the land is replenished) and do not need to pump Saudi chemicals into the ground.
A trip to a farmer’s market is far different than a trip to a place like a Whole Foods store. Vegetables and livestock that are in season and not delivered very far (the Locavore rule of thumb is to try not to eat food from more than 100 miles away if you can help it) have a negligibly higher cost at the register and virtually no societal costs associated with factory farms.
This is really just the tip of the iceberg of the issues surrounding the ways factory farming weakens national security. The more you dig, the more you see that true freedom and liberty depends on the yeoman farmer so celebrated by Thomas Jefferson. The Jeffersonian agrarian ideal is alive and well and you can help it survive simply by shopping.
Think about this: if the stuff really hits the fan and the country goes to h*ll, whom do you want to be friends with? I want to be friends with hard working men and women that know how to grow food and make their land work for them. Shopping at farmer’s markets is a great way to make community connections that are both personally rewarding and potentially life saving. I know the names of many of the people I buy my food from and if I’m lucky I just might get to be a farm hand if things go bad.
Thankfully there seems to be a shift away from the “hoard away somewhere with guns and MREs and ride it out” model of survivalism. Those MREs are terrible and will eventually run out. If you had to survive on them for any period of time you would likely add a great deal of depression to what is likely going to be a stressful situation. I want to be in a position to eat real food. That requires knowing how to grow it, something that is well beyond even moderately accomplished hobby gardeners. Even the gnarliest “I’m gonna drive ‘the last of the V8 interceptors’ and pump .50 caliber rounds into any desperados I see” survivalist is likely including gardening books in their personal survival library.
If you want to learn how to do something, a book can be a great source of information, but it will likely never replace hands on learning from someone that knows what they’re doing. If you want to be able to grow enough food to live on you should know a farmer. It’s real easy to meet them. Just go to a market and ask them about their product.
Being able to grow food is more important than even being able to properly operate a firearm (and many who can do the former know the latter simply by cultural osmosis). If you are willing to buy premium American made firearms, learn from the knowledgeable through conversation and classes, and enjoy them, you should be willing to do the same with your food.
Like all the best survival preps, gardening is fun and rewarding on its own and provides a wonderful opportunity to connect with your family. It ranks right up there with teaching your kids how to fish and shoot, but it has unfortunately fallen out of vogue in the last fifty years. When you’re picking up a head of lettuce from your new friend that grew it for you, ask him how you might do the same. It could save your life.
Shopping at farmer’s markets protects national security interests, builds important connections with like-minded people able to withstand hard times, and provides a way for families to connect with the traditions of one of America’s most hardworking and iconic professions, the farmer. Much lore and utility can be learned from those that actually know how to do things and no thing is more important than being able to produce food.
Economics and Investing:
HPD mentioned a piece in Mish’s Global Economic Trend Analysis: Bartering Services to Combat the Recession
David V. sent this: Social Security Bomb About To Explode
Items from The Economatrix:
Economic Crisis: No End In Sight; Worse Than The Great Depression. “Today five US banks according to data in the just-released Federal Office of Comptroller of the Currency’s Quarterly Report on Bank Trading and Derivatives Activity, hold 96% of all US bank derivatives positions in terms of nominal values, and an eye-popping 81% of the total net credit risk exposure in event of default.” (JPMorganChase, BofA, Citibank, Goldman Sachs, HSBC, Wells Fargo/Wachovia, which really makes Wells Fargo’s “profit” highly suspicious.)
Top Five Financially Happy States.
America’s 20+% Unemployment Rate
Geithner, Paulson Named in $200 Billion Lawsuit. The class action lawsuit filed in Federal court in Los Angeles is a “wide reaching” claim that will do what Congress cannot…”
Positive Signs Stir Hopes Crisis is Bottoming Out “Government examinations of the finances of the nation’s largest banks – the so-called stress tests – are finding the weakened banking system in better shape than expected…” Playing on a well-known saying, you can’t just be a “little bit bankrupt.” You are or you aren’t.
New Jersey Bank to Return Bailout, Sixth One to Do So
Job Cuts Needed to Stop New York City Bankruptcy
1st Time Jobless Overwhelm Job Center
Federal Budget Deficit Sets March Record, $192.3 Billion (Significantly higher than the $150 Billion that economists expected)
Jim’s Quote of the Day:
Joshua S. found a link on the “Kyoto Box” stove.
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From Cheryl: New Food Crisis Looms
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I found a good piece on edible and useful Cattail plants.
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Beginning at Sunrise, Easter morning, the folks at Everlasting Seeds are offering a 20% discount on all products except the Medicinal Garden, just for SurvivalBlog readers. You’ll have to use this link to get the Special price. The sale ends at sundown on Saturday, April 18th
Jim’s Quote of the Day:
And when I think, that God, His Son not sparing;
Sent Him to die, I scarce can take it in;
That on the Cross, my burden gladly bearing,
He bled and died to take away my sin.
When Christ shall come, with shout of acclamation,
And take me home, what joy shall fill my heart.
Then I shall bow, in humble adoration,
And then proclaim: "My God, how great Thou art!"
– Excerpt from the Hymn How Great Thou Art, based on the poem O Store Gud, written by Carl Gustav Boberg, in 1885. Translated from the Swedish by Stuart K. Hine.
Note from JWR:
Today we present another entry for Round 22 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The contest prizes include:
First Prize: 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 22 ends on May 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.
Good Fences Make Good Neighbors: Reinforcing Your Retreat for Long Term Survival on the Cheap, by Q.T.
We’ve all heard that particular proverb. For those of us reading this venue, we all have a specific mindset that probably keeps that at the forefront of our minds. We have our space. We have our preps. We have spent time and effort placing a lot of emphasis on keeping ourselves one step ahead. So how do we keep out everyone else?. Better yet… how do we keep prying eyes out? Still best, how do we create our sanctuary without drawing any attention to ourselves whatsoever?
We can build a fence, but a fence can be cut. Fences cost money. …Money that perhaps we would like to spend on other things. We could conceivably dig a moat, but if our land isn’t flat (let’s face it, it’s probably not). A moat also isn’t much of a deterrent unless it’s filled with something particularly unsavory, like crocodiles or piranhas. Furthermore, a moat is going to take a lot of effort, probably employing heavy equipment, and again, costing a great deal of money.
What we really need is something that serves as a hardy physical and psychological barrier, screens what is behind it, costs very little, and mostly takes care of itself. Maybe it could even get more robust as time goes on… Impossible, you say? Perhaps not.
In Europe, one long standing tradition of creating a fence against neighboring property is to plant a hedge. Now before you scoff, push out of your mind the juniper bushes freshly trimmed at waist height. What you want is something a bit more robust. Something wooly and wild and impenetrable…
A customary European hedge is initially a row of one particular type of woody shrub or tree planted about 1-2 feet apart. Once the tree reaches approximately 10 feet in height, an axe or hatchet is used to notch the tree at the base so that it can be bent over, and it is laid over at about a 35 degree angle from horizontal. When the entire row is done this way, the branches are woven and tangled together to form a rough and difficult to penetrate screen. As time passes, new vegetation grows up through the toppled trees and adds height to the hedge, further screening from the neighbors. This was primarily designed to contain livestock.
What we need is a system to keep out a much more ingenious invader than neighboring livestock. We want something that will stop anything short of a bulldozer or perhaps a tank. And best of all, if it’s all the same, we want something that looks nondescript and uninteresting to the passerby. If the hungry refugee has nothing to stop and look at, he likely will keep on going. The roving gang isn’t even going to slow down if they see nothing of interest. So what we need is something much more robust than the European hedge.
European hedges are often grown from the local native shrubs and trees. Locally, here in the midwest US we have several tree species that would work especially well for this type of application. Your local flora may differ a great deal where you are. My particular favorites for my location are the honey-locust, Osage orange (notably named the “hedge tree”, locally), and western red cedar. All three of these are known throughout the region as a pest. They are all fairly prolific and fast growing. The best bet is to look around and see what grows where you don’t want it to. Those will grow into the most robust living fence you can imagine.
I have not made these three tree choices lightly. These trees are chosen because of their quick growth ability, resistance to insects and blights, and ability to interplant very closely with other trees. Hardwoods such as Oak, hickory, and especially walnut, tend to crowd out other trees with chemicals secreted by their roots. However, you can interplant fruits such as mulberry, apples and pears among the locusts, Osage, and cedars.
Now, plant your trees spacing them out in a row approximately 12 to 18 inches apart. Water them. Fertilize them if necessary. Let them grow to about 5 feet in height (tree tubes may help them achieve this height but are by no means necessary). Make sure that all trees are trimmed of most side branches and splits split trunks are pruned to one side or another. This makes the final arrangement easier.
Once the trees have reached the appropriate height ( I said 5 feet, but this is not necessarily the case) you will need to notch the trunks approximately 3 inches above ground level. To notch the trunk, you should take a sturdy knife and carve approximately 2/3 of the trunk out. Alternate which side of the tree you notch, as you will be weaving the trunks together.
Once you have notched your trees, beginning with one pair, lay your trees over to about 30-to-45 degrees crossing in the middle. Go to the next set, doing the same, making sure that you achieve a true weave (in front of one, behind the next, etc). Once done, make sure that where the trees cross the second row is done in the same manner. What you end up with should look a little something like a chain link fence.
Next you need to wait for the tree to grow some more, and repeat the process as it gets taller. Since trees don’t grow at angles, it’s likely that either your initial stem will grow straight up, or perhaps a side branch will take the initiative to take off. But either way, you will be trimming from a ladder and weaving in the same way.
Obviously, one should grow other things outside the wall. Poison ivy, stinging nettles, thick brambles and rose bushes all serve as a primary deterrent long before anyone actually comes to the hedge. Making it look natural helps all that much better. Eventually your hedge will bush out and look less like a giant lattice and more like an impenetrable wall of vegetation.
Like anything, this process can be as big or as small as you want it to be, and it’s all about how much you put into it. I envision two hedges side by side about ten feet tall. The inner hedge mostly fruit trees and honey locust, while the outer hedge is made up primarily of cedar and Osage orange. Between the two is a wall made up of old tires with one sidewall cut out, filled with sand. The tire wall is about 5 feet tall and serves as a bullet stop for stray small arms fire. Above the tire wall the two hedges have been intertwined to hold it all together. The occasional observation post (OP) has been fashioned into the design and only accessible from the private side (inside) of the wall.
With a setup like this and an alleyway to a locked gate, access could be controlled in such a way that the vagrant who wandered in would automatically be covered and unable to escape. In the same respect, anyone who attempted to raid a place reinforced in such a way, would encounter a lot more resistance than they would want to, if in fact they even knew it existed.
Obviously this process takes time. Lots of time. And that is its primary downfall. Time may be something we all lack in these uncertain and trying times. It also takes a lot of work. Hard work. Expect to have scars. Consider that as better than the alternative.
For those of us who may have that place in the woods, and are just biding our time, this might be a thing worth doing, even if just for facing a public road. If one life is saved because of this information, then it has all been worth it. Good luck and God bless to all of you.