To be prepared for a crisis, every Prepper must establish goals and make both long-term and short-term plans. In this column, the SurvivalBlog editors review their week’s prep activities and planned prep activities for the coming week. These range from healthcare and gear purchases to gardening, ranch improvements, bug-out bag fine-tuning, and food storage. This is something akin to our Retreat Owner Profiles, but written incrementally and in detail, throughout the year. We always welcome you to share your own successes and wisdom in your e-mailed letters. We post many of those –or excerpts thereof — in the Odds ‘n Sods Column or in the Snippets column. Let’s keep busy and be ready!
Jim Reports:
Summer has started and it is now racing by. As usual, I’m juggling a whole raft of projects at the Rawles Ranch. Presently, these include: trench-digging, slash hauling, firewood cutting/stacking, and fire hazard reduction in our woods. The latter project is mostly just trimming up the bases of some cedar trees and dropping a few dead, sickly-looking, or malformed fir tree saplings. I hauled all of those cuttings and a lot of wind-downed limbs to the slash piles. Fohe sake of wildlife habitat, I don’t like the “Parked-Out” look for timber stands near the house, but I also don’t want a lot of fire hazard. My trimming efforts are sort of a compromise…
I installed a big Powder Mountain arch tube gate at one end of our main garden. Previously, we just had a chainlink mesh dog run gate protecting that end of the garden, but our persistent bull kept battering it, to get in. There is now no way that he will be getting through the new heavy-duty tube gate.
Yesterday morning, while I was just finishing up digging the waterline trench to our orchard, I saw a flash of black run up the “tunnel” of the trench like black lightning. It turned out to be our female “M” cat using the trench as her own personal runway. The trench was just a bit wider than her shoulders. She probably ran it for fun, all the way up from the orchard to the side of the ranch house, a distance of about three hundred feet. It was funny, seeing that!
Now, Lily’s part of the report…Continue reading“Editors’ Prepping Progress”