Our weekly Snippets column is a collection of short items: responses to posted articles, practical self-sufficiency items, how-tos, lessons learned, tips and tricks, and news items — both from readers and from SurvivalBlog’s editors. Note that we may select some long e-mails for posting as separate letters.
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Video: Abandoned Underground Bomb Shelter Sealed For 50 Years Under My Grandparent’s Garage! (You may want to skip forward to the 9:40 mark, for the actual opening.) JWR’s Comments: I saw and heard about a lot of similar shelters when I was growing up in Livermore, California. Many of them were around 200 square feet. Their popularity in our town was certainly because nuclear weapons were designed at the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory (LRL) — later renamed Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL). My father started there as a cyclotron technician and retired as a particle physics administrator. Many of our neighbors were physicists. When I saw the home shelters in the 1970s, many of them were still stocked, but sadly, many of them had been converted into rumpus rooms. In this video, it is amazing to see a shelter in Florida that is still “dry and tight” after 64 years! Now, he needs to restock it!
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And here is another one, built circa 1961: Albuquerque’s Cold War Blast Shelter. JWR’s Comments: I have an identical Bendix pen dosimeter, pen ratemeter & charger kit that I inherited from my father. (Mine is minus the nifty box, that was lost long ago.) Insert a fresh D-Cell battery, and it still works just fine...
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$2,000,000 Drive-In Bunker from Atlas.
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Reader L.E. wrote us:
“After having thrice failed to decently clean out my (closed top, tiny bunghole type) 55-gallon white plastic water barrels enough to avoid them almost instantly becoming fouled again with blue green algae once filled with clean water and colloidal silver, I gave up and had them cut in half and will make them into potato planters next spring. By the way, these type of drums/barrels are much harder to find, I think more folks are using them for this very purpose.
Possibly more can be obtained from car wash facilities as they use them to hold their soaps, or from factory food production facilities. Once cut in half by an obliging relative and the edges ground smooth [and after they are thoroughly pressure washed several times] they make excellent large planters. Because our weather is extremely hot in summer, the white plastic reflect more heat and doesn’t “cook” the plants roots the way the black planters would.”
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New bio-inspired medical glue seals bleeding wounds in seconds. (Note: Ignore the AI-generated illustration.)

