To be prepared for a crisis, every Prepper must establish goals and make 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 this column, in the Odds ‘n Sods Column, and in the Snippets column. Let’s keep busy and be ready!
Jim Reports:
I’m now fully into woodcutting mode. We burn 3 to 4 cords of wood each winter, so replenishing that is always a late spring/early summer task for us. I usually concentrate on the green wood first, and then dead-standing and dead-fallen trees. That way, the greenest wood ends up in the back end of the main woodshed and hence has the longest time to season, before it is burned. The green wood all comes non-marketable trees: Broken-crowns, cripples, leaners, and any that look diseased in any way. We only had two large fir trees blow down this past winter. The rest of what I’ll be cutting will mainly be small deadfallen tamaracks (western larch). It seems that nearly half of my woodcutting time is spent hauling limbs to slash piles, to burn months later. Oh well, it is all good exercise.
We have made some progress in building up our endurance, with alternating steep hikes and fairly level hikes, into the adjoining National Forest. Lily will have more about that.
To get ready for lambing season, I replaced the heavy netting on our homemade sheep “chair” or “cradle”. It looks like a traditional ladder, six feet tall, with a couple of rungs missing in the middle. In that 40″ gap is very loosely stretched a rectangle of heavy-duty fish netting. This, by the way, is the same netting that I use as the base layer for my ghillie capes and ponchos. Ewes can be flipped onto their backs into the cradle, and they naturally go semi-limp. Then we slide the top of the cradle handles up to lean on the wall of the barn at about a 35-degree angle, to begin crutching. The ewes only rarely struggle, when they are put in that position. We use that cradle for sheep shearing, crutching, and hoof trimming. This time, we just needed the cradle for a light crutching and hoof trims. Flystrike is not much of a risk in our region, but we don’t want to risk having a young lamb suckling on a dangling lock of wool, rather than a teat! Cructhing takes just a few minutes, even with handshears. The hoof trimming is even faster.