This weekly column is a collection of short snippets: practical self-sufficiency items, how-tos, lessons learned, tips and tricks, and news items — both from readers and from SurvivalBlog’s editors. We may select some long e-mails for posting as separate letters.
—
We’ll start with this advice on growing peppers, from Sean B.:
“Although I have been saving seeds from my garden vegetables and fruits for more than five years now, this year I am harvesting the result of a rookie mistake I made last year. Not knowing that bell peppers and jalapeno peppers can cross-pollinate, my bell pepper seeds from last year are now growing a hybrid and my jalapeno seeds from last year have very poor germination and low survivability in the plants. My hybrid bell pepper/jalapeno plants are now growing what looks like a very large jalapeno, that is spicier than a bell pepper, but not spicy enough to be a “hot” pepper. They also don’t have the nice thick fleshy fruit wall we expect from a bell pepper. So, although the hybrid is edible, it is closer to a “worst of both worlds” combination.
Next year I will either have to try growing my saved two-year-old bell pepper and jalapeno seeds (collected before the cross-pollination), or buy new seeds. A reminder to the seed savers out there, if you are not doing it already, keep similar plants far enough apart to prevent cross-pollination. Also, each year, pack away some “just in case” seeds so if something goes south, you have some 2-year old seeds as a backup. Were this year’s harvest happening during a TEOTWAWKI scenario, these “worst of both worlds” peppers would be a very unpleasant surprise.”
o o o
While they scare you with “variants,” Congress wants to make dietary supplements prescription only. (Thanks to Jim L., for the link.)
o o o
Lily directed me to this, over at Gateway Pundit: Bill Gates Smiles When Suggesting the Nonvaccinated Should Be Withheld Their Social Security Benefits. JWR’s Comment: Most evil people have difficultly concealing the depth of their evil intent.
o o o
Reader L.H. recommended this, from The Freeholder blog: Creeping Big Brotherism.
Regular content contributor C.B. sent us this: Bear opens 8 car doors in Colorado town in 1 night: ‘Lock all your windows and doors’.
o o o
“Mr. X.” sent this link and comment:
Watch these A-10 attack aircraft make history by operating from a US highway for the first time.
His comment:
o o o
LT. Mike sent this letter:
o o o
And Lenny offered this pithy response to the same Bitcoin article:
“Won’t stop crypto. People already pay taxes on losses, gains. This will impact PoS and dev developers and validators. They’ll move OCONUS taking jobs and revenue elsewhere. The U.S. will be left behind “
o o o
Some practical advice, over at American Partisan: Weapon Tie Downs: Starving The Green Monster.
o o o
Brandon Smith: We Will Not Comply: A Campaign Against Medical Tyranny.
o o o
Reader J.B. wrote to ask:
JWR’s Reply:
o o o
Video: Why the US Army issued infantry more pistols.
o o o
Reader M.J. shared these observations:
“My father is from Lebanon; I’ve been there a few times. My last visit was in 2018. So articles on Lebanon hit home for me.
Eric Peters: How the New Mileage Tax Will Get Your Old Car Off the Road.
o o o
Trevor sent this:
“I write to you today to share some successes, some setbacks and also a video that I stumbled across that needs to be shared. First, the video: This is from a YouTube channel from Academy of Ideas/ After Skool. I cannot speak of what their other videos are like, but this one on how an entire population suffers from a mental psychosis is very informative and very well produced.
Secondly, I would like to share with you and the blog readers my progress report:
Originally, we had entered into a verbal agreement with an elderly friend to purchase her homestead, around 4 acres with house barn and established orchard, gardens, etc. She had recently been widowed and was not able to maintain the place. We offered to help her with mowing, clean up, planting and harvesting. This went well for the first season, but during the second, she decided that she wasn’t ready to move into town and wanted to stay on the place. We had and still have first right of refusal, but it looks like she will be there for quite some time to come. During that period, my paternal grandmother passed away at the ripe age of 94 and left what was left of the original family homestead to my father. My father, being in his mid-60s was not particularly interested in having to maintain 2 houses, 2 wells, and around 6 acres of land that was 3 hours away. He first offered the homestead to my uncle, but his wife is in the later stages of a neurological illness and he wasn’t interested in the extra work either. My uncle suggested that my dad pass the place onto me, as I am the only grandchild that ever showed any interest in it to begin with, while my other uncles, aunts, and cousins would have just as soon sold the land and foolishly spent the returns from it.
That brings us to the present. My wife and two teenage sons have been heroically waking at 4:30 on Saturday mornings so we can make the drive to the homestead, working during the morning hours while it is still cool, taking a break during the heat of the day and then returning home after dark, repeating this every 2 to 3 weeks. We have been able to get the yard under control around the houses and outbuildings. Fell several cedar trees that were on the verge of getting out of control, along with an errant cottonwood that had decided to grow dangerously close to the power lines. This was accomplished over 2 separate visits, as the first time, my chainsaw would not start. I had a sore arm for a week afterwards trying to get it to kick over. After a thorough inspection of the machine, it fired up on the first pull once back home. My only thought was God didn’t intend for me to cut down those trees at that time, and who am I to argue with that! We have plotted out an area to begin an orchard, and next weekend will be working and amending the soil in the planting locations with plenty of compost, manure and wood shavings to prepare those spots for tree planting in the spring. We constructed two raised beds at my shop, and will be transporting them as well, with the intention to plant and overwinter garlic in one.
I started 50 Ponderosa Pine tree seeds in our small Aerogarden. 35 of the 50 germinated and 29 of the 35 are now two to three inches tall. They will be pulled from the seed starting trays and transplanted into a tree seedling bed in my shop for the winter. I have 50 or so Ponderosa Pine seeds remaining, 150 Eastern and 150 Western White pine seeds as well. These will be transplanted to form a windbreak when they are mature enough to survive. We have been watching the pin oak and linden trees in our yard for when they drop their acorns and seed pods respectively, hoping to grow several descendants of them at the homestead as well.
We are continuing to store up for the inevitable rainy day. Ordered 500 pounds of hard red winter wheat and 1,000 pounds of feed corn to repackage into mylar and buckets to continue building our multi-year reserves.
We would like to get a building site prepared for a 3 car garage, and hopefully form up and pour the footings and slab for it before winter. Not sure if this is going to happen or not, but would be quite pleased if we were able to begin construction on the garage once the weather breaks in February or March. Having a solid floored place to work out of the weather, as well as a secure place to store tools and equipment, will make life a little easier, as currently, I have to haul our two mowers along with trimmers, chainsaw, ax, tools, gas, oil, etc, with me every time we go down.
Ultimately, my wife and I plan to move there permanently, but would like for our boys to finished their schooling in our current location. The rural school district we are in has bucked the system and refuses to teach or even acknowledge the Marxist propaganda and divisive teachings of CRT and identity politics, to the point that my boys are learning from the same textbooks that I used when I was in school 25 years ago. This has to be one of the few school districts that hasn’t bowed to the pressure of the national stage, and as long as they stay on this path, I am proud that our children are being taught by the same people that attend church with us.”
o o o
Reader Jim L. spotted this, over at Cool Tools: Hand Pumped Hydraulic Log Splitter.
o o o
G. Smith in Canada wrote:
o o o
And lastly: Semi-Auto Belt Feds – Useful Tools or Range Toys?
Please Send Us Your Snippets!
Please send your snippet items for potential posting to JWR. or AVL. You can do so either via e-mail or via our Contact form.