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Choosing The “Perfect” Retreat Location

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As most of you know, I’m in the process of choosing a new retreat location since my current one has grown less than ideal for surviving TEOTWAWKI.

Now to be honest, there is no perfect retreat location that will guarantee your survival, it all depends on what type and depth of the collapse. But I think by choosing the best location possible, you can indeed increase your chances.

After many hours of study, I’ve narrowed my choices down to four states – where I end up will depend on where I can find a suitable spot of land, at a price I can afford. I’ll give you an update when after making my final decision.

What I want to do today is get your opinion. I’ve made my choices based on my needs and I’ll list those in a few days, (I don’t want to influence your answers here) but I’m sure others are looking for a better location to survive TEOTWAWKI.

Where (in the U.S.) do you think is the best, and safest retreat location? If possible don’t just list the state in general, list the state, county and town. The more detailed the better.

Some areas to consider are:

  • Population
  • Crime Rate
  • Water Availability
  • Growing Season or Ability to Herd
  • Availability of Wild Game
  • Proximity to Known Nuclear Targets
  • Weather Extremes
  • Known Terrorist Targets
  • Gun Laws
  • Personal Freedom
  • Cost of Living
  • Land Price and Availability

After a few days, I’ll post the results on the blog for others to consider. Feel free to add a comment below to tells us more about your choice – I’m particularly interested to hear from those who have made the move and have personal experience with the areas they suggest. 
Question

Choosing The “Perfect” Retreat Location is a post from: The Survivalist Blog dot Net © M.D. Creekmore. All rights reserved. Content theft will be prosecuted. Please report abuse.

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This Year, US Public Debt Could Reach End Game

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This year, US public debt could reach end game – In 2008, the size of the debt was such that it was quite clear that it was not sustainable. Now we have a timeframe to measure the likelihood of insolvency for the US public debt, and it is this year. The reason for that is described in an article whose title needs no explanation: “The bankruptcy of the United States is now certain”

5 Doomsday Scenarios for the U.S. Economy – It’s been a brutal summer for the economy. The housing sector, like a balloon batted in the air one last time by the government credit, resumed its inevitable fall. Economic growth slowed to a lead-footed 1.6 percent, and job growth is even more anemic. Meanwhile, consumers are cranky, the trade gap is gaping.

Gold Could Double over Five Years – Gold has the potential to double within the next five years, and if governments stumble with their policies, it can go even higher, said Frank Holmes, CEO of US Global Investors.

Is “The Day After Tomorrow” Happening Today — Ice Age Imminent? – In the movie The Day After Tomorrow, the North Atlantic Current essentially shuts down, which prevents warm equatorial waters from reaching Northern Europe and Northeast United States. The result is an immediate climate shift into an Ice Age. For dramatic cinematic effect the Ice Age unfolds rapidly with a massive storm. Indeed, there is evidence that some Ice Ages in history did occur nearly overnight due to cataclysmic events like the oceans conveyor belts grinding to a halt — animals and cavemen were frozen nearly in an instant.

Sellers Cut Prices on 50% of Homes - Homeowners are slashing prices more drastically and more frequently, according to recently released data from ZipRealty. The average price reduction is now 7.1 percent of list price.

Food Stamps Went to Record 41.3 Million in June – The number of Americans receiving food stamps rose to a record 41.3 million in June as the jobless rate hovered near a 27-year high, the government said.

Global Food Shortage Fears As Russia Extends Wheat Ban – Vladimir Putin has announced Russia will not lift a ban on grain exports before next year’s harvest, extending the embargo for another year, sparking fears over a global food shortage.

US Departments of Labor and Treasury Schedule Hearing on Confiscation of Private Retirement Accounts – The US government is desperate to get its hands on private assets to help cover soaring budget deficits and debts, and this is simply the largest and easiest piggy bank that could be seized.

This Year, US Public Debt Could Reach End Game is a post from: The Survivalist Blog dot Net © M.D. Creekmore. All rights reserved. Content theft will be prosecuted. Please report abuse.

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Mama Didn’t Prep 2 and 3

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Mama Didn’t Prep 2 Non-Fiction Writing Contest  Submission by by by E. Krause. Part 1 can be found here.

Well the tidbits that mom handed out were small, but memorable.

We lived in a small country house on a Turkey Ranch that Dad worked at. And I remember that country kitchen. The man that dad worked for also had peach orchards. After the picking was done for the year he told us we could have all we wanted of what was left.

Well Mom and us girls tramped out with bags and boxes to pick up all that were good to be had. I know we did this several times. Remember too eating a lot of them and the sticky juice dripping off my chin.

Well Mama didn’t can pretty peachs like you see at the county fair. Mama peeled hers and put them in a pot with water and sugar and cooked them. She had clean hot canning jars washed rinsed and ready to go. (I remember her hands turning beet red from the hot water)

When she checked the jars she would run her finger over the rim to make sure there were no chips out of them.

When the peaches had gotten to the desired degree of readiness she started dipping them out with a coffee cup (I know for a fact it was one of those from Mother’s Oat’s) and would fill the jars up to where she knew they should be. Then she would take a hot wet clean rag and wipe off the rim. She looked at me and said ” you don’t want anything that can keep it from sealing on the rim of the jar”. Then she would put the boiled canning lid on and put the ring on. She would tighten the lid down to seat the lid then she would loosen ring about a quarter turn.

Then the fun of listening for the sound of the lids and the pop of them sealing in the goodness for later.

My mama didn’t can because she had to. She canned because she could and it was “just in case”.

So what does my mama have to do with prepping? Everything and nothing. No she didn’t prep.

But with her talking (even the horror stories of food going bad) about canning and her handing out the tidbits of knowledge about it, so that inner seed was there and I was to later try it for myself.

My late husband loved to garden. And one year we had a bumper crop of almost everything. So I decided I could can. Wow! Did I ever begin to admire my mama more. I went further than mama tho and dipped my clean jars in the boiling water of the water bath canner. No bugs in my stuff for sure. I canned tomato’s with hot peppers till I was dreaming of it. I have lost count of all that I canned.

But do remember that the best part of it was canning peach’s. It was fun because I could call mama to ask her how she did it. Well she said, ” depends on how big a pot you have and how heavy a syrup you want”. And she finished by telling me if I got them all in the jars and it seemed like I didn’t have enough juice to fill, I could add boiled water.

So, tickled, and with her instruction’s in my head I canned those peach’s.

Well they were done and we all waited for the pop of the seal. I was proud as punch. And you know what they were prettier than county fair peach’s.

No my mama didn’t prep so what does she have to do with it? Everything and nothing. She gave me that inner seed.

I think if all goes well I will take that “inner seed” and use it next canning season. Oh, hopefully for nothing serious but “just in case”.

Mama Didn’t Prep 3

I guess my mama always sewed. She learned things from her mama and being a child of the depression and then a wife in war times, guess the need was always there. And she learned on an ol’ treadle machine.

So what does mama’s sewing have to do with prepping? Everything and nothing. She gave me the “inner seed” and with this she let that seed grow.

She didn’t sew like a seamstress. She didn’t stop and press seams. She finger pressed the seams and pinned them open. She said, “a person would go naked if she stopped to do all that stuff.”

She most time’s had to make our clothe’s. Oh! We had store bought stuff. But the main part of our wardrobe was things she sewed up. I remember going to Sprouse Ritz with her and her looking at the flat folds of material. She would run her hand under the top layer and scratch it with her finger nail (checking the weave) then run her hand over it loving the feel of it under her hand. Four yards for a dollar back then and she had to make sure it was good stuff. She already had in mind what it was needed for and for who.

I loved coming home from school and there would be a new garment hanging up. I loved the smell of new clothes she made. I didn’t care who it was for I would bury my face in it and breathe in the smell of it.

I learned to sew more than a teeny bit at home. Mama didn’t stand over me giving second by second instruction’s. She didn’t have to. She had given me that “inner seed” and I was using it without knowing that she had been giving me it all those time’s she had to sew up something.

The best tid bit was her doing finger work on clothe’s. She was doing buttonholes by hand because her buttonholer on the ol’ Mercury sewing machine went kaput. So she told me how to do buttonholes by hand. I watched with great interest as she did some nifty work there. She knew how to do french seams but never felt the need to finish something off quite that well.

She didn’t do fancy work. But could have if she had the means to do so. She made good substantial clothes for us to wear. And as most mother’s know she knew how to mend.

Mending, such a statement.

I will go and check my sewing supplies. Make a list. May just have to pick up a few things.

So what does my mama sewing have to do with prepping? Everything and nothing. That “inner seed” will come in handy “just in case”.

Mama Didn’t Prep 2 and 3 is a post from: The Survivalist Blog dot Net © M.D. Creekmore. All rights reserved. Content theft will be prosecuted. Please report abuse.

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7 Ways to Prepare for an Earthquake

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7 Ways to Prepare for an Earthquake – Non-Fiction Writing Contest  Submission by Bank  

In 1994 a friend of mine was in the Northridge earthquake. She was awakened in the middle of the night by her apartment collapsing around her. She crawled out of the wreckage wearing nothing but her nightly. She met her neighbors in the street. Most were cut, like she was, from scrambling through broken glass on their way out of ruined buildings. Some were missing. Most were found. Several were dead. It was a long time until dawn.

Hearing her recount the story of surviving an earthquake in the middle of the night made me think about surviving an earthquake in the middle of the night. I’m a thousand miles away from California, but I live on a fault line too. My town has a track record. We’re overdue.
Could what happened to her happen to me? What would I do if it did?

There’s one important difference between California and my home Montana. When she was thrown out of bed, it was a warm night, even though it was January 17. Everyone was standing around barefoot in their pajamas. Nobody was cold. Nobody froze to death. But Montana has a nasty tendency to get very bitterly frigid on a fairly frequent basis, especially in January.

If I get bounced out of bed by an earthquake, it might be below zero outside. And people who experience sub-zero on a regular basis know how bad it would be to stand around in the street wearing nothing but pajamas with bleeding feet and shock coming on when it’s ten or twenty below zero.

She is my friend, and I still hear the fear in her voice when she remembers that night. It was harrowing and horrifying and hard. And I knew that if it happened to me on one of those nasty mid-winter nights, it could be a lot harder. It might be a very long time until dawn.

And that’s what made me think, ‘What can I do now that would make it less terrible then?’ I made a list. Then I checked off everything on that list. And if you’ve ever wondered, ‘What if….’ then maybe you should look at this list too.

If you check off everything on the list, then if you’re ever bounced out of bed on a sub-zero night, things might be easier for you.
Take a look. Here’s the list.

After seeing pictures of the wreckage of her apartment, I imagined trying to find my glasses in the middle of that mess. If my glasses fly off the nightstand, fall to the floor, and disappear down some dark and dusty crevice, then I am immediately handicapped. I am hopeless and helpless without my glasses.

So I bought a glasses case on a string, of the type worn around the neck. I tied it to my bedpost. Every night for a thousand nights when I’ve gone to bed, I’ve placed my glasses in that case. They’re never on the nightstand any more. I reach for them automatically in the morning. I always know where they are. They are always within arm’s reach. Nothing can shake them loose. That glasses case cost me a buck and it bought me a lot of peace of mind. If I’m going to be coping with a quake in the middle of the night, I don’t have to go into the chaos blind. For a dollar, I can always find my glasses. That is the first thing on the list.

Of course, the electricity went out in Northridge, and it was night, so it was dark. And if the same thing happened to me, I would want light immediately available. Normally I keep flashlights in the junk drawer in the kitchen, and in the basement on the tool bench, and in the car under the seat, but I didn’t want to be in a position where I had to find a flashlight in order to find a flashlight. I didn’t want to waste any time at all fumbling around in the darkness and confusion searching for it.

So I bought a flashlight with a wrist strap attached, and I gave it fresh batteries, and I hung it from my bedpost along with my glasses. Then I wondered, what would happen if the batteries went dead? No light, no more! So I bought a package of extra batteries and put them in the draw in my nightstand.

I also bought a hand-cranked wind-up flashlight/radio/siren/phone charger. I tuned the radio to the station that’s designated emergency broadcast channel in case of emergency. I hung it by its wrist strap from the bedpost as well. The flashlight cost me a buck, the batteries cost me two, the wind-up one cost me twenty. What will they be worth? Plenty.

That’s the second thing on the list. Got eyes, got light. Good to go. Where am I going? How am I going to get there?

My friend wanted to get into her car and go somewhere safe, but her car was in the garage and the garage was askew and the garage door would not open. She couldn’t even sit in her car because the doors were locked. The keys were in her purse and her purse was probably on the dining room table, or maybe the kitchen counter, and both places were buried under so many splinters.

There was a magnetic key under the bumper but it was dark and she didn’t have a light. She was barefoot and the garage windows had shattered all over the ground. She thought she had a flashlight, but it was in the locked car. (Later it turned out the batteries were dead anyway.) So she just stood around in the street and waited for someone to help her to the hospital.

I don’t want to stand around and wait for someone to show up to help me. If it’s ten below zero, waiting around isn’t an option.
So I had a set of spare car keys made up. I added copies of keys of all the places most important to me—the places I’ll want to check first after a disaster, like my office, and my husband’s business.

I clipped the key ring to the wristband of the flashlight hanging on my bedpost. So now, if I’m bleeding and frightened and cold, I can sit in my car and have heat and light and a radio. I’m glad I don’t have a garage, because it will never collapse, trapping my car. I might be able to get to the hospital without waiting for help. It cost me four dollars to have the keys copied. Keys are third on the list.
 
If these three things are all you ever do, you will be so much better off when that night arrives than if you never looked at this list at all.
But if you agree that there are many things you can do now that will help you later, then read the rest of the list.

When my friend jumped out of bed, she did it instinctively, without thinking, and without looking before she leapt. She discovered the hard way that every framed family photo had fallen off her dresser top. Every picture on the wall fell. Every window in her apartment shattered. Every mirror broke. The floor was covered with shards of glass.

Her injuries came not from the quake, but from cutting her feet while making her way out of the wreckage. In fact, 80% of the injuries treated in area hospitals were for cuts from the knees down.

So I took an old pair of sturdy tennis shoes that I don’t wear any more and I put them underneath my bed.  In one shoe I stuffed a pair of socks, and in the other shoe I stuffed a clean pair of underwear (because if I need ‘em, I’ll be glad they’re there) and also a big bandana. If I’m going to be doing any crying or bleeding or screaming or throwing up, a hanky could come in handy.

To make sure that shards of glass didn’t fall into the shoes, I stuffed them into an old pillowcase. Then, thinking about the sub-zero scenario, I added a few more things to that pillowcase: a pair of jeans (with their pockets stuffed with useful items), a warm shirt, a sweatshirt, a hat, and sturdy leather gloves.

There was still room left in the pillowcase and plenty of space under the bed, so I added a couple of bottles of water – again, very useful if crying, bleeding, screaming, and throwing up is happening. In Northridge, it was a long time before water service was restored. In the pockets of the jeans I placed another hanky, a packet of tissues, some hair ties because I hate having my long hair in my face, a chapstick just for comfort, a whistle because it’s so much easier than shouting, and a few mints to suck on just in case there’s throwing up going on.

I added another copy of my car key just in case, and I tucked some folding money in the pockets too because the ATMs and credit card machines aren’t going to work as long as the electricity is down. I might need to buy something, and who knows where my purse will be or how much money I’ll have on hand. If I depended on medication, I would stick extra meds in the pocket too.

I stuffed all that into a pink pillowcase, and then I made up an identical kit for my husband and packed it in a blue pillowcase. In my mind’s eye, I rehearsed the scene a few times in which I practiced NOT jumping out of bed, but instead reaching under the bed for the emergency pillow case first. This way I can at least put on shoes to get out of the house, and have clothes to put on while standing around in the street.

Clothing is fourth on the list.

In Northridge, as in most earthquakes, the shaking broke natural gas lines, water pipes, and electrical lines. Water heaters tipped over, and gas and water poured into basements. Explosions and fires popped up all over. The overwhelmed fire department couldn’t put out the fires because the water mains were broken.

So under my bed went two fire extinguishers – one for my husband, one for me – which cost me $10 each. I learned how to shut off the water, electricity, and natural gas to my home. Shutting off the natural gas requires a wrench, so I put a wrench under my bed, and for good measure I tied another wrench to the gas valve.

The fire extinguisher and wrench may well end up saving my house from complete destruction while others burn down around me. In my imagination, I rehearsed putting on my shoes, grabbing the flashlight, and running outside to turn the utilities off before the house blows up.

Then I even spoke with my neighbors and found out where they utilities are located, so if they are trapped in their house, or if they can’t find their glasses or their shoes or a flashlight or a wrench, I can turn their gas lines off before their homes blow up. This was partly altruistic and partly selfish, because if their houses burn down, the fire department isn’t going to be able to do anything about it – and if their houses burn, my house may well burn down too.

The Fire Prevention Kit is fifth on the list.

Next I assembled an emergency tool kit with a variety of miscellaneous items that might come in handy. Communications will be difficult or non-existent, so to hedge my bets I added a telephone that does not require electricity but can be plugged directly into the phone jack. I also added a set of walkie-talkies, along with spare batteries for them.

One for my husband, one for me. I put in a battery operated AM/FM radio that clips to my belt. I found out where to tune it for emergency broadcast information and wrote that in magic marker on the radio itself and marked it on the dial. I stuck in a really good Swiss Army knife, along with pliers and a hammer in case I have to help pull people out of wreckage through shattered windows.

I also included some extra flashlights and more batteries because I expect working flashlights will be in short supply. This tool kit went into a draw-string bag under my bed next to the pillowcases. The tool kit and all its contents are the sixth item.

Then I assembled a 72-hour kit using the guidelines at www.Ready.gov. I collected ready-to-eat food, bottled water, a first aid kit, toilet paper, pet food and other items, packing it into a Rubbermaid tub with a locking lid that I stored in my garden shed in case the entire house collapses.

If you have made it to this seventh item on the list, you will be in better shape than about 99% of your friends and neighbors.
At this point I became very interested in learning more about emergency preparedness, so I took emergency response classes, joined the Red Cross, studied FEMA procedures, and teamed up with other people in my community interested in disaster preparedness.

I expanded my emergency kit to include everything I might possibly need: dust masks, goggles, knee pads, elbow pads, and hard hats with headlamps; tents and tarps; floodlights, a generator, Coleman lanterns, and emergency stoves and heaters; bandages and soup; duct tape, plastic sheeting, and spare lumber for covering shattered windows; down coats and sleeping bags; crow bars and car jacks and plenty more fire extinguishers. I don’t expect people to go to such lengths as I did, but if they did – it would sure make things easier for everyone when that day arrives.

FEMA statistics show that the average American will suffer three disasters over the course of a typical lifespan, with ‘disaster’ defined as any event that disrupts an entire community simultaneously. When it comes to disasters, there are only two variables, one of which we can control, and the other of which we cannot: There will either be a disaster or there won’t; and we can either be prepared for a disaster, or not. 

When combining these two variables, there are four potential outcomes:

  • There will be no disaster and I will NOT be prepared. (neutral outcome)
  • There will be no disaster and I WILL be prepared (neutral outcome)
  • There WILL be a disaster and I will NOT be prepared (negative outcome)
  • There WILL be a disaster and I WILL be prepared (positive outcome)

We have two choices. We can either wait around for someone to come help us, or we can be prepared to help ourselves. The failure to consciously choose option #2 means choosing option #1 by default. The post-disaster misery index of both an individual and the community as a whole correlates exactly to the proportion of people who choose option #2.

What’s your choice? Choose wisely.

7 Ways to Prepare for an Earthquake is a post from: The Survivalist Blog dot Net © M.D. Creekmore. All rights reserved. Content theft will be prosecuted. Please report abuse.

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Advertising Space Available

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We currently have one space available directly underneath the Ready Made Resources banner in the left sidebar. If you are interested in advertising in this position please contact me for rates and information.

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Global Collapse of the Fiat Money System

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Collapse-Proof Gardens for the Coming Depression – Most people today are not prepared to outlast a long-term economic disaster, even though in February 2010 Ben Bernanke of the Federal Reserve Board went on record stating that the current situation is worse than the Great Depression of the 1920s. Assuming that America is in the beginning stages of a second Great Depression, what steps can be taken now to prepare and create a measure of resiliency, especially when it comes to food?

Shut Down Banks If They Threaten System – Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke told a panel investigating the financial crisis that regulators must be ready to shutter the largest institutions if they threaten to bring down the financial system.

Global Collapse of the Fiat Money System - It is my estimation that they have to QE up to US$20 trillion at the minimum. The FED and no central banker would dare “create such an amount of money out of thin air” without arousing the suspicions and or panic of sovereign creditors, investors and depositors. It is as good as declaring officially that all the banks are BANKRUPT.

The U.S. Is Suffering a Japanese-Style Depression - Presciently bearish David Rosenberg, the chief economist and strategist at Gluskin Sheff who called the global meltdown back when he was still at Merrill Lynch, isn’t budging from his view that the U.S. is in a depression — and a prolonged, Japanese-style one at that.

The U.S. Path to Collapse – Rising gold and silver prices indicate that the U.S. is headed for an explosion in budget deficits that will rise far beyond what it can pay for through borrowing. Leading Chinese economists are now calling Japanese debt less risky than U.S. debt and with the Japanese savings rate in decline, the U.S. will soon have nobody left to borrow from.

Get Ready for High Unemployment and Unrelenting Inflation – Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke loses sleep over the possibility that the United States may suffer a repeat of the 1930s’ Great Depression. Inflation hawks and opponents of President Barack Obama’s Keynesian “stimulus” warn continually of a possible repeat of the 1970s’ stagflation. Yet recent data is beginning to suggest a more unpleasant possibility still: that the United States could suffer both traumas simultaneously – a prolonged period of pathologically high unemployment combined with vicious and unrelenting inflation.

U.S. Government Prepares for ‘Crisis’ - Given that at least some elements of the U.S. government have known all along that the U.S. economy was not recovering and could not recover, why is it that only now are we hearing of tentative, new plans of more “life support” for the dying U.S. economy?

Global Collapse of the Fiat Money System is a post from: The Survivalist Blog dot Net © M.D. Creekmore. All rights reserved. Content theft will be prosecuted. Please report abuse.

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Department of Justice Lists Survivalists, Constitutionalists as Criminal Extremists

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Department of Justice Lists Survivalists, Constitutionalists as Criminal Extremists – A recent Department of Justice guide for investigators of criminal and extremist groups lists “constitutionalists” and “survivalists” alongside organizations like Al-Qaeda and the Aryan Brotherhood.

Terrorist Training Camps in the United States? – For nearly 30 years, a violent group with established roots in both the United States and Pakistan has been committing numerous crimes here in America, consisting of murder, bombings, robberies – all for the purpose of “purifying” Islam through violence. Thanks to Kim for the link.

Gov’t can’t shut down terrorist training camps in U.S. – A non-profit Christian organization dedicated to protecting the traditions of the American family and defending the nation against radical Islam has released a documentary that exposes 35 terrorist training compounds being operated on American soil. Thanks to Kim for the link.

Obama’s New Tax On…Rainwater – Would President Obama’s Environmental Protection Agency really force Americans to pay a tax on “rainwater runoff” from homes and small businesses? You bet they would. In fact, the EPA, under radical environmentalist Lisa Jackson, is proposing regulations to do just that.

Homelessness Up 50% In Brooklyn – If you think you’ve been seeing more people sleep on city streets, statistics back up the perception. The homeless population living on New York City streets has gone up 50 percent in the past year, according to city statistics reported by the HellsKitchenLife.com blog.

Economic Gurus: Economic Armageddon Is Here - The worst nightmare forecast by economic specialists over the previous years has come true: new research by economic gurus in the United States of America has revealed a bleak scenario: the United States’ economy is in a state of depression. Yes, it is the Double Dip, a roller-coaster ride to economic catastrophe and it has arrived. To come: massive debt default, the failure of entire nations and widespread starvation in the western world.

Exploding Blog! – Blowing stuff up daily, interesting.

Government snooping “rights” expand. Again - Government agents can sneak onto your property in the middle of the night, put a GPS device on the bottom of your car and keep track of everywhere you go.

Department of Justice Lists Survivalists, Constitutionalists as Criminal Extremists is a post from: The Survivalist Blog dot Net © M.D. Creekmore. All rights reserved. Content theft will be prosecuted. Please report abuse.

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Bicycling Through an Apocalyptic Landscape

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Bicycling post-collapse thru an apocalyptic landscape – Non-Fiction Writing Contest Submission by J. G. 

Survival Bike

Before

 

Sometimes when I have a friend over to visit and they see my back room , they ask: “Why do you have so many bikes?” and “wow! where do you find those old bikes?” 

Well, I believe in having a few spares. Each one is similar, but with subtle differences; some have hand brakes, most do not. A few have luggage racks, panniers, baskets. Some are un-cluttered by those items. I prefer Schwinns, but I take whatever I can get! 

I have made it a mission to go to flea markets and yard sales to bring home at least 2 or 3 old bikes each year. I disassemble, strip off old ugly paint and rust then repaint them myself. Two complete coats of Krylon Primer Grey first, then the color, usually Olive Drab. 

What I look for in an old bicycle is simplicity. I have a couple of “mountain” bikes, but I prefer the old bikes with no gear shift or hand brakes.These are in my opinion much simpler to maintain. Fewer parts to break. I keep a can of WD-40 and several wire brushes on hand to fight corrosion. 

All of my bikes ,with the exception of the mountain bikes, are at least 30 years old or more and they will rust. Always opt for wide tires, do not expect smooth, level streets on a journey. Wide tires are better for off-road and trails. 

One thing I recommend doing is obtaining sets of the “No-More-Flats” tires, these are a solid core tube that goes inside the tire instead of the inner tube. No air required, and will not go flat.They are tricky to install. I have a bike shop here in town that can do this for me for $5 a tire. 

For working on my bikes I keep a tool box with only bike tools, including a set of cone wrenches. These can be found on Ebay for under $70, look for a brand called “Park City”. Valve stem kits. Bags of assorted small hardware. 

Bicycles have a long history among the militaries of the world: The US Army conducted experiments from the 1890’s thru the 1920’s - 

Survivalist Bike

After

 

conducting a series of rides from Chicago to the Oregon coast, following the Oregon trail in places. Self-sufficient, riding over 1500 miles in 30 days. 

By the 1920’s the Army began to have cheap reliable trucks, plentiful cheap gasoline and lots of new roads. By the time of the Louisiana manuevers the need for bike infantry pretty much went by the wayside. For awhile. 

In the closing days of WWII the Germans began preparing for anticipated shortages of petrol. Desiring to divert petrol away from more mundane needs such as for transport of troops and using that fuel for their Panzers, the Radfahren initiative established 80 companies of bicycle infantry. 

In the Asian theatre, the Japanese used bikes extensively during the invasion of China and Burma. Cheap and easy transportation of troops over hundreds of miles and no fuel required. The Bicycle Infantry could cover many more miles than on foot and carry considerable more gear. 

The British Airborne troops used a folding bike , made by the Birmingham Small Arms company to some success. They found a number of benefits for using bicycles greater range, mobility and greater carry capacity.From the time that bicycles were invented and mass-produced ,nearly every army of every nation have experimented with or fielded the bicycle infantry and relished the same benefits. 

Around the year 2000 the last of the world’s bike infantry regiments were phased out in Switzerland. There are today a number of Swiss Army Surplus bikes available if you don’t mind spending and exorbitant fee. I’d like to have one , but for over $1500 price tag for ONE , I could easily put 20 old Schwinns on the road . 

Today the US military is conducting experiments using off-road mountain bikes and the British military is researching folding bikes for their airborne troops once again.
 
Why do I collect bikes? Same reasons all those military planners used bikes: I foresee a coming shortage of PETROL, a need to be able to travel faster than I could on foot and the ability to carry an extra 50 lbs or more gear. With enough spare bikes perhaps I could band together with some of my fellow survivors and create a bicycle rifle regiment. 

Or if worse comes to worse, I suppose that I could maybe trade a bike or two for supplies. Eventually I might need to Bug Out and leave the extra stuff behind. When travelling by bike, I travel mostly in either the very early morning or late evening hours. Fewer people out and about and thus less likely to have any “interactions”. 

I prefer anonymity and to not draw any unwanted attention to myself when travelling thru new and unknown areas that I have not scouted beforehand. To travel without a trace and to not linger unnecessarily is the most desirable goal. Try to stay on the move until you get to your shelter or enclave. 

Avoid choke points such as bridges, tunnels. Avoid population centers. I’d say the best thing one could do is simply be aware of your surroundings when entering and travelling through a new area. That and knowing the route to your shelter and several alternate routes, even paths you might not normally consider. 

If I start to find the path congested by people or “civilization”, I will move parallel to my path for a time, attempting to move around on a flank. Go for the high ground if possible. Cross open terrain with care – there may be eyes watching you. 

If the need to explore a building or structure should arise of necessity,when approaching a structure always scout it out from a distance over time, dismount and then approach on foot along a straight-line off a corner. Avoid line of sight to windows and doorways. 

A small telescoping inspection mirror is very useful when observing around corners or up over a window ledge. You can peer indirectly around a corner without exposing yourself. 

The mobility of a bike in a land with no petrol gives you a speed advantage over people on foot. If you go in and scavenge, you may encounter hostiles who would try to stop you . The bike could offer a fast getaway. Scavenge quick and if required, “shoot and scoot” and be on your way. 

You should not allow morales or personal scruples deter you from your goal: To survive. I will do everything I can to survive, even at the expense of the lesser prepared. I feel zero qualms about it. After e.o.t.w.a.w.k.i. or any sort of large-scale social-economic collapse, the way I look at it is that there will be too many people to support. So maybe, I’ll thin the herd a bit more all by myself. Take their food and move along. 

(M.D. Creekmore adds – I do not support this idea of killing and stealing – that is why we prepare, to avoid this sort of thing. I don’t think anyone relying on this tactic will survive very long.) 

Bicycle Military

Bicycle Infantry ( RadhFahr Kompanies) By June '44

 

Any camp I set up during my journey would be far enough off the road or trail that I would not be found easily. If I bivouac for any length of time, I setup TWO camps. The first is a larger campsite with a brightly colored dome tent and a fire pit. This is actually a FAKE campsite, in plain sight . 

My actual camp is not easily visible. Concealed and obscured by terrain if possible, at least a quarter-mile further away. Not an elaborate campsite, something that could be setup and taken down quickly. 

One rule I live by is: no camp fire during the day. Only at night. And I gather up the ashes and trash and dump it in the firepit at my fake campsite. After e.o.t.w.a.w.k.i. always travel armed. 

My choice of armaments are as follows: 

  • A Sigma 9mm with 16 round mags . And 250 rounds ammo.
  • An 8mm Mauser Rifle and 100 rounds ammo.
  • A couple of folding blade lock knives on my belt.
  • The pistol is carried in a concealed holster at my lower back.
  • I have other weapons, these are just my minimum “must carry” choices.
  • Also will carry a small spotter scope, an optical range finder and a small set of binoculars, items that I can use to observe from a distance.
  • Eventually I will add some night vision gear to this.

Have other thoughts or suggestions please share with us in the comments below…

Bicycling Through an Apocalyptic Landscape is a post from: The Survivalist Blog dot Net © M.D. Creekmore. All rights reserved. Content theft will be prosecuted. Please report abuse.

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Paladin Press 40% off

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Paladin Press is having their first ever (and probably last) 40% off sale to celebrate their 40th anniversary. This is huge, check out their list books and DVD’s covering everything from survival and combat shooting to new ID. Be sure to use the promo code Paladin40 at check-out – sale ends September 10 2010.

Paladin Press 40% off is a post from: The Survivalist Blog dot Net © M.D. Creekmore. All rights reserved. Content theft will be prosecuted. Please report abuse.

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The Best Crops for a Survivalist’s Garden

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by Jason from The Self Sufficient Gardener

It’s generally considered blasphemy these days to be a survivalist and not garden. Food is the most important survival consideration next to water for the survival minded. It makes sense to be at least somewhat self-reliant when it comes to food production for you and your family. In other words if you don’t garden you should really consider starting.

For those of us who do mix gardening and prepping/survivalism the perennial question waits: What to grow?

Gardening prior to SHTF can be a challenge and doing so afterward will be even more of one. Therefore I’ve devised a rating system for choosing the best vegetables for my garden if I have to rely upon it in an emergency situation.

On a rating scale of 1-5, I rate the following attributes for each crop.

*Reliability—How susceptible is the plant to disease and pests. Can I count on production?

*Season—How often can the crop be grown? Does it take long to produce or can multiple crops be grown in one year.

*Nutritional Value—Not only calorie count but also vitamins and minerals. ATSHTF this will be critical!

*Sustainability—Can the crop be propagated year after year? We won’t know how long a disaster will last in some cases.

*Storage—Feast or famine? Eating great for a week won’t sustain a family. How easy is the crop to store long term?

*Yield—No sense growing things that won’t produce.

*Stealth—If TSHTF, how vulnerable will my garden become?

Of course, everyone’s rating scale will be different. You can even weigh some things heavier than others or disregard certain ones. The important thing is that you think about this beforehand and put it to use.

As an example I will rate three of my go-to crops if I had to survive on garden produce.

Beets

Reliability—4

Almost no pests eat beets. They are slightly temperature sensitive for germination and initial growth so planting at the right time is crucial.

Season—3

Can be started early and grown late. Germination as I mentioned above is the critical phase.

Nutritional Value—4

High in carbs/sugar. The green tops can be cut and come again harvested and the root of course is very nutritious.

Sustainability—2

Does not produce seeds until it over winters. This makes seed saving difficult.

Storage—4

Excellent capabilities. Beets will store great in a root cellar. They can be stored in a small box full of sand for a long time.

Yield—3

The greens and the root can be eaten as I mentioned.

Stealth—4

Other than the burgundy color, beets and inconspicuous laying low to the ground.

Tally the numbers and I get 24 for beets—not bad.

Potatoes

Reliability—2

Several pests like potatoes and we can’t forget about the blight that caused the great famine in Ireland.

Season—2

Potatoes grow well in cold weather but the require a long growing season.

Nutritional Value—5

This veggie is off the charts in nutritional terms.

Sustainability—3

The tubers can be divided or even just a small chunk can be used to grow another plant.

Storage—5

Outstanding storage life. Kept in a root cellar these will last quite a while.

Yield—5

Use a tire or tower setup and one plant can produce ungodly amounts.

Stealth—3

Potatoes don’t really have an obvious appearance for non-gardeners but they do get rather big in some cases.

So potatoes score high as well with a 25.

Amaranth

Reliability—4

Almost no pests or diseases to speak of affect amaranth.

Season—2

Growing season is somewhat long and limited to warmer times.

Nutritional Value—4

Very high in many vitamins, minerals and amino acids. Both the greens and the grains can be eaten.

Sustainability—5

Produces tons of seeds!

Storage—5

Though the greens do not store well at all, the grains will store almost indefinitely once dry.

Yield—4

Outstanding.

Stealth—1

Tall with bright flowers. The only saving grace is that most people have never seen amaranth.

Amaranth scores a 25.

Just for example I’ll give you a crop that most gardeners love but I consider a poor choice for survival gardens.

Tomatoes

Reliability—2

Cutworms are a problem. Disease is the real killer here. Early and late blights combined with blossom end rot leave tomato harvests in doubt.

Season—2

Only grows in warmer weather and takes a while to produce.

Nutritional Value—4

Good nutritional profile.

Sustainability—3

The seeds are easy to harvest and store and are generally reliable but only if the plant makes it to production.

Storage—3

Tomatoes are horrible for storage. The best bet is to harvest green and let them ripen on their own.

Yield—4

Good yields.

Stealth—1

Everyone knows what a tomato plant looks like and bright red fruit do little to disguise it.

Tomatoes score a 19.

I hope this rating systems has at least caused you to look at garden crops in a different way. Its good to know how to grow a variety of things but its also good to know which we can rely on when it comes down to it. 

Saving Seeds 

The truly self-sufficient gardener saves his/her seeds for replanting during the next season.  In most cases this is a simple task that will reduce costs of the garden to almost nothing.  The bottom line is that you can spend the labor yourself or pay someone else to do it.  If you pay someone else, expect to incur shipping costs.  Worse yet, you may not get what you’ve paid for.  F1 hybrid tomato seeds look exactly the same as Roma VF seeds to most if not all gardeners.  One year, eight Roma tomato plants I started from purchased seed turned out to not be Roma tomatoes.   

Saving seeds from hybrid plantings can be done for some plants.  However, be aware that hybrid seeds may be either sterile or the resulting offspring will not produce true to form. 

Here I will address saving techniques for some common garden plants.

Tomatoes

 

  1. Scoop or squeeze the seed and jelly from a fully ripe tomato out into a container.  This can almost always be done in a way that saves the rest of the fruit for consumption.
  2. Add water to bring the mixture to twice the starting volume.
  3. Let the mixture ferment for 2-3 days in a warm place.
  4. Add water to loosen the debris.  The seeds will settle quicker than the debris.  Anything floating should be discarded.  This includes non-viable seeds that float.  Keep adding water and pouring off the debris until what remains is almost strictly seeds and water.
  5. Pour the seeds onto a paper towel or screen and let them drain.  Place the seeds in a warm place to dry for a few days.

Peas/Beans/Okra

 

  1. Let the pods dry on the plant until you can shake the pods and hear the seeds rattle.  Monitor closely as the pods will open and spill the contents.
  2. Remove the pod carefully.
  3. Open and remove all seeds.

Peppers

 

  1. Open the fully ripe pepper carefully. 
  2. Gently scrape the seeds and collect on a paper towel.
  3. Let dry.

Lettuce

 

  1. Let the lettuce plant bolt and form the stem and dandelion like flower head.
  2. Once the head is somewhat dry, remove it and place it into a plastic bag or other container. 
  3. Shake the head to remove the seeds. 
  4. Let the seeds dry for a few days.

Squash/Pumpkin

 

  1. Scoop out seeds.
  2. Let dry.

Carrots/Beets/Onion

 

  1. These plants must be left in the ground over the winter to produce seeds the second year.
  2. Cover the plants with mulch and/or leaves.
  3. Uncover in the spring when you would replant the variety.
  4. The plants will form seed heads. Remove the heads when the seeds are somewhat dry. 
  5. Shake the heads to remove the seeds.

 
 

Longevity 

Seeds from onions, corn, parsnip and peppers should be used within a year or two. 

Seeds from beans, carrots, broccoli, asparagus, celery, leeks, spinach or peas are viable for up to about 3 years. 

Seeds from cucumbers, lettuce, eggplant, radish, chard, cabbage, beets, watermelon, tomato, squash and pumpkin are viable for about 4-5 years.

The Best Crops for a Survivalist’s Garden is a post from: The Survivalist Blog dot Net © M.D. Creekmore. All rights reserved. Content theft will be prosecuted. Please report abuse.

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