Prepping

   / Prepping
  • Thread Starter
#31  
Wow lots of good info, let me try to respond to all of it;

I have seen that Bison pump before, and seems like the ideal solution to getting water from my well, but it's got a $1,000 price tag... so that's out.

I'm not a heavy drinker... but beer doesn't last in my house. LOL We started making wine so we could lower our liquor bill, but we just ended up drinking more. LOL My good neighbor makes beer and we trade whenever a batch is up. Yeah, keeping a couple bottles of cheap wiskey & rum wouldn't hurt.

I was going to go to the gun shop with an open mind, but the Ruger 10/22 is what I kind of had my heart set on. At first I thought a 12 pump (Mossberg 500, or Remington 870) would be my first... but the 22 makes more sence.

As far as the woodstove; Yeah, idealy I'd set it up permanent and certifyed... but their is no suitable place in the house for it. Option #2 would be to replace the propane stove with a wood insert but that's many thousands of bucks... so no. Either would have been great to think of in the design phase of my house, but here we are. If that thimble is $350, well so be it. I may not get it tomorrow, but I'll save a couple bucks here and there and eventually get it.
 
   / Prepping #33  
What AlanB says.

The Survival Podcast & Forum is a PhD in prepping and survival for urban, rural and everyone in between.

At first I was put off by the "Survival" bit, having associated the word with the stereotypical, camo-clad whackjobs one reads about but nothing could be further from the case. Jack can be a bit strident when he gets on a rant, but his mind is razor-sharp with a gift for sifting through the BS we're fed by the main stream media. Also, TSP forum has a ZERO TOLERANCE policy for race or religion bashing. It is welcoming to all and the odd White Supremacist who wanders in gets banned before they know what's hit them.

PERMACULTURE

At risk of sounding like a whackjob myself, I believe it can save the World, no chit. Hit up YouTube for anything Geoff Lawton and take a look.
 
   / Prepping #34  
You guys have me wondering about medicines. My girlfriend is a Nurse and we have a drawer full of stuff here, but she's a city girl just learning about the outdoors and might not be thinking of what we should have here. Is there a book that you would recommend?

Eddie
Start with these

"American Medical Association Handbook of First Aid and Emergency Care"
"Where There Is No Doctor" by David Werner
"The Survival Medicine Handbook: A Guide for When Help is Not on the Way" by Joseph Alton ($pendy but better than the "Dr Bones" book Alton wrote)
 
   / Prepping #35  
I had the opportunity, in my younger days, to spend a winter in Salt Lake City. Most of the people I met and/or worked with were LDS (Mormon). I soon learned that the 3 month food supply regimen was a common thing amongst them. Don't know if it was a prerequisite or not, but they all practiced it. I would suggest if you're really interested in a 3 month survival thing, that you find a LDS member in your area, and politely ask him to explain what he does. I think you'll be quite pleased with the results. (I am not LDS, or pushing any religion, just an interesting experience).

TBN has these planning for worst case situations discussions a few times a year. After one TBN discussion, I started researching how to store food for long periods of time. One item that would be cheap and stores well in 5 gallon buckets is whole grain. Whole grain is also kinda cheap. BUT, with whole grain you need a grinder. Well, as always seems to be the case, there are cheap grinders and what you really want. :) A powered grinder is not useful in the situation we are discussing so one needs a manual grinder. Some of the grinders I found could be connected to motors via belts if you wanted to do so but the grinders were not cheap.

During the cool season I make whole GRAIN bread. It is amazing to us how filling whole GRAIN bread is compared to that white bread stuff. We will eat a bowl of soup, usually a bean soup, and have a slice or two of whole GRAIN bread and be completely full. No wonder people used to live off of this real bread.

Anyway, when I was looking at grinders and suppliers of grain, I found a company in NC bulk ordered grain and would drive it basically along I40 dropping off the load here and there. They might have been Mormons but I can't remember at this point. I do remember reading that the Mormons have stores selling products for long term storage and it seemed like there was one in the Greensboro or maybe Winston-Salem area of NC. I thought the Mormons are supposed to keep supplies for one or two years which is why they have the stores.

After one of the TBN conversations a few years ago, I started looking at supplies and was shocked to see that Amazon is selling food and containers to store food for long periods of time. Sportsmans Guide/Cheaper than Dirt has been selling more expensive freeze dried/MRE type of supplies in 1, 3, 6, 9, and 12 month quantities for years. There is a big enough demand out there for these materials for these retail outlets to serve and it has been going on for quite a few years at this point.

Later,
Dan
 
   / Prepping #36  
Start with these

"American Medical Association Handbook of First Aid and Emergency Care"
"Where There Is No Doctor" by David Werner
"The Survival Medicine Handbook: A Guide for When Help is Not on the Way" by Joseph Alton ($pendy but better than the "Dr Bones" book Alton wrote)

I also have some Outdoor survival books I have read over the years as well as first aid books. Books/documents on canning and food saving are important too. Most of the Foxfire books, especially the early books that talk about preserving meat and making soap are super important. Many pre industrial life skills that were in my great grandparent generation are all but lost. Foxfire Complete Collection Books 1 Through 12: George P. Reynolds, Eliot Wigginton, Foxfire Fund: Amazon.com: Books

I was at the wife's family farm yesterday and noticed some "old" books on the book shelves so I pulled one down and started reading. I want those books even though they were from the 1950s. One was on animal diseases and treatment which was really interesting. The other were on plants, crops, seeds and pest management. Old books but if you don't have access to the latest and greatest treatments.... Some of these books might be in the public domain and real cheap to buy. The animal book was published by the US government.

Later,
Dan
 
   / Prepping #38  
Wow lots of good info, let me try to respond to all of it;

I have seen that Bison pump before, and seems like the ideal solution to getting water from my well, but it's got a $1,000 price tag... so that's out.

I'm not a heavy drinker... but beer doesn't last in my house. LOL We started making wine so we could lower our liquor bill, but we just ended up drinking more. LOL My good neighbor makes beer and we trade whenever a batch is up. Yeah, keeping a couple bottles of cheap wiskey & rum wouldn't hurt.

I was going to go to the gun shop with an open mind, but the Ruger 10/22 is what I kind of had my heart set on. At first I thought a 12 pump (Mossberg 500, or Remington 870) would be my first... but the 22 makes more sence.

As far as the woodstove; Yeah, idealy I'd set it up permanent and certifyed... but their is no suitable place in the house for it. Option #2 would be to replace the propane stove with a wood insert but that's many thousands of bucks... so no. Either would have been great to think of in the design phase of my house, but here we are. If that thimble is $350, well so be it. I may not get it tomorrow, but I'll save a couple bucks here and there and eventually get it.

Yeah, that Bison sure is expensive. I want it bad but $1,000 is a bit much. Like the grinder I want, the price is high now, but the pump and grinder would be worth their weight in gold, if the SHTF. Yet, I still do not have them. :rolleyes:

Being able to make beer or wine is a great skill. If one knows how to make beer, it is only a short step to distillation, and people will barter for hard stuff. :laughing:

I would recommend either one of the 12 gauge shotguns. A shotgun is really the best, single, all around useful firearm. You can take small game or large game, two or four legged, with a shotgun. And shotguns are cheap and simple. There is a long running TBN discussion about the increased price and shortages of 22LR ammo in the US. If you have similar increased prices in The Great White Nawth you might want to reconsider the 22LR. For a SHTF situation, a really good quality .22 or .17 pellet rifle is more useful. I have a .22 RWS rifle that is a tack driver and it surely cost a pretty penny but I can easily shoot dime size groups at 25-30 yards. The RWS is more than powerful enough to take tree rats, rabbits and other similar sized critters. It is not quiet as I would like but it surely is much quieter than a 22LR. A tin of pellets is pretty cheap, especially compared to current 22LR prices. I can always melt lead to make pellets. No way can I make 22LR rounds.

When I designed the house, I spent quite a bit of time thinking about heating. We heat the house with wood because we have hardwood trees and mother nature seems to keep killing them. :rolleyes: Now, we do need the trees to heat the house but dang, Momma, quit killing the trees off. :shocked: Having heat, when the power is out is a wonderful luxury. :thumbsup: We have lost power and I have gone outside to do things. It is wonderful to walk into a hot house when one has body parts that are numb from the cold. Course it takes alot of work to make firewood and if you have to buy the trees it is not cheap. If you can someone fit a wood stove into the house, it would be a good thing.

Later,
Dan
 
   / Prepping #39  
Trick is that nobody sees or hears that you have food, fuel or anything else. When desperate their lives will be worth more than yours.
So no visible lights, no generator sounds and no aroma of cooking food.
 
   / Prepping #40  
I was going to go to the gun shop with an open mind, but the Ruger 10/22 is what I kind of had my heart set on. At first I thought a 12 pump (Mossberg 500, or Remington 870) would be my first... but the 22 makes more sence.

The 10/22 is cheap and a great toy. You can customize it to death. However, it's not very reliable. Like all .22 autoloaders, it has a tendency to stovepipe ejected cases, and eventually it will rattle itself to death. It is also an ammo waster, and noisier than other actions. Fortunately, the world is full of 10/22s, so it will always be possible to find another broken 10/22 for parts. If you really want a survival rifle, it's not a good choice. A closed breech rifle will be more reliable, quieter and will handle a variety of .22 loads, like .22 shorts and subsonic loads.

BTW, never dry fire a .22 rimfire gun. The firing pin hits the edge of the chamber and will chip and become damaged. Always used snap caps or a spent cartridge if you have to pull the trigger.
 
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