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The family raises goats, chickens, sheep, turkeys, and grows a variety of fruits and vegetables including squash, corn, and asparagus in a large garden.
Alas, if the doom strikes, you better believe I'll be facing it in free for all urban metropolis! Woohoo. (Any advice?)
Stock up on alcohol, tobacco, and firearms.
That's the point.
They will pay a high price to you.
Ive been slowly buying food from Mormon food storage facility near me it's sold at cost and last 30 years
https://store.churchofjesuschrist.org/usa/en/food-storage-3074457345616678849-1
Patrick saysThat's the point.
They will pay a high price to you.
Or force you to use your firearms if they can't pay the price.
https://www.theepochtimes.com/mkt_morningbrief/preppers-quietly-stock-up-for-the-perfect-storm_3935935.html?utm_source=patrick.net&utm_medium=patrick.net&utm_campaign=patrick.net
I had a profound heartbreak last year when I spent my savings on a risk to "prep" out in some isolated land and do farming. Unfortunately, I learned the hard way not to depend on your SO's perceptions of their family members sometimes. They can be very biased and completely miss major personality flaws.
Alas, if the doom strikes, you better believe I'll be facing it in free for all urban metropolis! Woohoo. (Any advice?)
Alas, if the doom strikes, you better believe I'll be facing it in free for all urban metropolis!
Alas, if the doom strikes, you better believe I'll be facing it in free for all urban metropolis! Woohoo. (Any advice?)
Stock up on alcohol, tobacco, and firearms. The ATF regulates all those because you need them if things really break down.
If the US dollar goes to zero, those things will all hold value and can be traded for whatever else you need.
It occurred to me that you could just stock up on pure sugar and wine yeast, which tolerates up to 12% alcohol:
https://www.yobrew.co.uk/fermentation.php
Then you could make a 12% alcohol beverage when needed and not have to store glass bottles. It probably wouldn't be a very interesting drink, but safe to consume and distillation would not be needed.
Right, but we're just talking survivalism here.
I suppose you would need a cool place to store the wine yeast.
richwicks saysFridge will work.
Yes, but if the power goes out a long time, it may go bad.
although you could probably just grow your own if really needed.
Yes, but if the power goes out a long time, it may go bad.
If you seriously want to consider a refrigerator you'd need a property in the country with a large propane tank
The family raises goats, chickens, sheep, turkeys, and grows a variety of fruits and vegetables including squash, corn, and asparagus in a large garden.
I wish preppers from Arizona, NM, and SoCal would shut the fuck up about evaporative cooling as a hot weather strategy, which won't work in the other 90% of the USA.
The family raises goats, chickens, sheep, turkeys, and grows a variety of fruits and vegetables including squash, corn, and asparagus in a large garden.
DhammaStep saysI had a profound heartbreak last year when I spent my savings on a risk to "prep" out in some isolated land and do farming. Unfortunately, I learned the hard way not to depend on your SO's perceptions of their family members sometimes. They can be very biased and completely miss major personality flaws.
Alas, if the doom strikes, you better believe I'll be facing it in free for all urban metropolis! Woohoo. (Any advice?)
So you moved, and it didn't work out, so you're back in the city now?
I too want to build or buy a self-sufficient farm, and I want one now, but I don't really want to move out and live rural, yet. One idea I have is I wonder if I could set things up so someone else lives there for now, taking care of things, maybe even paying a small rent (or maybe not), with the agreement that I may show up one day to also live there. I would want multiple dwelling...
I'm in a point in society where I don't have to kill to live.
I remember when I was a kid on a school field trip to Mount Vernon, they showed how George Washington had a deep dirt basement fridge. George had ice from the pond put in the dugout during the winter, and the ice stayed frozen all summer. Same trick was done at Thomas Jefferson's house in Monticello.
Good point, as it won't work if the maximum relative humidity is above 40%. The problem in the desert region is that you will need to ration water and may have not enough to run the swamp cooler or evaporative cooler.
Wow, what a cool and competent Austrian Chick. I'd survive with her.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ici2ZTHXLhM&source=patrick.net
It's interesting to see how soft I am. I'm in a point in society where I don't have to kill to live.
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