I have made a couple batches of wine... Mead actually. Turned out pretty good. Have to wait quite a while for it to taste good, though.
I won't move. Yes I will stay here forever. If I were to driven from my home, I would have nowhere to go. This is not a challenge, it is just that I will back myself in a corner and fight to the death to keep my home.
copper is easy to work with at pretty low heat and a small sledge. and with heat and oil can be made almost as hard as iron. You won't be able to run to the store to spend your kugerand for milk and bread.
Barter and valuable experience will be the ticket of the day. I save some lead, some copper, some angle iron like bed rails, some pipe and, some universal brackets.
remember the rule of threes. 3 days no water, 3 weeks no food, 3 months no shelter and your dead.
If the s never hits the fan, you can always sell your stuff. You lose nothing by always being prepared, and it is the only insurence I know of that costs so little and can give so much just my .02
"anyone who thinks scrappin is easy money ain't doin it right!"
I live on an island off the coast of Maine. It's pretty remote here.
It wouldn't be a very good quality of life but we would get by. There are at least 20 fresh water deep wells within a half mile of my home. There's all kinds of game. There are deer out on my front lawn every night. As a community we land over a million pounds of seafood every year. The house is well built and the generator building was designed to withstand winds up to 120 MPH & the interior is fire rated.
The basics are present.
It's hard for me to figure the scrap though. Got plumbing fittings in brass,copper,galvanized,& Black Iron going from 1/8" up to 2". Plenty of galv. & black iron pipe and the tools to thread them. Similar with flat steel,box,sheet, angle & channel but i see it as more along the lines of stuff that i use every year to make or repair things. It's handy to have around when you're in the middle of a project and the hardware store is closed.
Personally, I think you're better off investing in ammo. Lots of ammo. Lots and lots of ammo. And when you think you have enough? Buy more.
Everything else can come second.
But then, after ammo, I would go with some sort of water filtration system.
Then maybe something solar panel related.
Then gardening materials, books, seeds, etc.
Then bitcoins
I don't know if anyone has mentioned salt. The one thing my, otherwise self-sufficient, grandparents couldn't source in their small community was salt. It was vital for pickling and preserving meat. They grew their own food. Within their village, they could get iron tools re-forged, clothes mended (or spin linen and wool), shoes made etc. They would barter grain for flour and trade labor for the use of horses and wagons.
im on the survialist forum so yes iam a prepper
As yall can guess I am a little paranoid as a result of my military service. Seen with the ol eyeballs just what happens when S really does hit the F.
As a mechanic/repairman type of everything from computers to air conditioning to my first trade as a diesel mechanic...I will say this, your most valuable resource is always you. Patriot, you do exactly as I do, make hard copies of valuable information you happen to mine. I also have an expansive collection of tools for a variety of jobs. I've taken to doing things a certain way as a means to learn to do without. He who has the means will survive, that's a fact. Proven time and again by those who don't survive when things go bad.
Specifically, as a scrapper...your valuables are not in what you look at as having a weighted value but as functionally valuable. Copper pipes, solder, lead, aluminum extrusions, iron bar stock, pipe and so on in various lengths. Fittings, even wood has functional value. Screws, nails...THESE are things that will never get cheaper and will always give you the leading edge in barter. Besides all that...gold and silver are just too...risky. Having it on your physical person almost means you need security, and while that sounds doable the fact is, your adding risk in a situation you could avoid all together.
Pipe, fittings, screws, bolts and nails. If nothing else, keep your workbench well stocked. Ohhh and wire, cannot have enough wire.
I know all these people who claim to be preppers talk about is guns, bullets, food...etc. I'm a believer in personal value. If your the guy who can rewire a car or truck...or a house...or the guy who can weld with CAR BATTERIES well...want to guess how much more value you have over a stack of silver coins? Trade your time and skill, first and foremost.
And well...one last thing. A person with my level of training could and probably would take everything from a so called prepper. Your defenses are only as good as the person manning them. It's simple ignorance to think you could possibly survive with just you and yours in mind. Communities survive, neighborhoods survive...individuals suffer.
Last edited by armygreywolf; 09-21-2014 at 09:35 PM.
I agree on having ammo, but for it to come first over EVERYTHING is kind of silly.
You can't eat your ammo.
You can't drink your ammo.
You can't be healed with ammo.
You can't shelter in ammo, unless you want to live in a house made of things meant to be shot an that explode when near heat sources.
An while your ammo could keep you warm, but..is that really practical?
Is ammo on the list sure is. So is food, water, medicine, etc.
Good luck saying you'll just hunt for food, cause if the **** hits the fan like everyone says nature won't be much better. Wildlife will die in a nuclear assault, or you know asteroids falling from space, or super volcanoes, or or..<insert end of the world theory here>.
Not trying to rain on the survival parade, I also believe in being prepared, but again..I can't eat shot gun shells an bullets.
Jus' saying..
Sirscrapalot - You can turn painful situations around through laughter. If you can find humor in anything, even poverty, you can survive it. - Bill Cosby
To a point you can but you need a back up group.
Info: It takes 600 lbs of food per person per year. Most people think they can just hunt for meat, probably won't happen, soooo don't forget one table spoon of olive oil or, protean type oil or fat per day ,per person.
People in the wilderness areas starve to death eating only rabbit, they don't have enough fat.
It is time to buy, not a doubt in my mind. I have been buying for months. At spot mostly, some under (hard to find someone selling for under spot unless you are the only buyer at an estate auction). But definitely paint some green silver if you have a little extra you can live without. I try to do $200-$300/month, good number is 10% of your income, but I am settled in around 5%, but even 1% is better than nothing.
Intellectual property has the shelf life of a banana - Bill Gates
It will get to the point where the currency will collapse before anything else, and you can use gold and silver to trade for those other things then. It is not going to go from the all mighty dollar to "SHTF" in 3 days, and if you believe that wal mart will be open on Monday and you will be defending your hoard of copper and lead with an arsenal of whatever from the people coming to invade you on Tuesday, you need to turn off the TV.
That's not it at all. There are many ways society can collapse and I believe it will be faster than many people think. Hell - the wrong basketball team wins the championship or a person gets shot by someone of a different color and the city melts down. How do do you think people will react on a national or global incident? I'm not saying to forget about money completely but it shouldn't be your primary. Food water shelter defense and mad skills will be more important IMO. Unless it's fast zombies -} then we're screwed......
Rabbit starvation is a bit of a myth. The people who starved eating rabbit were starving themselves on a mountain in the dead of winter and were eating rabbits who were also starving due to the extreme winter conditions. A domesticated rabbit has plenty of fat to feed a person and as a protein source, that person is in no danger of starvation or malnitrition.
Ayuh !
Life is a dangerous place to be.
You will never get out alive.
IMO you should have everything on hand but the american dollar. an alternate currency, a 3-6 month stock of supplies (at least), and a way to defend yourself and your family (including your possessions that are keeping those people alive) should you HAVE to. This includes a way to make your property self sufficient, water, heat, food... all needed if SHTF. And those without, will certainly be looking for yours at about 2-4am.
What happens after the first three to six months ? Once your supplies run out you're in the same boat as everyone else.
Nobody is thinking in terms of sustainability.
Take the cities for instance ..... The natural infrastructure below ground can't support the population density of humans above ground. In order to be " in balance " with what nature can provide for food & water year after year you need to be way out in the country. You need to think about fishing or farming as a way of life. Maybe not too much different from the homesteaders living in Alaska these days.
Imagine the cities & suburbia ...... everything from food and water to the other necessities of daily life has to be brought in by the truckload EVERY SINGLE DAY. Disrupt the supply chain and you've got millions of people with no food or water, on foot, spreading out from population centers like a swarm of locusts devouring everything in it's path.
It's pretty horrible when you think about it.
The government has plans to block the major roads to prevent that from happening. Most of the refugees would be stopped before being allowed to overwhelm the rural areas where they might stand a scant chance of survival beyond the first year after TSHTF.
It's not pretty, but it is the reality of the situation.
I have two sustainable diet plans, one is obviously foraging, the army forced me to take a "survival" course that also somehow involved evading, torture resistance and escape...i thoroughly enjoyed it, something about having a hard to break will about things.
Also...I will readily admit that eating pets is on my list. I've ate dogs before while deployed...where'd yall think they got that tasty meat from for those flat bread sammiches ((yea...i knew and still ate it)).
In wisconsin considering the situation with deer management...and fish, and everything that seems to thrive up here...if the population reduction estimates are right and we lose 80% in the first year then food will never be an actual problem. Heck it's no problem now, canning, butchering chickens and lame horses, old heifers and stuff...nobody in this state is going to starve if they are willing to work to eat...period.
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