What have you done?

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What have you done to prepare for a catastrophe?


  • Total voters
    196
Lots of good people in Maine. It may take a few years for them to warm up to you .
My sister lives there but she isn’t a prepper, really. She is off the grid, though, and more of a homesteader. I sold some of the reloading stuff to someone in Maine (on eBay) I was tempted to say something to him but I didn’t. Hopefully I can make some friends. My sister asked me how many guns I still had (5 long guns) and she was surprised and said she would know where to go if something happened. But I am more of a food preserving and crafting type than a hunter. I can practice shooting when I get there.
 
My sister lives there but she isn’t a prepper, really... My sister asked me how many guns I still had (5 long guns) and she was surprised and said she would know where to go if something happened.
Good luck with that, I tell no one anything, not for years. The last thing I want is 5 or 10 people showing up at my door looking for somewhere to plug in their ipads. Sad but true.
 
Ah the famous words from everyone that finds out you own more than 1 firearm "Well I know where to go if anything happens".

Unless your in my immediate family or have something of value to add without being a drain on any of my resources then they may not get the warm welcome they expect.

Having extra trigger pullers would be great, but only if they're self sustaining. I definitely believe in safety in numbers, but have yet to find anyone who takes prepping serious enough.
 
Spending the rest of the day reloading ammo for my 223. Just finished our monthly food restocking. Next week I will go through all my firearms and perform a good leaning. I will also dial in my EC Tuner brake on my 223. I dialed in my 22lr and it shoots amazing groups now. I still have not been able to get the powder for my 6.5 Creedmoor, so I don't shoot it. Got to keep ammo on hand.
 
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Got an idea the tank is part of a bunker build con excuse - it'll be part of his overall self containment plan but they need a reason to be digging away on his property ....
 
His protection team is probably arguing among themselves as to who has to guard the side of the house with the propane tank.
His protection team knows better,they aren't going to be 3/4 of mile out where a shooter would be.

The article I read said he originally asked permission to bury it. Perhaps he was slapped down on that? It is an island after all.
 
Not sure how well your red potatoes are going to be doing in this heat, but your sweet potatoes are going to be loving it. Let me know how your red potatoes do. I have never tried to plant them this time of year.
 
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Haven't been around awhile but have put a bug out in place as a project over the past couple of years. I know a lot of prepping is for all out SHTF... but I bought a home overseas to bug out to if it's just something in between (for instance if 'home' here becomes more and more like the third world).
 
Not sure how well your red potatoes are going to be doing in this heat, but your sweet potatoes are going to be loving it. Let me know how your red potatoes do. I have never tried to plant them this time of year.

I tried growing some potatoes in the summer months a few years ago just to see what happened. The stems and leaves grew well, but potatoes did not. Sadly. Hope you have better luck Buttoni!
 
If SHTF how are you going to get OS?
cGc
 
I tried growing some potatoes in the summer months a few years ago just to see what happened. The stems and leaves grew well, but potatoes did not. Sadly. Hope you have better luck Buttoni!

It was either plant them or throw them out. So I figured what have I got to lose? I'm hoping for at least some potatoes, if the gopher doesn't eat them all first. LOL I'll just have to wait and see. I'll replant in October if these planted yesterday fail to produce.

The grow-bag red potatoes I planted here in the city back in early March are producing some small, new potato sized potatoes so far. No big ones though. Plants are beginning to brown off in our heat though, so I'm not too optimistic I'll get many more.

I've decided that the only thing more tiring than establishing, maintaining and harvesting a garden....................is trying to keep up with TWO gardens indifferent cities. LOL
 
If SHTF how are you going to get OS?

Likely via my local airport using my miles for upgraded seats and lounge access. :)

I know we say things like SHTF like it's some kind of end of the world type situation, but in reality that concept is going to have different meanings for different people. Even in all out war, people still got out of Saigon and Kiev. Maybe the line for some people might be their own gated community becoming unsafe, or a Uvalde type incident at their kid's private school (just hypothetical... my kids are grown up), or changes in laws that aren't conducive to one's own beliefs, etc.
 
We are getting our first rooster in the next weeks. We are getting 3-4 eggs daily and it is more than we need at the moment. We will be drying and canning about 120 lbs. of onions I have gotten by helping in the onion harvest last week.
Our Goliath tomatos and meat tomatos are getting canned in the next two weeks.
Will be getting another 100 lbs of feed for the chickens on Mon/Tue. since the corn harvest has fallen out terribly this year and the price will be jumping up fast.
Got the go-ahead from a farmer to clean out/up his back 5 acres of land and will be getting some spare firewood through the action also. The price of firewood has jumped about 75% in price as to last year. A ton of wood cost about $100 last year and now it runs about $165-$185 depending on the type of wood you order and where.
Getting a spare wood burning heater/stove from our adopted son since he is getting another one from a german family here and I can get it fixed up for him to use this winter.
I am canning our yellow tomatos and making concord grape jelly this week instead of moonshine from the grapes this year. I can buy enough moonshine for about $10 a liter, cheaper than any JimBeam or JackDaniels junk.
Tested the generator on the welding machine this week to make sure it is strong enough also.
Had the Volvo in the garage to gut out the DPF and re-program the on-board-diagnostics that it "forgets" that the DPF is even there and "needs" to be re-generated which uses more diesel than normal driving does. That will save me some money of diesel.
Busy getting the garden ready for winter. The carrots will stay in the ground covered with hay and the brussel sprouts also will stay till about December. They will both be harvested with the first heavy snowfall before they can freeze.
 
I ordered a second egg incubator and a 10'×6 greenhouse, it's an aluminum frame with polycarbonate panels, a gutter system, vents, etc.

As shtf gets worse, I will need to hatch more chickens and grow food during winter.

I don’t have a rooster, but my brother has several and I will get one when the time is right. Is anyone looking into getting meat birds to hatch and grow out yourselves? I’m eyeing some Red Ranger meat chickens. They grow slower than Cornish Cross, but you can keep a few for future chicks. They are said to be easier for homesteaders to raise. They are ready for processing at 9 weeks.
 
I don’t have a rooster, but my brother has several and I will get one when the time is right. Is anyone looking into getting meat birds to hatch and grow out yourselves? I’m eyeing some Red Ranger meat chickens. They grow slower than Cornish Cross, but you can keep a few for future chicks. They are said to be easier for homesteaders to raise. They are ready for processing at 9 weeks.
We tried the Red Ranger breed a few years ago. Nice looking birds, foraged well, didn't have leg problems and didn't die from hart attacks. But we just didn't like the taste. We ate a couple of them and ended up donating the rest to the senior center in town. We've been raising the Cornish X every year since. We like the taste but we always loose a bunch. They're not recommended for our elevation either. So now we're looking for a "duel purpose" breed that will reproduce on their own and are good eating.
 
What a shame they don’t taste good! What exactly was the taste?
The meat was kind of tough and stringy. That might be from letting them free range, rather than the breed itself. They had access to meat bird feed also, but preferred bugs, plants and seeds more. We raise the Cornish X in pens and they never go outside, which could be why the taste better in my opinion. I'd like to find a breed that does well foraging to cut back on feed costs, will reproduce on its own, and tastes good.
 
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