My son in Ohio has used this method for pig roasting. He’s done so many I bet he’s lost count. LOL. They do turn out delicious!
I agree with you on all accounts. What it ultimatum boils down to is people are ignorant to how bad things can get and how quickly those things go bad.I think there are a couple of reasons most people don't prepare.
1) It is expensive and means much of your disposable income goes towards prepping so less to spend on getting your hair and nails done, fancy nights out, new cars every four years and such.
2) They believe that someone else is going to "help" them if all hell breaks loose; be that the Federal Government, local police or relatives
3) They are clueless as to how thin the veil between civility and chaos actually is
4) They are somehow "special" and therefore that kind of stuff happens to other people and not them.
Fair enough.I'm assuming you mean the English Channel, NO I moved out of a British city 25 years ago and live in a rural agricultural area and have no plans to bug out anywhere else,
crossing the English Channel from here would mean travelling South and going through many inhabited towns and villages, or going many miles around to avoid them, I dont think that is feasible.
We have done some underground cooking of feral hogs like this, on a smaller scale:
Now my mouth is watering.
I like the underground method in SHTF for a couple of reasons
-no smoke to give away your location
-no smell ditto
-you don't spend all day having to check on your food
-it just tastes amazing
Native Americans used this method effectively for cooking many things such as yucca root, that would be poisonous otherwise.
One thing though they did not tell you in the video about using rocks. Make sure the rocks DO NOT have water trapped in them or when you heat them, they can explode, sending rock fragments out like shrapnel. We lined our pit with mortared in fireplace brick and only dug about 4' down. That way, it doubles as a smoke pit as well (because our ground doesn't freeze, we can have our "smoke house" in the ground)
I know where I'm heading next labor day. Haha. Reading that made me hungry!Years ago we used to go to a friend's ranch every labor day. They'd cook a whole beef in an underground pit. A couple times while traveling in the south pacific islands the wife and I would go to a pig roast. The locals would dig a hole in the sand and wrap the pig in banana leaves and cover with hot coals. Good eating.
Enter your email address to join: