Engineer wrote:Tools and useful items of enduring quality.
OneBiteAtATime wrote:Engineer wrote:Tools and useful items of enduring quality.
Brewing equipment.
barrytrot wrote:Actually I will second the "brewing equipment", but with a bit more elaboration:
ANYTHING that allows you to PRODUCE SOMETHING that is valuable in all economies.
Neilgen must be asleep already or he would be giving a flowery dissertation on the merits of "wood" and "protein" and he's absolutely right (ON THAT, not on everything
If you put your money in something that will produce income for you that's the absolute best hedge. And "income" also means stuff you yourself consume as that normally costs you money, so you are your own customer.
shinnosuke wrote:The Faraday bags on this page for some of your electronic preps.
http://www.disasterstuff.com/store/pc/E ... s-c128.htm
I am a customer of this website, but do not receive anything for the foregoing endorsement. Bob, the owner doesn't even know I just posted this. He is on another prepping site I visit.
SteelCityCopper wrote:shinnosuke wrote:The Faraday bags on this page for some of your electronic preps.
http://www.disasterstuff.com/store/pc/E ... s-c128.htm
I am a customer of this website, but do not receive anything for the foregoing endorsement. Bob, the owner doesn't even know I just posted this. He is on another prepping site I visit.
These have received mixed reviews. Go with a metal trash can and be done with it. Larger, cheaper, easier, effective, etc.
barrytrot wrote:Neilgen must be asleep already or he would be giving a flowery dissertation on the merits of "wood" and "protein" and he's absolutely right (ON THAT, not on everything
OneBiteAtATime wrote:Engineer wrote:Tools and useful items of enduring quality.
Brewing equipment.
Treetop wrote:In line with the suggestion for production I think trees are an often overlooked and prudent investment. A few good fruit/nut trees and some berry bushes. Some types can be put in for the price of the seed, or saving seed from something you know grew locally. Stone fruits are good for that (plums apricots and peaches) they will be desirable from seed. Apples and pears that wouldnt work as well, youd get better results from buying named nursery stock but it can be done. Even buying nursery stock it isnt very expensive and its dividends will last as long as you do.
I met an older guy on a forum a few months back who owned a few dozen acres. He logged out a good portion of the standing hardwoods and made some cash like that. He still has hardwoods growing for future sales, but he cleared enough room he mixed in lots of nuts and a bit of fruits. It is a few decades later now I presume because hes at the point he can sell the nuts specifically, (he put in lots more of those) and feeds hogs on the excess. He makes several thousand a year, Im not sure exact numbers but he doesnt do any of the work. Im not sure if he hires it out or just lets people collect the nuts and pay him but it doesnt HAVE to be a lot of work to have results. Then of course you get to eat them yourself, and if they HAD to be for some reason nuts can make up a large portion of a diet atleast in the short term, especially if youve got some dried fruits and berries and pine needle tea (vit c) to go with it.
Im huge tree fan. LOL Lots more you can do as well if you realy want to get into it.
Aqualung48 wrote:Debt. It is the hedge the government uses. Borrow money worth more in spending power, and pay back the same amount of dollars, with a low interest rate, with dollars worth much less.
mbailey1234 wrote:Aqualung48 wrote:Debt. It is the hedge the government uses. Borrow money worth more in spending power, and pay back the same amount of dollars, with a low interest rate, with dollars worth much less.
I kind of agree with this concept. If you can lock in a low long term interest rate and put that money to work it may be a good plan. I have explored a few ideas like this but the fact is you still have property taxes, insurance, possibly payroll, etc. to deal with so low borrowing costs are just one factor in the equation. Farmland investments during the last 10 years would have been a home run. I'm not sure that is still an option as everything has gotten so crazy around here though. Might be time to buy some decent rental properties but who would know?
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