pitw wrote:Butchering, knot tieing, welding, gardening, first aid, ammo reloading, tool fabricating, raising all our own food, plant identification and bartering horse trading.
68Camaro wrote:pitw wrote:Butchering, knot tieing, welding, gardening, first aid, ammo reloading, tool fabricating, raising all our own food, plant identification and bartering horse trading.
Good stuff!
pitw wrote:68Camaro wrote:pitw wrote:Butchering, knot tieing, welding, gardening, first aid, ammo reloading, tool fabricating, raising all our own food, plant identification and bartering horse trading.
Good stuff!
Seems to me if a person can't depend on oneself then he shouldn't expect help.
beauanderos wrote:
it's certainly a great asset to have the skills you're learning... but groups of like-minded survivalists will last alot longer than individuals. Trouble is... I can't even find any local start-up groups in central California. I think
the apathy and ignorance that affects those who stash precious metals probably extends to preppers.
beauanderos wrote:I'm sure there would be interest
pitw wrote:beauanderos wrote:I'm sure there would be interest
So can I do it in this section of the forum?
Recyclersteve wrote:Today I juggled watermelons while riding a unicycle backwards- under water...
68Camaro wrote:Ok this thread hasn't seen use in 5 years so time to dust it off. Today I baked fresh bread from scratch for the first time in my life, and I just cut a piece and tried it - really nice! Smells great and tastes quite good. I could easily survive on this bread - would make a decent sandwich, toast, French toast, or as bread alone.
The next step was to break out the wondermill junior deluxe flour mill that I bought 8 years ago and get it ready for electric drive. It was a bear to get the pressed on manual handle off - the method they created didn't work, so out to the shop to put it in a vise and drive it off with a hammer and punch. I will open a can of wheat berries and run a break in pound through it to take the edges.off of the burrs and throw that pound away (and play with the adjustments to get the fineness needed) before I grind enough to make a whole wheat loaf, after I eat up what I just made.
IdahoCopper wrote:I bought some plastic 35 gallon water barrels some years ago. I put a 1/4 pound of dry ice in the bottom of each, then poured 50 lbs of wheat in on top. I set the bung on the hole, then next morning, after the CO2 had displaced out all the air and O2, screwed in the bungs tight to seal. This keeps the insect eggs from hatching. Fifty pound sacks of wheat is the cheapest way to buy bread.
Return to Non-Metals Necessities and Things To Think About
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 20 guests