Saturday, May 21, 2016

Food Preps

One Year's Food For A Family Of Four

This plan is THE fastest, cheapest and easiest way to start a food storage program. You are done in a weekend. AND there are no hassles with rotating. Pack it and forget. It’s space efficient – everything is consolidated into a few 5-gallon buckets. You’ll sleep content in knowing that you have a one-year food supply on hand for your family should you ever need it.

With the exception of dairy and Vitamin B12, this bean soup recipe will fulfill all your basic nutritional needs. It won’t fill all of your wants, but using this as your starting point, you can add the stuff that you want. The is the baseline. It's not a varied diet that will satisfy cravings and such.

All of the food and storing supplies listed below plus 2 55-gallon recycled barrels to be used for rain catchment cost me $296, including taxes. I purchased rice, bouillon and salt from SAM’s Club. You can buy small bags of barley at the grocery, but if you don’t mind waiting a few days, special ordering a bulk bag from Whole Foods was cheaper. All of the beans I purchased from Kroger’s in 1-lb bags. Buckets, lids, Mylar bags and rain barrels were from the Lexington Container Company. 

If you do some research, you'll be able to find many (if not all) of these items locally. 

What you need:

8 5-gallon buckets
8 large Mylar bags
8 2,000 cc oxygen absorbers
8 gamma lids
A handful of bay leaves
90 lbs. of white rice
22 lbs. of kidney beans
22 lbs. of barley
22 lbs. of yellow lentils
5.5 lbs. of split green peas
5.5 lbs. of garbanzo beans
1 lb. of salt
A big box of beef and chicken bouillon.
A measuring cup

What you’ll do

Install the gamma lids on the bucket and insert Mylar bags. Place 2 or 3 bay leaves in the bottom and fill the buckets, adding more bay leaves after each 1/3 to full. Place an oxygen absorber in the top. Label buckets with the contents and date.

Fill

3 buckets with rice (shake it down good. Get it all in there!)
1 bucket each of kidney beans, barley, and yellow lentils
In 1 bucket store the split green peas, garbanzo beans, salt, measuring cup and bouillon. (I removed the bouillon from the box and vacuum sealed it as bouillon contains a small amount of oil.)
Yep, that’s a total of 7 buckets, so far.

I place a broom handle across the bucket and wrap the ends of the Mylar bag over the broom handle to give me some support. Then slowly and smoothly run a hot iron over the Mylar bag to seal all except the last 2 inches. Then I press out as much air as possible before sealing the remaining 2 inches. Make sure your Mylar is completely sealed from end to end. Now, stuff the bag into the bucket and rotate the gamma lid into place. This will protect your food for about 25 years. You’ll have excess Mylar bag at the top. Don’t cut it off, that way if you have to cut it open to get into it, you have enough bag remaining to reseal.

Where you’ll put it

It’s pretty easy to find a place for 7 to 8 5-gallon buckets even in the smallest of apartments. Discard the box springs and lay the kid’s mattress on top of the buckets, line the back of a large closet with the buckets. I made a couch-table by stacking buckets two high between the couch and the wall. The buckets are about 6” taller than the back of the couch. Add a shelf and drape and it looks fine; a convenient place for a lamp and books. Get creative.

                                                      (food bucket bed frame)

Making your bean soup
Measure out
· 8 oz of rice
· 2 oz of red kidney beans
· 2 oz of pearl barley
· 2 oz of lintels
· 1 oz of split green peas
· 1 oz of chick peas/garbanzo’s

Add 6-7 quarts of water. Add bouillon or salt to taste. Then add any other meats, vegetables, potatoes or seasonings you have on hand. Bring to a boil and then let simmer for two hours. You should have enough to feed 4 people for two days. This is thick and hearty. You will be warm on the inside and full with one large bowl. Kids usually eat half a bowl.

When the emergency is over

This system allows you to open the Mylar bags, retrieve as much of the ingredients as is needed and then reseal everything after the emergency has passed. Just be sure to replace the ingredients used so that you always have a one-year supply.

The 8th bucket – other stuff I would want

This list isn’t included in the $300. This falls into the “what I want” category. As money and resources became available, I’d just go crazy adding all of my indulgences, starting with coffee! You can add what you want, but I’d fill it with:

Dry onion. Let’s face it, what’s bean soup without onion! Sprinkle on the onions just before serving.
“Just add water” cornbread mix packets. I just can’t eat bean soup without cornbread.
Beef jerky and Vienna sausages. Add protein and zest to the bean soup
Instant oatmeal. Do you really want bean soup for breakfast? Freeze the oatmeal for 3 days before packing to kill any bugs.
10 lbs of jellybeans. Now, don’t laugh – it’s a bean. Jellybeans don’t melt like chocolate might. The high sugar content is quick energy, and a morale booster – with just enough of a high to help you over the really bad days. Easter is about here – stock up!

Before you fill the 8th bucket

Buy small bags of the ingredients and fix a big pot of bean soup for dinner. Eat the leftovers the second night, and 3rd night, until it’s all gone. Find out now – rather than later – what your family might like to add to it. Anything tastes great the first meal, but quickly becomes boring after the 3rd or 4th repeat. Don’t wait until the emergency happens to discover what you SHOULD have stored in your 8th bucket. … Maybe some Beano!


100 Year Old Water Lessons

How to Make an Emergency Water Filter

A handy and efficient water filter can be made out of an ordinary bucket.
First make a hole at the bottom of the bucket.
Instructions: “The water percolates through the layers of fine and coarse sand, and clean picked gravel and stones, with which the pail is filled, filtering through to the bottom in a clear state.”
One of the best layers you should add to this bucket is one made of charcoal. 

Rain Water Filter Barrel

During the boiling, broiling, blistering summer of 2012 here in the Missouri Ozarks, water was a topic of conversation everywhere. Creeks and ponds dried up (some never recovered) and the water table dropped, forcing a few neighbors to have their well pumps lowered or to even have deeper wells drilled.
Rain water filterMany folks shared memories of rain barrels, cisterns, hand pumps and drawing water with a well bucket as a child, usually on grandpa and grandma’s farm. Some said they’d never want to rely again on those old-time methods of getting water. But, at least they knew how it was done.
It seems we have lost much practical knowledge in the last 50 or so years because we thought we’d never need it again. Now we are scrambling to relearn those simple know-hows.
100-Year-Old Instructions
For gardening, rainwater is, naturally, best unfiltered. But, for household use, the following instructions yield a cheap and easy way to make a filter just as good as a patent filter costing 10 times as much:
“Take a new vinegar barrel or an oak tub that has never been used, either a full cask or half size. Stand it on end raised on brick or stone from the ground. Insert a faucet near the bottom. Make a tight false bottom 3 or 4 inches from the bottom of the cask. Perforate this with small gimlet holes, and cover it with a piece of clean white canvas.
“Place on this false bottom a layer of clean pebbles 3 or 4 inches in thickness; next, a layer of clean washed sand and gravel; then coarsely granulated charcoal about the size of small peas. Charcoal made from hard maple is the best.
“After putting in a half bushel or so, pound it down firmly. Then put in more until the tub is filled within 1 foot of the top. Add a 3-inch layer of pebbles; and throw over the top a piece of canvas as a strainer. This canvas strainer can be removed and washed occasionally and the cask can be dumped out, pebbles cleansed and charcoal renewed every spring and fall, or once a year may be sufficient.
“Or a small cheap filter may be made from a flower pot. A fine sponge may be inserted in the hole and the pot filled about as directed for the above filter. It may be placed in the top of a jar, which will receive the filtered water.”
I see no reason why this would not work with plastic, food grade barrels.

Shipping Container Homes

Shipping Container Homes


For anyone interesting in a shipping container already set up to live in. The price includes delivery to anywhere within 500 miles of Appleton. I walked through this container at a Prepper Expo a few years back. It looked nice. I'm not connected with these guys in any way, but I thought it might interest some folks. A relatively inexpensive instant cabin.




MODS International is the leading innovator in designing and building modular structures using shipping containers. One of our recent container homes has been featured on HGTV:...

T-Rex 2016

T-Rex 2016 AmRRON Preparedness Event

Nationwide grid-down disaster training exercise, T-Rex 2016, from Friday, June 10th through Sunday, June 12th, 2016. Earthquake-based disaster training exercise with emphasis on Amateur Radio for use during emergency/disaster situations.




Click for more information-https://amrron.com/category/t-rex-2016/
Communications S.O.I. By John Jacob Schmidt- https://www.amrron.com/?p=946
About AmRRON- https://amrron.com/about/
Join AmRRON- https://amrron.com/join-amrron/

Youtube Introduction 


This preparedness event will mirror the Cascadia Rising earthquake exercise conducted by federal and state agencies on the west coast. 

https://www.fema.gov/cascadia-rising-2016

http://www.wastateares.org/cascadia-rising

http://www.emergencymgmt.com/emergency-blogs/disaster-zone/cszexercise2016cascadiarising.html

http://www.inquisitr.com/3110941/cascadia-rising-fema-drill-slated-for-pacific-northwest-massive-earthquake-and-tsunami-overdue-in-region/

So.... One might ask what this has to do with the midwest and specifically the Great Lakes region? Our prepper group was planning on adding to the scenario to make it relevant to the midwest. Our proposed scenario would have the Cascadia event trigger the New Madrid fault, causing power and internet outages. Damage to transportation routes, bridges and other infrastructure. This could trigger other events with dams, nuclear plants, etc. Our preparedness networking group, Fox Valley Preppers, was developing a scenario that tested our ability to survive on our preps in a "bug out" or "bug in" environment depending on the choices made by individual preppers as the scenario develops.

AmRRON, however was way ahead of us and announced that they had added a major earthquake event along the New Madrid faultline and their shortwave radio operators would be relaying the unfolding scenario events via their established frequencies and protocols. Rather than re-invent the wheel, we have chosen to participate in that scenario.

The scenario takes place starting Friday June 10, 2016 and lasts through the weekend. If you are in Wisconsin, especially the Fox Valley Area, consider checking out Fox Valley Preppers. They can by found through Meetup.com and discuss a wide variety of topics at their month meetings. It's a good way to learn from others and many have extensive knowledge in various fields.

http://www.meetup.com/FoxValleyPreppers/