Wednesday, July 7, 2010

My biggest frustration with prepping

Our friend, MD Creekmore over at www.thesurvivalistblog.net has posed the question "What is your biggest frustration with prepping?" Here is the answer I sent him:

"Like so many have already said, my biggest problem is lack of time. I work 9-10 hour days, including a weekend a month and one evening a week, and have a 45 minute to 1 hour commute each way. Just finding time to cut firewood is a challenge, much less gardening, putting up fence, exercising and all the other things I need to do to feel more prepared. My job also requires that I do a fair amount of outside reading to stay current. And I do have a family I need to spend time with.
I would very much like to take advantage of my county’s Volunteer Firefighter program, both to learn some much-needed EMT skills and to help out my neighbors, but know that I will never have the time. The same is true for the blacksmithing classes held at a local folk-arts school.
As Poe pointed out above, no matter how much food you have laid by, you will never be truly self-sustaining unless you have a working garden, and I have had to work hard to make this a priority. Maybe I can help out a few other readers by revealing some little tricks I have learned to making the most out of what little time we get to spend in the garden:
* Try no-till gardening for grains. I scalp the grass down as low as it will go, and cover the clippings with a tarp for a couple of weeks to kill whatever is left, then sow my grain crops directly into the debris. There is no time spent behind the tiller, and you’re going to have to mow the grass anyway, right? I have had good luck with this and have consistent good yields of buckwheat, millet and hard red winter wheat.
* Used raised beds/lasagna/Three sisters gardening for vegetables. Again, scalp the grass down with the lawnmower, cover the clippings with several sheets of newspaper, and cover this with a couple of inches of compost (buy bags at Home Depot, or if you can, fill 5 gallon buckets with leaf mold and topsoil from the woods, I do the latter from a nearby creekbottom). Double-digging is nice, but time consuming, and can be avoided with no decrease in soil quality. Let the beds “settle” for a couple of weeks and rake in seeds of corn, beans and squash, or the companionable plants of your choice.
I use these two methods exclusively, and grow food as good as any of my neighbors, who are dependent on tractors and tillers for garden soil preparation.
Lack of time is my greatest frustration, but lack of money and spousal nonsupport are close behind. I don’t need to explain the money part, but it causes me a lot of heartache that my wife plainly sees the writing on the wall, but won’t help me try to erase it."

What do you think your biggest frustration is with being prepared?

Pray for Israel,
Gallowglass

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Hi folks,

Our friend, M.D. Creekmore over at www.thesurvivalistblog.net, in conjunction with his advertisor, www.luckygunner.com, are giving away 1,000 rounds of 9mm on July 4th.

Sounds like just the thing for some much-needed UZI practice.

So horse up and enter!

Look for a new post soon. I have had a million things going on, and no time to keep the blog up to date. Check back soon.

Pray for Israel,
Gallowglass

Thursday, March 25, 2010

www.thesurvivalistblog.net contest

M.D. Creekmore over at the The Survivalist Blog – a survival blog dedicated to helping others prepare for and survive disaster, is giving away a The Tactical Advantage book and DVD set by Gabriel Suarez and a copy of Don’t Get Caught With Your Pantry Down by James Talmage Stevens! To enter, you just have to post about it on your blog. This is my entry. Visit The Survivalist Blog for more information.

I'm sorry, folks, that I haven't had more time for the blog lately. My job has just been crazy, and I have had a ton of stuff to take care of at the Freehold every evening. Check back soon for entries about:

  • installing the new beehive
  • spring planting in the survival garden
  • (simulated) Bugout 2010 with Gallowglass and The Lion
  • my first trespassers of the season at the Freehold
  • book review of Survivors by Terry Nation
  • Obamacare
  • and much more!

Stay safe and pray for Israel,

Gallowglass

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Final seed order for Spring

This is the last of the Spring planting seed I am buying from the Internet for this year:

Sugar Baby Watermelon, organic Item :VWA-6020 Price : $1.75
$3.50
Sunset Dwarf Grain Amaranth Item :GAM-7195 Price : $1.95
$1.95
Golden Giant Amaranth Item :VAM-2010 Price : $1.95
$1.95
Multi-hued Quinoa Item :GQU-7360 Price : $1.95
$1.95
Iroquois Melon Item :VME-4380 Price : $1.95
$3.90
Charentais Melon Item :VME-4350 Price : $1.95
$1.95
Ireland Creek Annie's Bean, Dry, Bushsorry, organic not available at this time Item :VBE-2186 Price : $2.50
$2.50

Subtotal:
$17.70

This is from www.bountifulgardens.org, who are a bunch of freaky, nutjob hippies, to judge by their catalog, but seem to know their stuff when it comes to offering and growing heirloom seeds in a sustainable manner. They are the best place I have found when searching for unusual seeds like quinoa and amaranth, which you won't be able to find at your local hardware store unless you live in San Francisco.

The watermelon and cantaloupe are for sale at the roadside stand I am going to try this Summer in a desperate attempt to generate some income (I am buying Hallowe'en pumpkin seed from another supplier to sell also). The rest is for the use of my family. I would love to get some of bountiful garden's open-pollinated alfalfa seed, but I am having to cut every corner I can find economically, and I will just have to rely on the clover and buckwheat I already have for green manuring.

The only other seed I really need for this year is corn, and I am waiting to find out what variety my buddy RL is planting in the market garden so that I can be sure to plant the same kind. I don't want to screw up the marketability of our corn and the non-hybrid status of my family's future crops all at the same time. I also need potato sets (Yukon Gold and Pontiac Red), but those I can find locally for cheaper than internet prices.

I am taking two weeks off in March to get the garden ready. I'm sure there will be plenty posted here once I get started.

In other food production news, I am having a problem finding bees at prices I can afford. I really would prefer to start with nucs, but can't find any for less than $125, which is just out of the question this year. Packages seem to be sold out everywhere I look. I will be calling a local beekeeper tomorrow, to see what he has and to offer him sites for his hives on my land, if he wants them.

An e-mail newsletter I get about beekeeping had the news today that losses this year of hives due to CCD and other causes equal about 30%. I have not heard this from other sources, but it would explain the prices I am seeing.

A feedstore near the Freehold is advertising baby chicks for sale for Easter, and I am seriously tempted to buy a couple and try to get them to thrive in my largest Havahart trap until I can get something else built for them. I am going to stop in and see what variety the chicks are and what they want for them.

Pray for Israel,
Gallowglass

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

And one I forgot...

Sorry to have been absent for so long...

I left off an item from the list of things to buy from the grocery store:

Don't forget to stock up on those three- and five-packs of cigarette lighters! For what you would spend on one of those Swedish firesteels you could buy your bodyweight in el cheapo cigarette lighters.

No, they won't last forever, eventually they will rust out, but in the meantime you can have something that any idiot can use to start a fire. They would make for excellent trade items. Paladin Press used to sell a book on how to make a grenade out of one. If this book isn't available any longer, I'm sure somebody has figured out how on their own and the information is available on the Internet (and, no, I'm not encouraging anybody to go out and make hand grenades in their garage, which could have dire consequences, I'm sure, on your insurance rates, freedom from burns, and your marriage, I'm just saying it is possible).

Pray for Israel,
Gallowglass

Thursday, February 11, 2010

The Nine Things You Should Be Buying at the Grocery Store

We've all heard a million times about going to Sam's Club or Costco and buying a 50lb. sack of rice. If you have the money, and your back is strong enough, this might well be the best way to stock your larder.



I'm not a member of Sam's Club and am not likely to be able to afford to be for quite some time. I have had to development my preparations a little at a time over years. I work for a county government and only get paid once a month, so spending money just a little bit periodically is something that I have had to get used to. Not making much of a paycheck to start with makes it a necessity.



So, with little money only available at intervals, Costco was never an option for me. So I developed a list of things that I could buy a little bit at a time at my regular grocery store while shopping for our monthly grocery needs. Only one or two items from the list would be bought at any one time. The list probably looks familiar. The top four are the traditional LSD Big Four, with a little tweak. I would be glad to see any inclusions to this list that anyone would be willing to suggest.



The 9 Things You Should be Buying at the Grocery Store:



Salt-This is an easy number 1 choice. Unless you live near the ocean or a salt mine you are not going to have this for a while if TSHTF. Not only does it make food taste better, but it is a required mineral for living. You can use it to brush your teeth, sterilise a wound or tan a hide. And it is cheap; even upscale grocery stores will often have salt for sale for as little as $.98 for the smallish cylinder. I try to alternate buying the iodized variety with the regular. I figure I'll use the iodized for the people food as long as it will last to supplement our need for idodine. (don't forget that your livestock will need salt too, more on this in a later post). Many have suggested salt as a barter item, but I won't be trading anything I can't make for myself. My wife enjoys a good laugh at my expense about the "salt cabinet" but she may be glad one day I have provisioned it.



Beans and Rice- Since Ingle's doesn't sell Hard Red Winter Wheat, I buy rice and beans in the plastic bags. Rice sometimes also comes in a screw-top plastic jar and I buy this when I see it as I assume it might be less likely to split open. I buy the Zataran's name brand flavored rice once in a while just to mix other items with and spice up the bagged rice, but I remove it from the cardboard outer container so that the corners won't puncture any of the other bags. After I get my rice and beans home I put them in the freezer for three days or so to kill any bugs that the processing plant might have missed.

Powdered Milk- Again, remove the inner pouch from the cardboard box. Reseal in a plastic freezer bag.

Honey-This I hope to provide for myself soon. It can be stored at room temperature and never goes bad.

Medical Supplies- You won't find sutures or IV drips at Piggly Wiggly, but you might be surprised at what there is to be found. Don't just buy band-aids, either; mix it up a little. I used to buy a fair amount of isopropyl alchohol, but a recent article on www.survivalblog.com changed my mind and from now on I will be buying Betadyne. Look for sales, and don't forget stuff like cotton balls and Q-tips that might not seem important now, but might be necessary later. Hint-Lice eradication kits like Rid-X only cost a few bucks for easily stored small boxes and will be worth their weight in gold for someone in the future who needs one and can't find it. I consider soap, especially an antibacterial soap like Dial, to be a medical supply.

Dental Floss- I could include this under "Medical Supplies" but I think it is important enough to deserve its own mention. You can brush your teeth with well-chewed twig (try one from a sweet gum tree), but you can't floss with it. A dentist will tell you that if you can only brush or can only floss and have to choose between the two, then pick flossing. Incidentally, dental floss never goes bad. Fishing line will work in a pinch, but makes your fingers hurt like hell, and floss is cheap enough that even a life-time supply won't break you.

Canned Goods- A no-brainer, and a food you can use now and in any near-future power outage. I'm including bouillon and spices in this category, and don't forget canned dog food. Save the cans: a Spaghettio's can inside a Progresso can makes a great double boiler for small jobs, like making pitch for gluing wood or melting spent wax from old candles to make new ones.

A Bottle of Wine- Antiseptic and morale-booster all in one! Save the bottles, whether screw-top or cork. Remember: Napoleon's first experiments with canning used wine bottles as cans, and by all accounts were a success.

Clothing/Shoe repair- Last but most certainly not least. You would be hard pressed to save too much needle and thread. And don't forget to get plenty of mink oil/neat's foot oil/leather preservative of your choice and Shoo-Goo (can be kept in a freezer bag in the fridge to prolong its life span). You don't want your soles flapping free or your pants to rip in half when you might need them most.

In a future post I'll be telling you how I store all this stuff.

Pray for Israel,
Gallowglass

Thursday, February 4, 2010

More Seed for Spring

I found my 2010 copy of the Bountiful Gardens catalog today (it was delivered to an old address). This is a great place to find heirloom seeds, many of which can't be found anywhere else, like quinoa. If you can look past the endemic hippy-dippy Green zealotry in the catalog and the website, then I recommend you look to them for things you can't find elsewhere.

Due to budget considerations at the Freehold, my ever-understanding wife and I probably aren't going to be able to buy any more seed for the garden until we get paid again at the end of the month. But if I had the money to spend, here are a few things I would get from Bountiful Gardens as soon as possible:

  • I mentioned quinoa above. This grain is frequently touted as the "supergrain of the Andes." A staple of aboriginal Americans for centuries, quinoa is high in protein and can prosper in harsh conditions. Interestingly, I noticed today that BG has the grain labeled with an "H," their in-house designation for a plant that requires warm weather to grow, whereas I had always heard that quinoa requires cool weather. The seed is cooked or made into flour, but first has to be rinsed to remove the soapy coating, which is poisonous and protects the plant from predators. This rinse water supposedly is good for cleaning wounds and makes a good laundry soap.
  • BG offers flax. The culinary type, not suitably for clothmaking, which is too bad. Flaxseed is highly nutritious, but I would like to get some for its oil.
  • Amaranth. This is the anchor grain for my proposed system. I plan to grow quite a bit of it, if I can. I will someday devote an entire post to the topic of amaranth.
  • Hulless barley. For beer and bread, and no threshing required.
  • Good King Henry. A perennial green with qualities like spinach.
  • Strawberry Spinach. Another green, but this one also grows an edible berry. I have never seen it outside of the internet, but would like to have some in my garden.
  • Iron Age wheat. Hard to find, expensive, and hard to process. A vanity purchase on my part, and I should probably leave this off the list.
  • BG also offers Atlas cotton. This would be worth growing for future economic reasons.
  • And a million more.
Does it show that I really like looking at seed catalogs? Bad times are coming, I really believe that and every seed that I buy today may save my family's lives tomorrow. I only wish I had a little more liquid cash to work with.

In other garden developments, I got my second order from Brushy Mountain Bee Farm Tuesday. Due to the aforementioned cash shortage, this box contained only two disassembled dovetail hive bodies and a smoker. The only things I lack to truly get started are a veil, something to feed sugar water with (I am fairly confident I can figure out an inexpensive alternative to what the catalogs offer) and probably some pollen patties, just for insurance. I can get honey supers and the frames for them after the season starts.

And of course I still lack bees. I have been in contact with beekeepers in three different local areas who sell nucleus hives. It looks like they will cost around $80 each, and I will need two to start. I will make final arrangements at the end of the month before I can blow my voluminous county paycheck on luxuries like groceries or the mortgage.

I encourage readers almost everyday to garden. I know it is hard to pass up purchasing something fun like ammo or a cool sight, but this really is something everyone should be doing. It can only help.

Thought for the day:
"We don't let them have ideas, why would we let them have guns?"
-Josef Stalin

Pray for Israel,
Gallowglass

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Latest seed order

Here is the order I have just submitted to R.H. Shumway, Seedsman company:


01271A
Garbanzo Bean
Packet
1
$2.15
01275A
Jacobs Cattle Bean
Packet
1
$2.10
01296A
Vermont Cranberry Bean
Packet
1
$2.45
01299A
Yin Yang Bean
Packet
1
$2.65
02091A
Mississippi Silver Cowpeas
packet
1
$1.75
03273A
Jack O Lantern Pumpkin
packet
1
$1.75
03721A
Mammoth Russian Sunflower
1/2 Ounce
1
$1.50
04305P
Buckwheat
1 Pound
1
$6.25
04313P
White Proso Millet
1 Pound
1
$6.75
09959P
Yellow Blossom Sweet Clover
1 Pound
1
$9.95
09973N
Rox Orange Cane
1/2 Pound
1
$5.50


Update Quantities
$42.80

I had to delete a lot of things that I really wanted but just couldn't afford at this time. Most of these seeds will readily lend themselves to being planted in the raised mounds (think Three Sisters gardening) method that I am trying to use exclusively (my reasons for this will be covered in detail in an upcoming post), and they tailor nicely with my dried-beans-and-grain food storage ideas.

The yellow clover is for soil improvment and honey, but I may try to sprout some seed for human consumption. The Rox Orange Crane is a sorghum that should make good feed for chickens and rabbits. I will be trying to make some of the Buckwheat into beer, wish me luck! The sunflowers are for oil and the pumpkins are an effort to raise a little liquid cash in the weeks leading up to Hallowe'en.

I like R.H. Shumway because they provide lots of heirlooms, some of which can be hard to find. The prices are reasonable, and you have got to have faith in a company that has been around as long as this one has. They must be doing something right.

It is almost time here to start seeds indoors if that is your plan. I would like to hear what your gardens plans are and if you have begun.

Pray for Israel,
Gallowglass

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Security as a post-SHTF occupation

As I mentioned in a post last week, I recently asked MD Creekmore over at thesurvivalistblog.net about his ideas on what JW,R calls an "Iron Age profession" (that is, how you will earn a living should our world move to a simpler, less technologically-dependent state. JW,R meant the term tongue-in-cheek, not suggesting a real return to the Iron Age, merely how we would all make a living if it turns out that the world no longer needs computer programmers or stock analysts).

Mr. Creekmore and a surprising number of his readers listed "security" as a vocation they will pursue (the job of "pimp" had more takers, but I didn't notice anyone volunteering to be a "ho"), meaning, I suppose, that they will come to your house and guard your stuff in exchange for food or barter items. Besides standing around with an M-4, "security" in this context would probably also include some consulting advice, such as where to put fence or an OP/LP, and the use of radios and setting up a guard rotation.

I'm certainly not belittling the security profession. It is probably far more complicated than I know. But I do have some problems with it being a job in a TEOTWAKI world:

  • Most importantly, who is going to be looking after your stuff while you are guarding mine? Your family? Do you really want to leave your family at home to defend themselves from looters while you are at my house defending me from the same looters?
  • Whose gear and munitions are you going to be using? Will you really risk your neck and your stock of probably irreplaceble ammunition taking care of someone else?
  • Can you really make enough "money" to make this a worthwhile use of your time? Wouldn't your time be better spent growing and guarding your own garden than taking home a few cantaloupes from my garden?
  • Are you expecting to stand guard all day and then go home to your own bed at night like a 9-to-5 job? If you plan to make your way as a security professional on someone else's homestead, why bother to set up your own preparations or BOL at all?

In the TEOTWAWKI world I am talking about (think A World Made by Hand by JHK), I suppose there will be some self-sufficient communities, probably based around existing apartment complexes or subdivisions that are already fenced or otherwise secured, that might have need of a professional security service. This might be the best fit for future security professionals like Mr. Creekmore and his readers. Most of the rest of us will live on farms where such security services will most likely not be needed for the following reasons:

  • Every farmer I ever met, including myself, had at least a shotgun, and few qualms about using it.
  • Most farms will also have four-legged security (or in the case of geese or guineas, two-winged security). I would bet that your average Jack Russell terrior knows more instinctivly about security than just about any human ever born.
  • Farms will become hubs for extended families, or at least survival "clans," which will handle all their own security, even if we don't know all the right vocabulary for it (OPSEC will probably be better known as "put that damn fire out!" or "keep your voice down, you idiot!")
  • I certainly would consider paying for someone to stand guard on my farm should the situation warrant, but I won't pay someone to do the job part time. If you want to work for me in a security capacity then you will live on my farm and be on 24 hour call, besides pulling regular guard duty, and will also do your part hauling water and pulling weeds just like the rest of us when I need you to.

I can see a real need for extra security if you operate a roadside produce stand or attend a farmers' market after TEOTWAWKI. Perhaps this is what MDC is talking about, along with providing security at the apartment complexes described above. But can you really make a living looking after other people instead of your own?

Pray for Israel,

Gallowglass

Friday, January 29, 2010

Buying seeds for spring planting

As I pointed out in November, my business partner is putting about 5 acres under intense cultivation in marketable vegetables, so I really won't need to buy any vegetable seed for my family's own garden, which leaves me free to plant some unusual things. This year I will have a chance to start gardening the way I want for the future.

My survival garden is geared very much toward easily stored foods, grains such as buckwheat, amaranth, alfalfa, barley, hard red winter wheat, quinoa and millet, and beans that can be dried and put up in bags or old wine bottles, usually called "shell beans," such as pintos, kidneys, cowpeas (blackeyed peas), some limas, etc. I want to grow as many different types of these shell beans as possible, to provide both visual and taste variety.

This grain/bean combination has the advantages of providing large quantities of whole proteins, and they can also be made into porridges for breakfast and stews for dinners. They can be served cold and mixed with honey, or hot and served with corn pones. They can be ground for bread. They can also be sprouted to increase their vitamin content.

Leftovers can be eaten cold, or made into patties and fried into cakes.

Most of them are also highly bee-friendly, and I look forward to a bumper honey crop.

And they store well, and can be easily measured out and put in any other container for trading purposes. Try that with canned squash.

Beans and grains also have much better soil-building capacity than, say, tomatoes or broccoli.

They can provide winter food for chickens, goats and rabbits (my next food resource acquisitions, God please grant me the time!), and bait for deer.

Perhaps most importantly, these foods produce meals that my family and friends will eat and can digest. Most of us around my neck of the woods have been raised on "soup beans and cornbread" and won't mind at all having to eat it (for a while at least).

To have farm-fresh canned veggies all winter long would be nice, but canning is expensive both in resources (imagine cutting enough wood in the middle of the summer to heat pressure cookers for canning bushel after bushel of green beans) and time. Grains and beans just need separating from shells and threshing, and then drying.

I also intend to buy some other new things to grow, like sweet clover, and possibly a couple of pecan and persimmon trees. And some other marketables that may have an economic niche someday, like cotton and tobacco.

My purchases for now also include many herbs which will be new to my garden, chosen both for medicinal and cooking use, and picked largely by my skeptical, yet loving, wife.

Below is the first column of a spreadsheet I am using to compare costs from different seed sellers:


Crop (grains)
Buckwheat
Millet
Yellow sweet clover
Alfalfa
Russian sunflower
Flax
Barley
Sorghum
Crop (legumes)
shell beans:
Etna
Black Turtle
Hidatsu Shield Figure
Yin Yang
Kidney
Pinto
Crop (herbs)
Rosemary
Basil
St. John's Wort
Chamomile
Catnip
Lemon Balm
Yarrow


Yes, I know clove isn't a grain, but it seems to be best purchased from the same places that sell grains.

I think 2010 is going to be a very bad year economically for a lot of people, including me and my family. It is going to be more important than ever before for us all to find cheaper ways to do the simple things, including putting dinner on the table. If you don't have a garden yet, please give some serious thought to starting one.

The people you love most may thank you one day.

Pray for Israel,
Gallowglass

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Reply from M.D. Creekmore

Hope everyone is well.

I recently sent a message to Mr. Creekmore over at thesurvivalistblog.net about what his fallback "Iron Age occupation" would be. I think he misunderstood in part what I was getting at, and the reply and subsequent comments were rapidly hijacked into a discussion of the history of the the dissolution of governments in hard times and how on or off the mark JW,R is.

I didn't mean "Iron Age" as in "we got bombed back to the Iron Age" (more commonly seen as "bombed back to the Stone Age"), I meant was "what will you do for a living if our world should shift for reasons economic or otherwise into a situation where your current occupation could not provide you with a living?" The world envisioned by James Howard Kunstler in A World Made by Hand was more what I had in mind. I used the wording of JW,R in How to Survive TEOTWAWKI when I said "Iron Age." I should have been more specific.

Below is the text of my e-mail and Mr. Creekmore's reply:


Mr. Creekmore,
I am a regular reader of your
Survival Blog and appreciate your insights, advice and hard work.
As you too are a recent reader of Mr. Rawle's
How to survive teotwawki, I was wondering what your opinion is of his admonition that everyone should have an "iron age occupation" to fall back on?
For my part, I am a novice
beekeeper and intend to sell/trade honey (and its attendant by-products: wax candles, mead, etc.). I am also learning about brewing beer, and I am trying to gain knowledge and experience in making traditional Cherokee-style moccasins. I share 5 acres of my land with a truck farmer and there will be an increased need for food in the upcoming years even if there is no quick-slide SHTF situation, and I will use food production to the economic advantage of me and mine as well.
Just out of curiosity, I was wondering what your fallback iron age occupation is?
Thanks, and I look forward to your response.
Gallowglass
Gallowglass, one area where James Rawle's and I disagree is what will happen after economic collapse. From what I've gathered reading his writings - he believes the government at all levels will simply go away or cease to exist, after such an economic event.
If we look at history we see that this isn't realistic. As I've said before
governments do not relinquish power easily and economic collapse will not guarantee an end to government. I know this is a survivalist wet-dream but in reality it's not very realistic.
For example let's look at
The Great Depression of the 1930s , Russian collapse of 1998 , Argentine economic crisis (1999–2002), Zimbabwe etc., as bad things were, each had one thing in common - government did not go away and often became more oppressive and controlling.
Besides more oppressive governmental control, massive unemployment and a decrease of GDP after economic collapse, we will likely see a redistribution of resources (they take what you have and distribute it among themselves or others) an increase of violent crime and home invasion, more drug abuse, prostitution and vice, starvation among the poor and a lower standard of living for all but the wealthy.
Another area where I tend to disagree with many survival planners is that after an economic collapse, we will suddenly revert to early 19th century technology and way of life. This idea has long been popular with
Kurt Saxon and others but again it's not very realistic when we look at recent history for example.
Economic collapse is not a time machine that will send us back to the past. So don't expect to get rich pounding on a blacksmith anvil, sewing coats from raw hide, fur trapping, crafting wooden barrels or wagon-wheels etc. These skills are good to learn on a personal level just don't expect the world to beat a path to your door...
So what trades, skill and jobs do I think will be viable after economic collapse?
Anything to do with
food production, private security, medicine, alternative power, day labor / odd jobs (a lot of competition for available work), transportation (charge a fee to take several of people from point A to point B), repair, prostitution and drug dealing and manufacturing (not recommended for obvious reasons) etc.
While I can't list every conceivable opportunity here - I don't know your situation or skill set, it is a simple matter to research and brainstorm ideas. You may need to combine two or more trades in order meet your needs. For instance; you could sell/trade honey, work part time as a private security guard or perform day labor as opportunity becomes available.
Remember the more
self-reliant you are the less dependent you will be on outside sources for income to supply your needs. If you can produce your own food, liquor do your own repairs etc., there will be less need to barter for outside sources for these items. Self-reliance is key.
My fallback occupation(S) plan isn't much different from what I do now.
Reloading, gunsmith services, odd jobs, repair work, selling / bartering extra garden produce and egg production.
Keep in mind that we've been talking about economic collapse here, life after say a worldwide plague, cosmic impact, supervolcano, nuclear exchange or similar event will be different and could in fact send us back to the stone-age or similar. Plan accordingly.
Do you have a Post-TEOTWAWKI trade? What is it?


That's what M.D. had to say. What will you do to provide for you and yours when you don't have your present job (and damned few other people do either)? Imagine that money for the most part isn't around any more, or that inflation has rendered it worthless. How are you going to get by?

I would love to hear what you think.

Pray for Israel,
Gallowglass