BOB BAG – EDC – URBAN SURVIVAL 3 of 3


This video was created to showcase my BOB BAG/EDC/URBAN SURVIVAL situation. It will evolve as I learn more. Please leave any comments that could help me produce a better experience for viewers and ways for me to improve the contents of the bag.

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Gardening Question of the Day for Tuesday, December 1, 2009

What are the best ways to preserve and store potatoes during the winter? I stored them in the basement on a rack, but they all sprouted a few months later. (answer).

From The Old Farmer’s Almanac.

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Truth About Organic Gardening, Overview, Tips, Advice


Truth About Organic Gardening, Overview, Tips, Advice Organic gardener and Author Jayson Patrick gives you an overview or what vegetable gardening and fruit gardening the organic way is all about. Whats the difference between conventional gardening and organic gardening? Is organic food really more safe to eat than conventionally farmed foods? What are some good organic gardening tips? Here is some gardening advice. Is organic really not healthier? Can you grow organic good, organic tea and …

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Can the Building You are in Survive Earthquake?

In certain areas of the world, it is crucial to shape structures to endure the vast shock and hurt associated with earthquakes. Unfortunately, skill has not yet urban an early word scheme that can give immediate observe when an earthquake is eminent. Thus, we are completely at life’s mercy to live an earthquake, and buildings must be built to subsist an earthquake at any time.

Much explore and cram has been loving to culture which types of structures fare best in an earthquake. Generally talking the consensus is the metal buildings fare better than physical.

However, one might ask: does this mean that all metal buildings can resist an earthquake?

The answer is no. Just because a shop is metal does not mean it will automatically do well in an earthquake.

Metal structures are more possible to survive earthquakes because they are more yielding — they can bend and bend lacking breech. This characteristic is crucial in a staid earthquake.

The most public lettering of metal worn to create earthquake-prudent buildings is steel rebar. Steel rebar has the ductility that is essential to absorbing earthquake and is very solid, making it the best and most helpful selection for edifice in an earthquake zone.

Steel rebar has proven to be a brilliant structure important that can withstand earthquakes, but it not fool evidence in and of itself. It must be practical with the tweak engineering and architectural principles to expand its effectiveness. If you are considering using steel rebar to build an earthquake-strong configure, be absolutely assured your tactics and methods amend, or hire a designer who is easy with such structures.

Other types of metal buildings are far less strong to earthquakes, and can be somewhat unsafe in earthquake-prone areas. The metal modular homes are not constructed to withstand the tremendous shock of an earthquake. These types of buildings would be very unsafe in an earthquake zone. Also, leaf metal buildings are very fragile and warmly apt to attack during an earthquake. Experts do not counsel either of these types of structures to be sited in an earthquake zone. Some zoning laws forbid them altogether.

Another very important reason that influences whether a structure will survive an earthquake is the distribution of credence. A house that is top-weighty is more likely to reduction than a structure that is lightweight at the top. An earthquake-nontoxic house not only should be constructed with steel rebar. It should be framed with lighter supplies in the greater floors and have a brutally reinforced inferior split.

The most important message to learn from this discussion is that just because a house is made of metal doesn’t necessarily mean it is earthquake evidence. To be wholly earthquake resilient, an edifice desires to be built with the amend supplies (like steel rebar) and be built according to the rectify standards.

If you are edifice a commercial flare, you owe it to manually, your customers, and anyone who uses the building to use the best materials and techniques presented to you. You want to get the most out of your investment, so give it the attention it qualities.

Find tips about hurricance facts and volcano facts at the Natural Disasters Facts website.

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DIY Solar Panels

One of the things I would like to do is build my own solar panel. With the high price of panels, it makes it hard to get your hands on them sometimes. I found this article explaining how to make your own:


Build a 60 Watt Solar PanelMore DIY How To Projects

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Gardening Question of the Day for Monday, November 30, 2009

What can you tell me about the dried orange flowers called Chinese lanterns? (answer).

From The Old Farmer’s Almanac.

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Burt Gummer : Tremors

I found this video and would like to dedicate it to my buddy Rafer. Apparently he is a huge fan!


Survivalist Gun Nut Conspiracy Theorist …monster hunter… Survival Weapons Bigfoot Hoax Pictures Cryptozoology Art Bell Coast to Coast Am George Noory Loren Coleman Georgia Atlanta Hawks Horror Monsters Paranormal Patriot Act Clinton World Trade Center 9-11 David Icke America Iraq Iran Russia Israel Perfection

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GardenRack.

No Bend, No Kneel Gardening At Its Best!

GardenRack.

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Gardening Question of the Day for Sunday, November 29, 2009

Can you suggest some suet recipes, for this winter’s birds? (answer).

From The Old Farmer’s Almanac.

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Gardening Question of the Day for Saturday, November 28, 2009

I dug up a raised garden bed that had oriental and Asiatic lily bulbs and bearded iris growing there for three years. Can I use this bed for vegetables now? (answer).

From The Old Farmer’s Almanac.

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Birthday Bash: The Final Five Winners

Black Friday, the infamous start of holiday shopping, is winding to a close, but there’s still one last deal to be had. The winners of the Harvest 72″ systems were selected with the Random Integer Generator:

Random Integer Generator

Here are your random numbers:

498
525
533
234
727

Timestamp: 2009-11-28 02:15:04 UTC

Unfortunately, comment #234 was found to be an invalid entry. As a replacement, the following comment was chosen:

Random Integer Generator

Here are your random numbers:

622

Timestamp: 2009-11-28 02:30:20 UTC

Congratulations to Sandy Huffman, Meg Snow, Natasha Laity Snyder, LaRee Holcomb, and Anne Gullion! Keep your eyes open for a confirmation e-mail that’s on its way to you.

It’s been quite the birthday celebration, and we thank you all for getting involved in our Birthday Bash giveaways!

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Frequently Asked Square Foot Gardening Questions


Mel Bartholomew answers the most frequently asked question about Square Foot Gardening. With Patti Moreno the Garden Girl.

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Urban Farming


Edited & uploaded for Aidan Brooks: Trainee Chef at www.aidanbrooks.blogspot.com. What started out as an urban farming project in Detroit has rapidly developed into one of the world’s largest initiatives of its kind. Taja Sevelle’s Urban Farming – a not-for-profit corporation based in Detroit and with offices in Los Angeles, New York and St. Louis – has the ambitious aim of eradicating hunger. Urban Farming plants gardens on unused land and forges partnerships with business, local and …

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Gardening Question of the Day for Friday, November 27, 2009

What is xeriscaping? (answer).

From The Old Farmer’s Almanac.

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Birthday Bash: Thanksgiving Day Winners

Looking for our birthday giveaway? You’re getting warmer, and there’s still time to enter! Visit this blog post for all the info you need.

With all the mashed potatoes, family gossip, and napping you’ve likely taken care of today, I expect that the winners of today’s giveaway is the last thing on your mind! It’s certainly a busy time of year, and we hope you had a marvelous time with family and friends on Thanksgiving. The winners of the Medium Can Packs were selected with the Random Integer Generator:

Random Integer Generator

Here are your random numbers:

290
480
420
673
200

Timestamp: 2009-11-27 02:29:41 UTC

Congratulations to “traceface”, Debbie Pratt, Jeanine Feldkamp, Jessica Jensen, and Jennifer Andersen! Keep your eyes open for a confirmation e-mail that we’ll be sending out. We wish happy shopping to all of you who are braving our Black Friday Sale tomorrow, and remember that that’s the day we’ll pick the winners of the Harvest 72″ systems! Good luck!

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Gardening Question of the Day for Thursday, November 26, 2009

What exactly was a Victory Garden during World War II? (answer).

From The Old Farmer’s Almanac.

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Birthday Bash: Harvest 51″ Winners

Looking for our birthday giveaway? You’re getting warmer, and there’s still time to enter! Visit this blog post for all the info you need.

On Thanksgiving Eve, the team at Shelf Reliance is thankful for all of your birthday wishes and continued support. The winners of the Harvest 51″ systems were selected with the Random Integer Generator:

Random Integer Generator

Here are your random numbers:

697
776
61
149
747

Timestamp: 2009-11-26 00:11:07 UTC

Unfortunately, comment #697 was found to be an invalid entry. As a replacement, the following comment was chosen:

Random Integer Generator

Here are your random numbers:

586

Timestamp: 2009-11-26 00:50:41 UTC

Congratulations to Jessica Pulsipher, Sandy Perlic, Will Stillwell, April Elsegood, and Terri Walker! Keep your eyes open for a confirmation e-mail that we’ll be sending out. Happy Thanksgiving to all, and we’ll see you back here for our last two giveaways!

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DIY Eco-Friendly Raised Garden Beds

smraisedgarden3People are often looking to conserve space in their garden or yard. I ran across a great article at Urban Homesteader that discussed their installation of these beds. What makes it even better was the fact they did it with recycled products, and of course–on the cheap! Looks to have turned out great!I will be planning my own version as spring nears.

Good job guys.

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Introducing New Homestead Basics Feature

Introducing Snap Shots from Snap.com

I just installed a nice little tool on this site called Snap Shots that enhances links with visual previews of the destination site, interactive excerpts of Wikipedia articles, MySpace profiles, IMDb profiles and Amazon products, display inline videos, RSS, MP3s, photos, stock charts and more.

Sometimes Snap Shots bring you the information you need, without your having to leave the site, while other times it lets you “look ahead,” before deciding if you want to follow a link or not.

Should you decide this is not for you, just click the Options icon in the upper right corner of the Snap Shot and opt-out.

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Birthday Bash: A Quick Announcement

The Shelf Reliance staff is hard at work at locations throughout Utah (and even one in Idaho) to prepare for our Black Friday Sale. You can find details for a sale near you by clicking here.

All this traveling will result in a few delays on the blog, but have no fear! Our Birthday Bash giveaways will continue as expected, and though announcements of our chosen winners might come late in the day, rest assured that we haven’t forgotten about your entries. Have a happy Thanksgiving, and we hope to see you snagging deals at one of our Black Friday locations!

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Hunting and Survival: Some Tips For Beginners

Hunting is as old as humanity-older, in fact-and as new as the latest high-tech gear they’re selling at your local sporting goods store. Fossil evidence indicates that early humans were hunting with spears as long as 16,200 years ago, and scientists estimate that we’ve been eating meat much longer than that-for nearly two million years, a span of time that long predates the emergence of homo sapiens.

And in that time we haven’t merely hunted animals-we’ve made the experience of hunting part of the myths, rituals and arts of human culture. The cave painters, who are humanity’s first known visual artists-and still among its best-seem to have made hunting one of their major themes; there are images tens of thousands of years old that seem to depict animals wounded in a hunt, and some speculate that the reason for the overall predominance of animal imagery in those paintings reflects their origin in some sort of pre-hunt magic-an early instance, if you will, of visualization.

Agriculture, and animal husbandry, reduced the importance of the hunt slightly, but it’s remained a part of human life. Its decreased necessity, in farming societies, allowed it to become a social outlet, even a sport, for those who could afford the time-which, for much of European history, was not many people, given the brutal laws that affected laborers’ ability to sell their work for a greater-than-subsistence wage. Hunting became a pastime for the idle rich, one that was thought to build character. In the Europe of medieval and later times, hunting grew to be so firmly associated with the upper classes that the rich hunter became a sort of stereotypical figure-one that survives to our own day in the cartoon character Elmer Fudd, that befuddled but well-off would-be wabbit hunter of Looney Tunes fame.

In nineteenth-century America, by contrast, the slaves and poor whites of the South insisted, in practice, on their right to hunt for food (often from sheer necessity). Hunting thus became, for Americans, a more democratic pastime. The Second Amendment, and the resultant tradition of American gun ownership (not to say worship), helped reinforce this idea. So did such iconic American figures as the writer Ernest Hemingway, who returned to the subject in one short story after another, and the president Theodore Roosevelt, whose obsession with “virility” (as he defined it) drove him to a near-worship of sports. So as well did the practical importance of hunting to the settlers of the West and Middle West-who carried on from thousands of years of Native American hunting of the same territory, though generally without the ecological sensitivity and local intelligence of those peoples. (Thus the near-extinction of the Bison.)

These days, hunting faces some controversy, as animal-rights activists call the sport barbaric, and environmentalists worry that its ecological consequences may be dire. Yet conservationism is also woven into the history of American hunting-Roosevelt, that pivotal figure in its history, was also among the first Presidents to enact environmental-protection laws, and his legacy lives on among hunters who support efforts to protect certain wildlife habitats. In any case, hunting remains one of the few activities that allows contemporary urbanized Americans, the vast majority of whom live in cities and towns, to interact with animals and to see forests.

But for this very reason, hunting imposes certain dangers-after all, it asks people who may have little experience of surviving in the woods to do so, perhaps miles from familiar civilization. Here are some tips to keep in mind on your hunting trip:

1) Remember the “rule of three.” In general, humans cannot survive three hours in extreme low temperatures; three days without water; or three weeks without food.

2) Always bring a first-aid kit.

3) Make sure someone knows exactly where you plan to hunt, and exactly when to expect you back. If you get trapped in the woods, you want to know there’s somebody back home who can alert authorities in the event of your going missing. Hunt in a group, if possible.

4) Observe basic gun safety at all times, no matter how experienced you consider yourself to be. Don’t point a gun or bow at anything you aren’t sure you want to shoot. Don’t rest the muzzle against your foot, keep the safety on and the trigger untouched until the moment you’re ready to fire. Unload or unstring your weapon when it’s not in use, and keep it safely locked up. Wear hearing and eye protection, leave the beers at home, and in general, always treat your gun or bow as if it were loaded and ready to shoot-always.

5) Don’t hunt during periods of low visibility-children have been shot at a range of seventeen yards by hunters who forgot this bit of common-sense advice.

6) Wear bright-orange gear to ensure your own visibility to other hunters. If other hunters in the area seem to behave recklessly-an increasing problem as methamphetamine usage takes more and more of a toll on the same rural areas that provide many with hunting grounds-get out and get home, as fast as you can.

7) Spot-check your gear before you leave, especially if it has been in contact with the ground. Otherwise you may bring home unwanted “guests” in the form of scorpions, snakes, bugs and other undesirables.

8) This is not a complete guide. Your library or local DNR office will have information you need-make sure you avail yourself of all of it.

9) A good hunter is not one who laughs at danger or never feels fear, but the one who takes danger seriously and fears the right things.

CigarFox provides you the opportunity to build your own sampler of the finest cigars that include cigar brands like Montecristo, Romeo & Julieta, H Upmann, Macanudo, Cohiba, Partagas, Gurkha and many more. Choose from more than 1200 different cigars! Other cigar products include cigar humidors, cigar boxes, and cigar accessories like Zippo Lighters.

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Gardening Question of the Day for Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Can painting the inside of my house harm any of my houseplants? (answer).

From The Old Farmer’s Almanac.

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Birthday Bash: Wheat Grinder Winners

Looking for our birthday giveaway? You’re getting warmer, and there’s still time to enter! Visit this blog post for all the info you need.

Turkey Day’s getting closer and closer, and the prizes just keep coming! As mentioned in our King of All Giveaways post, the prize for today – Tuesday – is the Grain Mill Wheat Grinder.  This great kitchen accessory is regularly priced at $79.99, but it’s on sale now for $49.99. It would make a great gift for anyone who’s getting serious about food storage.

Now, on to the winners. We used random.org to choose 5 numbers between 1 and 845. Each of those numbers corresponds with an entry. Here are the chosen numbers:

Random Integer Generator

Here are your random numbers:

190
514
4
547
176

Timestamp: 2009-11-24 19:02:19 UTC

Those entries have earned a Grain Mill Wheat Grinder for 3 more newsletter subscribers and 2 more Facebook fans. Our winners are Cheri, Stacia, Lorraine, Diane, and Lynetta. All of their entries have been validated, and they’ll be receiving a confirmation e-mail shortly.

Thanks to all who entered! Those of you who are waiting to see your name appear in our list of winners still have time! 15 more prizes are ready to be awarded, and the best is yet to come. We’ll see you back here tomorrow!

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Thrive Food Storage Black Bean and Rice Burger


Food Storage specialist -To see the entire recipe, visit www.shelfreliance.com orclick on the “more info” link above this text. Shelf Reliance is your premier source for emergency preparedness supplies, food Storage and informational tools. Featuring freeze dried foods, food rotation systems (food storage shelves), and our revolutionary calculators for food storage and emergency kits, Shelf Reliance offers the tools you’ll need to create a comprehensive, customized emergency preparedness …

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Self-Sufficient-Life.com.

Keeping And Raising Chickens And Poultry. Build A Chicken Coop. Growing Your Own Fruit And Vegetables. Beekeeping (Honey Bees). Herbal Remedies, Herbs, Remedy. Hydroponic Gardening, Hydroponics Garden. Building Your Own Greenhouse.

Self-Sufficient-Life.com.

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