Preppers

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A place for people who like to be prepared for realistic disasters both human created and naturally occurring!

We expect there to be thematic overlaps with outdoor, survival, general preparedness, self-sufficient living and resilience... also gear talk is welcomed wholeheartedly.

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
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The most ignored area in medical training that I have seen in survival circles is homecare nursing. Per longtermcare.gov, a person age 65 has a roughly 70% chance of needing some type of long-term care services and supports before they die. However, it’s not just the elderly who may require homecare nursing. Anyone with special needs may also require more specialized care.

So while it may be a boring subject, but it’s an absolute necessity to keep your patient alive and viable.

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Read this book recently, just putting it out there in case anyone hasn't come across it yet: http://the-knowledge.org/en-gb/ There's a lot of useful stuff there, the basic idea is to enable people to develop basic technologies from scratch, a 'quick-start guide' to a technological civilisation.

The website also has some interesting prepping ideas on it, e.g the 'apocalypse-proof kindle'

It also occurred to me while reading it: good quality education in a resilient society would allow people to reproduce something like this. Yet despite almost 2 decades of formal education, a lot of it was completely new to me.

Would have been nice if Dartnell put up the whole book for free on his website but I guess he needs to make a living. It is, however, available for free on archive.org and also z-lib.

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Salt (self.preppers)
submitted 1 year ago by DevCat to c/preppers
 
 

We don't think much of it because it is so common. Consider, though, how many ways there are to use it. Flavoring, curing, preservation, etc. Plain salt has no expiration date, but flavored does.

Shelf life:

https://www.scienceworld.ca/stories/ever-wonder-about-iodized-salt/

https://www.mortonsalt.com/article/morton-salt-expiration-guide/

If shit were to seriously hit the fan, salt could once again become a much sought after commodity. It has been so important throughout history that at one point it was worth more than its weight in gold. Roman soldiers received part of their pay on the frontier in salt, and, in fact, the word "salary" comes from "salt".

If you live near the ocean, you can even produce your own, thus insuring a steady supply and even trade goods.

If you are simply interested in the history of salt, I recommend this as an audiobook:

https://www.amazon.com/Salt-World-History-Mark-Kurlansky/dp/0142001619

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The biologically active, slow-flow sand filters of lake water treatment would remove nanoplastics from the raw water very efficiently. This was shown both in the laboratory and in larger, realistic tests and modelling.

This is good news for those who are deciding upon what kind of water treatment system to implement. This is dependent, of course, upon how badly the SHTF, resources available, and permanence of location.

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Refugee Food Allowance (self.preppers)
submitted 1 year ago by DevCat to c/preppers
 
 

I was curious about how little you can do with to survive and started looking around. Then I thought about refugees and how many governments give them the bare minimum. If SHTF, you could expect a bare minimum package if the disaster were widespread enough. Also, this will give you a guide as to how much you'll need to survive.

A Syrian refugee in Jordan receives the following. These are rations for one adult for one week:

  • 420 g of rice
  • 400 g plain flour
  • 400 g tinned kidney beans
  • 170 g dried lentils
  • 85 g dried chickpeas
  • 125 g tinned sardines
  • 300 ml of vegetable oil
  • 400 g flour coupon
  • 1.5 kg rice coupon

You'll be making a lot of flat bread and hummus to go with your rice and beans. All of this is taken from: https://www.sbs.com.au/food/article/2017/06/14/why-i-will-be-eating-syrian-refugee-week

Page 57 of this report breaks down a diet analysis in one of those camps:

https://www.fsnnetwork.org/sites/default/files/a_cost_of_the_diet_analysis_in_azraq_refugee_camp_jordan.pdf

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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by a887dcd7a to c/preppers
 
 

Do you know of any regional sources/information on useful emergency kits?

I now for Germany there is a leaflet distributed by the BBK (Government) and I just found out about https://www.ready.gov/kit in different languages for the USA.

Any further sources/countries to add?

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The First World War had just begun, and already the wounds were rotting on the battlefield. In the last months of 1914, doctors like Sir. W. Watson Cheyne of the Royal College of Surgeons of England noted with horror the “great prevalence of sepsis,” the potentially life-threatening response triggered by a bad infection. And by December 1915, a British report warned that the thousands of wounded men were threatening to exhaust the material for bandages.

Desperate to get their hands on something sterile that would keep wounds clear of infection, doctors started getting creative. They tried everything from irrigating the wounds with chlorine solutions to creating bandages infused with carbolic acid, formaldehyde or mercury chloride, with varying degrees of success. But in the end, there simply wasn’t enough cotton—a substance that was already in high demand for uniforms and its recently discovered use as an explosive—to go around.

What were the Allied Powers to do? A Scottish surgeon-and-botanist duo had an idea: stuff the wounds full of moss.

Yes, moss, the plant. Also known as sphagnum, peat moss thrives in cold, damp climates like those of the British Isles and northern Germany. Today, this tiny, star-shaped plant is known for its use in horticulture and biofuel, not to mention its starring role in preserving thousands-year-old "bog bodies" like the Tollund Man, which Smithsonian Magazine revisited last month. But humans have also used it for at least 1,000 years to help heal their injuries.

...

Sphagnum moss also has antiseptic properties. The plant’s cell walls are composed of special sugar molecules that “create an electrochemical halo around all of the cells, and the cell walls end up being negatively charged,” Kimmerer says. “Those negative charges mean that positively charged nutrient ions [like potassium, sodium and calcium] are going to be attracted to the sphagnum.” As the moss soaks up all the negatively charged nutrients in the soil, it releases positively charged ions that make the environment around it acidic.

For bogs, the acidity has remarkable preservative effects—think bog bodies—and keeps the environment limited to highly specialized species that can tolerate such harsh environments. For wounded humans, the result is that sphagnum bandages produce sterile environments by keeping the pH level around the wound low, and inhibiting the growth of bacteria.

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We can copy text, images, videos, just like the original thing – but highly compressed so that they are easy to share and distribute, for instance on a flash drive or microSD card, or broadcast on inexpensive hotspots.

The Kiwix reader runs on almost any device (mobile phones, computers, etc.). For the end user it feels pretty much like a regular browser as the experience is almost identical to browsing the source website(s). Except that there is no internet.

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Hi,

I've been around at several reddit counterparts of this community and always loved to interact with the more rational people and nerd around about gear, goodies, gadgets and techniques.

Are you (mod) already spreading the word, that there is this community around? This community looks a little bit "abandoned", already 🫢.

Best wishes, a887

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Test (self.preppers)
submitted 2 years ago by silveroranges to c/preppers
 
 

Test