Posted on 02/27/2014 5:43:09 PM PST by Kartographer
There are certain factors you should consider when living through an extended emergency. It is common for your physical, mental and emotional state to be affected following a disaster. On top of that, you are hungry due to rationing food portions and still have to continue daily activities, physical labor, parenting, etc. If you havent put thought into the right types of food and the amounts needed to see you through the ordeal, then you could be setting yourself up for deficiencies in your diet.
Repeatedly, I have told readers interested in leading a self reliant lifestyle to simulate a disaster at home so that your family can practice living through it using the supplies you have. This creates a safe environment to prepare and train family members for what they might expect and help you learn what you may need for the future. Using the contents of your emergency pantry is no different. In fact, you should be using your pantries regularly to ensure the food you store is as fresh as possible. In my cookbook, The Preppers Cookbook, I list 25 must have foods for your pantries and also touched on what to expect in an emergency situation when you are rationing your supplies.
(Excerpt) Read more at shtfplan.com ...
The homegrown potatoes will be good to have when or if you cannot buy them. It is possible that the USD will collapse. Also, irish potatoes can be grown vertically. Sweet potatoes not so much.
But I see your point.
the military sends a lot of their warriors through foraging school
I am pretty sure that special forces all go through foraging school.
I already boil down carcasses, but I haven’t used the vinegar to leach calcium. Can you taste the vinegar in the broth?
Actually, you can buy potato seed.
Getting seeds that germinate is a challenge, but it is how new varieties are developed.
Here are some folks experimenting, w/links to sources of True Potato Seed (TPS):
http://www.curzio.com/N/Potato_starting_from_seed.htm
On a related note, since pickle juice is basically vinegar, use it to clean the sink drains. I also put up to one cup of pickle juice into a crockpot of a beef roast. Add onions and water to cover and no need to add extra salt because there's salt in the pickle juice. No, it doesn't taste like pickles. The vinegar dissipates with the cooking. Same principle when making homemade bbq sauce, at first the vinegar is overpowering but once it cooks and sits overnight, it mellows out. As you can tell, I don't waste anything.
When I learned about the brownie we were on a mountain top overseas that was commonly used for training. The aggressors were flown in via helicopter and the rest of us had to defend the site. We weren’t allowed to use the bushes as people tended to crawl thru them. So they had a porta potty. Unfortunately, the portapotty hadn’t been emptied in a while. The pile of processed MREs was about a foot taller then the seat.
I strongly suspect the potential damage to a frozen can is related to how wet the contents are.
Sardines packed in oil or corned beef, very little.
Tomato soup, probably quite a bit.
Thanks for that post.
I have tons of leaves composting and ready to go so I think I will try that.
Add a little sachet of rice. Rice will keep moisture from causing clumping in salt.
I use lemon juice instead of vinegar. On rare occasions, though I use balsamic vinegar-gives it a little more kick.
Last summer I grew a number of winter squash, edible gourds, and pumpkins. I am still eating the harvest as these all keep wonderfully in a 60-65 degree basement/root cellar environment.
Tho squash have their own set of growing issues such as squash beetles, vine borers, and powdery mildew, wouldn’t winter squash such as acorn, butternut, spaghetti, etc., be as good or better a choice than potatoes?
I know potatoes are good choice in northern environment, but much of US is more temperate...Thots?
Thank you. I’ll do that.
Potatoes are a good choice here up north. The only thing people need to do is make sure they use a variety that has good storage properties.
Squash grows well up here, too, so a combination of those two will give you variety.
Thanks. Probably good to have variety so that if one crop succumbs to a disease or pest, still have produce from the others.
Absolutely.
That’s what did the Irish in in their potato famine.
That's what I do. Potatoes are not cost effective for the limited garden space I have.
Beans are, as is zucchini, asparagus, scallions, peas, lettuce and tomatoes.
One option to consider is a community garden.
That can give you experience in growing different kinds of things when space is limited.
I remember the first time I saw a tomato hornworm on my tomato plants.
I must have set an Olympic record for the longest reverse standing long jump in the world.
I can only tell you what my grandmother told me and what I have learned on my own.
You do need seed potatoes. Never plant potatoes on a new moon or you will have all plant and very few potatoes. Plant the potatoes in dark nights in March (in Ga.) and always plant them when the signs are in the feet.
Don’t know if that will help but I always have a very good crop of “taters”
Also, when the plant comes up you must hill the dirt on top of it. You do this until the dirt is at least 4 to 5 inches high or higher.
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