Warning: This is a very long post, like almost 7,400 words or 15 pages
Hemlocks organization preliminary design as of 9/28/13.
The
mission is to survive until things get better.
Here's a
start organizational idea, since one
cannot do it all, nor can we, nor should we plan on it. Said another way, we humans need to have people
focus on jobs that benefit us all, like be thinking about it. And this is a
start organizational idea, so many changes may come. Often it may take a larger
community to do the best. So this draft assumes ideas are more important that
individuals, though some combination is obviously best. Ideas never die, though
individuals do. The general idea is to have an operational organization, with a
local "city-type" organization for basic needs under it.
H1 -
Personal and administration. Think
assignments as to living and sleeping (to include the two cottages and barn and
storage sheds) and bedding (the Hemlocks has some sleeping bags ( like seven + I
think) , etc. Plus there is a 12 person
tent, two cots, a three sided Cliff Field Pool shelter and outhouse, and many
sleeping pads. There's also probably 5+ sets of high tech long johns, too
(adult size, and some for kids). There's also many extra clothes. Let the boss
know just who is here at the time (once a week in writing). Maintain a welcome
aboard plan, to include sponsors to teach new arrivals "the way things are
setup" . Always mention not flushing
bleach, antibacterial stuff, prescription meds, prescription
glasses, water for cleaning paint
brushes, oil & grease, hand wipes & female sanitary products, etc &
etc. The intent is to maintain the septic tank system, which uses bacteria to
"digest" things like poop, pee, and routine home cleaning needs. Things
that the septic system can't handle should go into the dump, since we do have
to get rid of this stuff. Bottom line, keeping the septic tank system running
protects our long term health, like not getting cholera, as an example.
H2 -
Intelligence and information, like what is going on around the World, the Hemlocks,
and Monterey* that will affect us, and what will happen and when. Monitoring the emergency radios (already here,
both AM/FM/CB/Weather and World Bands) is part of the job. Maintain the world
map of where the radio broadcasting locations still exist. Keep track of a
calendar and daily time (the Hemlocks has two mechanical watches, two solar
watches, and instructions on making a sundial). Walk or ride a bike into town
(about a 15 minute walk to downtown) as
necessary. Provide weather reports/guesses.
Some basic tools, like two barometers, are here, already. Be in charge of 1 of the many dry erase
boards. The board should be a "news" board. The board should also include
weather info. Keep it up daily in the AM. Maintain a separate monthly calendar
board with input from the home school head person. Plan on using the same time and
date system as Monterey. * Use all sources, to include the barter people.
H3 -
Operations. This is further divided as
follows:
A. Plans. Like thinking
ahead, being it survival, the seasons, or whatever.
B. Operations. What we
do day to day to survive. Include running and tabulating the vote twice a year, like October 1st
before the cold season, and April 1st, before the warm season. Maybe that should later become once a year
(like the summer solstice on June 21st), but that will be decided by those
here. As a rule, it usually takes about 3 months for anyone to learn a new job,
and then they can do a better job. Even the USA military assumes a minimum of
one year assignments these days. All positions are voted on, by name. Paper and
printing and writing means will probably be short so using the old fashioned
ways, like just saying your vote to the
right person may be necessary.
1) Maintain a journal of major events at the
Hemlocks. Remember we have a point and shoot camera, and about 6 or more hours
of video capability, all run by rechargeable batteries. Plus we have a lot of
paper and pens and pencils. The intent is twofold: 1) record the history, and 2) help future
researchers when times get better.
2) Maintain
a "safety" map of zones at the Hemlocks to deconflict hunting with
all other activities. Decide the zones
for the map, which does not exist right now.
C. Training. Like what
we are doing to get better to survive. Include gun safety, patrolling, cooking
and food storage safety, gardening, hunting, first aid, wild plant recognition,
construction, bartering ideas and techniques,
walkie talkies, and the electrical system. Some combination of different
instructors and books and students will probably occur. Some of these skills can be bartered, too.
1) Maintain
the Hemlocks folders (about 2,000 pages) of how to do things. Often it is
skills that are old fashioned these days ( like how to make maple syrup).
2) Maintain the Hemlocks library of books. These
books vary all over the place, like from old fashioned ideas to just reading
for entertainment reasons. Even midwifery is included. Consider a librarian of
sorts who maintains a list to include who has them. Also maintain all
infrastructure books and how-to books (about 2,000+ pages).
3) Establish
a reading list, and update it annually. Use the many Hemlocks books for the
reading list.
H4 -
Logistics and communications.
A. Food and drinking
water. For example, keep an inventory of available food. Develop a rationing plan as required. Assign a
head cook to process, store, and cook
common food (working with the "mayor"). This includes canning and
other such efforts. Using wood stoves
will be tough over time since it takes wood to heat. As always, priority goes
to healthy food to prevent disease, and cooking safety, with tasty meals being
second in priority. Initially, there is a supply of paper plates, plastic "sporks",
and other such things to help the transition to the basic washing of eating utensils
and plates.
B. Medical. The Hemlocks
should have a head doc, for example. This person will probably be more like a
corpsman or medic or nurse or EMT technician or ex-military. If we're lucky, it will be a doc or a veterinarian.
There are many local OTC (over the counter) drugs also available to help them,
too (plus some breathing filters and
extra gloves, etc.). Initially, someone with First Aid training is best, to
include a parent. Priority goes to
preventive medicine efforts, with corrective medicine efforts second. Things like rubbing alcohol (70%) and
hydrogen peroxide (3%) are also stockpiled to keep infections down from boo
boos. Emphasize preventive medicine during all welcome aboard briefs. The
Hemlocks also has some broken bone setting stuff and basic dental repair stuff, too. Also the main house middle
room with the French Doors is the initial hospital room, too, to include
mosquito netting stuff. I suggest making the barn (left side with concrete
floor) an isolation ward if needed, and use the available 12 person tent,
sleeping mats, sleeping bags, and sleeping cots as needed. There is also a small shed behind the barn
that can be set up as an isolation room. And of course the other three storage
sheds can also be set up for isolation wards. One problem is keeping sick people
warm and hydrated during the cold season.
Also this
person is in charge of the diatomaceous earth (DE) products and powder dispensers
at the Hemlocks (about 150+ pounds). All is food grade, also. Even the
gardeners will be interested in DE products, and the chief doc is the person to
speak with. DE is a barterable product, too. The main intent of using DE is
control of insect outbreaks, like flea and bed bug infestations. The local
farmers even mix it into feed to deworm their animals. Gardeners use it for
garden bugs, though rain will wash it off. It is the old fashioned safe
insecticide, and don't let the white colored powder worry you.
This person
is also in charge of the limited number of razors for medical and personal
purposes. This person also controls the
various lice combs and chemical treatments.
Don't forget
the old military way of putting our bedding out in the sun once a month to let
the UV (ultraviolet) rays clean our bedding.
There are
also some one time only anti-biotic prescription drugs (times 4). How to use
them is up to the local head doc. Ignore expiration dates as they are stored in
the dark. Generally speaking, some work better above the waist, and some work
better below the waist.
Establish a
morning "sick call" time for routine medical things. Emergencies are on call for treatment all the
time. In this regards the Hemlocks also has two emergency litters, and two body
bags, also.
C. Setting up outside barter relations. Walking
into town with security will usually be
required. For example, if times are really hard, what do we trade for things we
may need, like cooking oil when it runs out, for example. Most of these things
help us in cooking or cleaning, and we do have a start up supply (about a
month's worth or much more, depending on how many people are here). Think about
salt, which the Hemlocks has (90+ pounds to start). Now barter decisions in the
end are the head persons decision, if time permits. This position may become
very important, depending on how long the hard times may be. Worse case,
consider a "barter pile or dry erase board" for a place for all to go
to for Hemlocks barter, and also to place anything we are not sure what to do
with, but will also provide the barter person with things to barter with. And
remember we can barter services, like home school or medical, as well as
things. So do maintain a public barter dry erase board for what we both want
and can trade for. Just where to place it is to be determined. We can always
use extra wood for cooking and heating in the cold season.
D. Getting stuff that
helps the mission. Mostly this means
tools, and keeping an inventory of what
we have to heat and cook with. It also means checking on all the water, waste
water, and local electricity sources. The Hemlocks has a good amount of tools,
to include farm and garden type tools . Also develop a barter plan, both what
we can trade away and what we seek, and want we want to preserve and use right
here. We will have a dry erase board to help that effort. And remember, we
won't have a on-off system of barter. For example, if we have 100 zip lock bags
of some size, perhaps 50 of them could be for barter purposes.
E. Establish and
maintain a garden during the warm season. The garden tools to do so are already here. The Hemlocks
is well set up in this area, including the best kind of seeds to plant, and we
have an open and protected area to garden in. Though in the end, establishing
and maintaining a garden is just hard work, including the security of it. And
the security is both from humans and local critters. Plus the Hemlocks as three
ways to can foods to eat for a later time.
F. Designate a cemetery
area, and prepare it. Appoint a religious lay leader, too (part time). Nothing
like weddings, and funerals. Think ashes to ashes, and making our own wooden
caskets for those who want a casket (and if we have the extra board wood). We
may not have time or the ability to always make a casket , and we may just have
to put a body in a hole for burial. For those who prefer cremation (and again
if we have the extra wood), think of a
funeral pyre, Hindu style. In all cases, the Family decides what to do with the
remains, including re-interment later (hence know where we are planted). For
planning purposes, a cremated human remains are about the size and weight of
a 5 pound bag of sugar. I assume some
death from old age, accidents, disease, and bad people and wild animals. By the
way, a cardboard casket is $270 if we could even get one in 2012. And the
Hemlocks has two body bags, plus 200 sandbags that could be used to cover up
the face or more of the deceased. Plus there are 40 metal markers and 20 more
American flags to mark grave sites. Remember to dig holes deep enough
(generally 4 to 5 feet deep) to keep the
wildlife from digging up the remains. And consider using plastic and sand bags
to collect cremated remains for burial. The head religious lay leader will
maintain the cemetery map(s) and markers so we know where our loved ones are
buried. And digging tools can be pick axes as well as shovels. The cemetery
areas have enough dirt to bury our relative's remains safely.
G. Assign hunters and
trappers (include using snares and snare wire which are here) and gardeners and
woods pickers, like for acorns and walnuts (fall...the Hemlocks has a manual grinder
to make flour) and morel mushrooms
(spring), and other mushrooms* and wild greens
(summer), and all the other wild foods identified by the Petersen and Army books. Assign fishermen when fish are available in
the warm season (basic fishing stuff is here). Use all the books that are here.
*The mushroom picker is also the
tester, just to ensure safe eating. If in doubt, don't pick them. Better be
hungry than dead.
H. Maintain the "trash
dump", and even a separate food
dump pit (probably using carcasses left
over from cooking) that will also attract worms for fishing, and probably yard
dogs and local critters. Establish a
mulch pile, too. Mix dirt with trash remains to keep the yard dogs and critters
scavenging down. Use periodic burning, also.
I. Keep track of the
available 5 and 2 and 1 gallon buckets, and the larger plastic and galvanized wash buckets, all which will probably be in
high demand. Remember some buckets are more food qualified than others.
J. Key control. Be in
charge of all the existing keys and locks.
There are many, and most are in the front room, but there is also a key
locker in the new room closet. Use the bolt cutter as necessary.
K. Allocate distribution
and use of the rechargeable batteries (AA's and AAA's, and some C and D and 9V
cells). This will become a big deal. Most of the rechargeable batteries are
eneloop style, which is good for the Hemlocks. This is an electrical engineer
job, in the end, including setting up a schedule to keep the available
batteries topped off. Mostly the charged batteries are for security use. Second
priority is to make sure all the smoke alarms are working. Third priority is to
provide some artificial light after the sun goes down.
L. Maintain all the
sewing and shoe maintenance gear. Mostly that is thread, needles, duck tape,
and shoe goo. The local doc might be interested in the needles if lancing of
wounds and blisters comes into play. The intent is to maintain existing
clothes, vice making new clothes.
1) Maintain
a tanning of skins and hides setup to use what we hunt and snare for various
purposes. Supplies are not available, so this will have a lower priority. Plan
on using local water and animal brains as a tanning method, like the Indians
did. There is an article on how to do all this.
M. Maintain and track
the magnifying lenses that can be used for many things, including starting/restarting
fires. Eventually all the matches will run out, maybe.
N. Periodically dump the
wood stoves of ashes. Remember ashes can be used to make soap, so coordinate
with the chief cook, also. And ashes don't have to be cleaned 100%...something
less can work about as well. And do leave an ash "bed" in the wood
stoves used for heat as that helps it burn best. Generally, emptying ashes
should occur around 3 or 4 times a year...it depends on the volume of use. More
ashes equals more dumping of ashes.
O. Assign the location
of the one existing fireplace ring (presently as the Cliff Field shelter area
on 9/28/13).
H5 - Civil
affairs. Mostly think of home educating our children, and keeping them mentally
and physically helping the effort. Think "Little House on the
Prairie". Remember we can use
school services as a barter tool, too. Develop an entertainment schedule for
all, including the many available games or even music concerts kinda like the
Grand Ole Opry, the local style. We can even listen on the world radio to music
like the Grand Ole Opry, or any kind of music, really. Or we can have story
telling or book reading periods. Our
imagination is the limit. The initial plan is to use the second cottage
"recreation room" as a school house, to include having one of the many
dry erase boards, the fold out table
tennis table, and other fold out chairs and
card tables in this cottage. Books can
be read in either house, or on the porches.
Since the Hemlocks has many books, it is important for entertainment to
teach reading, too.
Boss - like the overall head person in charge.
This is the person who decides about conflicts and priorities, and guides the
whole thing. Think of a savvy judge and jury along the way. People will come
and go, too. This person is also the
supreme court, like including evicting lazy people, which will probably have to
happen. Worse case, a person refuses to leave, makes unreasonable demands, or
comes back. In this situation, a council of elders can impose up to a death
sentence. This person is like a savvy judge too. It is a tough job, but somebody
has to be in charge. Remember
preserving American moral values, too.
Also consider providing a "grub stake" to evicted people, like a bag
of beans (if we even have it). The golden rule applies, in my way of thinking.
Assistant
boss - the boss needs help. Also work with the Hemlocks mayor to maintain a
daily schedule for all to see or know about. All the H people report to him,
too.
Hemlocks
mayor (this person reports to the Boss) - this person runs the local setup for
all to survive. When many get cold and hungry, then this will be an unpopular
position. This person controls one of
the many dry erase boards at the Hemlocks. The job includes:
Compound security. Develop a security plan. There is extra info on this subject (to
include maps) in the If Times Get Hard
3 ring binder. Assign "watches"
to protect the compound, 24 hours a day. And oversee it. Establish a patrolling checklist and use
it. All this a big deal when other people and wildlife try to steal our food, or
do other harm. Many of these will also
be doing other H (Hemlocks) type
services, like keeping a ship running 24/7. Keeping the Hemlocks electric plant
going will have a higher priority than protecting the Cliff Field Pond, for
example. Having a reliable time keeping means will become a big deal,
especially when awakened like at 0345 in the morning to do a 4 hour security
watch/patrol in the winter, and it is raining, for example. The Hemlocks has two
solar powered watches and four manual
clocks/watches to help in this idea. Think 24 hour operations, plus people have
to work during daytime, too. Consider the use of yard dogs, too. All in all, this is a thankless, but
necessary task, especially because the Compound is "walking distance' close
to Monterey. The Compound's proximity to
Monterey is a two edged sword, so to speak. Like it or not, that is the way it
is. Maintain the various weapons at the Hemlocks. The combination to the gun
safe is in the front room in one of the bedroom tables' drawers. The two
cottages have pepper spray and pistol crossbows for home defense.
Religious services. Provide them on
Sunday mornings. The Hemlocks needs a lay religious person(s). Best case we
would have more for all the major religious beliefs. And we need them for the rest of the week!, to include weddings and
funerals. Some will probably marry in and out of the compound, as an example.
Refugees and the ill need religious tending, also.
Monitor the food, drinking water,
and waste water services. This includes bathing, and rationing the 700+ baby
wipes that are an OK substitute for bathing. Those that prefer hot water can
use the wood stoves to make it with wood
heating. Boiling pots are here. Now
priorities for using warm water are the makers choice (the mayor will probably make
those that like hot water cut their wood and find the time). Assign a chief
cook for the Compound. Food will be offered out of a common meal. Individual
cooking cannot be tolerated. Cooking and eating is a communal effort. This is probably not as harsh as it
sounds, especially if we kick out lazy people.
Think gardening , hunting, snaring, etc, to feed, via food storage and
cooking. All this contributes to higher morale and health even during hard
times.
Monitor the children services, like
schooling, including lesson plans, and "keeping them busy". Support
home school efforts. Children still have to be taught, and will benefit from
education in so many ways that enhances their abilities and future happiness.
Be in charge of one "dry eraser
board" (there are many, and one goes to the "H2" for news and
weather things. Hopefully the mayor assigns one (like control, location, and
stuff on it) to the "school". This may become a big deal because of various
good demands to use it.
Assign people to cut and stack wood
for heat during the cold season and cooking year round. Do the same to
stockpile prepared wood during the warm season. Think mechanical, like the old
days, including the wood stoves. The tools are here, to include saws (one and
two man), axes, and splitters, and
sharpening tools and methods, hammers and nails, etc. This will be a major
effort, I believe; that is cutting, splitting,
and stockpiling wood. Have the chief cook maintain the one large metal
trash can for small cooking wood (and pine cones, etc.) collected from the yard
and nearby areas.
Remember we have a local coal seam
also, which can be mined for heat or cooking reasons. We have a book and the
tools and the grates for using coal, which is different from using wood. A map
of the location is in the infrastructure folder, and how to use coal is in one
of the "if times get hard folders". I would suggest having one person
mine the coal, while another person uses a line and bucket to lift it to the
top of the bluff and return it to the compound to use. Basically, coal needs
oxygen from below, and a hot fire to get going.
Assign people to both work in the
garden ( a reasonable time after frost planting time is after May 15th at the
Hemlocks), and then put up the food for the cold season time. In other words, plan ahead. The Hemlocks has a
book about that (and some supplies, to include two canning pressure cookers, a
boiling water canner, a food strainer, and utensils and directions), to help the people
who do it. It is pretty much like a high
school chemistry experience in my time. And it works. It is not rocket science.
The final product is similar to the canned foods we see at the grocery. And remember to label it. Food is
very important for health and morale.
Assign a "Hemlocks
Engineer" to maintain/understand the water, waste water, EMP and electric
stuff (which is still often new in early 2012). For sure knowing about the
operation of the electric plants (both water powered and solar powered) is a
big deal, especially including maintenance of the plants, and even the smaller battery
recharging schedules. The manuals to do so have been saved, too. This engineer reports to the " vice
mayor" directly, and can help the preventive medicine effort a lot. This
is an important position. The suggested initial priorities are clean water,
waste water, and then electricity. For electricity ensure knowledge of all
fuses and spare parts, to include locations. Maintain the electricity book in
the main house new room storage closet. Remember "chasing the sun"
for the solar backup setup. There is an article on this in the electricity
book. Now for "chasing the sun" for the solar setup, use the large
utility cart to move the batteries and solar panels around the yard 3 or 4 times
a day to capture direct sunlight, and the portable internal frame white tent to
park the setup out of rainy and snowy weather during the night time.
Assign cooks, food cleaners, and
house cleaners (the common areas). Use the many available containers, as
needed. Assign alcohol brewers as needed, too.
Conduct health and sanitation
inspections with the doc. With the doc
and H4 and the mayor, and once a quarter or more often, expose all bedding to the sunshine (4 to 6
hours is a good goal). Also emphasize fire safety. Include checking on all the
smoke and CO1 alarms using a map or notes to remember where they all are.
Replace the batteries as necessary once a year using the rechargeable batteries.
Schedule announced periodic drills,
to include house fire, wild fire, tornado, security of the compound, security
of the garden, and patrol back up. It is suggested to do the rehearsals during
daylight, and at least twice a year as a start.
Maintain and control all Hemlocks equipment,
including the bicycle, and the batteries, to include rechargeable batteries run
off the local electric plants, with the DC/AC converters, too.
Setup a monthly barber and beauty service for
health and sanitation and human preference reasons. Plan on using the electric
barber set powered with solar power, converted from DC to AC on the fly, also. Also plan on using scissors and a comb.
By
the way, and best case, we can do OK up at the Hemlocks if need be. It won't be a fun experience, but this is a
good place to survive for a while (like more than one year), if need be. The
key point is the running water springs, and a waste water system, all gravity
powered. That is a big advantage to staying alive.
Hemlocks vice mayor. The mayor needs
help. All city type people positions and workers report to him/her, and he/she
reports to the mayor.
Everyone has to wash their own
clothes and bedding on their own limited time. The Hemlocks has such gear
(including two wringers) , plus they have to hang their clothes and bedding out
to dry out (such stuff is here). Plus
they have to dump their own trash into the Hemlocks dump hole, to be burned by
the H4 periodically. Just how we collect our trash after the plastic bags run
out will depend on our ingenuity.
Last, here are the underlying
assumptions I am using on August 27, 2013.
A. Public electricity is
lost (for whatever reason), and using the triage idea, Monterey and the
Hemlocks may go one to three years without public electricity while the new
transformers are both manufactured, transported, and installed; and other
repairs are done. I suspect big cities will get a priority since that is
what I would do. Hence a place like New York City or Mumbai will do better, like go 1 to 4
months before public electricity is restored, and where most live (probably at
much reduced populations). Cookeville or Crossville nearer to the Hemlocks may
come back on like within a year or so. A place like the Hemlocks will probably
be last. I plan on three years, worse case.
B. Best case, the
Hemlocks will be making its own electricity, EMP and winter and beaver proof to boot (I hope). In that
idea, the place will make enough electricity to maybe power the small freezer,
some lights so we don't have to live like Abraham Lincoln, one LED security light to make trespassers and
wildlife make a better target, and a rechargeable battery charger (we have a
small solar one, too). Plus this design will include a " dump load"
that may help heat the main house place during our cold season (it depends on
the situation and weather and number of people here), and then dump the excess
heat into the atmosphere during the warm season. The Hemlocks electrical
engineer will do this, and the manuals to figure it out are in the main house
new room closet. The main house also has a wood stove insert for heating in the
front of the main cottage, and a second stove for the back of the main house.
And the second cottage also has two wood
stoves, too. One is primitive and one is "modern". The barn has a lot of room for a big tent (the
Hemlocks has one camping type tent for 12 with some sleeping pads) that is
here, too. Cold is one thing, but wet and cold is another less fun thing, so
the barn overhead cover will work well when it is rainy and snowy. There is a
third primitive wood stove available, too.
Just where it ends up will depend on the situation. Exhaust pipes and
metal tape to go with it is also here.
C. Compared to the
Nashville area, the Cumberland Plateau where the Hemlocks is, is a poorer place
to garden and farm, mostly due to the acidic type soil. Many garden plants
prefer a less acidic soil. Hence plan
ahead. Other ancestors (including local American Indians) have done this too
(like gardened and farmed), so vegetable
gardens will grow OK, and have already grown OK at the Hemlocks, which has two
nearby garden areas, too (already limed and fertilized), and like with full sun
most of the day. Gardening tools are available, too. The Hemlocks has a seed
vault, too. For example we can grow our own potatoes and tomatoes relatively
easy, or so I expect. Plus there are some apple trees and one peach fruit tree
and a simple blueberry patch. Plus we have
some grafting supplies, too.
D. Depending on the
situation and circumstances and the amount of people at the time, most people
will have multiple responsibilities, like normal. That will probably change
(like responsibilities) as people come
and go. Imagine living on a ship as a good example. Keeping up with that is
what the "H" type people and mayor do.
E. Thanks to mother nature, we have plenty of
clean spring water, and even waste water treatment (like a septic tank and drain
field), all gravity powered. Now we are
probably hurting on the food side of things
after a month or more (depending on how many people we have show up),
which is a good problem to have. The food dilemma will depend on the season, the number of people here, the food we grow,
and what we can live without. Also consider if a cold spell affects our growing
season, and just what we will do (usually do to an abbreviated growing season).
The 2d house kitchen also has a water
filter than can filter pond water for those that prefer that. It can support
about 20 adults a day at a minimal level.
F. The wood stoves are
the main methods of cooking, boiling water, heating water, heating
ourselves, heating our below floor
pipes, etc. There are three camping ovens, and a Dutch oven than can be used,
too. The wood stove insert in the main house has a small thermocouple fan
(around a 150 cfm (cubic feet per minute)) and a magnetically held temperature
gauge (old fashioned spring designed) on
it, too. An extra 100 cfm thermocouple fan will be next door, plus a third
similar fan is in the back of the main house on the small cooking stove there. The place (the Hemlocks) is about a square mile in size,
so there is plenty of wood to cut and burn. Much of it is already
"seasoned", too. Just use these
stoves outdoors or use an exhaust pipe/chimney to keep the carbon monoxide
killing problem away. One "rocket
stove" would work well on the porch
of the second cottage, for example, especially if we put in a green house
there, too (again the gear to do so is here). Now for all small stoves, one has
to collect the yard wood twice a day, kind of like the old days. Back then, the
yard wood would go into a box...now it goes into a large metal trash can with a cover. Ole granny use to do the chore,
now I (65 year old male) and the children have to do it.
F(2). Cooling in the
warm season is by use of windows and doors and maintaining the screens as best
we can.
G. People that come up
here will bring extra ammo, and their prescription drugs and glasses, and sized
shoes. Right now the Hemlocks has a working
30-06 rifle, a 22 long rifle, a Japanese WWII Arisaka rifle, plus four crossbows, two air guns with a lot of air gun ammo, one
sling shot, plus knives, pepper spray, and other similar things. If "guests"
don't bring more ammo, or guns, then we
will suffer, but survive. Ammo for the sling shot, after the ball bearings run
out, will be driveway and grounds pebbles. Targets for training are also here.
Shooting ranges must have some kind of backdrop to "collect" training
rounds. The backdrop can be natural. Shooters must still verify the safety of
their ranges when being operated, like no mushroom pickers in active down range
impact areas. Ammo should always be considered a valuable, limited, and
irreplaceable asset. Dry fire should be used for "snap in" training
as often as possible.
H. The local town
grocery and hardware stores will run out
of all commodities within a few days (like three), and without electricity, all
fuel supply and phone and other services,
to include emergency and medical, will
end. So will our refrigerator and frozen food sources. What we have is what is
here, plus what we grow, and make, have stockpiled, and defend from other
humans (and local critters will also probably invade our garden area, too).
I. All huntable game will probably be hunted out
within a year by local Monterey citizens. Then the use of snares (the Hemlocks
has some), and patrols, will be a big deal. The Hemlocks also has 4 rat traps
that can be used to catch squirrels, too. Plus there are 4 have-a-heart traps,
also. How to use and bait them will
depend on the hunters' skills. Initially, expect some ratio like 10 trap tries
to one successful trap. When we get good, the ratio might drop to 5 tries to
one successful trap. I expect most snare animal food will be from rabbits. Plus
we have many mouse traps, too.
J. Don't throw anything
away casually. Even things like animal fat will have value in so many ways.
Also old Mylar and zip lock used food bags will have value, as another example.
Wood stove ashes can help make soap, for another example. Every grain of rice
counts, too.
K. The main way to protect dry goods food stocks
from wild animals like mice is by using the large plastic containers here at
the Hemlocks in the main cottage. Also
the local small freezer (7.2 cu. ft.) serves the same function, but extends the
shelf life of whatever is in it. There is an inventory list magnetically
hanging on this freezer. Plan B is too use natural cooling which implies
digging into to the local overhangs, and taking advantage of the constant 54 F
temperatures. Now this usually means three things, also. One is protecting the
cache from local critters, two is protecting the cache from local stealing humans, and three is the 1/3
mile or more hike down and back to use this local 54 F refrigerator ( if we did
it under the nearby cliffs).
L. We may move some or all of the gardening
effort closer to the compound for security reasons (both human and wildlife).
Consider the near back yard and side yard, for example. It has been limed and
fertilized once, already.
M. The four traditional water
springs in July 2012 ran somewhere between 3,000 and 5,500 gallons per hour,
estimated. We really don't know for sure, though. Now this is a drought
estimate, and during rainy times, it will be better, like probably more like
5,000 to 7,200 gallons per hour. Now
springs depend on filtering, too; so build that delay into your calculations. Plus
there is some surface runoff, too (for the top two springs), that helps fill
the pond that helps make electricity, if it even rains or more likely have thunderstorms
and periodic showers over this land. And are there other springs, too. Plus the
Hemlocks has a Berkley water purifier, too. It is presently located in the
kitchen in the house next door. It will make around 30 to 40 gallons a day of
clean water, best case. That should work well for those who want clean pond (vice
spring) water to drink and cook with. And remember, one can boil water, too; like
to make it clean for humans to drink and cook with. In this case the water
might be cloudy, but also clean enough to drink and cook with.
N. Many females menstruate. Females are half of all humans. The reusable
and cleaning methods to accommodate menstruation
include natural sponges, manufactured pads, and existing cotton and natural products, plus Oxyclean
soaking methods to help the reusable methods. Old fashioned soap and water
helps, too. Then later (worse case) we may have to go the American Indian
route, like using the local Hemlocks moss. Disposal should be in pits, not the
septic system. The intent is to protect the septic system from things it cannot
"digest".
O. People will have sex, and some females will get pregnant.
The Hemlocks can handle that. In
fact, having a midwife can be a barterable trade. Now preventive methods to
getting pregnant include condoms, of which the Hemlocks has 100. The Hemlocks
has no birth control pills or other stockpiled means. Keep in mind we all got
here somehow, so life will go on, like babies getting made and growing up. Plus
we should have midwifery abilities that will help, too.
P. The dry erase boards have writing and erasing
materials to use.
Q. Generally, all the
structures at the Hemlocks are mostly wood, so they will probably burn quite
quickly. Hence be ruthless about fire safety and prevention. At Groton
Plantation where I use to work, the idea of "swept" yards still came
over from Africa. Even children were often forbidden from maintaining fires in
all hours of the day in share cropper houses. All this was a method of fire
safety and protecting lives.
R. The hard maple trees
and honey bee hives are assets (sugar and health mostly) we can use. They work
already.
S. Children are assets
to be used. And they must be integrated into the Community, as best we can.
Plus they must be educated to at least the 3R level to enhance their future. I assume
most will eventually leave to start their own Family, while some will bring in
new people, too. As always, it will
depend on the situation.
T.
I assume adult people can read. Mostly reading is for using all the reference
books and articles here, plus for entertainment. Dictionaries and a wiki widget are also available.
U. The emphasis is on
reading, writing, and teaching people as need be. A much lower priority goes to
the memory method of carrying on history, methods, and traditions. Usually this
discussion is mostly about our children and how to best teach them.
V. I choose not
to use farm type animals to help survive if times get hard. Rather I choose to
use pre-stocked products, like powdered milk, to try do the same thing. Hence I
have not already installed fencing and stockpiled animal feed, as an example,
of what I have otherwise planned on. The Hemlocks does have limited fencing available,
with fence posts coming from what we harvest.
W. I assume I can feed
my yard dogs from scraps and animal offal.
If I am wrong, then they will move away, die off, or be eaten. Even
Lewis and Clark ate 191 dogs they bought from the local Indians.
X. I assume between
Family and Friends who can even make it up here, there might be as many as 21
adults and 24 kids, plus local overflow. Any less will degrade many of these
ideas. Any more will ruin the best case situations we will probably face.
Y. I have personally
washed and wrung out clothes (by hand) and dried them in the sun and wind, so I
know one can do it, if they need to. I have even done it in the USA for one
adult and four young men. I did not enjoy the effort and time it took, but I
proved to myself I can do it if I need to.
Z. I assume if we have
poor health and sanitation in the region, then pandemics will erupt, and will
often affect me and my Family and friends; and especially the overload people
arriving, uninvited and desperate, normally I also expect. Heck, it may even
happen here. And I don't discount the
effect of Interstate 40 coming nearby. Even diseases like cholera and typhoid
may come back. To boot, I assume many of the old fashioned and "natural
remedies" and methods will still
probably still work OK. I also assume the idea of practicing preventive
medicine as best I can, and giving priority to letting our bodies heal most
sicknesses and injuries, with our medical help,
of course. Mostly that means keeping sick people warm and hydrated, as
best we can.
Z(2). I know
vegetable oil makes a good substitute (sometimes better) for mineral oil in so
many applications, including lubrication and rust prevention.
Z(3) I assume we will have refugees, who we will
help as best we can. The mayor will have to figure out where they stay and how
they heat (one primitive wood stove is potentially available) in the cold
season. Safe fires are permitted. Refugees should not live in and among the
accepted Family and Friends people. Spreading out has safety considerations,
too.
Z(4) I assume the all
the facilities will work. This includes the 3 bathtubs, and 4 toilets. I assume
any losses due to fire we will make up for somehow. Hence be ruthless about
fire safety as a first priority.
Z(5) I assume most warm season bathing will use
the local ponds. I assume most cold season bathing will be limited, and
generally using cold water. I assume some may want to bathe using the 35 gallon
metal wash tub, or baby wipes if available.
Z(6) I assume we will
eventually run out of paper toilet paper and baby wipes, and go more primitive
after that.
Z(7) I assume if burial
markers run out, we will use local creek stones and even wood as markers for
gravesites, with a map/diagram maintained by the religious lay leader.
Z(8) I assume the
stockpiled paper, pens, and pencils will last if we are frugal about using
them.
Z(9) I assume if we have a civil war, political
decisions will be individual. Said another way, I assume most at the Hemlocks
will focus on the mission of survival and not the conflict.
Z(10) I assume that
other situations (like a cul-de-sac in a city) may demand different and better
solutions.
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