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#GetPrepared

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People are freaking out and asking what they should be doing re: prepping. I've posted so much about this over the last few years but, really, my main advice is understanding how deeply you rely on the power grid.

It is the most vulnerable to sabotage and failure, and also the most important thing we have in our modern world. We rely on power for everything- clean water (pumping and purifying potable water), safe food (supply chain, refrigeration, and all aspects of agriculture), heating and cooling, communications, transportation (pumping gas, running infrastructure such as train crossings, traffic lights, etc.), nighttime safety and security... the list goes on.

The most important questions to ask yourself right now is what are you most dependent on, and how can you survive (and thrive) if you are subject to interruptions of the grid that could last weeks or months. It's really the same prepping you do for storms, but think BIGGER storms. The lessons learned from Katrina, Ian, Maria, and Helene are the same lessons for warfare.

Be kind and make good choices. Stay safe out there.

I continue to be utterly appalled at the ignorance, uneducated opinions and disgusting bigoted comments on the information posts that are giving out details about the terrible wildfires in Saskatchewan and Manitoba. No you utter morons, “they” are not starting fires to burn out “everyone” and move immigrants in, no the magnitude of these fires is not due to “arson”, the cause is climate change. It does not matter at all HOW they start, there are hundreds of little fires started for dozens of difference reasons all the time all over the place. The difference is that in horrific drought conditions coupled with high winds, the fires cannot be quickly put out as is usually the case. The fires grow into the monster that feeds itself and changes the local weather right at the fire and become impossible to stop. This used to happen occasionally in smaller areas. Now it is half the damn country and all around the planet facing these conditions. This is CLIMATE CHANGE. Climate change is caused by burning fossil fuels, not by lizard people, the homeless, immigrants, leftists or any other scapegoat spouted about. Now if y'all had listened to us decades ago when we were telling you that developing other ways of making energy might be a damn good idea, we might be pumping a fraction of the greenhouse gases into the atmosphere right now instead of this absolutely hellscape we have.
The absolutely BEST prep you can do is not let your family, friends or neighbours get away with saying this crap and spreading this nonsense. Tell people what is happening and why. I don't know if it's possible to stop this insanity now but if there is going to be a future on this planet, we have to encourage and support the engineers, the scientists, the inventors to keep finding and improving on better and cleaner sources of power. Meanwhile the rest of us need to use less energy, any way and every way we can.

Climate change is here now and it is hot, thirsty, windy and dangerous. And how it affects growing food is significant. Over the years, I've seen a lot of comments like “I know HOW to grow food, I just don't need to right now” or “yeah, when SHTF I'll be out there putting in a garden and hunting”.

Listen. If you aren't gardening right now, you don't know how to garden. I've been gardening my whole life and every year it changes, the climate changes, the zones change, the air moisture, humidity, wind, plants and soil water needs, changes in what varieties will do well in more heat, less water and humidity, length of growing season, - every aspect of growing food is rapidly changing and you need to adapt.

You will be lost in the weeds – no pun intended – if you don't start right now (better yet years ago unfortunately) to learn the basics and understand how climate change as well as other factors such as animal movement and migration, insects and pollinators, birds, rodents, and troublesome bugs affect your ability to make the most of your available growing space. Plant diseases are more troublesome as the planet warms up and the zones move north, along with fungal diseases, harmful insect migration, invasives, predators and prey.

Seed germination and viability seems to be becoming an issue the last few years. I'm not sure if it's supply chain, dishonest corporation practices, lack of expertise or what, but it is getting weirder. A couple of years ago we had pepper-gate (massive numbers of mis-labeled seed packages mainly with pepper varieties but also squash and other vegetables). This year has been a challenge to get kale and some lettuces to germinate for no apparent reason.

Last year we had a very late spring deep freeze which took out many kinds of fruit trees in BC. There were few locally grown soft fruits such as peaches to be had. So far this year, the blossoms are showing promise, so here's hoping.

The point is, grow food RIGHT now while you can learn and also have a monetary buffer while learning, during failures and while grocery stores have fully stocked shelves. During a societal collapse is not the time to find out that your soil is severely lacking in a necessary nutrient or that your growing zone won't support your stable foods or that the rats will eat you out of house and home. Learning how to deal with all of these issues now and sourcing out possible solutions in your local area while becoming familiar with typical ups and downs builds resiliency in your future security.

"Tuesday" has hit Tumbler Ridge:
Wildfires cause communication outage across Tumbler Ridge
“Communications are down in all of Tumbler Ridge due to wildfires,” the post reads. “This includes cell and traditional internet services, so please take care and plan accordingly. Many businesses in town are cash-only.”

energeticcity.ca/2025/05/01/wi

This is why we prep. #GetPrepared #Prepping #TuesdayPrepper #AmateurRadio #hamradio #hamr

Energeticcity.ca · Wildfires cause communication outage across Tumbler Ridge – Energeticcity.caAn array of wildfires in the South Peace have caused a communications outage across Tumbler Ridge on May 1st.

I have posted about this before but it's worth restating after reading a harrowing account of someone fleeing a huge wildfires recently in Oklahoma.

In my mountainous region in southern BC, we usually only have a bad fire situation once every couple of years. So, we do up our preps when a big one is nearby then, when the next year is rainy, we don't think about it. Before you know it, several years have gone by and we assume things are ready to go.

Prepping for disaster is not one and done. I have absolutely let some of these things go and I am now going to do a thorough re-check of all the preps this spring.

Are your fire extinguishers up to date and not expired, especially the vehicle and trailer ones?
Are your towing vehicles serviced and up to date, as well as tires for your trailer if you use one? Think bearings, etc.
Do you have disaster-specific preps for your area such as fire blankets in fire prone areas? Have you considered what you will do if the road out suddenly becomes blocked by fallen trees or power lines? (saws and axes could save you)

Are your pet preps altogether and practised for use such as getting harnesses and leashes on cats and getting them into carriers? Check pet foods, dishes, water, meds.

Have you practised with new equipment such as solar panels, inverters, generators, radio equipment, anything that you will need if you suddenly find yourself off-grid and self-reliant for an extended period?

Do you have particulate (smoke) face masks not just medical ones?

Do you have a list of important phone numbers and have you checked that those numbers are up to date? If your phone breaks or you forget a charger and the battery runs down, how many of you have important phone numbers memorized? Not me, that's for sure. I recently checked my list and found that 2 of my 3 kid's numbers had changed.

Are your medical kits up to date?
I recently smashed my foot rather badly and was using extremely past dated bactine to wash the blood off. It was fine but you can be sure I now have all up to date supplies for the house. Also, if you disable one hand, are your medical supplies accessible with the other hand, while possible bleeding and in pain? You never think of this until it happens to you.

The best thing to do is to think through all the scenarios, practice, and check your stuff all the time. You don't need it until you need it then it's too late.

If someone gave you a spinning wheel, a loom and a sheep, you COULD make your own clothes. But it would probably take you years to teach yourself how and you would be freezing and in rags before you figured it out. However, if you were also friends with someone who knew how to look after the sheep, shear it's wool, clean, card and spin that wool, weave the threads on the loom and then show you how to cut and sew a garment, it would go much faster.

Now if you ALREADY had those skills when you had the leisure time, money and people/resources to learn, you would not only be way ahead of the game but you could sell or barter your product and your knowledge as the needs arise.

Think about all the things you have and use that you have no idea how they were produced or where they came from. Think about all the people in your community with different skills and talents that you could learn from or trade and barter from.

The point is, learn some primitive skills now. Find out what you have inherent talent in. Experiment. Look for local resources. Find your people. Learn all kinds of different ways to look after yourself and your family when things collapse. Our high tech world is fragile and not sustainable. People are going to be shocked at how fast things fall apart and break when the means to continually consume, replace or repair are interrupted.

Live frugally and resourcefully. Here are a few tips:
-replace zippers in coats, it’s easy, take your time, save a ton of money. Even if you have to hire someone to do it, it is way cheaper than buying a new coat.

-don’t buy packaged or over-packaged food, learn how to cook, bake bread, make things from scratch

-educate yourself on quality, buy beat up used furniture and refinish, you can end up with a great piece of furniture with only a little bit of work for next to nothing

-repair your computers and devices or find someone local to do it.

-if you MUST replace appliances, buy basic hardworking non-computerized, metal component items either new or used. In future, you will be able to repair yourself and chances are they will last much longer. Unless you are a tech pro, you won’t be able to fix computerized parts in appliances. I replaced a computerized sewing machine that cost as much as a used car when IT was used with a basic non-computer new one. It will last until I’m long dead and cost a fraction of the price.

-find better ways of doing things such as using a metal or wooden soil blockers for starting seedlings in stead of plastic sectioned trays that only last a season or 2 then end up in the landfill.

-in the ethnic sections of grocery stores you can buy bulk packages of single spices and herbs way cheaper than little bottles to make your own blends such as curry powder, taco seasoning, meat rubs, etc. Use mason jars to store everything in. If you have a bulk barn nearby you can even reuse your own bags to buy in.

-put your leftover meals in the freezer in portions right after dinner. You avoid forgetting to use them and having to throw out food. End of the week, you have healthy ready-made food and spreading out the meals so that you don't have to eat the same thing multiple days in a row.

-you can get a lot more wear out of old runners by only replacing the insole

-I just rebuilt my home first aid station. I have quality bought kits for the vehicles but for at home, the ready-made kits have lots of unnecessary fillers. I bought various sized gauze pads, tape, rubbing alcohol and hydrogen peroxide, cotton balls, bactine spray, polysporin, big packs of bandaids, etc. as these are the things we use at home. I keep ice packs in the freezer and a heat pad for muscle stuff. Consider the usual type of injuries with regards to your lifestyle and stock accordingly.

-learn how to replace handles on axes, shovels, garden tools etc. And when buying these tools, make sure they have replaceable handles as some new plastic or hastily welded ones are not replaceable.

-I NEVER throw out a scrap of wood, ever. I have used every single little piece in some place, somewhere on my property.

@165b9d37a28903103af9ad24036bdc54270882c01add515791fc9666167cfac1

It took me no time at all to find these 4 map purchase sites for Canada, the last one is worldwide. All I can say to you is that you need to be able to study the area you are in or going in ON the map first. Take a compass, learn how to use it with maps. Develop situational awareness. Learn about topography, which direction the streams and rivers flow in your area, which direction valleys lay, time of sunrise/sunset for time of year, trace out your area on the maps, find landmarks, roads, bridges, etc. Of course you'll be lost if you don't do your homework ahead of time.
maptown.com/
maptrove.ca/
mapart.com/Canada_c_136.html
worldofmaps.com/

Now this is just rural stuff. You can pick up city maps at most gas stations. Learn how to use them the same way. You have to do the homework ahead of time. Plan, practice, chart out your route. See how it plays out on a map.

www.maptown.comMap Town is a retailer of local, regional, national, continental and world maps for hiking, travel, leisure and work. We sell topographic maps, travel guide books and hiking and travel maps for the entire world. Finally, we have a great selection of gifts such as Mova and Replogle globes,

I think a lot of "anti-prepping" people got their information from that terrible reality tv show. Prepping and survivalism is so far from that.

"When it comes to survivalism, Que said, it’s not necessarily just about the physical tools but also the mental flexibility of being able to shift one’s thinking to leave a place where you’re secure and find safety elsewhere."

#prepping #GetPrepared #homesteading

capitalbnews.org/black-women-s

Capital B News · Meet the Black Women Who Say Survivalism Is a Necessity, Not a TrendBy Rebekah Sager

Buy and practice using paper maps. Having directional awareness can save you in many un-anticipated circumstances. Do not rely on GPS. Not only because it is often wrong, it does not take into account road or bridge construction, or other obstructions, but because it is controlled by people that might not have your best interests in mind. Paper maps, old ones and newer ones show where roads are or have been, the connections, directions and landmarks. Learn them, use them. Skill building. It's a good thing.

The talk of the month (year) here is buying Canadian. What I am seeing a lot of, though, is comments like, “what about this particular product brand”, “I can't find a Canadian equivalent of this exact thing”, “I only like such and such, what is the Canadian version of it”... etc. etc. Ok come ON.

Time to shake things up, make changes, maybe even different personal choices, leave your comfort zone and get real. If you are struggling to live your life because you can't get a particular brand of any corporate produced, over-packaged, highly processed SOMETHING, you have bigger problems than our trade war with the US. For more than 20 years I have been talking about and giving ideas of how to use less energy, live with less consumption, make less garbage, and live lighter on the land.

If you are filling a garbage bag a week, and have no backup systems for power outages, store closures and supply interruptions, it's time to get with the game. Buying Canadian is absolutely important, but even more important is buying locally, in season food from farms and gardens in your area, growing your own where possible, buying used and reclaimed goods, making your own, mending, repairing, refurbishing, and making do.

Try eating different kinds of food, learning different ways of doing things, get creative with your day to day living. And further to this, instead of expecting other people on the internet to do this work for you, try doing some searching, label reading, and sourcing on your own. This is a built-in resilience against these kinds of situations that we are finding ourselves in now. It also makes life a hell of a lot more interesting.

Newfoundland and Labrador Farm GuideFood Hubs and Farmers Markets - Newfoundland and Labrador Farm GuideFood Hubs Western NL Food Hub   Year Round Orders placed Friday to Monday Pick ups on Thursday 23 Broadway Road, Corner Brook Visit https://www.nlfoodhub.ca/for details Pick Up Locations: Western NL Food Hub (17 Herald Avenue, Corner Brook) between 11:00 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. GCSU Backlot (Grenfell Campus, 20 University Drive, Corner Brook) between 1:00...

Some incredibly cold temperatures and really nasty wind-chill forecast in parts of Canada. Stay home and stay warm if you can. If you have to drive, be prepared to stay alive for hours if your car stops. Take thermoses of hot water or hot tea. Have another heat source, lots of serious clothing, full tank of gas, fully charged communication. All the safety stuff... don't even think of going anywhere without it. This isn't a drill.

It's time for all of us to reject the simpering of calling it “mis-information” and “dis-information”. It's time to call it what it really is... LIES. Lies are created, consumed and spread. Often the lies are created by people that don't even believe it themselves but they have an ulterior motive to spreading the wrong information to certain demographics. There are political agendas, greed agendas, power agendas and they all use vulnerable people as their minions. And by vulnerable, I mean afraid. People that are so fearful for their future, they can't imagine a way forward. They reject all they have ever known to be true and they embrace nonsense that sounds like it MIGHT be true, COULD be true, in a world so unrecognizable to them that they want desperately to belong to the “cool club” that has an alternative mindset and different, albeit nonsensical, answers.
This is rushing our world into deeper fissures between those that have everything, and those that barely have anything. The great divide is not ideology, but wealth, elitism and power. The inevitable resistance, rebellion, revolutions and ultimately war will surely sweep across the planet as the lies continue to take root. So many will suffer and die before the balance is restored.
I had a young man tell me a few weeks ago that the vaccine had killed his mother. The symptoms he described were from a vascular disease – covid virus. It was so much easier for him to believe that all the medical people in the world were conspiring to kill and maim people than a viral pandemic, of which there have been countless throughout history, was to blame.
We are seeing many, many people believing that terrible fires, hurricanes and floods are caused by weather modification, chem trails, directed energy weapons, lizard people ffs, ... when in reality climate change is caused by ONE thing.. fossil fuel use across all the transportation, communication, warfare, manufacturing and agriculture systems of the world and the greed that continues to be fed by this.
Don't listen to the lies, don't spread the lies, have zero tolerance for lies.

I almost passed over this article because it was another “we must have community moving forward ... etc. etc.” So many of these blogs are out and most are so vague as to not be helpful but this one is excellent. She actually goes there with being intolerant of true red flags to keep the community groups healthy and moving forward. She also points out that by letting humans be human, you stand a chance at learning to cooperate with people you may not personally like. Understand the difference between someone you don’t like and someone who is actually a threat. Those are not the same thing. Some really relevant points to consider and solid advice. Now this is specific to the pagan community but it works for other kinds of community work in mutual aid, disaster prep, etc. “Guidelines for Community Engagement” by Irene Glasse.

#Prepping #GetPrepared #TowerTime #TheStorm #Community

glassewitchcottage.com/2024/11

glassewitchcottage.comJoining the Circle: 5 Guidelines for Community Engagement – Glasse Witch Cottage

The bomb cyclone that hit the entire West Coast of Canada and the US this week (the name of which freaked out the deniers to no end) and what seems to be another possible one coming on Friday has demonstrated clearly that we ALL need to be ready for unusual and extreme weather events. This storm was wind, hard, cold wind that tore up trees and knocked them onto houses, cars, power lines and highways. Hundreds of thousands were without power, many still are. School buses were cut off from taking kids home by falling trees on the highways in Sooke on the island. (gusts up to 170 kmh just off island) I saw many photos of smashed houses in Washington.
Up here in the mountains, we haven’t really had much from it except snow with rain on top, then snow again. When rain and snow layer each other, the roads are horrendous. So travelling is risky and having the ability to stay home, (work from home and not have to shop) is optimum.
This cyclone was kind of our Pacific version of a hurricane. It had lots of rain but not as much as it could have. Lots of wind but not as much as it could have. And stayed a long time but not nearly as long as it could have, it’s still going out there in the ocean soon followed by another system.
It is clear that EVERYONE needs to prepare to the best of their capability and means. Shelf stable food and water storage. Battery pack power, generators and chainsaws. Whatever you can do is better than doing nothing. Obviously, know how to use and maintain your equipment and practice when nothing is happening. Spend off-grid nights to learn what you need when you have no choice. Are flashlights easily at hand? Can you find what you need in the dark? Can you make healthy hot food during a power outage?

So, there are a bunch of snowflakes out there that can't handle correct weather terms. They have been all over the weather pages mocking anyone that posts about this saying it's just fear mongering and "just rain". So here is some info from the BC Coastal Mariners:

I realize that the term "bomb cyclone" has ruffled a few feathers as some fear mongering media tactic.
So let's learn a bit..

Term first used in 1980. (44yrs ago)
Basically a "storm" that rapidly intensifies bringing heavy rain, wind and snow(yes this will bring snow to higher elevations).
Describes a storm that loses more than 24mb in pressure in 24hrs at our latitude.
can happen anytime of year but gets more attention in winter months due to blizzards and heavy snow conditions it brings.
if the sustained winds reach 64kts, under the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale, this approaching storm can be considered a Category 1 Hurricane
nb: this scale does not take into account storm surges or flooding which are possible as we wean away from the king tide
this storm will reach Beaufort 11 and could easily be 12. (raise your hand if you have been in over 10)
in terms of pressure for grading hurricanes this falls in category 3.

So yes this incoming low is going to be scary. Just because you haven't heard of it doesn't mean this is a new weather term/definition. The weather service/news are just giving you warning to prepare as we watch how this develops and tracks towards the coast. Stay safe.