Materials list
You'll find most of the materials you need at a home center, except for the cardboard barrel, often used by movers. (You cut it in half lengthwise and use it to form the oven's curving top.) Look online under Barrels & Drums for a local source.
- 14 concrete building blocks (8 by 8 by 16)
- 14 concrete cap blocks (8 by 2 by 16)
- 68 firebricks (2 ½ by 4 ½ by 9)
- One 28- to 30-gallon cardboard barrel
- One empty 1-quart can
- 6-foot square of 6-inch wire mesh (used to reinforce concrete driveways)
- 10 feet of 30-inch-wide chicken wire
- 4 feet of rough-sawed redwood 2-by-4
- 2 feet of redwood 1-by-3
- 16 1 ½-inch deck screws
- 3 feet of 6-inch-wide aluminum flashing
- Eight large wheelbarrow loads of adobe soil (heavy clay garden soil)
- Three bags Portland cement
- 1-foot square of ¼-inch galvanized wire mesh
- Exterior latex paint
- Optional: 24 precast 1- by 2-foot concrete steppingstones
Building a Barrel Smoker
Emergency Preparedness Guide PDF
geared toward earthquakes, but still very useful common sense.
Herbal Information
The Texas Manual on Rainwater Harvesting
Safe Handling and Storage of Oils and Fats
Water Treatment and Storage
Several Disaster Preparedness PDFs for pets, livestock and horses
Standard First Aid Kit for Home
I would hope you have several of these on hand, but are also prepared with at least the basic knowledge and common sense to know how to do other things. If you can stock bottles and containers of salves to keep you set up, that's great, but knowing what to plant and harvest from your garden and land to make your own salve would be better and more practical.
Also note, peroxide is good, but iodine is better as it will not only clean, but help control the bleeding as well. And several tubes of plain old ordinary SuperGlue...we just used it to close a pita-pocket sort of cut on middle child's toe ad hold it in place so it could seal itself and heal. handy stuff.
First Aid and CPR Manual to Download
Common First Aid Myths and Mistakes
Various Gun Manuals to download free
Making an Olive Oil Lamp
Making your lamp is relatively easy, and most likely you will have many of the materials on hand already. Here’s what you’ll need:
A wide-mouthed glass jar (a quart-size wide-mouthed canning jar works really well)
A short length of flexible steel wire (1 1/2 or 2 times the height of the jar)A wick
Olive oil
Irish Potato Famine Fungus strikes early and fast
ScienceDaily (July 5, 2009) — Home gardeners beware: This year, late blight -- a destructive infectious disease that caused the Irish potato famine in the 1840s -- is killing tomato and potato plants in gardens and on commercial farms in the eastern United States. In addition, basil downy mildew is affecting plants in the Northeast.
Common sense is simple and short -- "If you suspect the government doesn't want you to have it, stockpile it!"
2 comments:
Are you sure you don't have some executive assistant to help you come up with all this stuff!?? LOL Look like some great links. Thanks for sharing. -- We're finishing up "vacation-in-place," so I'm playing on the web this afternoon. Liz
Great links! Thanks! I have been toying with the idea of stockpiling homemade container candles (using old pickle jars ;-)), but now I am going to go with those oil lamps, so much easier to make and store.
I also now know whats wrong with my potatoes...grrrr....
I check your blog everyday, and I love it, even though I don't leave many comments. Keep it up!
Post a Comment