Living in suburbs leaves lovers of homegrown vegetables little choice but to use containers. Tomatoes…
Search Results: gardening (201)
Editor’s Note: Tis’ the Season after all. This is a Guest contribution from Red J…
Editors Note: A guest post from Angela Williams to The Prepper Journal. After all, it…
Editors Note: Another guest contribution from valknut79 to The Prepper Journal. The opinions expressed herein are…
It’s a mystery in many houses – where in tarnation do the odd socks go?…
Editors Note: Another great contribution from valknut79 to The Prepper Journal. And timely on this…
Editors Note: Another guest contribution from Robert Johnson to The Prepper Journal. As many still…
They say that if you don’t study history, you are doomed to repeat it. Well…
Editors Note: A contribution from R. Ann Parris. The Prepper Journal hopes the content of…
Editors Note: A contribution from valknut79, an important topic that can come to roost on…
Editor’s Note: Another outstanding entry from one of our regular and trusted contributors to The…
Editor’s Note: Another contribution from Xavier, much appreciated. After the SHTF and it stops falling…
Editor’s Note: Another outstanding entry from one of our regular and trusted contributors to The…
If your survival plan doesn’t include a bug out to the forest option, it should, but coming up with a good plan might be more difficult that you think.
What if events, beyond your control, fall upon you and change all you know and expect from life. Do you have a Plan B?
We can look at what is most likely to occur in the near future and our lifetimes, and use that information to help us decide where to focus our time, efforts and resources.
Here are a few ways we can cut down on the labor and time of gardening and increase our yields, whether we’re just getting started with some pots or whether we’re ready to expand our production in times of crisis
Happily, there are some things that can be salvaged for free or found at very low cost that make a world’s worth of difference.
Even with some small, modest beds, there are a few tools like hooked three-prong hand cultivators or a small spade that come in handy.
When we’re ready to delve into long-term disaster planning, water needs to be a focus. Without water, and a backup plan for water, all the rest of our preparations become null and void.
One thing that can help is to simplify the shopping list. In some case it’s about paring it down. In other cases, it’s about finding multi-purpose items.
Knowledge weighs nothing and you always have it on you. People often try to buy their way out of a problem, but skills are built through habit and time.
These hobbies for preppers will give you skills that you can use in a survival situation but can also enrich your life right now.
We plan on how we will act, what prepping supplies we will need to acquire and we plan how to talk to family members and avoid neighbors. But are you planning to fail? Is what you are doing really a plan at all?
There are some good guidelines and tips on stockpiling ammo that will simplify this process for you and make it easier than it sounds on some forums you may have come across.
I have felt an urgent need, from the birth of each child, to make sure that they are prepared for the many possibilities that may occur in their lifetimes.
Some of them relate to food production, some to increasing our efficiency, and some are little off-the-wall tasks that don’t get as much attention as they otherwise could.
Analyzing homestead elements for multi-functionality and redundancy were covered in the first article. This time we’ll look at combining them into multi-function spaces.
A lights out, no power debacle for an extended period of time is going to result in total chaos in any community.
You have a moral obligation to be prepared in case of a crisis. In general, there are countless reasons to be prepared for emergency scenarios.