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My House Was Bombed By Teenagers – Insurance Was A Nightmare

March 21, 2024 by Seasoned Citizen Prepper

Note: Harold was a beloved contributor to SCP who was targeted by some youths who threw a fire bomb at his home, which burned, and he and his wife barely escaped with their lives. This wasn’t the first incident in that town, but hopefully it will be the last. Harold is sharing with us an update and some of what he has learned about the insurance business through this whole ordeal.

Well I persevered and wore both the insurance company and the contractor down and we moved into Bright Acres on Saturday. What a relief without the herd of elephants thundering overhead in that apartment.

Our beautiful curving concrete driveway that we drive up and into the garage to unload the groceries etc., with just an 1-1/2″ step up into the house into the access area next to the kitchen, is pure delight as it has been raining here pretty often the past couple of weeks. So much, in fact, that the property can not be finished until late spring for everything due to the settling of the basement fill and the natural weathering of the treated wood on front and back porches. Still very much liveable though.

Note “lake” where the old foundation was.

Everyone who comes up at night, either front or back, are floodlit by the motion sensing flood lights on front and back when they get close enough to the house that their intentions are evident, they are here to either visit or otherwise access the house, are amazed and readily understand the “Bright Acres” name.

Have not gotten the security cameras in as of yet and will likely not get them mounted until it cools off again in the fall of the year. Likewise will not have a lawn until next year after some more fill is added.

While the insurance paid for the house they really took us to the cleaners on our personal property. Turned the loss list over to a third party who ignored the brand names and picked out the cheapest alternative like replacing an antique four drawer knee hole maple office desk of mine with a tubing and particle board contraption labeled as a computer desk and then depreciating it by seventy percent and virtually everything on the list was done the same way.

I will be very busy building and acquiring replacements for a lot of the items and some will never be replaced. Have to finish off the garage and restock my emergency supplies too over the next year to get back to where I was.

Since the salvage that went on in our house by in-laws and neighbors, with us too sick just out of the hospital to even contend with it, the knowledge that I was prepared to withstand about a year’s worth of upset and turmoil is no longer a secret – much to my chagrin as in the three days we have been home I have already had a visit from the welfarite no goods on the street looking to mooch something off me.

I am going to security fence the entire property as soon as the grant comes through and the security cameras which I had to order will be motion sensing pan and tilt with IR which automatically programs on the TVs when activated. If no TV is on when the driveway sensor alerts, it chimes and turns on a bedroom monitor.

As the intruder nears the house and the floods come on the camera switches from IR to normal light. Sure surprised a grandson last night with the lights.

I will be awhile getting settled in, but intend to go back to writing next week as soon as some semblance of order is achieved in my man cave which is presently being invaded by a grand niece while her mother visits Arizona. Then it will become my den again.

Harold

Filed Under: Security

Why I Quit Square Foot Gardening and Went Back To Rows (11 Reasons)

March 21, 2024 by Seasoned Citizen Prepper

square foot gardening

For all of the hype about square foot gardening and raised beds, when two of my sisters, both avid and experienced gardeners (better than I am) stopped by last week, we had a little discussion and all decided that raised beds and square foot gardening is less productive and harder than the time tested standard row garden.

I can hear it already, “Heresy!”

So, here is why three sisters in Minnesota are going back to row gardening:

  1. The raised beds dry out faster and hence need more water.
  2. The raised beds aren’t high enough to stop the back breaking work of weeding.
  3. The raised beds get just as weedy, if not more so after a few years of use, than regular in-ground beds.
  4. With the intensive planting of a square foot garden, if you go on vacation for a few days at just the time the weeds are coming in, you can lose a whole crop of root vegetables (carrots, onions, radishes, etc.) because as you pull out the weeds the intensively planted fledgling veggies also come out.
  5. Raised beds need tending at least 3 times a week. A standard row garden and you can get by with once a week weeding.
  6. It is a lot easier to work a hoe between rows of plants while standing up than to sit and constantly be bent over weeding in a raised bed.
  7. It seems to be actually easier to manage the fertility of the soil in a standard garden than in a raised bed – we don’t know why, we only know what is…
  8. It is easier to water the whole garden than individual plants.
  9. Intensive planting in small beds leads to more conflicts with companion planting.
  10. Lots of paperwork recording when you planted what, where, how to plan rotations, companions, etc.
  11. Expensive and time consuming to put in and get the right mix of soil in them.

I recently got this private email that Phil said I could share…

“Well I’ve been an SFG addict since I first read Mels first book, became a SFG certifed instructor and have been doing SFG ever since, and I couldn’t agree with you more.  
 
As in any system there good and bad things.  Everything you say about them is true.  My wife had a stroke 2 yrs ago in June and I had left my garden in beautiful green plots and when I came back to my garden the weeds had completely taken over. The soil/mix is so rich the weeds out grew my veggies and had gone to seed.  
 
When I had laid out my garden, I laid weed barrier down and then covered it with wood mulch and now I have weeds everywhere.  In desperation I have sprayed industrial strength vinegar, weed whacked, used a blow torch and finally I lowered myself and used some Roundup.  
 
I’m thinking I will have to pull up everything and go back to doing it in the dirt.   However, if one has the time, and energy to pamper their garden, you will get some fantastic results. but not massive amounts.”

-Phil

Don’t tear up everything! Just cover it with black plastic for a month and that should kill all of the weed seeds and anything else bad. I use black plastic and tarps to clear an area before I start a new garden – it works!

All that said, what is good about raised beds and square foot gardening?

  • Great for small areas where you don’t have room for a row garden.
  • Fewer tools and no rototiller or cultivator needed.
  • Good for wet areas.
  • They can be very attractive.
  • Great for someone who has the time and is obsessed with their garden – picking at it every day and never leaving home.
  • It is easier to build little mini-greenhouses over the beds thus extending the growing season.

So, what do we three sisters see that could work?

  • The original square foot gardens were in-ground – retains moisture and uses the soil that is there.
  • Intensive planting and vertical growing can save a lot of space in a small garden plot.
  • It is easier to fertilize and water a small garden.
  • It is easier to fence a small garden and protect it from wildlife.
  • You only need a shovel to dig it and because you don’t step in it the soil doesn’t compact.

We three sisters from Minnesota….. think Mel got obsessed and made a good thing too hard and complex. 

Filed Under: Gardening

Seasonal Crop Rotation

March 21, 2024 by Seasoned Citizen Prepper

Vegetable Garden Rotation

Over the past week I have been pulling up plants that have gone by and no longer producing in the garden, and started planting a second round.

Living in South Carolina the climate affords a pretty long growing season. Honestly – by this time of the year I am pretty sick of weeding and picking. We get WAY too many vegetables to consume ourselves and give away lots. I plant a second round to continue to practice, learn, and I just can’t stand seeing that empty ground knowing the potential it contains.

When you are making your garden plans, remember that there is a pretty good chance that you will have long enough to grow more than one crop.

Typically every year I plant cucumbers (National Pickling), Crookneck Squash, Zucchini, potatoes, tomato’s, cantaloupe, watermelon, and onions. This year – like every other year – I had successes and failures. I am speaking like the season is over and it’s not – I still have stuff growing and lots of veggies left to pick, but most of my plants which I started in April have gone by.

Crop rotation Compost

One of my compost bins is overflowing!!! Yes – I keep it in my garden. History tells me my second round of plantings do not do as well as my first. There are many reasons for this but I suspect the main one is extreme temps and sun exposure. I have considered rigging up some shade out of PVC and weeding fabric – just not a lot of time.

Second plantings this year consist of cucumbers, tomato’s, zucchini, and yellow squash. Some are by seed and some are transplants bought locally.

I am already thinking about my Fall garden – gonna make it a good one.

Filed Under: Gardening

What To Do For a Deer Tick Bite

March 21, 2024 by Seasoned Citizen Prepper

Deer_tick_Ixodes_scapularis

Warning: GRAPHIC IMAGES

Okay, I had two deer tick bites last week – oh yes, they were embedded.

Old thinking – cover the tick with Vicks or petroleum jelly to smother them, back them out with a hot match or nail.

New thinking – get the tick out as fast as possible by pulling STRAIGHT BACK with a tweezers.

Don’t press too hard as you want to keep the tick intact. Once out, put it in a ziplock sandwich baggy with a label as to when it attached itself and how long it was attached. Put this in your freezer – I know, another YUCK!

If the tick was attached for 36 hours and was severely engorged, or you start to feel flu-like symptoms, you have 72 hours to get to the doctor and get a prescription of Doxycycline (also might be available from a vet if you have a good relationship with them).

Deer Ticks Versus Wood Ticks

Now they seem only concerned about the deer tick due to it’s dominance in transmitting Lyme Disease.

What To Do

deer tick stages

So my health insurance 24 hour hotline nurse said to keep the tick in a baggie in the freezer and if I got flu-like symptoms in the next 30 days to contact a doctor.

The doctor’s nurse seemed to think that it was too late if the antibiotic wasn’t given within 72 hrs. Just sayin’…

Lyme Disease can have devastating, life threatening affects. My mother ended up in the hospital for a week last year with various serious symptoms that were eventually traced to Lymes Disease.

What I Did

I had two embedded ticks within 24 hours of each other. One I could reach but shredded it and the head finally festered out two days later – YUCK! The other I couldn’t reach and Bob was able to get out whole and is in the freezer.

I am now back to showering head and body in dollar store anti-dandruff shampoo which seems to keep the ticks moving around long enough for me to pick them off before they embed.

Learn from my experience!

Filed Under: Health and Medical

Solar Power for Dummies

March 21, 2024 by Seasoned Citizen Prepper

I’ve been wanting to learn about solar power because it can be extremely handy in a situation where you might need emergency power, or if you go off grid. I’ve watched a number of YouTube videos and read about solar power, but still just didn’t get it. John from Iowa upgraded his solar system and sent me some small panels and an inverter and other stuff to play around with. Now mind you, I’m not mechanically inclined at all and a bit leery of electricity as it is magic to me. But with a bit of email advice from John,  I now have light!
So here is what a dummy like me THINKS she has learned about solar power so far…
  • The solar panel itself is worthless without a battery to charge.
  • The solar panels are pretty fragile for the most part and break easily if tipped over – that is why the mounting hardware is so important.
  • You have to keep them clear of snow and debris or the light is blocked.
  • The larger the panel, the faster and more/bigger batteries it will charge and keep charged – note that older panels may be big, but may not charge as much as newer panels.
  • Amorphous panels do a better job of collecting light in low light or cloudy conditions, but aren’t as efficient as the crystalline panels.
  • Once you get above 100 watts, you can usually find panels for around $1 a watt.
  • You need to connect the panel to the battery – usually with battery cables.
  • You need a charge controller of some kind to not overcharge the battery if you are just going to set it up and walk away from it.
NOTE FROM JOHN FROM IOWA: “Charge Controller. You must remember that electricity runs both ways. That’s why you can put it back into the grid. The little solar panels I sent you have built in Diodes to prevent this from happening. A Charge Controller does also, but it also controls the rate the electricity goes to the battery when charging. Too much cooks the battery, and ruins it.” Ten watts or less is usually considered a battery maintainer, but will not be able to recharge the battery if drained. You SHOULD have a deep cycle marine battery to hook to the solar panel as these batteries are meant to be recharged many, many times. Now understand that I don’t really get this as a regular car battery is constantly being recharged by the alternator when you drive it. Plus the small solar panels used to maintain batteries are often used on car batteries when the car is in storage, etc. But remember that I don’t know much about this subject, but I may be ahead of you… Those deep cycle marine batteries start at $75 if you have an old one to turn in and the more they can put out the pricier they get. I bought a used one at an RV dealership for $25 that I am playing with to learn about solar. NOTE FROM JOHN FROM IOWA: “Deep cycle and car batteries are different in the respect that car batteries are never meant to go below about a 50% charge for any length of time. That low of a discharge for a length of time, will destroy the car battery. Repeated deep discharges will kill a car battery fairly quick, as Sulphur usually forms on the plates as well as deterioration of the plates themselves. This is due to the fact that the lead plates actually change tier chemistry as the battery is discharged. The car battery has much thinner plates as you’ve likely noticed by the overall weight difference. A deep cycle battery, on the other hand, is made to go deeply discharged and recharged back up with little to no ill effects, repeated times. It has heavier plates and construction that allows this to be okay.” There are lots and lots of 12 volt (battery powered) appliances out there. Think of truck stops and camping centers – coffee makers, little freezers and refrigerators, phone and laptop chargers. Amazon is a good place to start looking for 12 volt appliances. BUT you don’t have to go with 12 volt appliances, you can buy an inverter sized correctly for the 110 appliances you want to connect. Here is a basic rundown that will give you an idea of what appliances take how many watts – these are all approximate numbers:
  • Large Household Appliances (refrigerator, washing machine, etc.)  2,500 Watts
  • Well Water Pump  2,400 Watts
  • Electric Circular Saw  1,600 Watts
  • Microwave Oven  1,400 Watts
  • Hair Dryer  1,300 Watts
  • 1/3 HP Submersible Pump  1,000 Watts
  • 1.7 Cu. Ft. Small Refrigerator 600 Watts
  • Flood Light  500 Watts
  • 20 inch TV/DVD Combo  300 Watts
  • Xbox  200 Watts
  • Desktop Home Computer  150 Watts
  • DVD Player  60 Watts
  • Laptop Computer  50 Watts
  • Battery Charger for a Cell Phone  25 Watts
Under KISS (Keep It Simple Stupid) that means that to run a SINGLE large appliance you will need at least $2,500 in panels alone – not counting mounting hardware, wiring, batteries ($100 to $150 apiece and Lord knows how many you would need!), installation, etc., etc. So this is why people who are off grid and using solar panels to generate electricity have propane appliances and use their electricity judiciously. Practically no one can afford an American lifestyle from just solar energy and battery power at this point in time, and solar panels have come down a lot in the last 8 years. So, I have been talking with an electrician about a startup solar array on my barn – 300 Watts expandable. Installed, about $1,500 – remember that I don’t understand electricity (it is magic to me) so I have to have someone install it. He is doing grid tied electric. At this point in time my local electric company will install for FREE a new meter that will run backwards – I just paid my electric bill and they said my meter can be programmed to run with solar, so no money upfront. You might want to check this out with your electric company. However, I want to do both grid tied AND off grid if needed – versatility makes sense to me as a preparedness person. The electrician hasn’t figured out how to do that yet… He is new to solar, but the only one in town even experimenting with it. Plus I would like to experiment with wind power and hydro power as I have a creek here.

Filed Under: Alternative Energy

Bev’s Favorite Garden Tools

March 21, 2024 by Seasoned Citizen Prepper

Gardening is work and good tools can make all the difference. I’ve spent a lot of money on garden tools through the years between rummage sales and buying new. Sometimes you think you have exactly what you need and you get it home and work with it, and well, it just doesn’t perform as expected.

Tools are also very personal to the individual. Your height, weight, strength and how you garden. I thought I would share some of my favorite tools and why they are my favorites.

First off, I love flower gardening with perennials. I have a lot of shade so I have a lot of hostas and hostas have wicked root systems. I also love daylillies and they too have some really tough root systems. I have several raised bed gardens for veggies, several square foot gardens, and have gone back to row gardening for certain crops. And a small greenhouse (although I wish I had the space to have this one). I do not have a rototiller or power cultivator – I do everything by hand.

I wish I would have bought this hose sprayer end a long time ago and am considering buying a couple of more when they come on sale. It is a shower wand. It turns on and off with a lever – yeah when you have arthritis! It sprays a gentle shower that doesn’t wash your seeds out, or your young plants, and yet soaks them to perfection. It reaches 4′ and has a rubberish grip so your hands don’t get cold either. I love it!

This little hand weeder is a surgical instrument in the garden. I actually have two of them. That dandelion or thistle in the middle of your strawberry patch or asparagus can be removed easily and quickly without hurting any of the plants you want to keep. The V in the middle lifts the tap root on plants easily.

Besides weeding it does a wonderful job of lifting individual strawberry plants (often in the aisles in the spring), small raspberry plants for transplanting, individual flowers or small groups for transplanting and will even work to plus in plants in an already established bed.

Another advantage is that it will act as a “mini-cultivator” in a square foot garden. Drag it between your mini rows and it pulls out the little weed seedlings quickly and easily. Extends your reach too.

For row gardening, there is nothing like the standard arrow head hoe.  Chop, hill the potatoes, drag sideways across young weed seedlings, get in narrow spaces. I have a half dozen hoes, but this is my favorite.

Second favorite hoe is the stirrup hoe. You can drag it through the rows and it just slices off the young weed seedlings. Work it back and forth and you can almost dig a hole. Perfect for row gardens with open spaces.

shovelAbsolute favorite shovel in all the world! Went to a garden sale of daylillies and hostas and the guy was using this shovel to split and dig huge hostas! Yes it is pricey at $40 for a shovel, but well worth it!

Stainless steel one piece construction I believe. Can’t break it! I have broken a lot of shovels, even the expensive ones that say they won’t break. This one doesn’t break! It has a narrow, tapering blade with a SHARP end – perfect for cutting tough root systems. And I LOVE the cushioning on the handle.

Filed Under: Gardening

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