Archive | March, 2012

SurvivalBlog Writing Contest

Posted on 31 March 2012 by Preparedness News Feed

We’ve chosen the winners for Round 39 of the SurvivalBlog
non-fiction writing contest.

But first, I’d like to mention several new prizes that will be awarded starting with Round 40:

  • A new prize will be added to the First Prize package: a $300 gift certificate from CJL Enterprize, for any of their military surplus gear. You may remember seeing them mentioned in SurvivalBlog as suppliers of a variety of U.S. military surplus gear, including full military specification ALICE packs, at great prices.

  • Three new prizes will be added to to the Third Prize package: These include: a large handmade clothes drying rack, a washboard and a Homesteading for Beginners DVD, all courtesy of The Homestead Store, with a combined value of $206. (BTW, I recently bought two of their large drying racks for our use here at the ranch and I can attest that they are very sturdy and well-made.)

These new prizes bring the combined value of the top three prizes to more than $5,600. I greatly appreciate the generosity of the prize donors!

And the winner is…

First Prize goes to Jim D. for The Extreme Solar Still Concept which was posted on March 31, 2012. He will receive: A.) A gift certificate worth $1,000, courtesy of Spec Ops Brand, B.) A course certificate from onPoint
Tactical
. This certificate will be for the prize winner’s choice of three-day
civilian courses. (Excluding those restricted for military or government
teams.) Three day onPoint courses normally cost $795, and
C.) Two cases of Mountain House freeze dried assorted entrees in #10 cans, courtesy of Ready
Made Resources
. (A $350 value.) D.) A 9-Tray Excalibur Food Dehydrator from Safecastle.com (a $275 value), and E.) A $250 gift certificate from Sunflower Ammo.

Second Prize goes to The Gentleman Fahma in New Hamsha for A First-Timer’s Cider Making which was posted on March 7, 2012. He will receive: A.) A Glock form factor SIRT laser training pistol. It is a $439 value courtesy of Next Level Training. B.) A FloJak F-50 hand well pump (a $349 value), courtesy of FloJak.com. C.) A “grab bag” of preparedness
gear and books from Jim’s Amazing Secret Bunker of Redundant Redundancy (JASBORR)
with a retail value of at least $300, D.) A $250 gift card from Emergency Essentials, and E.) two cases of Meals, Ready to Eat (MREs), courtesy of CampingSurvival.com (a $180 value) and F.) A Tactical Trauma Bag #3 from JRH Enterprises (a $200 value).

Third Prize goes to Charles J. for Melting Lead for the Meltdown which was posted on February 3, 2012. He will receive: A.) A Royal Berkey water filter, courtesy of Directive 21. (This filter system is a $275 value.), B.) Expanded sets of both washable feminine pads and liners, donated by Naturally Cozy. This is a $185 retail value, C.) A Commence Fire! emergency stove with three tinder refill kits. (A $160 value.), and D.) Two Super Survival Pack seed collections, a $150 value, courtesy of Seed for Security.

There were also 24 honorable mention prizes. Each of these writers will each receive a $30 Amazon.com gift certificate. These go to:

Note to all prize winners: Please e-mail us and let us know your current e-mail address. (The Amazon gift certificates are delivered via e-mail.) And for the top three prize winners, we will also need your UPS and USPS addresses. Thanks!

Also note that the Honorable Mention prize winners are still eligible to be awarded any of the top three prizes, in subsequent rounds of the writing contest, so so keep up the good work!

Round 40 begins today and ends on May 31st, so get busy writing and e-mail us
your entry. Remember that there is a 1,500-word minimum, and articles that relate practical “how to” skills
for survival have an advantage in the judging.

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Letter Re: Key Questions For and About Your Children

Posted on 31 March 2012 by Preparedness News Feed

James: In regards to M.D.M.’s article, I’d like to add something to his Question #4, There is no reason to smother a baby or toddler to keep them quite as in that M*A*S*H episode mentioned. I learned an old Indian trick years ago, when my kids were young and restless. All a mother needs to do is blow lightly in the child’s face when they start fussing and about to cry. This blowing lightly momentarily takes their breath away, and they stop fussing, and concentrate on breathing, It doesn’t take much blowing lightly in their face, and they soon drift off to sleep. This works good on infants and kids up to about two years old!
 
Nothing is more distracting than being in church and have some mother not knowing what to do to keep her baby from crying, and disturbing everybody around her for several rows, until the only thing she can do is take the baby out of the room. I read about this in some old book on Indian plains tribes, the mothers used to run out into the woods or high brush with their child and hide, when the village came under attack, and this blowing lightly in the child’s face to keep them from fussing or crying saved many lives. So after reading this, I tried it in church when my youngest son was a baby, and started fussing and crying, and it worked wonderfully! Something good to know if you have a baby and don’t want to disturb people in church! – J.M. in Utah

Article source: http://survivalblog.com/2012/03/letter-re-key-questions-for-and-about-your-children.html

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New Images of Titanic Shipwreck Revealed

New Images of Titanic Shipwreck Revealed

Posted on 31 March 2012 by How about that! News from the Other Side

Just in time for the 100th anniversary of the most storied maritime disaster in history, National Geographic magazine and a team of researchers have unveiled new images of the Titanic, revealing unrestricted views of the wreck for the first time ever.



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Image: National Geographic

National Geographic

The detailed, sweeping images of the sunken ship were made by stitching together hundreds of optical and sonar images collected by three deep-diving robots during a 2010 Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution expedition.

One remotely operated vehicle and two autonomous swimming robots were equipped with sonar, used to make wide-area maps; and advanced 3D camera systems, used to conduct detailed investigations of the shipwreck.

The resulting images are the most comprehensive ever made of the ghostly site.

The initial survey covered an area about the size of Manhattan. The deep-diving vehicles made detailed maps of the seafloor, then moved in to concentrate on the colossal, broken pieces of the Titanic’s wreckage, and the thousands of artifacts on the seafloor surrounding the shattered ship.

“There are very few places on the bottom of the ocean that we have a 25-year history of what’s happened there, and this study will help scientists and others understand the long term fate of wrecks,” WHOI’s Bill Lange said in a statement.

“Having a better understanding of the conditions and long-term changes that can occur to these shipwrecks from corrosion, microbial activityand the pressure in the deep sea will give policymakers and environmental managers the tools and data they need,” he said.

Lange was a member of the 1985 and 1986 WHOI teams that first discovered and explored the wreck. “There’s no doubt in my mind that the public’s interest in Titanic helped propel the development of many of the technologies we use to explore the deep sea today,” he said.

The images, made from 250 mosaics of the Titanic site, are published in the April 2012 issue of National Geographic Magazine.

Image: Titanic engines

Copyright 2012 RMS Titanic / AIVL / WHOI

RMS Titanic (a subsidiary of Premier Exhibitions Inc. and the only company permitted by law to recover objects from the wreck of Titanic) will be adding both still images and interactive applications of the work done by WHOI to its touring exhibits, “Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition.”

A full list of cities where these mosaics and more exclusive content from the most recent expedition will be on display is available online at www.rmstitanic.net.

Follow OurAmazingPlanet for the latest in Earth science and exploration news on Twitter @OAPlanet and on Facebook.

More from OurAmazingPlanet:

Image Gallery: Shipwreck Alley’s Sunken Treasures

Image Gallery: Stunning Shots of the Titanic Shipwreck

Shipwrecks Gallery: Secrets of the Deep

More from msnbc.com:

PhotoBlog: More amazing views of the Titanic

Events mark 100th anniversary of Titanic’s sinking




Full Titanic wreck site mapped for first time






What sank the Titanic? Scientists point to moon



Cosmic Log archive on the Titanic

© 2012 OurAmazingPlanet. All rights reserved. More from OurAmazingPlanet.

Article source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/C2C-InTheNews/~3/dVhokhBTips/

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Navy: We’re 4 Years Away From Laser Guns on Ships

Posted on 31 March 2012 by How about that! News from the Other Side

 

The dream of sailors, nerds and sailor-nerds everywhere is on the verge of coming true, senior Navy technologists swear.  Within four years, they claim they’ll have a working prototype of a laser cannon, ready to place aboard a ship. And they’re just months away from inviting defense contractors to bid on a contract to build it for them.

“Subsonic cruise missiles, aircraft, fast-moving boats, unmanned aerial vehicles” — Mike Deitchman, who oversees future weapons development for the Office of Naval Research, promises Danger Room that the Navy laser cannons just over the horizon will target them all.

Or they will be, if ONR’s plans work out as promised — not exactly a strong suit of proposed laser weapons over the decades. (Note the decided lack of blast at your side.) First step in reaching this raygun reality: Finish up the paperwork. “The contract will probably have options go through four years, but depending on which laser source the vendors pick, we may be able to demo something after two years,” says Roger McGiness, who works on laser tech for Deitchman. “Our hope afterwards is to move to acquisition.”

Translated from the bureaucrat: After the Office of Naval Research can prove the prototype works, it’ll recommend the Navy start buying the laser guns. That process will begin in “30 to 60 days,” adds Deitchman, when his directorate invites industry representatives for an informal idea session. Deitchman and McGiness plan on putting a contract out for the prototype “by the end of the year.”

If this sounds like a rapid pace of development for the ultimate in science fiction weaponry, there are two major explanations why the Navy thinks the future makes a pew-pew-pew noise. The first is technological. The second is bureaucratic.

From a technological perspective, the Navy thinks maritime laser weapons finally represent a proven, mature technology. The key point came last April, when the Navy put a test laser firing a (relatively weak) 15-kilowatt beam aboard a decommissioned destroyer. Never before had a laser cannon at sea disabled an enemy vessel. But the Martime Laser Demonstrator cut through choppy California waters, an overcast sky and salty sea air to burn through the outboard engine of a moving motorboat a mile away. You can see video of the successful demonstration above.

The bureaucratic reason has to do with a decision inside the Office of Naval Research to focus its laser efforts with laser-like precision. For over a decade, it’s dreamed of creating a massive, scalable laser weapon, called the Free Electron Laser, that can generate up to a megawatt’s worth of blast power. Currently, the laser blasts 14 kilowatts of light — think 140 lamps, all shining in the same direction and at the same wavelength. A hundred kilowatts is considered militarily useful; a megawatt beam would burn through 20 feet of steel in a single second.

The Free Electron Laser has its critics, including a Senate committee. And it was sucking up all the oxygen inside the Navy’s laser efforts. So, as InsideDefense.com first reported, ONR decided, effectively, to break them up into the laser equivalent of weight classes. Generating a 100-kilowatt beam is now the province of “solid state lasers,” lasers that focus light through a solid gain medium, like a crystal or a optical fibers. The Free Electron Laser, which uses magnets to generate its beam, will stay focused on getting up to a megawatt.

That, the Navy’s scientists contend, will get an actual, working laser cannon onto a ship faster. Yes, a 100-kilowatt laser isn’t as powerful as the longed-for megawatt gun. And yes, a solid-state laser can’t operate on multiple wavelengths, while a Free Electron Laser can, making the mega-laser more useful when the sea air is full of crud and pollution. But the Office of Naval Research says that lots of active, near-term threats to ships will be vulnerable to the 100-kilowatt, solid state laser.

“It’s easier to shrink down a solid-state laser [to get on a ship], and there’s a maturity here, vice the Free Electron Laser,” says Deitchman. “The solid-state laser will still deal with many asymmetric threats, but not the most hardened, most challenging threats. It’s near-to-mid term. The Free Electron Laser is still long-term.”

There’s another advantage to developing a less-powerful laser first. The Navy’s surface ships don’t yet have the power generation necessary for spooling up a megawatt-class laser — or at least not if they don’t want to potentially be dead in the water. That’s one of the reasons the Senate Armed Services Committee is skeptical of the Free Electron Laser. It’s not clear that the ships can cope with diverting 100 kilowatts of power, either, but the Office of Naval Research thinks they can, and the laser geeks are “working closely” with the Naval Sea Systems Command to make sure the scientists are writing checks that the ship’s generators can cash.

But perhaps even more important is the fact that the Navy brass is on board with a concerted push for a new generation of shipboard weapons. “This was a decision by the Office of Naval Research,” Deitchman says, “that was approved and supported by senior Navy leadership.” The Navy may be set on a smaller fleet, but apparently it wants that fleet making pew-pew-pew noises.

Article source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/C2C-InTheNews/~3/dpqjsORPXQM/

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Exploding Dinosaur Myth Burst by Scientists

Posted on 31 March 2012 by How about that! News from the Other Side

Now researchers based at Zurich and Basel universities in Switzerland say they
have debunked the myth by proving that it would not have been possible for
the gas, released as the bodies decomposed, to reach such pressures that it
spontaneously exploded.

Through measurements of the corpses of 100 humans, which are of a similar size
to ichthyosaurs, they found that putrefaction gases, which build up as the
body breaks down, only reach pressures of 0.035 bar.

In contrast they calculated that for ichthyosaur skeletons to explode under 50
to 150 metres of water, the depth at which the fossils were found, would
require internal gas pressures of between five and 15 bar, which would be
extremely unlikely due to gas permanently seeping out of the body.

This is in part because the water pressure would neutralise the pressure
building up inside the body, Christian Klug, one of the researchers,
explained.

He said: “It is completely impossible that the carcase explodes without
further help. The gas would never get enough pressure to explode.

“The only exception would be if you stab the carcase, then it might
happen but then it would usually just be the organs and body liquids that
get expelled.”

More likely is that certain situations where the oxygen levels, depth and
water currents were just right, the carcases would have sunk to the sea bed
and been left untouched by predators, the researchers said.

As they decomposed gentle currents may have dispersed away the small embryo
bones while leaving the larger adult skeletons in situ.

Article source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/C2C-InTheNews/~3/kgv-1nZtt08/Exploding-dinosaur-myth-burst-by-scientists.html

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The Imaginary Monsters of U.S. Cities

Posted on 31 March 2012 by How about that! News from the Other Side

If you want to catch a cryptid doing its thing in America, common sense would deem you drive far out into the woods where humankind rarely ventures. After all, it’s typically hunters and hikers who wind up having awkward run-ins with Bigfoot or the Flatwoods monster.

But city dwellers who want a taste of the supernatural ought not to despair. A deep riffling through the musty archives of American folklore reveal several beasties who have given up their woodsy pad for the fast-paced life of the big city. See what monsters could be dealing with condo fees and long lines at Starbucks in the gallery below.

Please use a JavaScript-enabled device to view this slideshow

Article source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/C2C-InTheNews/~3/gjGQ1PoHRGg/

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Comment on Readers’ Entries Part 1:  Organization/Storage Tips when Prepping in an Apartment by aptprepper

Comment on Readers’ Entries Part 1: Organization/Storage Tips when Prepping in an Apartment by aptprepper

Posted on 31 March 2012 by Preparedness News Feed

Editor’s Note:  This is the first segment of readers’  tips for preppers living in an apartment.  I was originally planning to post all tips in one blog post.  However, due to the large number of tips received, I separated them by category.  The most popular topic by far, is regarding storage.  As all apartment dwellers know, unless you live in a loft or penthouse suite, space is always an issue.  I was gratified to see so many tips and thank our readers for taking the time to enter our contest.  Please note if your tip did not appear in this post, it will be in the next one.

Finding Storage Space

Always be on the lookout for somewhere to put more preps.  All the usual space is taken up, and if you are like me, you can always use more space for those goodies you want to
stock for later.

Think you are out of space?

You have space under the bed, on the floor of the closet, and on closet shelves.

Buy a shoe bag and hang it on the inside of your closet door.  Those little pockets can hold an amazing amount of stuff.  Extra meds, medical supplies, baby wipes, or
food.  Candy, dried fruits, etc. Whatever you want to store that is small enough to fit and not so heavy as to tear the pockets.

You can hang one on the inside of the bathroom door for extra supplies there too.
Bath tissue, peroxide, q-tips, make up. And yes you can store extra make up.

Under the bathroom sink is a good place for plastic containers with goodies. Make sure
that if the pipe breaks it will not ruin whatever is under the sink.

For thirty or forty dollars from Wal-Mart or Kmart you can buy a shelf stand that goes
over the toilet tank. It will have either open shelves or one or two with doors over
them. This will offer you storage you can take with you when you leave, and also does
nothing to alter the walls of your bathroom.

Bookcases. you can stack cans behind books on bookcases. or put doors or a curtain over the front of the bookcase and stack food or supplies there.

Do you have a suitcase or overnight case? Fill them with items to take with you if you have to leave.

The trunk of your car holds an amazing amount of blankets, water, and dry foods.

Do you have extra purses? Fill them too. The drawers of your dressers, Canned foods
can go in the back of the drawers, or under clothes.

Is the furniture yours? We found end tables at the thrift stores that look like a drum,
closed on the sides, with one door that opens, it holds lots of food out of sight.

You can slide a flat of tuna under the couch. Do you have an entertainment center, are
there doors on it? If the doors are glass or plastic see through, put a covering over them and put food in there.

You can buy a shower curtain with pockets on it to put in shampoo, soap, scrubbies, etc.
or make one.

A hanging shelf in your closet that is supposed to be for handbags and sweaters, can
hold those and also supplies. Zip up and things are out of sight.

Put extra blankets and sheets under your mattress.  Take out the last drawer of your dresser and put things on the floor. Under your kitchen sink for plastic bags, and
items that won’t ruin if wet.

Do you use the oven of your stove? Does it have a pilot light.?  Store extra kitchen tools there, buy gift boxes, fill them with whatever you want, slide them under the living room
chairs.

Cover a window with cardboard covered with material to look like a curtain from outside.
Then put small shelves in the window, fill with goodies, and hang a curtain over it from
the inside of the house. From outside it looks like a curtain, from inside it looks like a curtain.

You can also get boxes and label them, summer blouses, winter blouses. Hats, scarves,
Christmas decorations, and put them on a closet shelf. Fill them with supplies you need.

How much company do you have visit, do they come for dinner, or lunch? How long do they stay? This is not to be nosy, it is to help you think of how to store things without
bringing them to someone’s attention and asking you questions you may not want to
answer. Or to expose you to problems later.

If you have the room in the kitchen, you can buy a small storage unit designed to hold food or tools. They don’t take up much floor space, but have four or more shelves. They
can hold lots of food.

Wooden file cabinets two or more can also be used for food storage.  They also make nice end tables to hold a lamp.

Either buy the blocks that raise your bed up or make some with concrete blocks covered
with contact paper, fabric or painted. This will raise your bed up a few inches and allow you to store more things there.

Make some shelves for the hallway with 1×6 or wider pieces of wood, which can be cut to the length you want at the store you buy them from.  You can again use concrete blocks, or glass blocks.

I suggest you cover the sides and front of them. You could put books on the top shelf. I
suggest that in an apartment you cover, conceal your storage. .

You have most likely a contract you signed when moving in the apartment that gives
management the right to enter to make repairs, treat for insects, or to inspect for
up keep on your part. Not usually a problem.

Do you have a headboard for your bed?  You can use bookshelves for a headboard. Fill
the shelves with supplies, and cover the shelves, or turn the open side of the bookshelf to the wall, push the bed against it, and bingo, you have a headboard. And a place to store extra food or whatever you want.

You can make a foot board for the bed this way too. Probably want doors on it. or use a
short dresser for a foot board.

If you have the room, extra dressers can be put in the bedroom for storage.

If you can’t lift the mattress on the bed to put extra blankets under, put them on the top
of the mattress, cover them with a plastic mattress cover, and make the bed as usual.

Cover the pillows with extra pillow cases and cover them with plastic pillow covers, then
put one over the plastic one for sleeping.

You can hang quilts on the wall as decoration until you need to use it. Sheets can be
folded and put under couch cushions or chair cushions. Sometimes blankets too.

Blankets can also be used as a throw cover over chairs and couches. Some people don’t
like the look, some do. It is storage in the open.

Rethink how items are stacked or arranged in the kitchen shelves. Can you change them, re-arrange them to get more use from the space.

You can build a small box. wide enough to hold a can of veggies or fruit, however high
you want, and the length of a wall in the living room. fill it with food cans, then put
the furniture in front of the box. Oh, paint the box to match the wall or wall trim. Most
people don’t pay attention to little things like that. Use doors or curtains over it to
hide the contents.

It is not always convenient to buy something new, especially when you are trying to build
up storage items and supplies. And sometimes when you have used something
for one purpose for a long time, it is difficult to envision it being used for another purpose.

You can find extra space if you look around your home thinking about some new ways to store your foods and other supplies.

–Selene

 

The best tip I can give would be don’t overlook storage areas like under the beds, under and behind the couch, and  water heater closet.

–Lweson

 

Storage Hint: Aside from the normal apartment storage locations such as under beds, under couches and chairs, inside the hollows of the ends of couches and chairs and such, think vertically! That space above the door trim in the hallway… put cleats on the wall, hooked to the studs then reinforce a piece of ¾” plywood with cleats every 16 inches and lay across the span to creat an apartment “attic”  the width of which is usually less than 48 inches and can be as long as your hallway. Think vertically… the space above the refrigerator is another large storage spot for this trick.

– C. T. B.

 

Being an apartment prepper you need to use any and all space available to you. I.E. Closets, under beds, kitchen & bathroom cabinets, under tables: side, coffee, and family. Also use storage that’s available inside of things: coat pockets and winter clothes pockets. Be sure to exchange when you move back to winter clothes and use your summer clothes. Maybe not be able to store alot inside but you’ll being able to store some. Also use any luggage, duffel bags, purses, school bags (when schools out) for storage as well. Always be open minded and thing outside the box. There maybe be empty space under your couch or recliner to use. All it may take is a little modification.

–HoosierPrepper2012

 

My suggestion is this:  I sometimes cave and waste $1.48 on a 20 oz Pepsi, a “single serve” of chocolate milk, a Vitamin Water, etc. I have six packs of individual Gatorade in my pandemic pantry so that I don’t have to open a big bottle for a stomach bug. When I empty this kind of small, strong plastic bottle, I wash it and rinse it, cut off the label, and fill it with water. But my suggestion is WHERE to put it: this is the suggestion that applies to anyone in a small space. I have a lot of bookshelves, even have cookbooks in some kitchen cabinets. I put all these water bottles behind the books. Usually there is up to four inches of wasted space behind a book, when it’s pulled out from the back of the bookshelf. I now have yards of bookshelves lined with water bottles. It’s discreet and uses space that can’t really fit anything else.

–mama7x
Farming Salt & Light

 

Keep all canned goods on a rotating storage rack like a cansolidator so that your cans always stay fresh!

–D.V.

http://hdivs.com

 

I have been directing those who live in apartments to store water in 2-liter bottles after they have been sanitized with bleach. They can be filled with filtered water or water that has been treated. A secure way to store without leakage is to dip the top into a container of melted candle stubs. After the wax has hardened, lay them down onto the box lids you can get at a grocery or wholesale store. Slide them under the bed. Most under-bed space allows you to stack a pack of toilet paper on top of the bottles. Great utilization of tight spaces.

 

–Linda

 

Hide your preps ‘in plain sight.’  Put your preps in antique trunks that can be used as end tables. You have storage that no one knows about.

–Stacy

 

I have recently installed a behind-the-couch rolling can rotator in my 12×14 living room.  It is 8′ long, 12″ wide, has six shelves with two tracks each.  The shelf holds about 400 cans, which load from one side, roll down the 2″ grade to the other end, where I pull cans as needed.  It automatically offers you oldest first.

Here’s the link to a couple of blog posts about it.  We kind of winged it as far as design, and there are a couple of things I would do differently on a second shelf, but it sure does work!

Initial:  http://krissimplyliving.blogspot.com/2012/03/rotating-can-rack-progress.html

Final:  http://krissimplyliving.blogspot.com/2012/03/final-installation-of-can-shelf.html

–1dychef2k

 

 

Throughout my extensive military training and personal survival challenges around my home state, I have learned that water is the most important resource. As a husband and father of two smaller boys, I must prep my 625 square foot apartment to support all of us. Food can often be easily condensed, but water is hard to store in the quantities necessary. My tip for storing water is to fill any extra space in your chest freezer with water in Costco milk jugs. The jugs are more rectangular and stack easily. Also, in short periods of power grid failures, your freezer will stay cold longer, allowing you to put off breaking into dry stores for a little and keeping any frozen meat cold long enough to decide if it needs to be converted to dried goods for the long haul or put back into a regular rotation to prevent spoiling. As other water stores in the house are used up, you can begin using the ice water from the freezer. While there is often not much room in a prepper’s freezer, any extra space that can be used to store water is valuable space!

–Bigyakker

My best advice for apartment preppers is to make lists of everything.  In an apartment you have so little space that you have to stick things where ever you can.  With so many different places, instead of one location, it is very important to know not only what is in each location but all the locations that you have.  When I started prepping I would lose track of what I had because I would put something in one location and forget that it was there.  The things would either go bad or I would buy more because I would forget what I had and where I had it.  I started by making a list of all the locations that I had and then I made a list of what I had in each location.  I keep all of the list together so when I am looking for something I can look at all the list at once.

–April

Great suggestions, everyone!  Thank you!  I know I’ll be re-evaluating some of my storage spots.

 

For your preparedness needs, please visit:

Get the real deal. Whether bugging out or sheltering in place, you can never have enough clean water for survival: For your water purifier needs, please visit:

 

Source Article from http://apartmentprepper.com/?p=4346#comment-7387

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Comment on Readers’ Entries Part 1:  Organization/Storage Tips when Prepping in an Apartment by Comment on Readers’ Entries Part 1: Organization/Storage Tips when Prepping in an Apartment by Carl Hill | Learn How to be Prepared

Comment on Readers’ Entries Part 1: Organization/Storage Tips when Prepping in an Apartment by Comment on Readers’ Entries Part 1: Organization/Storage Tips when Prepping in an Apartment by Carl Hill | Learn How to be Prepared

Posted on 31 March 2012 by Preparedness News Feed

Editor’s Note:  This is the first segment of readers’  tips for preppers living in an apartment.  I was originally planning to post all tips in one blog post.  However, due to the large number of tips received, I separated them by category.  The most popular topic by far, is regarding storage.  As all apartment dwellers know, unless you live in a loft or penthouse suite, space is always an issue.  I was gratified to see so many tips and thank our readers for taking the time to enter our contest.  Please note if your tip did not appear in this post, it will be in the next one.

Finding Storage Space

Always be on the lookout for somewhere to put more preps.  All the usual space is taken up, and if you are like me, you can always use more space for those goodies you want to
stock for later.

Think you are out of space?

You have space under the bed, on the floor of the closet, and on closet shelves.

Buy a shoe bag and hang it on the inside of your closet door.  Those little pockets can hold an amazing amount of stuff.  Extra meds, medical supplies, baby wipes, or
food.  Candy, dried fruits, etc. Whatever you want to store that is small enough to fit and not so heavy as to tear the pockets.

You can hang one on the inside of the bathroom door for extra supplies there too.
Bath tissue, peroxide, q-tips, make up. And yes you can store extra make up.

Under the bathroom sink is a good place for plastic containers with goodies. Make sure
that if the pipe breaks it will not ruin whatever is under the sink.

For thirty or forty dollars from Wal-Mart or Kmart you can buy a shelf stand that goes
over the toilet tank. It will have either open shelves or one or two with doors over
them. This will offer you storage you can take with you when you leave, and also does
nothing to alter the walls of your bathroom.

Bookcases. you can stack cans behind books on bookcases. or put doors or a curtain over the front of the bookcase and stack food or supplies there.

Do you have a suitcase or overnight case? Fill them with items to take with you if you have to leave.

The trunk of your car holds an amazing amount of blankets, water, and dry foods.

Do you have extra purses? Fill them too. The drawers of your dressers, Canned foods
can go in the back of the drawers, or under clothes.

Is the furniture yours? We found end tables at the thrift stores that look like a drum,
closed on the sides, with one door that opens, it holds lots of food out of sight.

You can slide a flat of tuna under the couch. Do you have an entertainment center, are
there doors on it? If the doors are glass or plastic see through, put a covering over them and put food in there.

You can buy a shower curtain with pockets on it to put in shampoo, soap, scrubbies, etc.
or make one.

A hanging shelf in your closet that is supposed to be for handbags and sweaters, can
hold those and also supplies. Zip up and things are out of sight.

Put extra blankets and sheets under your mattress.  Take out the last drawer of your dresser and put things on the floor. Under your kitchen sink for plastic bags, and
items that won’t ruin if wet.

Do you use the oven of your stove? Does it have a pilot light.?  Store extra kitchen tools there, buy gift boxes, fill them with whatever you want, slide them under the living room
chairs.

Cover a window with cardboard covered with material to look like a curtain from outside.
Then put small shelves in the window, fill with goodies, and hang a curtain over it from
the inside of the house. From outside it looks like a curtain, from inside it looks like a curtain.

You can also get boxes and label them, summer blouses, winter blouses. Hats, scarves,
Christmas decorations, and put them on a closet shelf. Fill them with supplies you need.

How much company do you have visit, do they come for dinner, or lunch? How long do they stay? This is not to be nosy, it is to help you think of how to store things without
bringing them to someone’s attention and asking you questions you may not want to
answer. Or to expose you to problems later.

If you have the room in the kitchen, you can buy a small storage unit designed to hold food or tools. They don’t take up much floor space, but have four or more shelves. They
can hold lots of food.

Wooden file cabinets two or more can also be used for food storage.  They also make nice end tables to hold a lamp.

Either buy the blocks that raise your bed up or make some with concrete blocks covered
with contact paper, fabric or painted. This will raise your bed up a few inches and allow you to store more things there.

Make some shelves for the hallway with 1×6 or wider pieces of wood, which can be cut to the length you want at the store you buy them from.  You can again use concrete blocks, or glass blocks.

I suggest you cover the sides and front of them. You could put books on the top shelf. I
suggest that in an apartment you cover, conceal your storage. .

You have most likely a contract you signed when moving in the apartment that gives
management the right to enter to make repairs, treat for insects, or to inspect for
up keep on your part. Not usually a problem.

Do you have a headboard for your bed?  You can use bookshelves for a headboard. Fill
the shelves with supplies, and cover the shelves, or turn the open side of the bookshelf to the wall, push the bed against it, and bingo, you have a headboard. And a place to store extra food or whatever you want.

You can make a foot board for the bed this way too. Probably want doors on it. or use a
short dresser for a foot board.

If you have the room, extra dressers can be put in the bedroom for storage.

If you can’t lift the mattress on the bed to put extra blankets under, put them on the top
of the mattress, cover them with a plastic mattress cover, and make the bed as usual.

Cover the pillows with extra pillow cases and cover them with plastic pillow covers, then
put one over the plastic one for sleeping.

You can hang quilts on the wall as decoration until you need to use it. Sheets can be
folded and put under couch cushions or chair cushions. Sometimes blankets too.

Blankets can also be used as a throw cover over chairs and couches. Some people don’t
like the look, some do. It is storage in the open.

Rethink how items are stacked or arranged in the kitchen shelves. Can you change them, re-arrange them to get more use from the space.

You can build a small box. wide enough to hold a can of veggies or fruit, however high
you want, and the length of a wall in the living room. fill it with food cans, then put
the furniture in front of the box. Oh, paint the box to match the wall or wall trim. Most
people don’t pay attention to little things like that. Use doors or curtains over it to
hide the contents.

It is not always convenient to buy something new, especially when you are trying to build
up storage items and supplies. And sometimes when you have used something
for one purpose for a long time, it is difficult to envision it being used for another purpose.

You can find extra space if you look around your home thinking about some new ways to store your foods and other supplies.

–Selene

 

The best tip I can give would be don’t overlook storage areas like under the beds, under and behind the couch, and  water heater closet.

–Lweson

 

Storage Hint: Aside from the normal apartment storage locations such as under beds, under couches and chairs, inside the hollows of the ends of couches and chairs and such, think vertically! That space above the door trim in the hallway… put cleats on the wall, hooked to the studs then reinforce a piece of ¾” plywood with cleats every 16 inches and lay across the span to creat an apartment “attic”  the width of which is usually less than 48 inches and can be as long as your hallway. Think vertically… the space above the refrigerator is another large storage spot for this trick.

– C. T. B.

 

Being an apartment prepper you need to use any and all space available to you. I.E. Closets, under beds, kitchen & bathroom cabinets, under tables: side, coffee, and family. Also use storage that’s available inside of things: coat pockets and winter clothes pockets. Be sure to exchange when you move back to winter clothes and use your summer clothes. Maybe not be able to store alot inside but you’ll being able to store some. Also use any luggage, duffel bags, purses, school bags (when schools out) for storage as well. Always be open minded and thing outside the box. There maybe be empty space under your couch or recliner to use. All it may take is a little modification.

–HoosierPrepper2012

 

My suggestion is this:  I sometimes cave and waste $1.48 on a 20 oz Pepsi, a “single serve” of chocolate milk, a Vitamin Water, etc. I have six packs of individual Gatorade in my pandemic pantry so that I don’t have to open a big bottle for a stomach bug. When I empty this kind of small, strong plastic bottle, I wash it and rinse it, cut off the label, and fill it with water. But my suggestion is WHERE to put it: this is the suggestion that applies to anyone in a small space. I have a lot of bookshelves, even have cookbooks in some kitchen cabinets. I put all these water bottles behind the books. Usually there is up to four inches of wasted space behind a book, when it’s pulled out from the back of the bookshelf. I now have yards of bookshelves lined with water bottles. It’s discreet and uses space that can’t really fit anything else.

–mama7x
Farming Salt & Light

 

Keep all canned goods on a rotating storage rack like a cansolidator so that your cans always stay fresh!

–D.V.

http://hdivs.com

 

I have been directing those who live in apartments to store water in 2-liter bottles after they have been sanitized with bleach. They can be filled with filtered water or water that has been treated. A secure way to store without leakage is to dip the top into a container of melted candle stubs. After the wax has hardened, lay them down onto the box lids you can get at a grocery or wholesale store. Slide them under the bed. Most under-bed space allows you to stack a pack of toilet paper on top of the bottles. Great utilization of tight spaces.

 

–Linda

 

Hide your preps ‘in plain sight.’  Put your preps in antique trunks that can be used as end tables. You have storage that no one knows about.

–Stacy

 

I have recently installed a behind-the-couch rolling can rotator in my 12×14 living room.  It is 8′ long, 12″ wide, has six shelves with two tracks each.  The shelf holds about 400 cans, which load from one side, roll down the 2″ grade to the other end, where I pull cans as needed.  It automatically offers you oldest first.

Here’s the link to a couple of blog posts about it.  We kind of winged it as far as design, and there are a couple of things I would do differently on a second shelf, but it sure does work!

Initial:  http://krissimplyliving.blogspot.com/2012/03/rotating-can-rack-progress.html

Final:  http://krissimplyliving.blogspot.com/2012/03/final-installation-of-can-shelf.html

–1dychef2k

 

 

Throughout my extensive military training and personal survival challenges around my home state, I have learned that water is the most important resource. As a husband and father of two smaller boys, I must prep my 625 square foot apartment to support all of us. Food can often be easily condensed, but water is hard to store in the quantities necessary. My tip for storing water is to fill any extra space in your chest freezer with water in Costco milk jugs. The jugs are more rectangular and stack easily. Also, in short periods of power grid failures, your freezer will stay cold longer, allowing you to put off breaking into dry stores for a little and keeping any frozen meat cold long enough to decide if it needs to be converted to dried goods for the long haul or put back into a regular rotation to prevent spoiling. As other water stores in the house are used up, you can begin using the ice water from the freezer. While there is often not much room in a prepper’s freezer, any extra space that can be used to store water is valuable space!

–Bigyakker

My best advice for apartment preppers is to make lists of everything.  In an apartment you have so little space that you have to stick things where ever you can.  With so many different places, instead of one location, it is very important to know not only what is in each location but all the locations that you have.  When I started prepping I would lose track of what I had because I would put something in one location and forget that it was there.  The things would either go bad or I would buy more because I would forget what I had and where I had it.  I started by making a list of all the locations that I had and then I made a list of what I had in each location.  I keep all of the list together so when I am looking for something I can look at all the list at once.

–April

Great suggestions, everyone!  Thank you!  I know I’ll be re-evaluating some of my storage spots.

 

For your preparedness needs, please visit:

Get the real deal. Whether bugging out or sheltering in place, you can never have enough clean water for survival: For your water purifier needs, please visit:

 

Source Article from http://apartmentprepper.com/?p=4346#comment-7386

Comments (0)

Comment on Readers’ Entries Part 1:  Organization/Storage Tips when Prepping in an Apartment by Comment on Readers’ Entries Part 1: Organization/Storage Tips when Prepping in an Apartment by Carl Hill | Learn How to be Prepared

Comment on Readers’ Entries Part 1: Organization/Storage Tips when Prepping in an Apartment by Comment on Readers’ Entries Part 1: Organization/Storage Tips when Prepping in an Apartment by Carl Hill | Learn How to be Prepared

Posted on 31 March 2012 by Preparedness News Feed

Editor’s Note:  This is the first segment of readers’  tips for preppers living in an apartment.  I was originally planning to post all tips in one blog post.  However, due to the large number of tips received, I separated them by category.  The most popular topic by far, is regarding storage.  As all apartment dwellers know, unless you live in a loft or penthouse suite, space is always an issue.  I was gratified to see so many tips and thank our readers for taking the time to enter our contest.  Please note if your tip did not appear in this post, it will be in the next one.

Finding Storage Space

Always be on the lookout for somewhere to put more preps.  All the usual space is taken up, and if you are like me, you can always use more space for those goodies you want to
stock for later.

Think you are out of space?

You have space under the bed, on the floor of the closet, and on closet shelves.

Buy a shoe bag and hang it on the inside of your closet door.  Those little pockets can hold an amazing amount of stuff.  Extra meds, medical supplies, baby wipes, or
food.  Candy, dried fruits, etc. Whatever you want to store that is small enough to fit and not so heavy as to tear the pockets.

You can hang one on the inside of the bathroom door for extra supplies there too.
Bath tissue, peroxide, q-tips, make up. And yes you can store extra make up.

Under the bathroom sink is a good place for plastic containers with goodies. Make sure
that if the pipe breaks it will not ruin whatever is under the sink.

For thirty or forty dollars from Wal-Mart or Kmart you can buy a shelf stand that goes
over the toilet tank. It will have either open shelves or one or two with doors over
them. This will offer you storage you can take with you when you leave, and also does
nothing to alter the walls of your bathroom.

Bookcases. you can stack cans behind books on bookcases. or put doors or a curtain over the front of the bookcase and stack food or supplies there.

Do you have a suitcase or overnight case? Fill them with items to take with you if you have to leave.

The trunk of your car holds an amazing amount of blankets, water, and dry foods.

Do you have extra purses? Fill them too. The drawers of your dressers, Canned foods
can go in the back of the drawers, or under clothes.

Is the furniture yours? We found end tables at the thrift stores that look like a drum,
closed on the sides, with one door that opens, it holds lots of food out of sight.

You can slide a flat of tuna under the couch. Do you have an entertainment center, are
there doors on it? If the doors are glass or plastic see through, put a covering over them and put food in there.

You can buy a shower curtain with pockets on it to put in shampoo, soap, scrubbies, etc.
or make one.

A hanging shelf in your closet that is supposed to be for handbags and sweaters, can
hold those and also supplies. Zip up and things are out of sight.

Put extra blankets and sheets under your mattress.  Take out the last drawer of your dresser and put things on the floor. Under your kitchen sink for plastic bags, and
items that won’t ruin if wet.

Do you use the oven of your stove? Does it have a pilot light.?  Store extra kitchen tools there, buy gift boxes, fill them with whatever you want, slide them under the living room
chairs.

Cover a window with cardboard covered with material to look like a curtain from outside.
Then put small shelves in the window, fill with goodies, and hang a curtain over it from
the inside of the house. From outside it looks like a curtain, from inside it looks like a curtain.

You can also get boxes and label them, summer blouses, winter blouses. Hats, scarves,
Christmas decorations, and put them on a closet shelf. Fill them with supplies you need.

How much company do you have visit, do they come for dinner, or lunch? How long do they stay? This is not to be nosy, it is to help you think of how to store things without
bringing them to someone’s attention and asking you questions you may not want to
answer. Or to expose you to problems later.

If you have the room in the kitchen, you can buy a small storage unit designed to hold food or tools. They don’t take up much floor space, but have four or more shelves. They
can hold lots of food.

Wooden file cabinets two or more can also be used for food storage.  They also make nice end tables to hold a lamp.

Either buy the blocks that raise your bed up or make some with concrete blocks covered
with contact paper, fabric or painted. This will raise your bed up a few inches and allow you to store more things there.

Make some shelves for the hallway with 1×6 or wider pieces of wood, which can be cut to the length you want at the store you buy them from.  You can again use concrete blocks, or glass blocks.

I suggest you cover the sides and front of them. You could put books on the top shelf. I
suggest that in an apartment you cover, conceal your storage. .

You have most likely a contract you signed when moving in the apartment that gives
management the right to enter to make repairs, treat for insects, or to inspect for
up keep on your part. Not usually a problem.

Do you have a headboard for your bed?  You can use bookshelves for a headboard. Fill
the shelves with supplies, and cover the shelves, or turn the open side of the bookshelf to the wall, push the bed against it, and bingo, you have a headboard. And a place to store extra food or whatever you want.

You can make a foot board for the bed this way too. Probably want doors on it. or use a
short dresser for a foot board.

If you have the room, extra dressers can be put in the bedroom for storage.

If you can’t lift the mattress on the bed to put extra blankets under, put them on the top
of the mattress, cover them with a plastic mattress cover, and make the bed as usual.

Cover the pillows with extra pillow cases and cover them with plastic pillow covers, then
put one over the plastic one for sleeping.

You can hang quilts on the wall as decoration until you need to use it. Sheets can be
folded and put under couch cushions or chair cushions. Sometimes blankets too.

Blankets can also be used as a throw cover over chairs and couches. Some people don’t
like the look, some do. It is storage in the open.

Rethink how items are stacked or arranged in the kitchen shelves. Can you change them, re-arrange them to get more use from the space.

You can build a small box. wide enough to hold a can of veggies or fruit, however high
you want, and the length of a wall in the living room. fill it with food cans, then put
the furniture in front of the box. Oh, paint the box to match the wall or wall trim. Most
people don’t pay attention to little things like that. Use doors or curtains over it to
hide the contents.

It is not always convenient to buy something new, especially when you are trying to build
up storage items and supplies. And sometimes when you have used something
for one purpose for a long time, it is difficult to envision it being used for another purpose.

You can find extra space if you look around your home thinking about some new ways to store your foods and other supplies.

–Selene

 

The best tip I can give would be don’t overlook storage areas like under the beds, under and behind the couch, and  water heater closet.

–Lweson

 

Storage Hint: Aside from the normal apartment storage locations such as under beds, under couches and chairs, inside the hollows of the ends of couches and chairs and such, think vertically! That space above the door trim in the hallway… put cleats on the wall, hooked to the studs then reinforce a piece of ¾” plywood with cleats every 16 inches and lay across the span to creat an apartment “attic”  the width of which is usually less than 48 inches and can be as long as your hallway. Think vertically… the space above the refrigerator is another large storage spot for this trick.

– C. T. B.

 

Being an apartment prepper you need to use any and all space available to you. I.E. Closets, under beds, kitchen & bathroom cabinets, under tables: side, coffee, and family. Also use storage that’s available inside of things: coat pockets and winter clothes pockets. Be sure to exchange when you move back to winter clothes and use your summer clothes. Maybe not be able to store alot inside but you’ll being able to store some. Also use any luggage, duffel bags, purses, school bags (when schools out) for storage as well. Always be open minded and thing outside the box. There maybe be empty space under your couch or recliner to use. All it may take is a little modification.

–HoosierPrepper2012

 

My suggestion is this:  I sometimes cave and waste $1.48 on a 20 oz Pepsi, a “single serve” of chocolate milk, a Vitamin Water, etc. I have six packs of individual Gatorade in my pandemic pantry so that I don’t have to open a big bottle for a stomach bug. When I empty this kind of small, strong plastic bottle, I wash it and rinse it, cut off the label, and fill it with water. But my suggestion is WHERE to put it: this is the suggestion that applies to anyone in a small space. I have a lot of bookshelves, even have cookbooks in some kitchen cabinets. I put all these water bottles behind the books. Usually there is up to four inches of wasted space behind a book, when it’s pulled out from the back of the bookshelf. I now have yards of bookshelves lined with water bottles. It’s discreet and uses space that can’t really fit anything else.

–mama7x
Farming Salt & Light

 

Keep all canned goods on a rotating storage rack like a cansolidator so that your cans always stay fresh!

–D.V.

http://hdivs.com

 

I have been directing those who live in apartments to store water in 2-liter bottles after they have been sanitized with bleach. They can be filled with filtered water or water that has been treated. A secure way to store without leakage is to dip the top into a container of melted candle stubs. After the wax has hardened, lay them down onto the box lids you can get at a grocery or wholesale store. Slide them under the bed. Most under-bed space allows you to stack a pack of toilet paper on top of the bottles. Great utilization of tight spaces.

 

–Linda

 

Hide your preps ‘in plain sight.’  Put your preps in antique trunks that can be used as end tables. You have storage that no one knows about.

–Stacy

 

I have recently installed a behind-the-couch rolling can rotator in my 12×14 living room.  It is 8′ long, 12″ wide, has six shelves with two tracks each.  The shelf holds about 400 cans, which load from one side, roll down the 2″ grade to the other end, where I pull cans as needed.  It automatically offers you oldest first.

Here’s the link to a couple of blog posts about it.  We kind of winged it as far as design, and there are a couple of things I would do differently on a second shelf, but it sure does work!

Initial:  http://krissimplyliving.blogspot.com/2012/03/rotating-can-rack-progress.html

Final:  http://krissimplyliving.blogspot.com/2012/03/final-installation-of-can-shelf.html

–1dychef2k

 

 

Throughout my extensive military training and personal survival challenges around my home state, I have learned that water is the most important resource. As a husband and father of two smaller boys, I must prep my 625 square foot apartment to support all of us. Food can often be easily condensed, but water is hard to store in the quantities necessary. My tip for storing water is to fill any extra space in your chest freezer with water in Costco milk jugs. The jugs are more rectangular and stack easily. Also, in short periods of power grid failures, your freezer will stay cold longer, allowing you to put off breaking into dry stores for a little and keeping any frozen meat cold long enough to decide if it needs to be converted to dried goods for the long haul or put back into a regular rotation to prevent spoiling. As other water stores in the house are used up, you can begin using the ice water from the freezer. While there is often not much room in a prepper’s freezer, any extra space that can be used to store water is valuable space!

–Bigyakker

My best advice for apartment preppers is to make lists of everything.  In an apartment you have so little space that you have to stick things where ever you can.  With so many different places, instead of one location, it is very important to know not only what is in each location but all the locations that you have.  When I started prepping I would lose track of what I had because I would put something in one location and forget that it was there.  The things would either go bad or I would buy more because I would forget what I had and where I had it.  I started by making a list of all the locations that I had and then I made a list of what I had in each location.  I keep all of the list together so when I am looking for something I can look at all the list at once.

–April

Great suggestions, everyone!  Thank you!  I know I’ll be re-evaluating some of my storage spots.

 

For your preparedness needs, please visit:

Get the real deal. Whether bugging out or sheltering in place, you can never have enough clean water for survival: For your water purifier needs, please visit:

 

Source Article from http://apartmentprepper.com/?p=4346#comment-7385

Comments (0)

Letter Re: A Practical Utilitarian’s Take On Firearms and Calibers

Letter Re: A Practical Utilitarian’s Take On Firearms and Calibers

Posted on 31 March 2012 by Preparedness News Feed

Mr. Rawles,
I really enjoyed the SurvivalBlog article by Kyrottimus, titled A Practical Utilitarian’s Take On Firearms and Calibers. I appreciate his expertise and experience.  I commend his list of Must-Haves for the AR-15 or M4gery, and would like to respectively suggest one more item to add to the McFarland 1-piece gas ring, the Bravo Company Gunfighter charging handle, and the Magpul B.A.D. Lever.  The Defender D Ring should be an addition to your AR-15 rifles.  After listening to John Farnham sing the praises of this little device, it should be a serious consideration on a Personal Defense Weapon (PDW).

The Defender D Ring installs around the extractor.  With the high bolt velocity of the AR-15, the extractor can be stressed.  The Defender D ring provides a stronger extractor tension, as well as contributing to the reliability of the extractor, and extending its life.  You can purchase this inexpensive “must-have” at Strike Tactical Solutions

Farnham’s perspective is civilian use of the PDW, with an emphasis on function and reliability. As a woman, these considerations are very important factors in defending myself. – Belle Ringer

Article source: http://survivalblog.com/2012/03/letter-re-a-practical-utilitarians-take-on-firearms-and-calibers.html

Comments (0)

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