Food Storage Battle: Cans vs. Buckets

food storage plan

More than getting yourself safe, survival means being calamity-ready and making sure that you have stored ample amount of food and water. With a preparedness guide and proper food storage, you can have a lifetime supply of food.  Looking at your food storage options is especially important if:

Looking at your food storage options is especially important if:

  1. You are planning on bugging in or shelter in in place for any period of time
  2. You are planning on caching food and supplies along your bug out route
  3. You have a bug out location where you will be storing food for months or years
dry food storage
There are lots of food storage options, you don’t need to limit yourself to MRE’s. Photo by See-ming Lee via Flickr

Did you know that there are certain types of foods that can definitely last a lifetime? Knowing which foods to include in your food storage list is crucial to survival. Recently, there has been a heated debate over which between cans or food buckets are better to store. With various natural factors to consider such as moisture, sunlight, and even insect infestations, this list is geared toward helping you choose whether cans or food buckets work best for you.

Canned on Cans

Most preppers today think of canned goods as the only way to store food. Accordingly, it seems that canned foods have been an everyday necessity in every American household. Last 2011, a survey by the Canned Food Alliance revealed that 84% of Americans eat meals out of canned foods a couple of times in a month, with 34% having canned food meals thrice a week.

food storage checklist
There are both store bought and DIY options for your food preps. Photo by US Department of Agriculture via Flickr

Canned goods are safe alternatives to fresh or frozen foods while meeting the dietary needs of every consumer and avoiding preservatives. These offer a wider variety for storage purposes and are readily available since they can be purchased in any grocery store. As such, it is no wonder that most Americans living a busy day resolve to eating canned foods.

Bucket It All Up

Most prepper’s storage room is filled with a variety of foods other than canned goods. Since variety and quantity are crucial, preppers tend to go for buckets and pails as an investment for long term bulk food. Unlike canned foods, food buckets could hold rice, grains, beans, dehydrated vegetables, sugar, powdered milk, and even ready-made meals.

food storage buckets
Storing food in buckets has lots of flexibility. Photo via ClintJCL via Flickr

Since both canned goods and food buckets could give you the food you need for your survival, here’s a rundown on the pros and cons of canned foods and food buckets to keep your preparedness guide and food storage secured.

Pros and Cons Of Cans vs Buckets

Price

    • Canned goods are cheap and this is why most people consume these products.
    • Food buckets, since they come in larger sizes, are sold at a higher price. If you count the math, buckets are good for a number of servings, making it better at price. However, you may opt to make your own food bucket which costs less, as long as you take note of the proper food storage techniques and buckets allowed for long-term storage.

Shelf-life

    • Most of the canned goods have 3 years shelf-life. However, if exposed to water or a humid temperature, it is reduced to 2 years or less depending on the amount of rust. Rusting around the lid of the can is a sign that the canned good is not fit for eating anymore.
    • On the other hand, food buckets have as long as 15 years of shelf-life. It should be noted, however, for those making their own food buckets that recycling signs such as HDPE#2, LDPE#4, PP#5, or PETE#1 should be present for a bucket to be food grade.
food storage in plastic buckets
An advantage of buckets is that they can store more food in a single container. Photo by Tim Patterson via Flickr

Portability and Convenience

    • Canned goods give you the convenience of eating with just heating or eating it fresh from the can. Canned goods are perfect for on-the-go or carrying in your backpack since it comes in small sizes.
    • Food buckets have a wide variety, grains, beans, and the like. You could buy paint buckets or food storage buckets in your nearest local store and prepare these on your own. However, when it comes to portability, going for food buckets might be a nuisance since it is too heavy to bring around.

Nutrition Value

    • Though canned goods are often labeled as bad for the health compared to fresh produce, it’s really not that bad at all, especially when you are talking about food that lasts for a longer time. Accordingly, canned foods were processed within hours of their harvest to keep their freshness and nutritional value.
    • Food buckets are often dried or dehydrated. As such, it is free from preservatives and the drying or dehydration process keeps its original nutritional value.
food storage canning
Canning is a time-tested way to store excess harvest from your garden. Photo by Sharon Drummond via Flickr

Taste

    • Canned goods are mostly drenched in some liquid solution which overpowers the actual taste of the food.
    • Food buckets are able to retain the actual taste of the food, may it be sausage, rice, pasta or beans. Some food buckets available in the market today often come with recipes with all the ingredients included inside. This enables people to have a varied menu for the day.

Preparation

    • Canned goods do not require preparations as they are readily available in every market or grocery stores.
    • If you choose to make your own food buckets, then it requires time for preparation and the right storage, depending on the food to store. However, food buckets may also be bought in the market or online.

Final Thoughts On Food Storage Planning

Throughout history, people have come up with various ways of keeping and storing food as a crucial step towards being calamity-ready. Two of which, cans and food buckets have been popular today as it is able to store food at a longer length of time. Do take note that variety and balance in food storage is essential.

More than choosing between cans or food buckets, preppers should consume and replace these stored foods as well to keep them in the loop on how these are prepared and to keep their stock new. Assessing your readiness for the calamity right now will benefit you and your family, so check your preparedness guide and keep your food storage filled with cans, or buckets; it’s your choice.

Your Thoughts?

Do you have a favorite food storage method?  Is there anything that someone who is new to storing food should look out for?  Please let us know in the Comments Section below, thanks!

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bug in vs bug out

Bugging In Vs Bugging Out: How To Decide In An Emergency

bug in vs bug out

Bugging out is undoubtedly one of the most popular topics in survival literature, as well as in online discussion forums.

Assembling a bug out bag is something akin to a rite of passage among preppers, and we love to critique each other’s kits.

We talk endlessly about bug out locations (BOLs) and bug out vehicles (BOVs).  Yet, for all of that discussion, one rather critical part of the plan often lacks attention.

We talk a lot about HOW to bug out, but we often forget that sometimes bugging in is the required course of action.

Weighing Your Options

First of all, I firmly believe that bugging out should be considered your last option rather than your primary plan of action in most disaster scenarios.

For most of us, home is where we have the bulk of our supplies and hitting the trail with even a fraction of what we have stockpiled would be an arduous effort, to say the least.

Sure, we can fit all sorts of supplies in our vehicle but what if motorized travel isn’t a viable option? 

Depending upon the nature of the crisis, streets could be impassable due to debris or even manned roadblocks.

That said, even though it isn’t the best option in many cases, bugging out is still an important part of your overall disaster planning.

bug in plan
Would you have made the right choice?

Deciding When To Bug Out

Deciding when to bug out will largely be a judgment call, of course.

There are many factors that may come into play, and we certainly can’t plan ahead for all of them. 

However, there are a few key indicators, call them red flags if you’d like, that should get you thinking that it might be time to beat feet and head for a more secure location, at least for the immediate future.

Civil unrest in the immediate area

Particularly if you live in an urban or suburban area, this is a big clue that things are headed south and you might not want to stick around.

As I’ve often said and written, frequently the biggest threat in a crisis is other people.

If you are made aware of looting and riots happening in your immediate area, you may want to load up the family truck and head out of town for a bit.

Now, a word of caution, here.

I cannot stress enough the importance of obtaining reliable information on what’s going on around you.

It is one thing if your neighbor tells you they just got back from the grocery store where he saw massive crowds stripping the shelves bare. 

Another thing entirely if he tells you his sister said her best friend’s cousin was told by a random guy on the street three cities over that there were rumors of rioting happening.

This one reason why a working radio is a critical element of your survival gear. Depending upon the nature of the disaster, going online with a phone, tablet, or laptop might not be a viable option. A crank powered radio, ideally one that can tune in shortwave transmissions, might be the only way you can gather information about the world at large. 

Bear in mind, though, recent history has shown that reporters quite often get as much wrong as they get things right.

bug in plan
The Eton FRX2 is an excellent emergency radio

Stores aren’t getting restocked

The common statistic tossed about is that the average grocery store only has enough stock on hand to last three days at normal buying volume.

That’s actually rather misleading as it depends upon the items in question. Food items will go quickly. Toiletries, maybe not so much. 

Either way, if the grocery store has to shutter their doors because they’ve run out of stock on most things, people are going to get rather antsy.

bugging in

We live in an age of immediate gratification. We’ve become accustomed to satisfying our wants without thinking much of it. In fact, people get very upset quickly if the store doesn’t have the item they traveled there to purchase.

“What do you mean you sold out of The Walking Dead, Season 87?!”

They’ll demand to see a manager, who is just as powerless as the store clerk, and pitch a holy fit because the store dared to sell their entire stock of the item without so much as a thought for this important-in-their-own-mind customer.

Now, imagine it isn’t a DVD set, but food.  And rather than just being offended, the customer is starving… and has three kids at home who are just as hungry.

Yeah, you probably don’t want to hang around to see how that plays out.

Emergency services are overwhelmed

As we’ve seen happen time and again in major disasters, emergency services such as fire, police, and rescue can become overwhelmed.

Understand, I have the highest respect for those brave men and women who, when a crisis hits, run toward rather than away from danger. But, they are only human, and there are only so many of them to go around. 

They can’t be everywhere at once, right?

Because of the limited resources, and no matter how large the department is, there are a finite number of emergency responders available at any given time, what’s called triage is going to take place. 

Basically, decisions will have to be made about which emergencies are more important than others.  Of course, dispatchers do that every day. A massive pileup on the highway is going to take precedence over a lost dog. 

However, in the wake of a major disaster, there will most certainly be lives lost simply because of a lack of emergency personnel available.

Making The Call To Bug In Or Bug Out

The most important thing to remember is to trust your instincts.

If your gut is telling you it is time to get out of Dodge, listen to it.

Our subconscious minds often come to solid conclusions well before our active minds can muddle through all of the information. Bugging out can put you and your family in significant danger, whether from the actual crisis at hand or the people reacting to it in a less than an ideal manner. But, the danger of staying at home might be greater.

How to Prepare for Bugging In

To make sure you’re prepared for a situation that requires bugging in, read The Ultimate Guide to Bugging In: Preparing Your Home for a Disaster.

About The Author

This article was written by Jim Cobb who runs SurvivalWeekly.com.

Jim is the author of several books on preparedness and has most recently written “Urban Emergency Survival Plan: Readiness Strategies for the City and Suburbs,” which is a comprehensive look at disaster planning for urban and suburban dwellers.  Find out more about this great resource here:

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The Knowledge prepper Books Review

The Knowledge: Prepper Book Review

The Knowledge prepper Books Review

We’ve all seen post-apocalyptic movies or TV shows that feature heroic survivors scrounging for food and, more likely than not, fighting off some sort of un-dead enemy. It all looks so…achievable, doesn’t it? In the movies, someone always manages to build a fire and find drinking water; no one ever dies of dehydration or from an infected wound. The question is, if civilization were to collapse, could we rebuild life as we know it?

According to The Knowledge: How to Rebuild Our World From Scratch by Dr. Lewis Dartnell, the answer is no. In this eye-opening survivalist guide, the author argues that if civilization should fall and necessities such as food and clothing no longer ‘magically’ appear for us on store shelves, then humanity would crumble. With all the advances and conveniences we’ve created, we’ve forgotten how to meet our basic needs if this crutch was taken away. In order to survive in a post-civilized scenario, we would need to relearn many of the core skills our ancestors used to advance civilization in the first place.

Why It Needs to be on Your Nightstand

The book is written from the perspective that if the world were to suffer a major catastrophe, it would be next to impossible for the ‘survivors’ of whatever calamity befell our civilization to retrace the steps of recent generations. Readers will learn the skills essential to rebuild our world in the immediate aftermath beyond just basic survival. By growing and mastering these skills, readers can move on to more complex tasks and learn how to improve their lives should the unthinkable happen.

Can’t we just use all the same stuff we enjoy today?

Consider this: many of the advances we enjoy today were created during the Industrial Revolution, fueled primarily by fossil fuels. At that time, these fuels were easily accessible and abundant, but now can only be mined or drilled using energy intensive and increasingly advanced methods. Oil, for instance, is currently fracked out of the ground using cutting-edge technology; a group of post-apocalyptic survivors wouldn’t stand a chance of pumping oil from a fracking well, let alone distilling it into fuel or plastic.

The Knowledge prepper Books Review

Given that we won’t be able to exactly replicate what our ancestors did, we need to devise ways of leapfrogging many of the steps they took as well as alternative solutions to problems solved during a different time.

A Quickstart Guide To Rebooting Civilization

In The Knowledge, Dartnell argues that “the aim for an accelerated reboot of civilization is to jump directly to a level that saves centuries of incremental development, but that can still be achieved with rudimentary materials and techniques – the sweet spot intermediate technology.” The book will teach you the skills needed to reimagine and recreate many vital technologies, including the following:

  • Melting down and reshaping plastics to make containers and other durable, reusable materials
  • Making steel via the Bessemer Process, instead of forging the way medieval blacksmiths did
  • Damming up a stream to create a millpond for a waterwheel – a technique not used until 600 AD, nearly 1,000 years after the widespread adoption of waterwheels
  • Leveraging chemistry to create a great deal of materials for building and creating, including basic chemistry to more efficiently make paper, soap, and fuels

How do I know this sort of thing is even possible?

Sound incredible? The Knowledge provides plenty of examples of times throughout history when civilizations successfully redeveloped technologies to survive. For instance, the City of Gorazde repurposed a roman-era waterwheel technology to generate electricity in the 1990s.  This was during the Bosnian War when the city was cut off from the grid during a three-year siege by the Serbian army. A few years earlier, Europeans were able to repurposed more than 1 million cars to run on wood, coal and methane gas during WWII.

The Knowledge prepper Books Review
An old wood-powered car. Think you could get it back up and running?

What You’ll Learn About Rebuilding Civilization

The Knowledge provides an in-depth review on the key tenets of civilization and the skills needed to rebuild from scratch. If you were in a post-apocalyptic situation right now, would you be able to weave cloth from plant material? Preserve your food? Put wind and water energy to work? Find your way using only the stars as a guide?

If you answered “no” to any of these questions, you need to read this book. In addition to learning the skills needed for those key tasks, you’ll also learn the following:

  • What makes soil rich, the best fertilizers to use, and the best crops to cultivate based on ease of growing and nutritional value
  • How to turn crops such as cereals into consumables like bread and beer
  • How to preserve your food using traditional methods
  • How to spin yarn and thread from plant and animal materials to weave cloth
  • How to harvest the raw materials for more complex necessities such as soap, fuel and preservatives
  • How to scavenge for basic materials to build tools (such as a blacksmith’s) that will allow you to build more complex tools (such as a lathe or drill press)
  • How to create medicines needed for infectious diseases, childbirth, and more
  • How to perform basic medical exams and diagnosis without MRIs, X-rays, etc.
  • How to manage transportation in a post-fossil fuel world, e.g. wood-powered cars, animal power, wind for sailing
  • How to develop basic communication tools such as quills, inks and paper, as well as more complex medias such as the printing press, telegraph and radio
  • How to use basic chemistry to make explosives for mining and salvage work
  • How to use the stars for navigations as well as primitive tools such as sundials and astrolabes

The Knowledge prepper Books Review

The Ultimate Prepper Book?

If you’re looking to develop your self-sufficiency toolset, this book is a must-have. When disaster strikes, the greatest resources you can have is knowledge. The Knowledge gives you a holistic view of what skills you’ll need so you can prioritize your learning and development. There are also practical examples of how to use those skills to build the necessities of life from readily available materials.

The essential knowledge provided in this book will give survivors the tools to build a strong foundation for the future generations that come after, so that they can do more than survive – they can thrive.  If you are interested in vastly increasing your own preparedness or learning more about The Knowledge, you can read what other people are saying here.

The Knowledge prepper Books Review

About The Author, Dr. Lewis Dartnell

Dr. Lewis Dartnell is a professor of astrobiology at the University of Leicester in the UK. He is a UK Space Agency Research Fellow, STFC Science in Society Fellow, and the Senior Editor of the journal Astrobiology. He has committed countless hours to his exhaustive research of the technologies and skills needed to rebuild our world, and the detailed thoroughness of his book demonstrates this.  In addition to all this Lewis has somehow has time to keep up a preparedness related blog at The-Knowledge.org.

I recently reached out to Dr. Dartnell to speak with him about his book and ask the questions both myself and readers of The Bug Out Bag Guide had after reading The Knowledge. His rationale for writing the book in his own words is as follows:

What I tried to do with the book is push much farther beyond what most prepper books deal with – not focusing on the run-up to a disaster or the immediate aftermath, but looking years or generations down the line as to how you would actually need to know to reconstruct a new civilization (not necessarily rebuilding our world) from the ground up and ensure it remains vibrant and progresses. The idea behind the book is what would be the crucial knowledge you’d want to be able to hand to a group of post-apocalyptic survivors if society were ever to collapse (be it from pandemic outbreak, asteroid impact, or whatever) to help them rebuild as quickly as possible – a quick-start guide for civilization itself.

Q&A with Dr. Dartnell

Question #1

There are so many prepper books available, why should this one be on your must-read list?

Answer:

I have very deliberately written The Knowledge to pick up where other prepper books leave off. You can certainly stock-pile canned food, bottled water, and other consumables, and this would fare you and your family well for riding out a disaster. But then what? What do you do once your reserves have run out? What would you actually need to know to produce everything you need for yourself, and to start recovering a society from the bottom-up? The Knowledge is a thought experiment on how you could orchestrate the reconstruction of a technologically-capable society in the aftermath of a global catastrophe. I take a post-apocalyptic world as the starting point, and ask what is the critical scientific and technological knowledge you’d need in order to reboot civilisation after an apocalypse, how to avert another Dark Ages, and how you might even accelerate that reboot second time around… The one thing I hope people take away after reading The Knowledge is to understand a little more about the behind-the-scenes fundamentals of how the life-support system of our modern civilisation works, and appreciate the everyday things we just take for granted today.

Question #2 – Note This was the winner for best question!

Given a small amount of time and money, what five skills would you recommend a person learn to be ready for any eventuality? In order of importance, please.

Answer:

Well, at the end of the day, developing any new skill to a meaningful level of proficiency takes time – there are no short-cuts, particularly if you want to be prepared for any eventuality. But as long as your community of survivors has a diverse set of skills represented amongst them, and can work together effectively, you’ll have a much better chance of thriving. Throughout the chapters of the book I talk about the most crucial domains of knowledge and capability, why they were crucial in our own historical development and therefore why they will be needed if we ever have to reboot civilisation from scratch. This, of course, includes areas like agriculture and knowing how to grow enough food to sustain your community, and to keep your land productive and fertile over the generations. Knowing which natural fibres you can harvest and spin into thread, and then weave into clothes on a loom is also important. But history teaches us that building a capable society needs much more than just basic survival skills like these. The knowledge of how to extract crucial raw ingredients from the world around you and transform them into the most useful substances and materials. How to you create soda, needed for everything from soap to glass and paper? How do you get metals out of their rocky ores, to make all the tools and building materials that you need? And being able to use tools is also critical, as well as knowing how to maintain and repair them. I explain in The Knowledge why the lathe is so fundamental, and how it has the astounding ability to reproduce itself. All you need to make all of the components of a new lathe is a lathe, and if you know how, you can even use a half-finished lathe to complete its own construction. All of these crucial capabilities were developed slowly over time, and what I’ve tried to achieve in The Knowledge is provide enough of an outline that these could be redeveloped rapidly during a post-apocalyptic recovery. Well, as far as is possible in one single book, of course!

Question #3

What do you think the hardest thing to master or salvage would be?

Answer:

If our civilisation ever did collapse and a community of survivors had to start again, rebuilding a progressive and technologically capable society, I think one of the most difficult fields to recover will be medicine. Although there are some herbal remedies that can be extracted relatively simply from natural sources, the vast majority of pharmaceuticals in use today are purified or modified by advanced organic chemistry, and that is going to take a lot of time for a society to redevelop. For centuries of history, doctors found themselves in the frustrating position of being able to diagnose the ailment or injury inflicting a patient but being essentially powerless to do anything about it; without antibiotics to treat infection or without anaesthetics and analgesics to allow surgery. I explain in The Knowledge the fundamentals of these things – how to chemically synthesise nitrous oxide or how you could re-isolate penicillium mold,for example. But in the aftermath of a global catastrophe the survivors would find their health-care capabilities knocked back to basics for quite a while once all the pre-existing drugs and medicines have degraded away (which I also discuss in The Knowledge)

Question #4

What key skillsets would you want to teach the next generation so they could build on whatever knowledge or technology you yourself were able to salvage or re-learn?

Answer:

Of course there’s only so much information you could fit into a single book, or indeed a whole library of tomes. So the key skill for a society rebuilding after an apocalypse would be knowing how to fill-in the gaps – how to rediscover all of the other knowledge that you weren’t able to explicitly preserve or salvage. And so just with the last two or three centuries of our history, by far the most successful system for generating understanding will be science. The scientific method is essentially knowledge-generation machinery – a process you go through to understand the world around you and be confident that your explanation is the best one.  As long as the survivors can maintain an inquisitive and rational mind-set then civilisation has a chance of recovering rapidly and not getting caught in another Dark Ages of superstition and ignorance.

Question #5

What is the single most important issue with regards to hygiene? They are so many things to consider, from hand washing to location of a latrine, and how to do these things with very limited resources (like water).

Answer:

I would argue that one of the most important nuggets of modern understanding that should be preserved if all else is lost, is the notion of germ theory. This is the idea that the reason people fall sick and pass their disease on to other people is not because of bad odours or the whims of fractious gods, but that there are things so tiny they are invisible to our eyes, but which get inside our bodies and make us ill. The most easily prevented diseases are spread by what doctors delightfully term ‘fecal-oral transfer’. Health education studies in the developing world have found that nearly half of all gastro-intestinal and respiratory infections can be avoided simply by regularly washing your hands. Although the importance of germs and hygiene seem obvious today, in our own history this wasn’t appreciated until surprisingly recently. As late as the 1850s, people in London, the capital city of the greatest empire on the planet at the time, were pouring their waste into the river Thames, and 20 yards downstream someone else was dipping in a bucket and drinking it. So if you did have to reboot civilisation, imagine the centuries of pestilence that you could leap-frog over with the fundamentals of germ theory. With this understanding, it is immediately obvious why you need to keeping washing your hands, treat carefully your sewage in large settlements, and use antiseptics and aseptic techniques to stop infection of an injury or after surgery. So in The Knowledge, I explain how to make your own soap for personal hygiene, how to produce ethanol as a disinfectant, why privy pits should always be dug at least 20 metres downhill from your source of drinking water, and how to construct a rudimentary microscope to demonstrate for yourself the existence of these invisibly small bacteria and protozoa.

Thank You!

Thanks again to Dr Lewis Dartnell for taking the time to answer our questions, if you want to find out more about the book, you can check out The Knowledge here:

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alcohol burner

Choosing An Off-Grid Stove + How To Make Alcohol Fuel

alcohol burner

Some well-seasoned, cast iron cookware and a carefully constructed fire offer just about everything a chef could want. However, you’re not going to lug cast iron pots and pans around to make a camp kitchen when you are bugging out. For solo, long distance, treks into the wilderness, smaller, portable stoves are more appropriate. In this article we’ll discuss lightweight, reliable cooking stoves, small enough to fit into a bugout bag. We’ll also highlight options that utilize clean burning and renewable fuels and even show you how to make your own alcohol-stove fuel at the end of the article with a moonshine still.

General Stove Types

There are at least half a dozen fuel sources and hundreds of stoves and gizmos available to choose from when selecting portable cooking equipment. In general, backpacking stoves are either heated with liquid or gas fuel. While solid fuel is much less common, there are a few options in that category as well. Liquid fuel stoves in the United States are generally designed to burn white gas (Coleman fuel).

alcohol burner
A basic Coleman Fuel Stove

Internationally, liquid fuel stoves are adjustable so that they can burn kerosene and other fuels as well. Gas stoves almost always use isobutene. Most portable solid fuel stoves are designed to burn prepackaged pellets, but a few models are set up to burn wood (in the form of small twigs).

The nice thing about white gas and isobutene stoves is that they’re very easy to use and they provide plenty of heat. In short, they make cooking on the go very convenient. However, the downside is that all of the most popular liquid and gas stoves utilize petroleum products as the fuel source. Solid fuel stoves provide less heat but still offer convenience. Though, pellets designed for the solid fuel stoves generally utilize petroleum products and binders as well. The problem with petroleum based fuels is that they will quickly become a finite resource in the event of a SHTF scenario. Also, the process of producing such fuels isn’t very environmentally friendly.

By our account, there are only two extremely lightweight, extremely portable backpacking stove options that utilize environmentally friendly and renewable fuel: solid fuel stoves designed to efficiently burn wood, and alcohol burner stoves.

alcohol burner

Portable Wood Stoves

Portable wood stove operation is very easy. Find some dry twigs, break them down to the appropriate size, and feed them into the bottom of the burner. It requires some scavenging and the fire must be constantly tended to because it will be very small and wood needs to be constantly fed into the burner. However, the fuel source is free, renewable, environmentally friendly, and generally easily obtainable. One of our favorite portable wood stove options, which we have reviewed in the past is the Emberlit Wood Burning Portable Stove.

alcohol burner
The portable, alcohol burning Westwind Stove will fit in any pack

 Portable Alcohol Burner Stoves

Ultra-simple alcohol burner stoves are another one of our favorite mobile cooking options. The two biggest advantages of alcohol stoves are as follows.

  1. The fuel does not need to be pressurized to burn and the stoves themselves have no moving parts. As a result they’re extremely reliable.
  2. You can make your own renewable fuel for an alcohol burner stove. We’ll show you how below!
  3. Bonus: Operating an alcohol burner stove is as simple as it gets. Simply set up the stand, place the fuel canister inside, take the cap off the canister, and light.
alcohol burner
A combination alcohol/wood stove, the Solo Stove

Combination Wood / Alcohol Stoves

While completing research for this article we found this awesome dual fuel wood / alcohol stove. You can use alcohol canisters (if you have them) to start a fire and cook food or heat food nearly effortlessly. If your fuel alcohol supply becomes exhausted and you don’t have the time or provisions to make more, you can use the stove as an efficient wood burner.

How to Make Fuel For Your Alcohol Burner Stove

The good folks over at Clawhammer Supply provided the following simple procedure for making a batch of fuel alcohol for alcohol burner stoves.  A still is required which can either be made (can be DANGEROUS!) or purchased in 1 gallon, 5 gallon, or 10 gallon models as a part of your prepping.

The following recipe is for a 10 gallon batch of fuel alcohol mash:

Yield:

2.5 gallons of 150 proof alcohol.

Note: If you are using the 1 Gallon Still we are giving away below, cut this recipe down to 1/10th to adjust for its smaller size.

Ingredients:

  • 30lbs white sugar (cheapest you can find)
  • 8 gallons water (tap water works just fine)
  • Distiller’s Yeast (capable of producing at least 20% ABV)

Procedure:

  1. Mix sugar and water.
  2. Heat mixture to 70 degrees F.
  3. Add turbo yeast (follow directions on package to determine how much to add)
  4. Transfer to fermentation bucket with an airlock.
  5. Allow to ferment and settle for 1 week.
  6. Double distill in a 10 gallon column still equipped with copper packing (for reflux).
alcohol burner
A Classic Copper Moonshine Still

Distilling Notes:

Alcohol over 100 proof (50% concentration) is flammable, but its flammability varies depending on atmospheric pressure and temperature. As such, we recommend distilling your fuel to at least 150 proof for use in a fuel alcohol stove. A proof of 175 works the best. Once your fuel alcohol has been created you can store it in a glass carboy or you can pre-load it into fuel alcohol canisters, for easy get-away, should you need to grab your bugout bag and hit the road in a hurry.

What else can I use this alcohol for?

You can also use the recipe above to make fuel for small engines (such as a chainsaw) and even motorcycles or cars. The only difference is the proof. FYI: Proof is a number that tells you how strong alcohol is. To find proof, double the percentage of alcohol. For example, if you have a solution that is 50% alcohol, it is 100 proof. 100% alcohol is 200 proof. It also works in reverse. An 80 proof solution of alcohol is 40% pure alcohol. If you’re planning on using this fuel in a small engine, it will need to be distilled until it is roughly 195 proof and a desiccant will need to be added to remove the last bit of water in the fuel, raising the proof to 200.

Be aware that federal and state laws prohibit the production of alcohol for consumption (moonshine, whiskey, etc…). However, a federal permit for fuel alcohol is available. It’s free and is easy to obtain right here. Also, each state has its own set of laws on the topic of distilling and you may be required to obtain a state permit for fuel alcohol production, in addition to the federal permit. Be sure to research the distillation regulations in your state before purchasing a still or making alcohol to verify that you’re in compliance with the law.

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prepping

How To Prep Like A Spartan

prepping

The Spartans were renowned throughout the ancient world for their military prowess and disciplined lifestyle.  They did not win every battle, but they did beat back larger forces to defend their homelands time and time again.

This ability came down to their dedication to preparedness, their whole society was geared towards it. Spartan men and women were trained from a young age to respect the community as a whole and dedicate themselves towards its preservation.  This included training in warfare, foraging, adaptation, and conditioning oneself to hardship.  They were in effect a nation of preppers!  No wonder they were respected by their fellow Greeks!

Today we idolize the Spartans for their strength and discipline in books, movies, slogans, and more.  But what can we learn from their culture of preparedness?

Learning To Survive At An Early Age

At age 7 Spartan children left their families to join the Agoge.  This was a training program for both boys and girls that tested their strength and wills as well as taught them the skills they needed to serve Sparta as they came of age.  The Agoge was renowned throughout the ancient world and powerful families from friendly nations vied to secure a place for their own children for 1-2 year stints.

family preparedness

Male Spartans had to endure thorough physical training to prepare them for war campaigns and the hardships of living in the field.  Looking at the Agoge program that every boy Spartan had to pass through gives us some great insights into their mindset of preparedness.  There are a lot of elements within it that we can draw upon when looking at how we prepare today as well as how we instill this mindset into our children.

Hardship was the norm

An especially important element of Agoge training was being taught to endure pain and hardship.  Students were often made to suffer hunger, thirst, cold, fatigue and lack of sleep.  Spartan boys were made to walk long distances without shoes, bath at the cold waters of the river Eurotas and wear the same piece of clothing year round.  This was meant to condition them to the realities of wartime and is a valuable example for us today.

When prepping, being conditioned to hardship is a valuable asset.  If you have to be on the move day after day evacuating from a disaster or terrorist act you will you be slowed down because you are cold, hungry, or your feet hurt?  Are you ready for the hardship imposed by the removal of everything that is comfortable in your life?  In order to be truly prepared we have to ready ourselves for such deprivation.

Flexibility and using the environment around them was expected

To be a Spartan boy going through the Agoge was to always be tired and hungry.  In addition to the harsh physical training, they were constantly being underfed.  To get the nutrition they needed the boys were encouraged by their teachers to forage from the world around them and steal from the kitchens.  However, if they were caught stealing – even though it was encouraged – they were severely beaten as a punishment for failure.

For modern day preppers this shows how important it was seen to be able to feed yourself while on the move.  Would you be able to feed yourself in the absence of a grocery store?  Do you think you could liberate food from a watchful source without being caught if your life depended on it?

prepping

No rest for the weary

Even if they were able to fill their bellies, they still had an uncomfortable night ahead of them.  This is because in their barracks, Spartan boys were not even allowed to have blankets to keep them warm at night.  They slept on top of straw and reeds, which they gathered without knives from riverbanks, strengthening (and scarring) their hands in the process.

While this requirement would toughen up their limbs it would also show the value of using the environment around you to make what you needed.  For us today we can look to our shelter building skills to emulate the Spartans.  Are you able to build a shelter by hand in the wilderness?  Keeping warm and dry after a day of hard walking gives you the opportunity to recuperate so you can be mobile again the next day.  Shelter building with scavenged materials is an essential skill that all preppers should master.

Females Spartans were held to high standards as well

Female Spartans were trained in a variety of subjects both mental and physical:

  • Athletics – running, dance, gymnastics
  • Writing
  • Poetry
  • War Education

This program was aimed at building female Spartans into good citizens able to serve the state.  Additionally their training prepared them for the mental hardship of being separated from their fathers, brothers, and children while they were off on campaigns.

Physical Fitness Was A Big Part

If you are ever caught in a situation where you have to bug out you will surely be put to the test physically.  Just having your bug out bag packed and ready to go will not be enough, you need to actually be able to carry it until you reach safety.

spartans3

Spartan Training

The Spartans put a huge emphasis on physical fitness in both in the Agoge training and throughout their entire culture.  Both men and women were expected to maintain their fitness during their entire lives.

This emphasis helped define the Spartan soldier and enabled them to march for longer and fight harder, even against overwhelming odds.  The Spartans won a great many of the ancient Olympic Games due to this commitment to physical fitness.

Students in the Agoge were constantly encouraged to compete against one another to weed out weaker members and push everyone to constantly improve.  Female students would even be encouraged by their instructors to observe and mock the competitors to drive them even harder at their tasks.  Agoge students were expected to gain proficiency at:

  • Distance running
  • Gymnastics
  • Jumping
  • Javelin
  • Discus
  • Wrestling
  • Combat

How Can We Train Ourselves?

So, how can we use this as inspiration for our own prepping?  As with any challenge we need to train harder than we expect to have to endure when the test comes.  This may mean taking your bug out bag for a walk on weekends to condition yourself to carrying it.  If that proves difficult try just going for a hike without it until you can build up your strength to carry the load.  My old mixed martial arts coach used to say, “sweat in the gym so you don’t bleed in the street” which captures this mindset perfectly.

prepping

A Lifetime of Dedication

For Spartans, their dedication led to a lifetime of service.  All males who passed through the Agoge lived in state owned barracks and continued to serve in the army until age 60.  They continued their own training and once experienced, the training of the next generation for basically their entire lives.  From age 7 to age 60, ALL Spartan males would relentlessly dedicate themselves to the prosperity and preparedness of their nation.

Modern Day

Today as a nation we are obviously very far from this single minded focus.  But, on an individual level can we seek to emulate this dedication?  Would you start training your children at age 7 to serve the interests of your family day in and day out until age 60?  Can we instill the proper mindset and pass essential skills and knowledge on to them in the face of our own distractible and fragmented culture?  I know I will be trying to do so with my own children, it seems to be an immensely worthwhile investment.  I will try to lead by example and show them the way.

spartan prepping

Our Own Preparedness Mindset

Looking at these examples we can clearly see why the Spartans were respected among the ancient world and are still looked up to today.  Their level of dedication and preparedness was truly impressive.  The rigorous training they practiced and widespread commitment would be impossible to replicate for most modern day Americans.

It is however this mindset that preppers seek to emulate.  In the modern world we can still train our bodies and minds to endure hardship, overcome mental and physical obstacles, and pass these values on to the next generation.  Dedicate yourself to this as the Spartans did and you will be able to face any challenges that get in your way.

Your Thoughts?

Do you have a way of preparing that would make the Spartans proud?  How do you prepare yourself physically and mentally to face hardships?  Let us know in the Comments Section below, thanks!

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