Комментарии •

  • @americanrifleman2992
    @americanrifleman2992 3 года назад +147

    10 people who gave a thumbs down did not learn and next time they will freeze again. This man is spot on.

    • @jameskidd7499
      @jameskidd7499 3 года назад +6

      Or they're just plane contrary

    • @americanrifleman2992
      @americanrifleman2992 3 года назад +7

      @@jameskidd7499 Possibly but I am going with those ten I mentioned are just stupid.

    • @skyangel6336
      @skyangel6336 3 года назад +11

      It makes no sense to thumb down a survival video that is sound wisdom for the ages and it never changes cause it's always needed. Some people seem to hate life including their own Gosh ! I love all this info and sound advice! Maybe it's the electric company owners Hahaha Lawd!

    • @tambrasmith9707
      @tambrasmith9707 3 года назад +3

      For sure

    • @rhondaadams230
      @rhondaadams230 3 года назад +7

      Hopefully someday they will wake up.

  • @susanwirt1
    @susanwirt1 3 года назад +28

    You did not grow up "poor". Your family loved you and taught you invaluable life skills.That means YOU grew up very rich indeed.

    • @DeepSouthHomestead
      @DeepSouthHomestead 3 года назад +8

      In that aspect yes. Financially we were very poor.

    • @patremagilbert8787
      @patremagilbert8787 3 года назад

      True

    • @sallyintucson
      @sallyintucson 3 года назад +1

      In my eyes, “poor” is more when you grow up without love. All four of my grandparents were alcoholics so neither of my parents knew how to show love. We never wanted for toys and whatnot but those are just objects.

    • @pattiandrews9360
      @pattiandrews9360 3 года назад +1

      Amen Amen Amen. Will not take advice from a down in the mouth, I need attention man who truly has POVERTY MENTALITY. Hope his parents did not have to hear those comments. He has spoken of this before??????? That gray beard was supposed to bring wisdom!!!!!! Time he grew up.

    • @resolutionarybeing1885
      @resolutionarybeing1885 3 года назад +1

      @@sallyintucson Yep, I so agree with you. As a foster kid, I missed so much I would have liked to know and pass on to my kids, and if you do not know; --you do not know! -- what good is out there to be shared or how to do that sharing. Once you are introduced to these good things/choices, --rejoice, celebrate and share. Then you can choose to go on a hunt for the best values, principals, skills, thoughts, priorities, ethics, etc. Once we realize that we always have choice, we can establish even how we choose to respond while standing in front of a firing squad. Be discerning now because things are changing for all of us. Choose wisely while we can have the best possible options to share. Doing what is good and worthy is good for everyone and benefits everyone. We each are making differing sizes of concentric circles of goodness in life's puddles but we can make tsunamis of goodness (especially together)that will be more than a passing whisper of possible goodness but a life changing path for humanity to celebrate and share together. Love and support all goodness no matter the size. We all need more goodness and all goodness matters for sake of life and the well-being of our planet!

  • @larryhively4199
    @larryhively4199 3 года назад +134

    Get yourself a few zero degree sleeping bags. I use them as comforters and even sandwich between two in winter. Best sleep ever.

    • @kayfr3841
      @kayfr3841 3 года назад +7

      Great idea. Thanks

    • @culdesacgrocerygarden
      @culdesacgrocerygarden 3 года назад +5

      Those things are extremely warm, hot even. But they are heavy. We've had them for many many years, but I cant sleep with one. Because the pressure they put on my joints is so painful.

    • @Growmap
      @Growmap 3 года назад +8

      A cheaper way to stay warm that I find more comfortable is emergency aka space blankets. I bought a cheap mosquito canopy on eBay (about $25) and covered it with space blankets. A double size air mattress fits perfectly inside. If I lose power and it is super cold, I'll set that up in front of my fireplace, build a big fire with the space blankets opened up on that site, warm it up in there and then let the fire burn down, close it up and crawl inside. Multiple people or pets inside will keep it warmer. I put a queen size in mine, but it doesn't really quite fit...I made it work, though.

    • @heidimisfeldt5685
      @heidimisfeldt5685 3 года назад +12

      @@Growmap
      Air mattresses are like sleeping on ice. Cover with a very thick quilt, maybe that helps a little bit.

    • @Growmap
      @Growmap 3 года назад +2

      @@heidimisfeldt5685 Yes, I keep a blanket over mine year round because it is cold without it.

  • @LB-eh5fz
    @LB-eh5fz 3 года назад +245

    I’m 65 I LOVE THIS SNOW STORM WEATHER, I MADE A SNOW ANGEL IN MY YARD ,YES I DID,,,, HOW LONG SINCE ANY OF YOU MADE A SNOW ANGEL ,,I COULDNT RESIST ,,,IM A GREAT GRANNY, THEY ARE ALL IN OHIO IM IN KENTUCKY, I MAKE MY OWN EXCITEMENT, MY NEIGHBOR CHILDREN SURPRISED ME THEY BUILT ME A BIG SNOWMAN IN MY YARD WHILE I WAS SLEEPING ,I WAS SO EXCITED , I WALKED OUT AND WATCHED THE CHILDREN SLED RIDE DOWN THE HILL ,I THREW SNOWBALLS AT MY 56 YEAR OLD NEIGHBORS FRONT DOOR UNTIL SHE OPENED IT AND SAID OH THIS IS HOW IT IS,,SHE LAUGHED GOT GLOVES BOOTS COAT HAT ON CAME OUTSIDE AND WE HAD A SNOWBALL FIGHT ,,GENTLY ,,😃,,SHE AND I MADE SNOW ANGELS IN THE SNOW ,,HOW COULD YOU NOT,,, I MADE CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIES FOR THE NEIGHBOR CHILDREN, THIS HAS BEEN THE BEST MOST FUN EXCITING WEEK IVE HAD IN MANY YEARS,,, YES,,, SO PEOPLE ITS ALL HOW YOU HANDLE ANY SITUATION,,,, I MADE SNOW ANGELS IN THE SNOW AT 65 YEARS OLD AND GOT IT ON MY IPHONE AND SENT TO MY SON AND GRANDCHILDREN AND I TOLD THEM TO GET OUT OF THE HOUSE AND ENJOY THIS WINTER WONDERLAND🌨☃️❄️ IM SO GLAD I DIDNT LET THIS MEMORY PASS ME BY 😊❤️

    • @cindybonem494
      @cindybonem494 3 года назад +32

      Good for you👍🏻 I’m glad that you enjoyed yourself, you are right if you’re prepared you can enjoy the beauty of Gods creations, I pray that you’re pantry is always full your wood pile never runs out, and your well is full of sweet water, God bless you !

    • @lanesteele240
      @lanesteele240 3 года назад +18

      I made a mud angel.

    • @slickbaby726
      @slickbaby726 3 года назад +7

      Love it

    • @marthamydear7499
      @marthamydear7499 3 года назад +10

      I enjoyed it too. Hadn’t seen snow before - not real snow - so this was soooo coool!

    • @singncarpenter6270
      @singncarpenter6270 3 года назад +7

      Fantastic. I wish I'd have made a snow angel now, but the snow is almost all melted.

  • @sislertx
    @sislertx 3 года назад +109

    I also learned have paper plates and bowls and disposable forks knives ...especially if u aint got water to wash with. Have baby wipes for a quick "shower"...mental lifw saver for self cleaning.

    • @lisalowe6922
      @lisalowe6922 3 года назад +5

      Yep, we were out of water for a few days. Those paper plates sure came in handy.

    • @Growmap
      @Growmap 3 года назад +7

      You can wash dishes with sand or wood ash or just wipe them off. If you're super healthy, you can just re-use them instead of washing them every time. (Not recommended except for people who have strong immune systems, garden or get other exposures all the time, and who eat organic, non-gmo whole food and almost no commercial packaged/bottled food.)

    • @kleineroteHex
      @kleineroteHex 3 года назад +11

      as long as there is snow you can do dishes :)

    • @redtigerlily8165
      @redtigerlily8165 3 года назад

      @@kleineroteHex we only got enough to flush toilets

    • @zenrvn4702
      @zenrvn4702 3 года назад +7

      Line dishes with plastic wrap to avoid paper and washing.

  • @drakeblack329
    @drakeblack329 3 года назад +69

    My Grandma used to crochet water bottle sweaters..my wife crochet's blankets, quilt's blankets..people have been brainwashed into believing the Government will take care of them..

    • @Growmap
      @Growmap 3 года назад +5

      Yes, and that typically leads to widespread starvation which is likely coming to the U.S. So people better wise up fast and learn to be more self-sufficient.

    • @heidimisfeldt5685
      @heidimisfeldt5685 3 года назад +8

      @@Growmap
      People need to learn how to grow vegetables, without spending any money whatsoever. It can be done. I know, because I do it.

    • @DonnaRatliff1
      @DonnaRatliff1 3 года назад +3

      You got that right! And The Gov knows it too. I hope people smarten up soon.

    • @skyangel6336
      @skyangel6336 3 года назад +3

      @@heidimisfeldt5685 Awesome it does take some preparation to do that depending on your climate if you need a greenhouse , tunnels for warmth etc which most will need in US cause most of us have some kind of winter. BUt storing it up seems key in the warmer months to get you through if you don't have money for the other to invest in! If I see Mason Jars on sale I just buy um or see at yard sales time to time !

    • @wandahershey9227
      @wandahershey9227 3 года назад +3

      Everyone needs to find out what herbs they can grow or forage to substitute the meds they take in case they can't get their meds. Learn and start now

  • @katsgardenkitchenandmore9050
    @katsgardenkitchenandmore9050 3 года назад +35

    I live in an apartment in Utah and my porch is covered in pots that I grow food in I even grow in my window sill in my house.

  • @gerhardbraatz6305
    @gerhardbraatz6305 3 года назад +57

    So many people were born and raised into the grocery store life style that they simply don't have any idea how to grow food or even where it comes from. Even farmers who monocrop don't have their own family gardens any more. It is just so sad to see. Hopefully this will wake a lot of people up.

    • @solideogloria3111
      @solideogloria3111 3 года назад +7

      It is sad. What’s even more depressing is trying to garden and homestead and being mocked and told to just “go to the grocery store it’s easier”.

    • @Growmap
      @Growmap 3 года назад +3

      @@solideogloria3111 Ignore them. They'll be coming around if things get worse. But think about relocating to a very rural area. Cities will be unsafe when people are going hungry. More people in rural areas are self-sufficient.

    • @carlyrose6613
      @carlyrose6613 3 года назад +3

      Yes! This was my sister and I growing up. I want to learn lots about being self sufficient homesteaders and ranchers.

    • @mgd6087
      @mgd6087 3 года назад +3

      Doing public gardening, I've had more than one child upset with me because I pulled up a carrot or radish for them. "It's dirrty". "I don't eat things like that".

    • @carlabuggs1238
      @carlabuggs1238 3 года назад +2

      @@Growmap not if things get worse but when things get worse!

  • @glendavertner8906
    @glendavertner8906 3 года назад +11

    Danny and Wanda,
    We have answered prayers for our miracle baby, Evie. She went home from the hospital today. PRAISE GOD.
    Thank you and any of your Subscribers for all of your prayers. 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏

  • @Cindysmiths-homesteadlife
    @Cindysmiths-homesteadlife 3 года назад +60

    My daughter had plants growing on her apartment balcony. It was just cucumbers and tomatoes but it was something

    • @heidimisfeldt5685
      @heidimisfeldt5685 3 года назад +2

      If everyone did it, there would be a whole lot of these cucumbers and tomatos. 🥒🍅🥒🍅🥒🍅🥒🍅🥒🍅🥒🍅🥒🍅🥒🍅🥒🍅🥒🍅🥒🍅

    • @truthseeker7575
      @truthseeker7575 3 года назад

      Seed starting for the cool,weather crops already here. Tiny little townhouse, but enough space to do something.

    • @wmluna381
      @wmluna381 3 года назад +1

      I have a south / east facing balcony and do the same. Live in an apartment. Use grow lights, too.
      I have few really nice looking tomato plants now btw 1-3 feet tall under grow lights that I just started cutting to clone off of today. I am in Michigan.
      Also going to get heavy into 'guerrilla gardening' this spring summer in that I am going to utilize identified, out of the way public spaces to plant larger and more perennial type plants and trees. Plus additional 'seed bombing'.
      There is almost a quarter acre of landlocked plantable ancillary space by my work that sits in the back of commercial / residential buildings and gets good sun. Been having fun feeding the birds over the winter in the area to situate them for insect/bug control in a symbiotic ad hoc permaculture setup of sorts.
      I used to live on 5 acres and it kills me not to be able to plant on a bigger scale these days, so this methodology allows me to do so to an extent.
      I've been collecting all kinds of seeds and have cut and propagated wild berry canes I've found during hikes in parks and other random places. This allows foods for the birds and other animals. Not that I hunt and trap, but that could be a consideration for some.
      It's one way to have a 'food forest' in more than one place in case the grocery stores become low or defunct at any point and time. It also allows you to hide your stuff from the general public.
      Plant extra for the animals (clover for rabbits, chestnuts for deer, serviceberries, etc.) and things that can be deterrents to them as well (garlic, walking onions, thorny barrier bushes at the edges of your property).
      Consider your climate and plant things that will survive a hard cold snap. Since I am in MI zone 6B, I plan to order plants/trees that can deal with zone 3-4 environments and that can be drought tolerant enough to survive better than others.
      If you live up north, I recommend researching / looking up Canadian gardener channels for hot tips.
      Also, get into learning what wild and local plants you can forage at will. Outdoors and in your home. I just learned I can eat all the geraniums I've been growing year-round in my house.
      I'd stock up on lots of salad dressing to have on hand though. 😊

    • @sallyintucson
      @sallyintucson 3 года назад +1

      Trading is the oldest form of currency. I have too many cucumbers, you have too many potatoes. Let’s trade!

  • @wholefoodslifestyles3603
    @wholefoodslifestyles3603 3 года назад +90

    I saw an article yesterday that said that growing gardens are "boring" and "often end up in despair." I think they are trying to discourage people from growing (I have even heard it referred to as "dangerous") because they want most of the population to die/depend on the government and bow down to them. NOT ME AND MY FAMILY NEVER! Keep on being self-sufficient ✊

    • @ConfedVet
      @ConfedVet 3 года назад +10

      I love my garden. Not only for stress release but for canning food.
      I love to can and the food is safer than store bought.

    • @singncarpenter6270
      @singncarpenter6270 3 года назад +12

      I like being boring. It's what I do. I'm a boring gardener.

    • @rawfoodwriter
      @rawfoodwriter 3 года назад +8

      The tyrants also want to make gardens illegal. They will claim people dont know what they are doing and that it is for their "safety". I will not comply!

    • @yellowbird5411
      @yellowbird5411 3 года назад +9

      For frustrated gardeners or those who don't want to do the labor of a garden, plant fruit trees. For years I thought fruit trees were complicated things that someone needed a horticultural degree to grow. It's not true. I would suggest buying some fruit trees at your local box store and just get them in the dirt. Dig a hole twice as large as the root ball, and keep the soil level with the soil on the root ball. Water. Once or twice a year fertilize with something - compost, leaves, whatever is appropriate for that kind of tree. Pruning is optional. No weeding, no replanting, no back-breaking labor. If you want, plant flowers or some tomatoes at the base of them. Some fruit trees produce in the second year. Some grow like weeds, like mulberry. I have one less than two years old and it's already making berries and is 14' tall. I am growing fruit trees, and I knew little when I started. I still know little. But I'm getting tangerines, star fruits and loquats. Moringa is another fast grower.

    • @nspowers7130
      @nspowers7130 3 года назад +1

      @@singncarpenter6270 snicker.

  • @ashleymcdonald2239
    @ashleymcdonald2239 3 года назад +9

    Noah prepared for the flood in faith. And Joseph prepared for the 7 year famine. We need to prepare so we can share with others in Jesus Name.

  • @royamberg9177
    @royamberg9177 3 года назад +50

    When I grew up we always had a year supply of food going into winter

    • @fourdayhomestead2839
      @fourdayhomestead2839 3 года назад +6

      Thank God my grandma insisted it! I'm the only one that still does.

    • @beverlymichael5830
      @beverlymichael5830 3 года назад +3

      @@fourdayhomestead2839 me too

    • @heidimisfeldt5685
      @heidimisfeldt5685 3 года назад +4

      ❤😎 All the old people in the country did that, before electricity and convenience came along. When mothers stayed home, and kids learned from their parents, and grandparents. Very rare these days.

    • @DonnaRatliff1
      @DonnaRatliff1 3 года назад

      Yep my granny lived through the depression in her early 20's, she was always prepared. Stocked & harvested all summer for winter in upper northwest Maryland where I grew up. 👍

  • @bparsons72007
    @bparsons72007 3 года назад +25

    I remember growing up in the 70's where most people including my family had a garden, chickens, and fruit trees. Then in the late 80's and early 90's.....everyone started depending on grocery stores for food.
    I do miss the days before the internet and cell phones.

    • @sallyintucson
      @sallyintucson 3 года назад +2

      I come from a family that settled in Los Angeles after the Civil War. Talk about city slickers! (I live in another state.) I’m the only canner in the bunch. Hopefully, some of my nieces and nephews will want to learn from me.

  • @lucyjunek7615
    @lucyjunek7615 3 года назад +43

    When I drive around, I'm amazed that I see no gardens in people's yards. Even in the country.

    • @DeepSouthHomestead
      @DeepSouthHomestead 3 года назад +3

      I've noticed the same thing.

    • @heidimisfeldt5685
      @heidimisfeldt5685 3 года назад +6

      I have noticed the same, and no fruit trees. Don't think people know much more then doing monoculture anymore, they all run to Walmart..... very sad.

    • @parnellbeth
      @parnellbeth 3 года назад +12

      I can't say that. I live in appalachia and is was only a generation ago that everyone had gardens etc. Well 2020 was a wake up call. The elders had told folks for years they were loosing the old ways. Last yr was ppl around here gardening and canning like crazy. Bought every seed, canning jar, hoe, fruit bushes and trees, you name it.

    • @DonnaRatliff1
      @DonnaRatliff1 3 года назад +6

      Me too! And I live in rural Alabama on lookout mountain. Ive looked and hardly anyone grows a garden here. I do hope people wake up before it's too late.

    • @mrskimmieg
      @mrskimmieg 3 года назад +1

      I’m going to try and sneak a few edible plants into my front yard and outsmart the HOA. 😂 We have also put raised beds in our backyard.

  • @malcolmt7883
    @malcolmt7883 3 года назад +19

    Long electric outages will make you appreciate old fashioned stuff like oil lamps and percolating coffee pots.

    • @Growmap
      @Growmap 3 года назад +4

      Great point! I love my big oil lamp and it puts off a lot of heat, too. That reminds me that I need to get more oil!

    • @ASouthernLadyinAppalachia
      @ASouthernLadyinAppalachia 3 года назад

      I have stainless steel French Press, no glass to break.

    • @melodyscamman244
      @melodyscamman244 3 года назад

      Yup. I worked three years in a remote site without power or water and I actually got hired because I already had the skills to even keep the site open in very dangerous weather. I should have taken the chainsaw in with me to work for hurricanes and blizzards though. I learned the hard way by being rescued by my boss for trees down in the pass to the road. Another thing I learned is those old coleman lanterns that you had to pump threw great light.

    • @denisehislop6026
      @denisehislop6026 3 года назад

      Thats all we use is a stainless percolating coffee maker. The only way I like my coffee ☕

  • @kendallg9533
    @kendallg9533 3 года назад +28

    I love this video and the wisdom you shared. I was 5 years old during the blizzard of 1993. I grew up in the Blue Ridge Mountains of NC. Thank God my family had generators and gas logs. I learned to never raise my kids without emergency heat, power and water. People think im nuts because I'm young but not freezing to death is priceless.

  • @ruthspillman546
    @ruthspillman546 3 года назад +6

    I grew up the same as you. I now am alone in the mountains and I have propane heat. I have been preparing forbthis time for several years. God had warned me in the 90's of this time. I also can and freeze, have 2 gardens, chickens. I supply my children with a lot of this extra food. God has given me wisdom and understanding. Thankfully I took His warning to heart Praise Him!!!

    • @sallyintucson
      @sallyintucson 3 года назад +1

      I know a lot of people, including myself, who felt the need to learn how to can, bake, garden etc in the early “90’s. It wasn’t just the Christians who heard/felt it. Now is the time to share that knowledge with younger people who are interested.

  • @meaniebeavers1112
    @meaniebeavers1112 3 года назад +55

    My granny put hot water off the wood stove into a quart canning jar and wrap it with a towel and put it under the covers near where our feet went. She put so many quilts on us you could move. She put a pee pan next to the bed because you sure didn’t want to run to the outhouse during the night. But some of my best childhood memories come from my visits to her home just not the ones where I forgot and touched the stove.😳

    • @marthamydear7499
      @marthamydear7499 3 года назад +5

      What a wonderful memory! Thanks for sharing it with us. 😊

    • @violethomesteadgeorgia7278
      @violethomesteadgeorgia7278 3 года назад +8

      So did mine. Only heat in the old house was a large cooking stove for wood. We slept under a lot of blankets and woke up to frost on the top blanket

    • @Emeraldwitch30
      @Emeraldwitch30 3 года назад +11

      My gran used to save cherry pits every time we bought or went to pick your own cherries. She washed them and put them in heavy canvas bags(like little pillows)
      She'd set them on the back of the Woodstock and when grandpa and I went out fishing we got a cherry pit bag in each pocket to keep our hands warm.
      They lived on the lake. Every time they got cold or I had to go tinkle(I was little so often lol) grandpa had me exchange them for warm ones.
      They stayed warm for a very long time.
      I might go buy some pits from Cherry central and make a few up for my hands while out working in the yard.

    • @doradodd6964
      @doradodd6964 3 года назад +7

      Mama warmed bricks in the oven and wrapped them in towels to keep our feet warm. Just using what u have on hand

    • @Emeraldwitch30
      @Emeraldwitch30 3 года назад +3

      @@doradodd6964 my son and his fiancée collected these beautiful flat smooth rocks at lake Huron for me last summer to add to my rock collection and thinking about their shape I'd bet after being thoroughly dried I could heat them and put in a quilted bag for warming. I use them to hold my frost cloth down right now but your story about brick has totally made me realize it. Thank you 🥰
      My mom teases me about being a "stone age " reincarnation lol. I do like my rocks lol

  • @wahnitafinnegan4410
    @wahnitafinnegan4410 3 года назад +54

    You have been telling us for a while this was coming and to be prepared. I want to thank you!! You taught me a lot and I am prepared the best I can be. We were very lucky in our area South Jersey it wasn’t really bad. But my husband and I garden and put up vegetables, and listened to you to on all the other staples we should have in our pantry. Keep teaching us!!

    • @peg1518
      @peg1518 3 года назад

      Hello to another south Jersey resident who is into preparing! Happy to know you’re out there and close to me, and also enjoying this channel. We live in a beautiful area even though in such a populated state. You’d never guess it, right?? They all live in the north tip of the state I guess, haha. Best wishes to you, stay safe neighbor!

  • @estellaeggleston1643
    @estellaeggleston1643 3 года назад +27

    We live completely off grid minus cell phones! We live in Northern Minnesota where is gets -60, and we have a wood cook stove and a wood heating stove, we are always cracking a window because it gets hot! We have been living this way for 16 years and I don't miss being on the grid. I have been canning for 20 years and trying to teach people but no one ever listened! I hope and pray they start now, as most of my family lives in Texas

    • @doradodd6964
      @doradodd6964 3 года назад +3

      I live in East Texas I am 74 I got the message 2 years ago and started prepping I encouraged my sisters to do what they could also my son's and friends got my boys raising quail and container gardening. I am blessed to have all natural gas. None of my family suffered during this storm. We have alot of tricks up our sleeves cause we went thru this as kids

    • @robertgregorski4389
      @robertgregorski4389 3 года назад +1

      We are moving to northern Minnesota in a couple years! So can’t wait!

    • @estellaeggleston1643
      @estellaeggleston1643 3 года назад +1

      @@robertgregorski4389 may I ask what county? And what state are you moving from? Just curious, you don't have to answer

    • @robertgregorski4389
      @robertgregorski4389 3 года назад

      Cook county and coming from Louisiana. Originally from Wisconsin

    • @estellaeggleston1643
      @estellaeggleston1643 3 года назад +1

      @@robertgregorski4389 we are in Saint Louis County

  • @sammia4227
    @sammia4227 3 года назад +60

    “Never be all electric.” Everything in my house is electric. We have a gasoline generator, and a small propane camp heater- but we have these just for emergencies. I’m really thinking that I need to get a wood stove. I live up north and we can get some cold, long winters.

    • @DeepSouthHomestead
      @DeepSouthHomestead 3 года назад +16

      A wood stove would be a good investment.

    • @saddleridge4364
      @saddleridge4364 3 года назад +4

      do it, you won't be sorry

    • @neal0071234able
      @neal0071234able 3 года назад +3

      The original gas fuel was farms private owned stills.. Alcohol was the original gas..

    • @kleineroteHex
      @kleineroteHex 3 года назад +5

      when my daughter and husband bought their house it was a - for the time it was built- very well thought out house! Electric heat must have been the thing at the time, they even hat electric to the gutters to keep them from freezing, and of course electric heat. After the first two cold months they got an insert for the fireplace and that heats the whole house now, wood stored up for 2 winters all the time. Wood heat is just so nice! My house, we changed the oil heat very quickly to gas. Even when the electric is out we can still cook on the gas stove; if there is no gas we have 3 outdoor cooking options, always have a back up plan life was too smooth for too long.

    • @marilyngodfrey868
      @marilyngodfrey868 3 года назад +6

      My husband has always vented the wood stove pipe out through a window, with a piece of flat tin cut the size of the window pane he removes.Then using tin snips he cuts a circle, hole in the center and runs the stove pipe through it. He replaced the stove pipe this year.
      Does it do the job? Yes!
      Just remember your stove pipe needs to be higher than your roof peak and it needs a small hat. That keeps rain, sleety and snow out as well as birds, etc.

  • @johnmcginnis5201
    @johnmcginnis5201 3 года назад +17

    Having just experienced the 'Texas Chill' some observations:
    * Yes multiple ways to heat. We have electric and gas heat. Can switch either way. It was a lifesaver this time around.
    * Prepping is a lifesaver. The stores have little. Many has had to empty out their frozen food sections because they lost power.
    * Better water pipes. We did not have a pipe burst but many have. Adopt northern clime construction to avoid problems.
    * Fuel storage. Adapt a plan and stick to it.
    * We were under a water warning. Had to boil water to drink. Will be buying a purification system.
    * Prepare for 'guests' We hand family and friends stay with us who lost power.
    Just a few items.

    • @sallyintucson
      @sallyintucson 3 года назад +1

      Look up GeoPress purifiers. They’re made for camping and traveling in third world countries. I keep one with my emergency supplies.

  • @GAS-MONEY
    @GAS-MONEY 3 года назад +27

    One is none and two is one when talking preparedness! Thank you Danny! Growing pains are much better than hunger pains!

  • @gaylecollins7367
    @gaylecollins7367 3 года назад +21

    I have a woodstove thats my only heat source, down comforters (worth the expense), outdoor shower that can be used in your shower, clothes lines (yes, you can dry them outside in the winter). I raise my food (cattle, chicken (meat and eggs, I also preserve the eggs over winter), pork, goats (milk and meat), and veggies. The other thing I've used to warm my bed is heated rocks wrapped in a towel at the foot of my bed, stays warm all night!
    I'm also buying a kit for a wood burning barrel stove to put in my greenhouse. I'll be up grading my greenhouse for winter use.

    • @melodyscamman244
      @melodyscamman244 3 года назад +2

      Get a double barrel kit.

    • @MFaith777
      @MFaith777 3 года назад

      Can’t dry my clothes outside during winter in Mn, they’d turn to ice! 🥶

  • @GammaCharlotte
    @GammaCharlotte 3 года назад +40

    This may sound a little strange but one of my preps is books. My son and DIL think I should get rid of my books and only read on my tablet. I believe in hard copies. I have all kinds of books such as gardening, food preservation, animals, medical stuff, etc. If the power goes out our computers, internet, and Wi-Fi won't work and we won't be able to read anything on a computer. But they just don't understand. They don't have enough life experience. We have a pellet wood stove. It came with the house when we bought it. We also live in a forest. WHY?!? would anyone buy a pellet stove when they're naturally surrounded by all the wood they could ever use? Also, the stove has digital controls and you need electricity to make it work. 🤪

    • @DonnaRatliff1
      @DonnaRatliff1 3 года назад +7

      Amen to Books! 👍Hard copies.

    • @heatherk8931
      @heatherk8931 3 года назад +2

      I'm a firm believer in books as well. Like you said, grid down, you can't do anything. Most people don't realize a land line is the other thing you will wish for when it all fails. Most people have cordless or none at all. The old wall phones would still work without electricity! Theres so much more!

    • @melodyscamman244
      @melodyscamman244 3 года назад +5

      Gramma Charlotte, you are correct on all counts. Here is a hint, put all your books on the north wall and tell them it is for insulation. There is no good argument for less insulation! Plus, that actually works.

    • @debraarterburn9688
      @debraarterburn9688 3 года назад +2

      We as a prepper have been told for years our power is going to go out so get hard copy books on our hands, so my house if filled with books, and games for children and adults, the internet isn't going to be up and running

    • @sallyintucson
      @sallyintucson 3 года назад +3

      Someone suggested the same to me. I pointed out that books don’t need electricity and don’t get viruses. That was the end of that discussion.

  • @debrawade6656
    @debrawade6656 3 года назад +14

    You’re never to old to learn to can. My family never canned so I’m the first in our family. I’m 65 and teaching/learning with my sister (50) how to can vegetables, meats, fruits and meals. The times are getting harder and we need to be prepared. Thank you for the wisdom you share. God bless as we go through this together.

  • @iterrilee
    @iterrilee 3 года назад +33

    Wood stove lessons-we had taken down a couple trees a year ago that well stocked us up on split wood-not thinking we would necessarily need that much, I covered a good bit of it with tarps as winter approached (We’re North Central Indiana). So, having a good amount of wood split/seasoned/dry ahead of time. Our wood stove is 14 mo old, has had moderate use before this winter-last week smoke started leaking out around one of the seals when we closed the damper down-yep, needed to replace the seal -only took 3 days to get replacement from manufacturer) but it made me realize we needed to get replacement seals to have at the ready. We were able to burn as long as we didn’t close the damper-but, we went through a lot more wood. Also, can’t use stove for 24 hours after you glue in the new seal.

    • @violethomesteadgeorgia7278
      @violethomesteadgeorgia7278 3 года назад +6

      Thank you. I'm getting ready to buy a wood burning stove. Think I'll order a few extra parts just in case

    • @heidimisfeldt5685
      @heidimisfeldt5685 3 года назад

      Good to know. Thanks. 😀

    • @t.j.jordan7486
      @t.j.jordan7486 3 года назад +1

      Amazing, we share the same name! I have another dear friend in LA who has our name also! I am in the deep south as well - Alabama. It's so odd to see someone spell Terri with an i, but to have Jordan as a last name is just as unique! Thanks for the info on the seal, we have a wood stove and a wood heater we are about to get set up and usable...rather than being stored in my husband's shop! God bless and stay warm :)

    • @johnnyelectric4844
      @johnnyelectric4844 3 года назад

      Thanks for that tip corn to feed turkeys deer and other birds for meat

  • @kathryngagne5813
    @kathryngagne5813 3 года назад +12

    My Great Aunt had 2" x 20" x 30" soap stone slabs. She would warm them in the oven, wrap them in towels and place them at the foot of our beds under the covers. Heaven to little feet on a cold Winter night. You could easily warm them with a wood stove.

    • @Mary-zj9jz
      @Mary-zj9jz 3 года назад +1

      my mom did the same and I have bricks to do that with and a grill I can heat them up heat them up on

  • @garden333
    @garden333 3 года назад +11

    We have subdivisions going up everywhere and all they care about is the landscaping. The time and money being spent and they can not eat that. This is what they should be teaching in schools today.
    Another good way to prep is to have some precooked food in freezer. We always make lots of meatloaf, roasts, cooked hamburgers, etc in freezer ready to go in case of emergency. We package each for the serving size we need. We also have solar landscape lights that we have had to bring in the house a few times.

  • @royamberg9177
    @royamberg9177 3 года назад +75

    Every house should have a wood stove. They always used to

    • @marthaadams8326
      @marthaadams8326 3 года назад +4

      or coal if in Appalachia

    • @marilyngodfrey868
      @marilyngodfrey868 3 года назад +4

      I have two friends whom I called to see if they were ready for the storm! Both said they feared being cold. I suggested a fire in their fireplaces. Both seemed shocked , so I'm guessing they have not had a fire in years. Oh my, and both are in their 70s, and married!

    • @freedomthrufaith
      @freedomthrufaith 3 года назад +1

      In some states it’s illegal and in the new homes they aren’t allowed

    • @makeitstop9344
      @makeitstop9344 3 года назад +1

      I collected wood stoves! I have 9 unused stocked! I would buy them from anyone who would sell them . Most are the window front. I find the window front to be very useful to know where you’re at in terms of maintaining your burn!

    • @royamberg9177
      @royamberg9177 3 года назад +1

      @@freedomthrufaith in an emergency

  • @tinnerste2507
    @tinnerste2507 3 года назад +5

    I have a 350 year old house, and lived a year and a half without power. I wore lots of layers made of leather and wool cause its wind/water resistant and doesnt often need washing. I. Find it waaayy more comfortable to sleep in an unheated room. Even in below freezing weather. Its way nicer than in summer.the best tip for freezing weather is to empty the pipes the night before with a bathtub full of water to flush the toilets. Then you can use water for a few hours a day, then empty again overnight. This stops the pipes from freezing and bursting.

    • @taylorshomestead3934
      @taylorshomestead3934 3 года назад

      How do you empty the pipes?

    • @saddleridge4364
      @saddleridge4364 3 года назад +1

      @@taylorshomestead3934 You would have to turn off your well pump at the box and then run the faucets til water stops coming out. I would not want to do that every night, I'd be a bit nervous about restarting the well pump that many times.

    • @tinnerste2507
      @tinnerste2507 3 года назад +1

      @@taylorshomestead3934 you turn off the water to the house, the same switch you use when you have a leak, and open all of the taps untill they empty

    • @taylorshomestead3934
      @taylorshomestead3934 3 года назад

      @@tinnerste2507 thanks!

    • @taylorshomestead3934
      @taylorshomestead3934 3 года назад

      @@saddleridge4364 thank you!

  • @heatherhernandez6360
    @heatherhernandez6360 3 года назад +12

    I definitely think this past weeks freeze was a big wake up call for many people!! We fared well but definitely have some goals and changes to work towards. Wood stove and bigger generator being the big ones.

  • @juliekraft4102
    @juliekraft4102 3 года назад +14

    This has been a good trial run for a awful lot of people. This is probably a blessing in disguise for those who are quick learners.🤔

    • @sallyintucson
      @sallyintucson 3 года назад +1

      That is, IF they learned anything... Many young people astound me with their lack of sense today. Example: a college kid said “Things were better when we used steam to power things.” My response: “And what was used to make the steam?” She was genuinely shocked. She’d never thought of that before. 🤦‍♀️

  • @charlettenitzsche4160
    @charlettenitzsche4160 3 года назад +14

    I store my feed in nonworking deep freezers that I have latched shut. I live in southern Illinois, and our humidity level is less than yours most of the year. It's waterproof and keeps the critters out.

    • @mgd6087
      @mgd6087 3 года назад

      Ever go to Benson Park. Julius side?

    • @carolynsimmons3087
      @carolynsimmons3087 3 года назад

      Things like freezers would sweat on the inside here in texas..

  • @sandhollowhomestead6972
    @sandhollowhomestead6972 3 года назад +14

    You brought back memories of my wife and I when we got married in 71. We lived in a rental and we couldn't afford to heat the entire house. It had 2 natural heaters. We hung a heavy quilt in the archway between half the house and only heated the kitchen & bathroom and the bedroom which had a small nook beside it. The other half was freezing. Even now we put plastic over our windows to help hold heat. We've added heavy curtains over blinds so we can keep the cold out. We run our nat. gas heater around 67* in the day and 62* at night. I have thermo-leggings under my jeans and I wear a T-shirt, hoody and when I go outside a use a jacket over it. It just makes sense to layer up your cloths. You've got to adapt to the weather if you want to survive. Over time you adjust. We also have a fireplace for emergencies.

    • @mgd6087
      @mgd6087 3 года назад +2

      Happy Fiftieth Anniversary!

    • @sandhollowhomestead6972
      @sandhollowhomestead6972 3 года назад +1

      @@mgd6087 Thank you! Can't wait for the next 50! LOL!

    • @mgd6087
      @mgd6087 3 года назад +2

      @@sandhollowhomestead6972 Now THAT'S love!

  • @XyZ98768
    @XyZ98768 3 года назад +13

    Wool blankets. Wool blend long johns and tops. Silk blend long johns and tops. Wool blend beanies. Wool gloves and socks. Expensive, but well worth it's weight in GOLD.
    If you don't have a hot water bottle use glass Mason jars filled with hot water, wrap it in a towel and put in a pillowcase.

  • @MsLippy
    @MsLippy 3 года назад +14

    Room for improvement for sure on our end; but we passed the test more than I thought we would. May this storm bring knowledge to many, and a window to be given for improvement. Blessings Yall❤️

  • @bearupfarm1818
    @bearupfarm1818 3 года назад +20

    Good advice Danny. My home and farm is totally self sufficient.,we don’t have any utilities here.

  • @marieparks5674
    @marieparks5674 3 года назад +4

    We use rice bags, throw them in the microwave for two minutes, I sew the bags and fill them with rice, they last for along time, I use flannel

  • @Votethepower
    @Votethepower 3 года назад +9

    When you pulled out those hot water bottles, I laughed so hard!! That's what I use in my bed every night during the winter. It helps with pain and it puts me to sleep faster.

    • @Mary-zj9jz
      @Mary-zj9jz 3 года назад +2

      when mom was kid she heated a brick on the stove and wrap in a towel

  • @KatInTheNorth
    @KatInTheNorth 3 года назад +14

    Important words of wisdom! Self sufficiency is an insurance and can relieve stress and anxiety in case something down the road should happen. You and Wanda stay safe! God Bless 🙏🏼

  • @dianemeans7626
    @dianemeans7626 Год назад

    Ran across this older video . . . I always enjoy them. I'm 67 and I remember so much of this from my father (who grew up in the south). By the time I came along we were in SoCal. He applied what he could but everything is so fast here it eventually went by the wayside. Listening to your videos reminds me of many of the things he tried to teach me.

  • @kathybruton2186
    @kathybruton2186 3 года назад +12

    As cold as it is I'm concerned about jars freezing...I'm seeing the necessity of a root cellar sooner than later lol

  • @craftsandcrabgrass1859
    @craftsandcrabgrass1859 3 года назад +8

    Great list! I'm thankful to have checked off most of the items, and am hopeful to have them all checked off soon.
    My husband and I started a contest about two years ago to see who could bring the most chicken feed home in one trip, and it not only came in handy when the roads were too bad to drive, but also when shortages hit last year (storage may be an issue this year, as they're predicting la nina, but we'll get it figured out). I also challenged myself to double my canning in 2019, which really helped over the past year.
    We've definitely had people talk about us like we're off our rockers, but we have what we need when we need it, so I'll happily look crazy to those people.

    • @Growmap
      @Growmap 3 года назад +1

      Consider growing sprouts and fodder for your chickens. 1 cup of grain = 4-6 cups if you grow it for a week.

  • @theIAMofME
    @theIAMofME 3 года назад +11

    Danny, you are so right. It hasn't been THIS cold for THIS LONG in I can't remember when. Now, yes we've had some deep snows here in W. TN every 10 years or so. But, never these kind of temps for more than one day, maybe two. But, it's been a WEEK or more. We have a nice Kerosene heater that has kept us warm. We have gone through 17 gallons of it!! Your furnace in the south is not made for this kind of winter. We have put small space heaters where the pluming is. Thank goodness we've had power all along. I used a radiator type heater I have to put big rocks on. They heat up so hot that you almost have to use pot holders to hold them. I put them under the cabinet of one of our BR sinks that's on an outside wall. No frozen pipes. And we had temps at zero with windchills in the high teens!! I even put a hot rock in the bed with us. LOL I may check out those hot water bottles. It's nicer than a big rock. LOL Stay warm. We never had to leave and had everything we needed. But, this indeed took us by surprise and now we have to resupply. We have a BIG gas generator. It hasn't been cranked in 10 years. Hubby has dropped the ball! He says he's going to get it repaired or whatever it needs ASAP! Food was never an issue. Nor water. This winter has definitely taught us A LOT! Grateful for the lessons.

  • @nspowers7130
    @nspowers7130 3 года назад +2

    Feed and hay for our agricultural animals.
    We've been experimenting for a year.
    What happens if we cannot get cattle feed. The feed mills are up North. What happens.
    Greens. Grow greens. Peel the leaves off at the bottom. Plants will keep growing and producing. They are great cattle feed. Side note we could not freeze them. We stuck them in the freezer. Pulled them out and they thaw and turned to mush. So we hurried up and fed the last batch frozen. They ate it up, no side effects.
    But the greens I planted under the oak tree canopy lasted well into the summer. Long after the grass was long.
    Just ideas. And you do not have to grow them from seed. The bunched greens you buy from the store, you can plant them in the ground and they grow.

    • @Growmap
      @Growmap 3 года назад

      I've seen people harvest wild purslane to feed goats. I love to eat purslane but it either grows like the weed it is or not at all. I keep living where it doesn't want to do well. I thought the same thing you did so I grow wheat fodder for my horses. They love it. And I feed the same fodder to the ducks along with sprouts as well. That way, if there is a drought or I can't get feed they won't go hungry. (I do also feed them free-choice hay in the winter + an organic feed all year long and will as long as it is available.)

  • @JojoCrazyCat
    @JojoCrazyCat 3 года назад +2

    My dad always told me as a kid, the three main things you need to survive.
    Food, Clothing and Shelter.
    But, i would have to add tools.
    Tools can be many things.

  • @think4yourself916
    @think4yourself916 3 года назад +13

    Good advice my friend. What is sad about today is most people lost the ability to survive they are totally depending on the system.

  • @jameshagan2263
    @jameshagan2263 3 года назад +13

    Not trying to sound callous, but it's a surety those who FAIL to plan plan to FAIL .
    May the Gracious LORD Bless you and yours .

  • @jameskidd7499
    @jameskidd7499 3 года назад +2

    I'm 73 yrs. old and I guess I learn something new about every day and things come to mind I should have known or thought more about long ago and the saying you never grow too old to learn must be right .

  • @verawol3111
    @verawol3111 3 года назад +7

    People who live in apartment’s usually have house plant and sometimes have those small balconies that fit a few chairs and a little table. Maybe their house plants could be kale or greens, they could use a greenstalk on their balcony or grow tomatoes in a five gallon bucket.
    I intend to send my daughter who live in an apartment a greenstalk for her birthday. I hope she uses it.

    • @Growmap
      @Growmap 3 года назад

      If I had limited room or was growing on a balcony, I'd buy AGardenPatch self-watering, self-fertilizing containers. I use them in my garden, too, especially for tomatoes and cucumbers. They keep the cucumbers from getting bitter the way they usually do when it is super hot in the summer.

    • @verawol3111
      @verawol3111 3 года назад

      @@Growmap thanks

  • @archegosfarmsteadship
    @archegosfarmsteadship 3 года назад +8

    Wood stove and solar is the way to go, solar will be the first thing I put on my homestead when I move later this year! Lots of lessons learned! Blessings to you Danny and Wanda😁

    • @cynthiafisher9907
      @cynthiafisher9907 3 года назад +2

      Except if it snows a lot, solar panels won’t work if covered in snow.

  • @frogfoothollar5349
    @frogfoothollar5349 3 года назад +6

    We've had our wood stove since 1980. It's been a life saver. Our last ice storm in SC was 2014. Our power was out a week. But we were warm and had plenty of food and water.

  • @swcomment5542
    @swcomment5542 3 года назад +2

    One of my takeaways from the southern freeze was that I need to make my grandson to emergency kits before he goes off to college in the fall. One to keep in his car and one to keep in his dorm.

  • @ruthspillman546
    @ruthspillman546 3 года назад

    We warmed up large rocks onbthe wood heater and put them at our feet. We cooked on a wood kitchen stove, heated with a wood heater and did NOT HAVE A BATHROOM OR ANY WATER IN OUR HOUSE. You went to the well and put the bucket down in the brought it up with a rope and crank. We were onevof the last to get any modern things in our home. I am grateful that I appreciate what I have today and know how to prepare for the "hard times".

  • @denniscleveland669
    @denniscleveland669 3 года назад +8

    Wool clothing was greatly used back in the day. Long Johns were the one piece underwear with the two button trap door or single button slit.

    • @melodyscamman244
      @melodyscamman244 3 года назад +1

      I had some vietnam era flightline pants I wore to shreds! Cotton long johns and those old style flightline pants and you are good to go in ten below! Back in the day, you could get nice Herman Survivor boots with thick wool lining and they were great in any extreme cold I came across out on the Air Base exposed areas. I did have silk long johns with the flap for even worse weather. That stuff is still out there to be had but not easy to find. Worth it though.

    • @denniscleveland669
      @denniscleveland669 3 года назад

      @@melodyscamman244, in the bushcraft and survival community, it’s well thought of as “Cotton Kills”! I had cotton lined wool long Johns, but if you sweat just a little, the cotton kept the moisture and lost all of its insulating ability. Nylon gets wet as well. It can microscopically absorb water. Silk is a good under garment, as is some other synthetics. Wool and polyester are kings of the thermal world.

  • @bonniewatson178
    @bonniewatson178 3 года назад +8

    I shake my head watching the news, people talking about their food going to go bad because they don’t have electric ⚡️ put your food into a basket, box or tote, in your garage or porch that’s if you have a single home. Believe me I would find a way to save my food when it’s below freezing outside. A lot of Americans have gotten soft waiting for someone to do for them what you should do for yourself, being prepared as much as you can should be a way of life, and now some have realized the Calvary ain’t coming! And that Mayor down in Texas that made that statement should wake folks up because when SHTF you are on your own!

    • @culdesacgrocerygarden
      @culdesacgrocerygarden 3 года назад +1

      Exactly what I have been saying! In the great depression they kept their food outside in the snow during winter. It just makes me shake my head in disbelief that anyone who has snow and ice on the ground would let their food rot in the refrigerator in side just because the power is out.

    • @ngolden0003
      @ngolden0003 3 года назад

      People should be prepared butTHAT STATEMENT THE MAYOR MADE WAS DOWN RIGHT CRUEL AND SEEMED LIKE HE KNEW THEIR WEATHER WAS INTENTIONAL- basically saying survival of the fittest, that’s true but come on have some sympathy!

    • @Growmap
      @Growmap 3 года назад

      @@culdesacgrocerygarden Common sense has gone extinct in many people. They are so used to never thinking that they've forgotten how.

  • @carricowherd3826
    @carricowherd3826 3 года назад

    We never heated our upstairs in the winter. We had flannel pajamas, a night cap, and a pile of quilts. We were lucky to be raised by our grandparents who lived through the depression.

  • @laurarowland7926
    @laurarowland7926 3 года назад

    Thankyou for being here to share your wisdom🙏

  • @michaelhoggard591
    @michaelhoggard591 3 года назад +10

    Very good reference to old time remedies! Not many left that are thinking this way. Prayerfully there will be more lessons taught to the young on what we know from our elders. There are not too many young ones left that were taught the ways to survive. Pray for our nation and our leaders as the Word instructs us. And pray that God will bring back our umbrella of protection and our youth (as far as that goes, a whole lot of the adults as well) will listen to His direction.

  • @fourdayhomestead2839
    @fourdayhomestead2839 3 года назад +15

    Down bedding & long flannel gown with a wool hat & socks is a necessity up north here.

  • @marshashelley8668
    @marshashelley8668 3 года назад +5

    I was blessed to be raised by parents that grew up during tbe depression. So I have always stocked up for winter. Stock more since 9/11. People have short memories anymore and young ones werent taught about stocking up. People in the cities dont believe they will have problems. Guess now they will think different. If they have Any common sense. I always have a garden too, and go to farmers markets or fruit stands, which we dont have mamy of anymore, and get enough of what I need to add to mine to be able to can for the winter and beyond.

    • @sallyintucson
      @sallyintucson 3 года назад

      Farmer’s Markets have become VERY popular in my city during the last ten years or so.

  • @sunflowermarcia7277
    @sunflowermarcia7277 3 года назад +5

    Great reminder. I have a lot of the things you spoke of because i listened to you and other preppers for the last year. Thank you. I also love my greenstalk and bought a 2nd one for me and 1 for each of my family for Christmas to get them growing. I have been telling my family to prep but not all of them are listening. I will continue to tell them.

    • @Growmap
      @Growmap 3 года назад +2

      Consider giving them food as gifts. My neighbors know I like to garden so they gave me a big can of seeds. And last year when I bought some bulk beans and rice I put some in 1 gallon plastic containers with lids and gave them to a farmer friend. I don't think he ever bought that much at once before. I said, plant some, eat some, save some.

    • @marielong7910
      @marielong7910 3 года назад

      What is a green stalk?

  • @jackiekitchennowordsneeded587
    @jackiekitchennowordsneeded587 3 года назад +5

    I agree my, granddaddy live in the depression, always have a backup.

  • @brandyweems8326
    @brandyweems8326 3 года назад +3

    moved up here to Fayetteville NC from MS...lived in a neighborhood for 4yrs....had field peas,purple hull,squash,tomatoes, herbs,and more...my neighbors thought i was crazy....when covid hit,they were wanting my frozen peas.😎...we've moved outside the city limits,more rural,my yard is almost an acre!!! im soooooo excited to see what happens with my garden this year😊

  • @vernahelvikmontanamomma8737
    @vernahelvikmontanamomma8737 3 года назад +8

    Montana here, I have a Ashley wood stove with a rebreather in the pipe, a self moving fan on top of the stove. Sometimes it gets 80 in the living room. We do have a propane furnace but when the electric goes out so does the fan on the furnace. I have an electric cook stove which I want to change later. But as a back up I have a propane stove that you can hook up to a 20 pound tank. I have two burners and a little oven. I built a rocket stove that is on the back step so I can use that if no propane is available. We have lots of little trash branches that can be used for the rocket stove. We also have two small generators that we can be used for our fridge and freezers if needed. We have a 60 foot pond so that we can be used for water. I have a Berkley water filter. I dehydrate food and I can my food. I would love a freeze dryer. I have a nice garden that I am expanding with raised beds because my back isn’t what it used to be. I have extra medicine and I have been a nurse for 30 years and have been in the nursing field for 43 years. I have books that teach living off the land and using them. I raise chickens and butcher them. But even with all this we need to improve. When I was a kid we used to put bricks on the wood stove and when we went to bed we would wrap them in towels to go to bed with. We need to get more gas for the vehicles and more propane. More batteries. I also feel the same. People depend on the government way to much and are ignorant on how to do things. I have a green stalk in my house trying to see if and how much food I can grow in the winter. I do want a green house. That is my next step this year. Always need to improve.

    • @Growmap
      @Growmap 3 года назад

      Consider getting little solar devices. I have solar-powered lanterns and one also has a handcrank on it. They make solar-powered thermos-type jars that boil water. If you have large windows, you can grow microgreens and herbs and even tomatoes and bell peppers in the house all winter long. If you don't, you can use LED grow lights. If the power went out, the plants would just stop growing. They likely wouldn't die unless it got really cold inside your house (except plants like purslane that can't take any cold at all).

  • @pinetreehill586
    @pinetreehill586 3 года назад +29

    Electricity is only a convenience that makes people lazy. I could give it all up and live in a tent like my Granny did. I was prepared to do that if we couldn’t find gas for the generator. A fire outside of a tent would be warmer than nothing.

    • @culdesacgrocerygarden
      @culdesacgrocerygarden 3 года назад +1

      A fire outside is a place you can put a large rock or a brick and put it into the coals. Take the hot brick or rock and wrap it in something like a towel and take it to bed with you for heat. The pioneers did that. I remember reading it in little house on the prairie when I was a little girl.

    • @nspowers7130
      @nspowers7130 3 года назад +3

      @@culdesacgrocerygarden yes it's true. Get a book and hand write all this good information.
      Grandfather warmed our beds with rocks. Just research now which rocks, some blow up with to much, fast heating.

    • @Growmap
      @Growmap 3 года назад +2

      Yes. A tent inside is a good way to get and stay warm, too. And if you have a fireplace, you can warm it up inside first. Everyone needs to build a rocket stove NOW so they already have it if they need it. Super cheap and lots of details online on how to do it. Only takes some bricks and no fasteners required for some designs.

    • @baneverything5580
      @baneverything5580 3 года назад +2

      Get an inexpensive 30-50 watt folding solar panel with USB and 12 volt charging ports, rechargeable USB fans, power banks with USB ports, and warm white USB LED lights and they can`t turn off your lights and fans. Get USB battery chargers for your NIMH and 18650 rechargeable batteries and you can run your radios and flashlights. That`s the most inexpensive way to go solar. I got lucky enough to get a 50 watt panel on sale for 36 bucks. It worked perfectly to keep my stuff charged after the Winter storm after the sun came out.

    • @melodyscamman244
      @melodyscamman244 3 года назад +1

      To my memory, we had pocket doors and a fireplace in that room, centrally in the house. We would shut the pocket doors in a storm, fill up the bathtub with water and listen to an old radio with a car battery or play music ourselves and the kids could dance. And of course, tell stories. No one was afraid of stuff we didn't have. Hey, you guys with the lanterns, put them on an s hook off the ceiling so dogs and kids don't cause an accident.

  • @debbiewilson6527
    @debbiewilson6527 3 года назад +6

    We had a additional well dug with a windmill for water. A windmill is a must for a homesteaders. You can't water your garden with anything else.

  • @carolavant3778
    @carolavant3778 3 года назад +5

    So many people don't think past their nose. I'm grateful that I grew up poor because we had to learn to either do without or make do. Even with little money, you can stock a pantry. My son and I live very well on very little. When I see how much food people throw away, it boggles the mind. So many don't preserve or can, and many that do are preserving and canning stuff they don't need! I have a friend who only cans jams and jellies and the occasional fruit in syrup. She has a dehydrator that she uses to dry flowers for popourri. Jeese, how about saving and freezing the tops and tails off of vegetable to make broth to can? How about dehydrating celery and peppers before they rot in your fridge? How about canning up that big pot of soup before it goes bad in the back of the fridge? People need to think. And what about the ones that say, "Oh, I have half a steer in the freezer." Well, that's awesome, but if you live in an all electric house and don't have an alternative way to cook, what are you going to if the power goes out in the Summer? I've lived though too many hurricanes to not have a gas or propane burner that can accommodate my pressure canner! Right now I've just moved to a more rural homestead. Some of my friends in Zone 9b thought I was crazy moving to Zone 8b. They also couldn't understand why I lovingly packed all of my canning, empty jars and supplies. Well, folks, we've been eating well from my old pantry, and I'm just now finding sources for quality food other than the grocery stores. The heat here is electric, so I'm going to invest in a wood stove. Sure, it's going to take up space that I could put something pretty, but pretty isn't going to keep us warm during a power outage. I'm also investing in something that will power up my well pump, so we'll have water. Think, think, think!! I need these things a lot more than I need a new car or new furniture!! And here, I have more land, and 5 beautiful pecan trees - I'm gardening like my life depends on it this year, because it does.

    • @Growmap
      @Growmap 3 года назад

      I'd love to know what kind of burner can accommodate a pressure canner. I've been thinking I need one of those unless I can figure out how to install a wood cook stove (and come up with the money to buy and install one)!

    • @heatherk8931
      @heatherk8931 3 года назад

      @Carol Avant : I've canned my pot of chicken soup, and turkey vegetable soups. Bought dried beans which I will also can when I figure how to store it all. I'm in 9a or b not sure, but power outages really worry me as well. A freezer full is only as good as the power that keeps it running. I've got 6 fruit, and 4 citrus trees and blue, black and trying to grow raspberries. Some strawberries. I save seeds from tomatoes, squash, peppers and seldom eat meat. I'd love some chickens!

  • @jendyson6729
    @jendyson6729 3 года назад

    I was absolutely stunned by the families in Texas who couldn't get along for just a couple of days without the basics. You don't have to be a prepper to have enough food water and fuel for a week or two. They kept saying that this never happens here.... well it usually doesn't but many other scenarios could happen at ANY TIME. You don't have to live in a flood zone or earthquake prone area to have an emergency. Water, food, medicine and even a couple extra propane tanks for your outside grill for cooking is so easy to have. I hope everyone, regardless of where they live will plan better.

  • @candacethompson2521
    @candacethompson2521 3 года назад +5

    I couldn't stop looking at the beautiful jars filled with a gorgeous color of orange. Blessings

  • @70washington
    @70washington 3 года назад +5

    I will always have a wood stove in a home, Propane for hot water and cooking would also be nice. lamps and lamp oil for light at night or when the power is out.

  • @georgiapeach2339
    @georgiapeach2339 3 года назад +4

    Some good advice that I've always heard is to have back ups for your back ups. I have several ways to do things. Food, cooking, heating. It took me years and years to do it all. I'm still not done and never will be as it's an every day thing but I found out through this storm I can at least survive for the moment.

  • @americaforamericans6254
    @americaforamericans6254 3 года назад +59

    People who take certain prescriptions should also want to learn about herbal medicine replacements they can forage in the area they live.

    • @brandyweems8326
      @brandyweems8326 3 года назад +8

      amen!!!! thats exactly what I've been doing....thank God we dont take many prescriptions for super serious conditions.

    • @allmantree
      @allmantree 3 года назад +14

      Let food be thy medicine and medicine be thy food.....
      Easy peasy! It's ALL preventable but it takes work now. Back in the day when things were rough as a cob life really forced you to work work work. I was born 150 years too late I believe.
      🇺🇲🦅🪂👍🏼🪓😼

    • @americaforamericans6254
      @americaforamericans6254 3 года назад +4

      @@allmantree may just be born again and missing the simpler times of the past subliminally. We no longer write in stone so all our gains can be lost in an instant with a major solar event thanks to the most intelligent technology based society. We don’t learn from our past and traditions anymore we learn from the internet information allowed to be available. These are sad times that make me wonder if this is the dark age. A time lost in time when it all crumbles. When it all decays back to its natural form their will be no trace of existence. We should all just glad for the experience and praising God for allowing it. The earth and heaven is a beautiful place if you just take a look around.

    • @theIAMofME
      @theIAMofME 3 года назад +12

      You are so right!! There are so many herbs out there that are fabulous. I am 54 this year and take not one prescription drug. Nor does my husband. I also found out during covid that Tonic Water with quinine in it is GREAT FOR ARTHRITIS!! I was taking it with zinc every day and noticed my arthritis almost disappeared. I was still a bit stiff at times but, no pain. That's the ONLY thing good I learned from covid. No wonder people with RA and Lupus use hydrocloriquine!!!

    • @Emeraldwitch30
      @Emeraldwitch30 3 года назад +8

      @@theIAMofME i use a shot of tart cherry juice every night too. Helps my arthritis but I've also got a touch of gout. I thought it was an old wives tale but for $4 a bottle I figured can't hurt. It helps quite a lot.

  • @mrs8792
    @mrs8792 3 года назад

    I’m new to Arkansas and just got through the freeze, only because I’m a prepper. I can’t sat enough about getting a few good quality wool blankets. I can use down blankets due to my asthma and I would’ve frozen without the new wool blanket I bought.
    It’s funny you mentioned the “night cap.” I wore a hat to bed one night and decided I’m going to sew a few our of flannel.
    I remember my Father wearing long Johns most of the year in Oregon. He had wool shirts, coats and blankets. I never liked wool blankets until this year! They really kept me warm.
    Hugs to you and Wanda and God bless you both.

  • @naplescajun
    @naplescajun 3 года назад +4

    LOVE growing in the greenstalk! However, it's not our only means of growing food. Very good video with loads of great information--thank you for all y'all do.

  • @Spongebob007
    @Spongebob007 3 года назад +4

    Yes to lesson #1! I live in Slidell & don’t think of cold much. Lesson learned

  • @carlabuggs1238
    @carlabuggs1238 3 года назад

    Okay, so here is a quick tip that people rarely think about. Fondue pots!! You can find them relatively inexpensive at Goodwill or you can buy one. I have a few one works with a votive candle and the other two use Sternos. I love them because they reheat the chili and soup that I made and canned as well as put of a good amount of heat. Use black plastic, also known as unused trash bags, and tape of a small area of the house. Put everything you need in that area. I was amazed at how people were still trying to heat the entire house. Oil lamps are also good for light and heat.

  • @lisageeck
    @lisageeck 3 года назад +11

    All electric is a problem in the summer, too. Hurricanes knock out power and you have to still cook and such. I picked up a camp stove this summer with 8 hurricanes that were headed our way. I'm not comfortable with just the electric and not being able to help ourselves until everything is back to normal.

  • @tambrasmith9707
    @tambrasmith9707 3 года назад +4

    My neighbors came and stayed with me during this freeze and we were warm ... even had chicks hatch and kept them warm in front of the wood heater, and cooked on it too

  • @nancygould6789
    @nancygould6789 3 года назад +3

    Thank you guys for keepin-on-keepin-on. It's a highlight of my day to listen to your wisdom.

  • @JojoCrazyCat
    @JojoCrazyCat 3 года назад +1

    It is good that you are around, to help teach people that don't know how to prepare.
    Because many didn't have parents that taught them how to deal with bad times.

  • @cdlady54_95
    @cdlady54_95 3 года назад

    Totally agree. 99% of America is industrialized industrialized and never knew hos to garden or lost that training. Thank you for sharing and be safe.

  • @sajmt1414
    @sajmt1414 3 года назад +7

    I’ve been making a list of things we need to improve on after this winter storm. We got about 11.5 inches of snow here in AR. I will be putting fuel on our list. Great video.

  • @lindafriesen3559
    @lindafriesen3559 3 года назад +8

    Speaking of sleep wear, they also surrounded their beds with curtains to help keep night drafts out.

    • @Growmap
      @Growmap 3 года назад +3

      I bought a $25 mosquito tent off eBay and covered it with emergency blankets. That way I can heat my bedroom for an hour or so, then turn off the heat, crawl in and close it up. Unless it gets down close to freezing it stays warm enough to sleep in all night, especially if I have my dog inside, too.

    • @mgd6087
      @mgd6087 3 года назад +1

      I put two long strips of cardboard in a door frame. Then I got long 2 inch strips of magnets to seal it tighter, but still allow people to come in and out easily. After that, the extra blankets were sufficient.

    • @patremagilbert8787
      @patremagilbert8787 3 года назад

      Good idea

    • @patremagilbert8787
      @patremagilbert8787 3 года назад

      Good idea

  • @JojoCrazyCat
    @JojoCrazyCat 3 года назад +1

    Never rely on just one thing.
    I always try and keep extra of everything i own.
    So when it comes to the power going out, i have a few things for light, heat, something to cook our food with.
    I never rely on frozen or cold food.
    Most of my food storage is can food, so if the power goes out that food will last for years.
    I am just starting on preserving the food i grow in my garden.
    Me and my brother are like the ant and the grasshopper.
    I am the ant that works all day long to get things done, and prepares just in case of bad times.
    My brother is like the grasshopper that lays around and eats everything he can, and don't think about tomorrow.
    That story is a very good story.
    And also, give a person a fish and they eats for a day, teach a person how to fish and they eat for a lifetime.
    The problem is, so many are not willing to learn these days.
    So we just have to teach those that are willing to learn.
    Let the grasshopper learn the hard way, from the mistakes it makes over and over.

  • @mrs.americanmade7452
    @mrs.americanmade7452 3 года назад +9

    I FREEZE MY CHERRY TOMATOES WITH SKINS ON AND CUT THE STEM TOPS OFF, THEN WHEN I MAKE SOUP I RUN HOT WATER ON THEM AND SKINS COME OFF IMMEDIATELY AND READY TO GO IN THE SOUP, THEY COME APART EASY TO GET OUT EXACTLY HOW MANY I NEED FROM THE BAG.

    • @MimsysGarden
      @MimsysGarden 3 года назад +1

      Oooohhh thanks! What a great idea for over abundance! 💚 Mims

    • @marthamydear7499
      @marthamydear7499 3 года назад

      Great idea! Thanks for sharing!

    • @culdesacgrocerygarden
      @culdesacgrocerygarden 3 года назад +1

      I do that too but I dont even take the skins off any more. I am getting used to seeing them in my soup, lol.

    • @Growmap
      @Growmap 3 года назад

      @@culdesacgrocerygarden I'm glad I'm not the only one. I leave them on when I make pasta sauce, too. I figure I'm the only one likely to be eating it and I don't most veggies including potatoes, beets, carrots, etc. A lot of the best nutrients are right under the peel and I want to eat them.

  • @cindybonem494
    @cindybonem494 3 года назад +54

    Never put all of your eggs in one basket, my goodness isn’t that true! Diversify your heating with a duel fuel furnace one that you can run on propane/wood/coal or natural gas, it makes so much sense to me to have a variety of options to heat with and to cook with, charcoal or wood for a grill will be a life saver and for years the Boy Scouts have made tuna cans with corrugated cardboard rolled up inside then Pour melted wax over it to make a heat source for cooking, they work great! Another thing I’ve been thinking about is to not to delay stocking up your pantry until you have a garden, that’s nonsense! Go to the grocery store and buy what you need, until you can grow a garden, harvest it and can it up, Heavenly Father has already provided veggies, soups, stews, ravioli, canned meats like chicken, spam or canned ham, salmon, tuna and beef, stock up NOW, learn to grow a garden while you buy from the grocery store and can it up. Last but not least forget about taking a vacation or going in debt buying a new car, use that money to prepare all that you will need to survive the coming calamities that the scriptures say will happen. Go to the dentist, OBGYN, or other Doctors to tune yourself up before hell breaks loose. It’s a lot to do but steady preparation is the key always moving forward. Danny and Wanda, I know that you know all of this already but a second witness is always a good thing. I forgot about water storage and filtration look up water storage options on Pinterest, Danny has a video on it and my favorite on water catchment is LDS Prepper he is so thorough on how to do it.

    • @laurarowland7926
      @laurarowland7926 3 года назад +1

      I have the heating issue with my elderly parents ..they can't run wood stove anymore & I just got them a solar power generator to have in the house..like to get full house generator but they are hard to convince..be safe & well✝️🙏

    • @mgd6087
      @mgd6087 3 года назад

      I once read: Throughout your life, make friends of all ages. I add: and of all types and skills. Look for inspiration. I knew a priest who was asked for money by a shoeless homeless person. He had taken a vow of poverty, so he had no $ but in a moment of grace he realized that he knew where to get another pair of shoes so he gave up the ones he had and walked on to where he got his replacement pair. (Another version of the "shirt off your back".)

    • @patriciahuffstead7929
      @patriciahuffstead7929 3 года назад

      @@laurarowland7926 ivyc

    • @karlfair
      @karlfair 3 года назад

      @@laurarowland7926 If you're planing on your parents using a solar generator for heat, you will need a big one. Most of the off the shelf units will not keep up with the loads a heating system demands. Also, if they can't work a wood stove, will they be able to operate a generator? Hope this is food for thought. Stay safe.

    • @laurarowland7926
      @laurarowland7926 3 года назад

      @@karlfair I want to invest in a solar powered generac that does the whole house but they don't feel they need it . I got them a bluetti for inside for microwave, etc. They seemed happy..I felt better..it's an ongoing conversation 🙏

  • @caribbeanhouse6372
    @caribbeanhouse6372 3 года назад +5

    Thanks for sharing your story and your opinion about the future. I agree with you some people keep prepare but thinking they will have electricity to keep the house appliances running but never got a generator as a backup.

  • @conniedavidson1807
    @conniedavidson1807 3 года назад

    I remember the snowstorm in the 60's. We lived in Yazoo City and we found half of an old round Coke sign. We used that as a sled and had so much fun.

  • @nancyd8045
    @nancyd8045 3 года назад

    I live in upstate New York and have a conventional furnace/ hot water heater in our home. The year Florida had hurricane after hurricane we thought if something kept electricity out of our home during winter, we wouldn’t be able to stay home. So we had a wood stove installed as an alternative source. Best decision we ever made.

  • @charlesbaxter3820
    @charlesbaxter3820 3 года назад +4

    I use pickle barrels for grain, they have a rubber gasket and a screw on lid. I can put 300 lbs of feed in them. Maybe they will work for you. I also use it to keep flour sugar and corn meal in it

    • @Emeraldwitch30
      @Emeraldwitch30 3 года назад +1

      I get frosting buckets from the bakery for $1 each. They are only 3 to 4 gallons but they have a rubber gasket and I store my bread flour/sugar/rice/wheat berries/ap flour/semolina flour and probably a few other things im not recalling. But they keep the pantry moths and critters out and are a touch easier for myself to haul around. But I'd take a nice barrel like yours if I could get them.
      I'd like a couple IBC cubes for rain water reclamation too from my roof.

  • @johannaadams4703
    @johannaadams4703 3 года назад +6

    We heated with only wood for 15 years. We have since moved into an all electric house. The wood stove came with us. It is sitting in my living room waiting for the hole in the ceiling and roof for the pipe..

  • @lindamills9444
    @lindamills9444 3 года назад +1

    You do what you have to do, the problem is some don't want to do what it takes, you can take a candle and brick or rocks or whatever is safe and make a little fireplace and heat water or food in a pot. If you don't have water use snow or ice. I have gas and electric heating, and I'm glad. Back in the day our great-grandparents would heat a brick and wrap it in a towel and put it in the bed to keep warm.

    • @Growmap
      @Growmap 3 года назад

      Yes. Look up "rocket stove" designs to find a good one for that purpose.

  • @sethb9545
    @sethb9545 3 года назад +1

    I raise garden and can have berry bushes make jams and pie raise my own meat and have eggs being raised on a farm we were taught how to do all these things from our mother .

  • @sassyannie6292
    @sassyannie6292 3 года назад +6

    Many people eat at restaurants, they don't cook at home much less grow their food. My husband and I grow, preserve, and make our meals. We have alternative ways to cook and now heat a room, but we need to do better.

    • @DonnaRatliff1
      @DonnaRatliff1 3 года назад

      I'm with you. I refuse to eat any of that stuff. Most all genetically modified. Like the Technology they're using also to try to control the weather. I've been watching what the Tyrants are doing.

    • @redtigerlily8165
      @redtigerlily8165 3 года назад

      I've grown a lot of my own for years. I love knowing what has been done to my food. Dont trust the nutritional or other value of the "perfect " looking groceries. We as a society need to stop being so complacent and chasing a worthless dollar

  • @Richardofdanbury
    @Richardofdanbury 3 года назад +3

    This was an excellent presentation... take heed of it and prepare because times are fixing to get really, really tough... even worse than the Great Depression.

    • @sallyintucson
      @sallyintucson 3 года назад

      I agree. We hit the same unemployment mark in the US last year that we hit during the Great Depression.

    • @Richardofdanbury
      @Richardofdanbury 3 года назад

      @@sallyintucson Yes, but that was largely due to the scamdemic of CoVid-19 which is a bunch of hooey!

    • @sallyintucson
      @sallyintucson 3 года назад

      @@Richardofdanbury You don’t know anyone who’s died from it yet, do you? I do. I was also down with it myself for 3 1/2 months last spring. No tests were available in my state.

  • @sandybarnes8355
    @sandybarnes8355 3 года назад +2

    blankets are good for alot of things. insulation, draft control put over doors and windows, around bottom of doors, etc. Many nights in winter when I was growing up my mother put hot water in a bottle and put it in our bed to help keep us warm. also they took a rock and heated it up to warm the bed.

    • @Mary-zj9jz
      @Mary-zj9jz 3 года назад

      yes if see a free or cheap blanket at a yard sale almost always pick it up, even if they have holes those make good door blockers

  • @michellesgarden5695
    @michellesgarden5695 3 года назад

    Laying here in my bed watching your video I glance at the ceiling of my room in our 120 years plus house that I call..'The House that Jack Built' ...some of the door surrounds have been shaped with a tomahawk I'm sure!
    Its home and we love it