Monday, February 28, 2011

Bunkers

Just watched video footage of the inside of a nuclear bunker under one of Khadaffi's "liberated" palaces. And I gotta say it drove home one thing I've always noticed about bunkers and bomb shelters: They are stifling and creepy. Even for the wealthiest of megalomaniacs. All that concrete and steel does not make for a light and cheery environment. I've never experienced anything but oppressiveness inside a concrete tunnel, bunker, fallout shelter or gun emplacement. And I've been inside as many as possible, cuz I think they are cool. It would be cool if someone designed the interior of one of these bunkers so that it was just FUN. Wonder if that's possible?

Natural caves can be oppressive, too. But they can also be airy and pleasantly cool. Part of it has to do with how deep they are, how dark, how wet or dry, and the air quality. In Joshua Tree I've found many a pleasant cave - but they are not true caves, merely pockets beneath jumbled boulders. The most oppressive caves I've been in were limestone, in Santa Cruz - very wet and muddy, with damp, cold air. Some of the most beautiful were in Southern France. One even had a shallow river with gondolas, and the ceiling was hundreds of feet overhead!

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A note on Restrepo:

Weapons I observed included an M60, an M1A with a SAGE EBR stock, M-4s, an automatic grenade launcher, 9mm pistols, SAWs, shoulder-launched rockets, a .50 rifle, Warthogs and helicopter gunships. Very interesting to watch them being used.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Stuff

*Um...what was I going to say...oh yeah: Restrepo. If you want to see what our more battle-hardened troops experienced in Afghanistan, then check this documentary out. It is impressive! It made me proud to be an American. I don't want to give any of it away, so just go see it. And be glad that those dudes were on our side.
*Word is that there are now counterfeit silver coins, bars and ingots on the US market. Washington state is seeing a flood of them. Apparently they are all (so far) being made in China and are flawed. Also, they are reproductions of pricey old coins. It seems that it's generally not worth counterfeiting silver unless one reproduces a very pricey coin with historical/rare/numismatic value, because silver itself is simply not worth that much to begin with. These coins can be identified as fakes because they have an iron core: A magnet will be strongly attracted to them, and if dropped on a hard surface they will thud rather than ring.
*For what it's worth, fake gold bars have been discovered in the US in the last year. They have tungsten cores.
*Saw 6 cop cars pull over a guy in a car outside my apartment today. The cops had their pistols out and were ducked behind their cars, yelling for the dude to get out of the car. He didn't put up a fight. He was a tall black dude with long dreads, driving a Saab. Never seen that go down before. Funny how us civilian gawkers were right there across the street, checking it out. Good thing bullets didn't start flying!

Saturday, February 26, 2011

The (Diabolical) LittleFoot Agenda(!)

Those who know me well understand the true extent of my megalomania. So it will come as little surprise to them to hear of my actual plans for the tiny plot of scrubland I own deep in the mountains of _____. In the coming weeks and years I will endeavor to build from scratch the Principality of LittleFoot, a sovereign nation and EOTWAWKI lifeboat outpost for self-sufficiency freakaziod outlaws of all castes & temperaments. LittleFoot will remain first & foremost a benign dictatorship, with extensive forays into cooperative economic liberal socialism & hippie survivalist social anarchism/Libertarianism. Passports, currency & edicts will be issued in due time, as well as random Presidential dictations inspired by authentic divine madness. We will endeavor at all costs to be highly productive & prosperous while pursuing a zero-environmental burden blueprint. No, actually we will improve the landscape to the point where we not only attain self-sufficiency on 4.4 acres, but also vastly improve the landscape in all ways. We will avail to set up a local trade network, & assist the surrounding community in attaining general security. We will also create our own happy militia known as The LittleFoot Lightning Bolts. Perhaps the state motto will be: "Fuck red tape, let's get 'er done!" ?

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Olive Grove Part I: The Beginningness


Above: Down in this forest, under the oak trees, lie several dozen olive tree sprouts ranging from 4 to 40 inches in height. They must have sprouted from olive seeds that birds or squirrels dropped from the branches overhead. Why this phenomenon has started only in the last couple of years, we don't know -- though the olive seeds themselves surely came from the one enormous olive tree that lies a hundred yards out of sight, to the right.




Above: Two hours of work netted this little olive tree nursery. First, I dug up the smallest olive tree seedlings I could find out in the forest, then I transplanted them into these red pots. The sprouts, the plastic pots and the (mint condition) pallets were all 100% free. The two bags of potting mix cost me $16.00. 19 seedlings transplanted today, probably 16 to go. I'll try to fit all of them onto these 3 pallets in this sunny, fenced space that is safe from hungry deer. They will be watered regularly.

In a few weeks, if they all look healthy, I'll give them some plant food. Then, in a year or two, when they are healthy and much larger, I will transplant them again, this time into the sunny meadow that will eventually contain the entire olive grove. With real soil, direct sunlight, regular pruning and watering, the grove should be highly productive.

P.S. The larger olive tree seedlings will be transplanted directly from the forest into the olive grove meadow, skipping the potting process entirely. They are already too big for pots. I will put chicken-wire rings around them, and feed them plant food and water, and hopefully these measures, along with direct sunlight, will promote their growth exponentially.

Sunday, February 13, 2011

The Zero DS Motorcycle


http://www.uncrate.com/men/cars/motorcycles/zero-ds-motocycle/

This is an electric motorcycle that I can get behind, seeing as it's dual sport. One day I expect that remote ranch vehicles will be electric because they can be passively solar charged while not in use, and because they don't require extended range. I could see using an electric DS bike and an electric pickup truck for ranch or farm work. Batteries are a bitch, of course, but maybe a new technology will supplant them one day.

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

The Horex VR6


http://www.gizmag.com/horex-six-cylinder-supercharged-motorcycle/16584/

Cripes. A German company named Horex, which hasn't produced a motorcycle in 50 years, has now unveiled the VR6, which features a 1200 cc, 200 horsepower, supercharged six-cylinder engine. I'm in love. Deeply in love. I think this is forever this time, and I'm willing to commit. Don't get me wrong - I love Zoom too, and Zoom has a supercharged V6 with 230 horsepower, but Zoom is a truck. Let me repeat that: My truck also has a supercharged V6 and delivers 230 horsepower, but it is a truck, not a motorcycle. Furthermore, Zoom is a boy, so I could never love him sexually, like I love the Horex VR6. I just hope this (expensive) little Hore(x)'s "exhaust pipe" doesn't burn my dingaling off. Don't look at me like that -- I'm a man, and a man has supercharger needs, does he not?

More SOCOM Stuff



Not to beat a dead horse, but here are more images of a SOCOM 16 (Image 1, top) and an aluminum billet Sage Tactical stock (Image 1, bottom), and the completed Hyampom SAW (Image 2) after the switcheroo is complete. Note that IF the final product in Image 2 has a bullet button installed (AND a 10-round magazine as shown), THEN it is California legal. This puppy has a 16-inch barrel with a muzzle brake, a telescoping stock and a pistol grip; and a red dot scope and a bipod can also be attached to the front rails. Soo-weet.

Friday, February 4, 2011

Stranger Than Fiction


This strange Segway-ish machine makes me guffaw, and want to ride it, simultaneously. Absurd? Yes. More comfortable-looking than slogging thru the 110 degree dust on foot? Yes.

Thursday, February 3, 2011

New Guns Part 5





What we have here, in images 1, 2 & 4, is the Boberg XR9, the "High Tech Pocket Pistol". The XR9 is a prototype 9mm pocket pistol by Boberg Engineering. Its uniqueness lies in the fact that the magazine is located directly under the chamber. This allows this small pistol to have a full size barrel (4.2”). Think of it as a bullpup pistol -- the action is further back than usual, allowing for a longer barrel in less space. Image 1 shows how bullets are drawn backwards out of the magazine in order to load into the chamber. Images 2 & 3 compare two pistols with the same barrel length. Note how the positioning of the chambers is different on each weapon. The Boberg, in image 2, is considerably more compact than the Model 1911 .45 in image 3. In fact, the Boberg is at least 1.5 inches shorter, and probably 2+ inches shorter.

This is an idea whose time has come. I hope it hits the market and revolutionizes pistol designs across the board. Shit, imagine what you'd have if you added this "bullpup" feature to the Springfield XPD Compact, with its variable-length magazines. You'd have a super-compact 4-incher, is what you'd have. Something that every sub/urban prepper can use.

That's it for this post. Just one gun tonight -- got other stuff to do.

Peace out.

The Food Crisis Is Here, And It's Here To Stay

This is a brief posting. It's a warning that global food prices have been skyrocketing for several years now. We are in the beginning stages of a long-term food crisis, one that has been brought about by global warming, pollution, the burgeoning human population, and decades of unsustainable urban growth and industrial farming which have destroyed a large percentage of the earth's arable land. Penny Kelly discusses this emerging food crisis in her book ROBES. It is a very, very serious issue that humanity now faces, and it will lead to mass starvation in the coming decades.

NOW is the time to address food security on all levels. As a prepper, YOU need to learn how to garden, YOU need to learn how to farm, YOU need put aside food stores, YOU need to lay claim to arable land that you can produce food on, and YOU need to network with other like-minded people who you can work with to create a new food infrastructure. Think of it as a grand challenge and a grand adventure. The payoff is survival, and health. If you fail, you will face hunger, poverty and ill health in the decades to come, as food prices go ballistic and you are forced to eat increasingly synthetic garbage.

If you read survivalblog, you will note that in recent months, Rawles has again and again cited rising food prices worldwide, and ongoing food shortages. This is primarily affecting the Third World at this time, but it WILL hit the First World, and when it does, we will be ill prepared to deal with it. Let's pray that the gardening and urban farming trends sweeping our nation are here to stay, and that they keep gathering steam. They may mean the difference between eating and starving in the years to come.

Don't forget what I'm saying. Keep it in mind. Every prepper should be thinking about this issue right now, and they should be actively creating their food security infrastructure.

Seize the day!

Amen†

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

New Guns Part 4


Well, I think I died and went to heaven. And if I did, don't resuscitate me. You see, I am a big fan of Personal Defense Weapons (PDWs). Why? Because I like compact, and I like effective. And the PDW shown above is possibly my favorite. It's called a PDW 7.92 VBR-B Compact, and it's a Belgian concept. I don't know if it's actually in production, but you can go online and read all about it and even watch videos of a guy demonstrating its incredible usefulness. It uses the 9mm platform, but fires a special 7.92 mm round. I don't know what that means exactly, but apparently it's a good thing.

I like everything about this device. I wish I had one in my truck. I like the extended magazine, the pistol-size of it, the rear bolt charger, the sight, the front hand grip. It even has a tiny pull-out stock, which is kind of cool. Actually, the stock's too small. It should be bigger. And it has select fire: 1 shot or three-round bursts. Which rocks. What a bad ass little canon. I bet its armor-piercing rounds would pop holes in a car body.

Maybe if I move to Nevada one day I'll be able to get one.



So, this thing in the image above is cool also. I don't know what its called or who makes it. But, its a carbine stock for a Glock pistol. You just fit the modified full-auto pistol inside it, swing out the folding stock and lock it, grab the grips, squeeze the trigger, and blast away. You can put different length barrels on the pistol, and notice the extended magazine. Also, note the bolt charger at the back of the carbine. That's a nice touch. Gotta say I like the Belgian PDW more, but I'd take either. Submachine guns rock, too. Specially Glock submachine guns. Cuz they are tiny, and they kick out the jams.

Yeah, well, like I said. Nevada. One day. Maybe.

Little Things

•Pops pulled out his rifle the other day. His dad gave it to him new in 1942, when he was a kid. It's a Winchester pump 22LR with a tube magazine. Pops said he hadn't used it in 50 years, and that he poured oil down the barrel after the last time he fired it. He kept the bolt separate from the rifle all those years, locked away in a box in his bathroom.

I got my cleaning kit out and set to work. The rifle looked 69 years old. No, it looked older. The metal had neither bluing nor shine - it was brown and pitted, but not actually rusted. It looked like an old cowboy gun you'd see hanging on a wall in a Western bar. I dropped the bolt in a bowl of Simple Green and then scrubbed it with a toothbrush. Then I squirted Break Free down the barrel and ran a bore brush up and down it a dozen times. Then I ran two patches thru the barrel a dozen times, finishing with single swipe with a well-oiled patch. When I looked down that barrel I was surprised to see that it looked brand new - smooth, silver, with perfect rifling. How could the barrel be in perfect shape when the outside of the gun was so pitted and weathered? Hell if I know. Last thing I did was dry off the bolt, cover it in oil, then lightly oil the entire rifle inside and out.

I have no doubt that the old Winchester will fire perfectly. We'll find out the next time we head up to LittleFoot.

•So, the military now offers a new kind of lightweight combat ration called a First Strike Ration, and these FSRs contain shelf-stable sandwiches that resemble hot pockets. Word is that these sandwiches use the same wheat bread found in MREs, and are filled with diced Slim Jims. Not very good, but edible nonetheless. Personally, I love this shit. To me, a shelf-stable sandwich is pure science fiction, and that's why I'm here, to see science fiction actually happen. But I can't promote these FSR sandwiches in good faith. After having read ROBES by Penny Kelly, I believe that that kind of synthetic, processed food is poison to the human body. Still, if you try one, let me know how it is. Inquiring minds would like to know :-)