Month: November 2014

Thursday, 20 November 2014

10:33 – I’m still hard at work on the prepping book, but I need to take some time off to build some science kits. Kit sales this month are running slightly ahead of last November. Two-thirds of the way through the month, we’re at about 80% of last November’s total sales, so if the trend continues we’ll end up at about 120% month-on-month. Then comes December, which is a pretty heavy month, so we need to get finished-goods inventory built up for that.

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard has a good column posted about the US-China climate deal and its effect on the oil industry. I agree with the substance of his arguments, but I think he underestimates the impact of solar on petroleum. Forecasts are nearly always wildly optimistic over the short term and wildly pessimistic over the long term, and I think that’s the case here. The question is, how long a term?

Solar is poised to become a major source of electric power. We’ve known for a long time that this would happen eventually. Insolation on every square meter of the planet’s surface amounts to about a kilowatt. The only questions have always been how to convert that solar energy to a useful form–i.e, electricity–and how to store that electricity.

As to capture, the science is already there. We have the science and increasingly the technology for very high-efficiency solar panels. The real problem has been storage. Back in the 70’s I read a book on storage batteries by a guy named George Vinal. It was published in something like 1907, and the technology had hardly changed during the intervening 70 years. It’s changed massively in the 40 years since I read that book. Revolutionary advances have been made in the labs, and are now working their way into mass production.

So now it’s just a matter of engineering and manufacturing, and we have plenty of good engineers and factories. Even now, you can walk into a Home Depot and buy a pretty impressive solar array. They’ll even send a crew out to install it on your roof and connect it to your battery bank. Costs are plummeting, and more and more people are adopting solar power for part or all of their power needs. In many areas of the US, solar is already at “plug parity” with utility power. As costs continue to drop, solar will continue to displace utility power. My guess is that in 10 years solar will be commonplace, and in twenty it will have largely displaced electric utility power all over the US. The utilities will go down fighting, of course, but down they’ll go.

All of this is to the good. Better that every building is self-sufficient in electric power, including for cooling and heating than that we continue to build large power plants and run millions of miles of wire to distribute that power generated centrally. And far better that we cease consuming fossil fuels and instead leave them as feedstocks for chemical manufacturing.


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Wednesday, 19 November 2014

09:44 – I see that Buffalo got six feet (1.83 meters) of snow. This anthropogenic climate change–or whatever they’re calling it this week–has to stop. We didn’t get any snow, but our overnight low was 19F (-7C). That’s much too cold for November around here.

I’m not sure why everyone is making such a big deal of the expected Ferguson, Missouri grand jury decision. From what data I’ve seen, the man who was killed was a thug who’d robbed a convenience store minutes before the shooting and then attacked a cop. I’m not sure how a grand jury could rule this anything other than a good shooting. And if other thugs decide to riot, loot, and burn, I hope the authorities and good citizens of Ferguson deal with it with lethal force. Apparently, solid citizens in the area are arming themselves, which is a good decision. Fortunately, Missouri is a very strong Castle Doctrine state.


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Tuesday, 18 November 2014

11:13 – I’m going to hell for this. I’m writing a sidebar in Chapter I-14 on Preparing for Financial Emergencies. The sidebar is about inflation and fractional-reserve banking, and I’ve titled it, “Money From Nothing (and Your Checks for Free)”. I may be drummed out of the Austrian School for that one. Or not.

Crap. I just Googled that exact phrase and came up with six hits dating back to 2009. Oh, well. I thought it was original when I coined it a few minutes ago. I guess it was far too obvious not to have been coined years ago. Actually, it was probably coined by you-know-who. As Dorothy Parker famously observed, “I never seek to take the credit; We all assume that Oscar said it.”

We don’t have a vacuum sealer. As usual, before we made our Costco run Sunday we looked through the coupons. They had a Food-Saver vacuum sealer on sale for $120, which was something like $40 off. I checked Amazon for a price comparison and found that Costco’s deal was in fact a good deal. Fortunately, I also checked the reviews on both Costco and Amazon. There were a lot of very negative reviews, many of which said that they were on their second or third vacuum sealer, that they’d bought the Food Saver brand in the past and that it had worked well and lasted a decade or more. Their comments about the current models weren’t so kind. Dying in a couple months if not DOA; wasting the (very expensive) Food Saver brand bags, and so on. From these reviews, it seems that Food Saver products made years ago were excellent but newer models suck. I ended up ordering a Nesco model from Amazon, which was half the price and had excellent reviews on Amazon and elsewhere. It’s a very new product, so it has no track record yet, but we probably won’t be beating it death as some people do, so it’ll probably work just fine for us.


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Monday, 17 November 2014

09:13 – Wow, the cold weather has really moved in. Our lows are below freezing for the next several nights. For tomorrow the forecast high is just above freezing and the low is 18F (-8C).

Costco run and dinner with Mary and Paul yesterday. Mary is vegetarian and cooks amazingly good no-meat dishes, so I gave her a copy of the list of seasonings that Frances and Barbara came up with and asked her to please add to and annotate it from the point of view of someone who was going to be cooking meals from boring staples like rice and beans over a long period. I’m sure Mary will come up with some worthwhile additions and suggestions.

Yesterday was the first Costco trip in a long time that I didn’t buy much in the way of shelf-stable foods. Other than six jars each of spaghetti sauce and apple sauce, a pack of seven one-pound assorted pastas, a jar of red pepper, and two bottles of Worcestershire sauce, the only thing I added to our cart was two 12-packs of 12-ounce cans of evaporated milk. I couldn’t resist those. They were on sale for about $0.75/can.


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Sunday, 16 November 2014

13:08 – I just started doing an initial inventory on the food we have stored in the basement. Until now, I’ve just been buying stuff and sticking it on the shelves in the basement, without any attempt to organize or inventory it. My goal was to get us, as quickly as possible, to a one-year supply of food for Barbara and me. (Or more likely, as I’ve said, a 3-month supply for the two of us and six relatives/friends, or a one-month supply for the two of us and 22 relatives/friends/neighbors.)

With roughly 1,200 pounds of stored food, we’re at the point now where the two of us could eat reasonably well for a year. The mix needs to be tweaked somewhat. For example, we need more spaghetti sauce, fruits, meats, and several other items, as well as more dehydrated/freeze-dried stuff like butter powder, cheese powder, and so on. And I’m going to add more staples–various types of flour, white rice, brown rice, egg noodles, white sugar, confectioner’s sugar, brown sugar, corn meal, etc.–but those we’ll pack ourselves in gallon foil-laminate Mylar bags with oxygen absorbers. Doing it that way is cheap–about half the price of buying the stuff in #10 cans at the LDS Home Storage Center, which is itself much cheaper than any other source for staples in #10 cans–and the staples will remain usable indefinitely.


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Saturday, 15 November 2014

11:07 – Barbara’s sister Frances stopped over after work last night. We had dinner and then spent the evening talking about what herbs, spices, and other seasonings to recommend for long-term storage. Frances was also kind enough to bring over some of her loose-leaf recipe books from when she ran a food-service operation. They’re on a large scale. One I remember listed the first ingredient as 20 pounds of chicken pieces.

I told Frances and Barbara to start with the idea that we were cooking over a period of months or longer with long-term packaged staples like flour, sugar, pasta, powdered milk, beans, etc. along with some canned meats and other foods. The goal is turn turn this stuff into appetizing meals, and we spent the evening talking about which herbs, spices, sauces, and other seasonings to include in preparations, at what priority, and in what amounts for one person-year. They both came up with excellent suggestions, which I’ll now incorporate in the book.


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Friday, 14 November 2014

11:37 – The morning paper reports a home invasion in Walkertown, a few miles from here. Two masked invaders robbed the home and fatally shot one of the occupants. Barbara has a metal baseball bat sitting in the corner at the front door. I think I’ll replace that with a 12-gauge pump, even though we live in a very low-crime neighborhood.

Work on the prepping book continues. At the moment, I’m writing about why it’s a terrible idea to buy one of those X-person/Y-year emergency food kits that Costco and Sam’s Club sell.


14:31 – I just checked statistics and found that the prepping book is now 123 pages and about 46,000 words. It’s still full of gaping holes and nowhere near ready to have anyone see, but my impression is that I’m about 30% of the way through the first draft. I’m pleased with progress so far and I hope I can continue at the current rate.

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Thursday, 13 November 2014

08:46 – The morning paper reports that the DA will not prosecute a young man who on Monday beat his father to death with a length of steel pipe. The DA concluded that the young man was acting in self-defense and defense of his mother. The dead man had a long history of domestic violence. As terrible as this is for the young man and his mother, it brought a smile to my face. I love to see stories about wife- and child-beaters being beaten to death themselves. That’s true justice, something our so-called justice system almost never delivers.

Work on the prepping book continues. At the moment, I’m writing about vigilance committees and the power, in the absence of competent authority, of any elected or appointed government official, inside or outside law enforcement, in the legislative, judicial, or executive branches of any level of government to deputize civilians during an emergency.


13:27 – Well, it’s been a pretty good day so far. We’ve shipped three science kits, including two to the same person in Australia. I’ve also received three exciting emails, the first telling me that I’ve been accepted to Who’s Who, the second telling me that I can get my doctorate on-line, and the third telling me that I can earn $4,000 per month working at home. I’ll take care of the first two later today. I deleted the third one, because I already earn more than $4,000 per month working at home.

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Wednesday, 12 November 2014

09:36 – The prepping book is starting to shape up. I’m still in the random phase, where I write a sentence or a couple of paragraphs in one chapter and then jump to another chapter and do the same. Or maybe just stick in a header to remind me to write something about a subject. Some days, I add material to 10 or 15 different chapters. Within the next six weeks or so, I should be able to start posting draft chapters to the mailing list.


14:38 – UPS just showed up with the fleece-lined hoodie I ordered from Costco for $22. It’s an XLT, just like my old one from LL Bean, which would probably cost $60 now. The first thing I noticed when I unpacked the Costco hoodie was that it had much thicker cloth and fleece than the LL Bean hoodie and felt noticeably heavier. I just checked with my shipping scale. The LL Bean hoodie weighed 28.4 ounces, and the Costco hoodie 35.2 ounces. Now, granted, the LL Bean hoodie is several years old and has been washed many times. I’m sure it’s lost some of its fleece over the years. But it was never as thick as the Costco hoodie. I’m quite pleased with the new one, even ignoring that it cost only $20.

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Tuesday, 11 November 2014

08:46 – It’s Veterans Day, which is also my mother’s birthday. She was born 11 November 1918, the day WWI ended, and would have been 96 years old today.

I need to get a tabletop photography area set up downstairs so that I can shoot a bunch of images for the prepping book. I’m going to use white background paper with two lights on the front corners of the work surface, each angled in at 45° and angled down at 45°. Because I may be using small apertures and correspondingly long exposures, I’m going to hang my Colt 1911 Combat Commander as a weight on the center column of the tripod. The reason I’m being so specific is that I intend to file for a patent on this method. I’m going to call it the 45/45/45 method. And if Amazon comes after me, I intend to re-purpose one of those 45’s.


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