GB #6.1, bridge collapse & planning, Zimbabwe,

Lemme get the commercial stuff out of the way and then we’ll continue with our regularly scheduled post….

Okay, more AR mags on the way. My vendor will be out of them at current pricing within the next two weeks so once theyre gone, theyre gone…at a reasonable price. After hat we get into unreasonable pricing. These are very nice magazines and I am certain that around this time next year you’ll be very happy you bought them. I’ve restored the ordering page so its about as easy to get these things as I can make it. Im sure everyone who has received their magazines from this last batch are pleased….right? Right?

Still have some #10 cans of Mountain House, as well as plenty of the vacuum-packed pouches on hand. Email for list.

[/commercial]
=+=+=+=

Bridge collapse in Minnesota brings up the old bugaboo about having multiple routes of travel in case something just like this happens. Despite my disdain for many of Ragnar Bensens books, one thing I did take away from them was his ‘Survivalists Rule of Three’ which basically said that anything worth doing is worth doing with a secondary and tertiary alternative. That is to say three different ways of heating your house, three different routes of escape, three different means of emergency lighting, three alternative safe locations, etc, etc. I’m paranoid so I go for four levels…the Primary, Auxillary, Contingency, Extra (PACE) plan. In some things (canteens, for example) its not a financial burden, on others (guns, radios, for example) it can add up. However, the levels of redundancy are kinda comforting. Plus, when it comes to preparedness, ‘too much’ is always preferable to ‘not enough’.

Anyway, the moral of the bridge collapse episode is that you need to have, beforehand, alternate routing information available. Yes, there really is a ‘Plan B’.

Of course, a bridge doesn’t have to collapse to render a route unpassable. Roadblocks (official and unofficial), flooding, construction, accidents, etc. can all cause your primary route to be unavailable. This was shown on September 11 when NYC closed its tunnels and left the bridges open to only foot traffic. Additionally, weather conditions routinely close many roads in this country. Heck, right now there are probably some roads closed not far from here due to forest fires.

So, summing it all up: have a Plan B (and more) in case your first avenue of travel becomes unavailable.

=-=-=-

Everyone following the exploits of Zimbabwe’s economic self-destruction? Hyperinflation with a few twists. The most jaw-dropping amazingly insane edict to be issued by the government there has been price caps on the sale of consumer goods. In short, it may cost you 10x to buy the product but you cant sell it for more than x. The result? Predictably people went to stores that were having these price controls enforced, emptied the shelves, and probably resold a lot of the goodies for ‘real prices’. Let me put it into context. Right now gas is about $3.00 a gallon, right? Imagine .gov saying that no gas can be sold for more than fifty cents a gallon. Never mind that its costing the gas station two bucks and change per gallon just to get the stuff. So what happens? Everyone runs down to the Exxon and tanks up at fifty cents, the gas station is out of gas and the owner refuse to restock (since he’ll lose his shirt), and the people who bought all the gas turn around and sell it on the black market for $3 a gallon…because, surprise, all the gas stations are out of gas.

There are various blogs out there following this misadventure and I recommend reading them. Not necessarily for the example of how incredible ignorance can bring a country to ruin, but rather for the real-world lesson of what happens to infrastructure and personal wealth in a prolonged economic disaster. The folks who can produce their own food, produce their own electricity, have a hard currency, or can otherwise fend for themselves will make it through…the rest? Well, someone’s gotta make up those lines that stretch around the block.

This is why Im always left at a loss when people say that having gold or silver is a waste because ‘you cant eat it or shoot it’. This is true but only if TEOTWAWKI is a near-instantaneous overnight disaster. But many disasters are slow, creeping things…there’ll be a time in Zimbabwe where money will be useless because there’ll be no products to buy but until that time comes there’ll be months (maybe years) where having a globally recognized form of currency (such as gold or even, in this case, foreign currency) will be just as useful, if not moreso, than a pantry full of freeze drieds.

Societies and civilizations very rarely become Mad Max city-states overnight. Theres usually years of descent into that level of anarchy. When you hit the bottom of that slide, sure, its gonna be bullets and beef jerky as the national currency but that’s a long slide to the bottom and during that slide is when alternatives to the rapidly devaluing regional currency have

=-=-=-

Anniversary of nuking Japan is nigh. When someone tells you that nuclear war is unsurvivable and the living will envy the dead keep in mind that some survivors of Hiroshima were evacuated…to Nagaskai..and nuked again. So there are not only survivors of the atomic bomb, there are survivors of the atomic bombs. Survivors of the atomic bombings, by the way, are called hibakusha and they apparently are discriminated against in that noble, civilized and elegant Japanese culture.

First hand accounts by survivors can be found here. Interesting reading.

GB#6.0

All the mags are sold. I’ll be checking Monday to see if more are available at the same price. If so, you’ll hear about it; if not, well hopefully you took advantage of thigns while you could.

GB #6.0 arrival

Originally published at Notes from the bunker…. You can comment here or there.

Magazines arrived today. Wow, these things are nice. Seriously nice. Nice enough, in fact, that Im going to see if my vendor has any more. These are a dull grey/black finish, drop free from the mag well, have cool followers and are just generally a really nice mag.

I have exactly 15 left if anyone wants some. You’re gonna pat yourself on the back next year when the pre-election jitters start and crummy, worn-down-to-the-gold-anodizing GI mags at gun shows are going for $30.

Fifteen.

For those of you who ordered, your mags are going out in tomorrows mail.

GB #6.0 arrival

Magazines arrived today. Wow, these things are nice. Seriously nice. Nice enough, in fact, that Im going to see if my vendor has any more. These are a dull grey/black finish, drop free from the mag well, have cool followers and are just generally a really nice mag.

I have exactly 15 left if anyone wants some. Youre gonna pat yourself on the back next year when the pre-election jitters start and crummy, worn-down-to-tje-gold-anodizing GI mags at gun shows are going for $30.

Fifteen.

For those of you who ordered, your mags are going out in tomorrows mail.

Jericho, books, Glock, Group buy, reloading

Nice thing about the TiVo is that I can ignore the TV for a week or two and then catch up on everything in one sitting. For example, I missed several episodes of ‘Jericho’ but now that they are being rebroadcast the TiVo kindly collected them for me as they came. So, I got to see some stuff I’d been missing. In case you’ve been under a rock, the show was cancelled and then brought back for a several episode order on the strength of a viewer campaign to bring it back. As I’ve said before, Im amused by this because across the board the preparedness forums almost universally were critical of it for too much drama, not enough gunplay, etc, etc, etc….yet when it gets cancelled theyre up in arms, so to speak, to get it back.
=-=-=
Im cleaning out a buddy’s house since he’s now in a nursing home and am sifting through his library of books. A lot of historical stuff but a lot of preparedness/gun stuff too. Theres a couple really good books in there and as I come across them I’ll mention them in case you want a copy.

Pretty much all of us have a copy of ‘Where There Is no Doctor’ which is an excellent book. For me, its greatest value is in the back ¼ for the book where the drug information is. If youre out there looting a Walgreens its always good to know which pills are the ones you want.

Anyway, another excellent medical book I came across is ‘Medicine For The Outdoors’ (Auerbach, Lyons Press, #1-55821-723-1) In this case, ‘outodoors’ means ‘where youre not gonna have access to 911, EMS or anything close to a real doctor’ which is the situation we are likely to be in when [insert your particular flavor of TEOTWAWKI] occurs. 500 pages, plenty of illustrations, and good detail on drug names, usage, etc. Not a ‘one book for all occasions’ but it seems to be a worthy addition to the home library.
=-=-=
The first step is admitting you have a problem. So..(deep breath)..Im a Glockaholic. Sure, it started easy enough..a used police trade-in G19 here, a bargain 2nd gen. G17 there. And then two days ago I …I…went for the hard stuff – brand new 3rd Gen G17.

Okay, enough kidding around…this is the first factory new handgun I’ve bought in probably ten years. I tend to buy used stuff because its cheaper but this one..well, the stars lined up for me to be able to get it.

Anyway, without mentioning specific numbers, this is a redundant Glock but having levels of redundancy is what being prepared is all about. So, this one will get a few hundred rounds through it to make sure it works, get cleaned, and get tucked into the safe ‘just in case’. It’ll be nice to have if I need a loaner for a friend, something happens to one of my other Glock 9mms, or if I need to stash an extra somewhere.

I took this occasion to re-read the big Glock book and reacquaint myself with the Glock disassemblys and whatnot. Love ‘em or hate ‘em, I will say that they are excellent examples of mass-production engineering. Except for the big parts like barrels and whatnot all spare parts are less than five bucks, theres 34 parts versus who knows how many for other pistols, all the parts can be removed..nothing is staked on except the front sight (and even that is removable without special tools), and nothing requires fitting. Drawbacks? Well, they’ve got no soul or personality. Theyre like Bic lighters versus Zippo lighters, one carried more style and history but may not be nearly as convenient, reliable and durable as the other. On the other hand, if it goes bang every single time I pull the trigger that’s really all that matters.

I see the 1911 guys going on about how anything since 1912 is a step down in handgun development. I wonder if they also say that switching from the .45-70 to the .30 calibers was a mistake. After all, that ‘big heavy .45 bullet’ always ‘knocked em down’ whereas those pipsqueak ‘minor caliber’ .30’s required high magazine capacity (5 rounds vs. 1 round) to make up for the lack of stopping power.
I appreciate tradition and ‘classics’ as much as anyone else, but at the same time I’m not going to let that stand in the way of recognizing improvements in design.

=-=-=

Speaking of guns and ammo…the .40S&W conversion for the big Dillon arrived the other day. I was examining the dies and conversion and discovered that Dillon shipped me a .40 S&W carbide sizer die that was missing the carbide sizer ring. Ooops. A quick call to them got me the customer service theyre famous for. They’d send another die right out…no need to send back the other die. Keep it for spare parts or something. Good outfit to do business with, those Dillon guys.

The Dillon RL1050, by the way, Was. Not. Cheap. However, it does crank out 1000 rounds an hour without much fuss. Since factory ammo is so expensive these days, and reloading a thousand rounds on a single-stage press is a major time sink, this thing does start to pay for itself fairly quickly in terms of time and money saved. (And since this is the ‘super’ 1050 it’ll do .223, .308, .30-06, etc, etc. as well…..good to know since the South African .308 has dried up and gone through the roof when you can find it.)

Speaking of ammo, I saw a link to a news piece about how the military has started reducing its orders for small arms ammo. Read into that what you will. The practical result is that those facilities will have been tooled for producing huge amounts of .223 and they’ll need work. So….possibly expect to see availability increase and prices decrease in the future. Don’t bet on it, but don’t be surprised if it happens.

=-=-=

Elections are still ahead of us and the prognosis, as far as Im concerned, is not good. I can understand if you take everything I say with a grain of salt since Im basically a faceless stranger to you…I can accept that. But if you decide to not value my opinions on anything else, accept and act upon my opinion that if you do not start stocking up on spare guns and especially magazines very soon you are going to be kicking yourself after the elections. You don’t have to go nuts and sell the jet ski, just get some spare mags for your rifles and pistols. How many? By the dozen. Buy the dozen.

=-=-=

Still have the C Products AR mags. Not as many as before but still enough to take the edge off the upcoming election. Also have about a dozen of the ChipMcCormick 1911 mags left as well if anyone is interested. (Very nice 1911 mags, by the way.)

=-=-=-

Need a Titan complex? its sorta telling that theres no photos of any of the underground portions of the 57-acre complex. Probably flooded. Who can say? Cough up $10 grand and get a tour.
The eBay auction
The website

Jericho, books, Glock, Group buy, reloading

Nice thing about the TiVo is that I can ignore the TV for a week or two and then catch up on everything in one sitting. For example, I missed several episodes of ‘Jericho’ but now that they are being rebroadcast the TiVo kindly collected them for me as they came. So, I got to see some stuff I’d been missing. In case you’ve been under a rock, the show was cancelled and then brought back for a several episode order on the strength of a viewer campaign to bring it back. As I’ve said before, Im amused by this because across the board the preparedness forums almost universally were critical of it for too much drama, not enough gunplay, etc, etc, etc….yet when it gets cancelled theyre up in arms, so to speak, to get it back.
=-=-=
Im cleaning out a buddy’s house since he’s now in a nursing home and am sifting through his library of books. A lot of historical stuff but a lot of preparedness/gun stuff too. Theres a couple really good books in there and as I come across them I’ll mention them in case you want a copy.

Pretty much all of us have a copy of ‘Where There Is no Doctor’ which is an excellent book. For me, its greatest value is in the back ¼ for the book where the drug information is. If youre out there looting a Walgreens its always good to know which pills are the ones you want.

Anyway, another excellent medical book I came across is ‘Medicine For The Outdoors’ (Auerbach, Lyons Press, #1-55821-723-1) In this case, ‘outodoors’ means ‘where youre not gonna have access to 911, EMS or anything close to a real doctor’ which is the situation we are likely to be in when [insert your particular flavor of TEOTWAWKI] occurs. 500 pages, plenty of illustrations, and good detail on drug names, usage, etc. Not a ‘one book for all occasions’ but it seems to be a worthy addition to the home library.
=-=-=
The first step is admitting you have a problem. So..(deep breath)..Im a Glockaholic. Sure, it started easy enough..a used police trade-in G19 here, a bargain 2nd gen. G17 there. And then two days ago I …I…went for the hard stuff – brand new 3rd Gen G17.

Okay, enough kidding around…this is the first factory new handgun I’ve bought in probably ten years. I tend to buy used stuff because its cheaper but this one..well, the stars lined up for me to be able to get it.

Anyway, without mentioning specific numbers, this is a redundant Glock but having levels of redundancy is what being prepared is all about. So, this one will get a few hundred rounds through it to make sure it works, get cleaned, and get tucked into the safe ‘just in case’. It’ll be nice to have if I need a loaner for a friend, something happens to one of my other Glock 9mms, or if I need to stash an extra somewhere.

I took this occasion to re-read the big Glock book and reacquaint myself with the Glock disassemblys and whatnot. Love ‘em or hate ‘em, I will say that they are excellent examples of mass-production engineering. Except for the big parts like barrels and whatnot all spare parts are less than five bucks, theres 34 parts versus who knows how many for other pistols, all the parts can be removed..nothing is staked on except the front sight (and even that is removable without special tools), and nothing requires fitting. Drawbacks? Well, they’ve got no soul or personality. Theyre like Bic lighters versus Zippo lighters, one carried more style and history but may not be nearly as convenient, reliable and durable as the other. On the other hand, if it goes bang every single time I pull the trigger that’s really all that matters.

I see the 1911 guys going on about how anything since 1912 is a step down in handgun development. I wonder if they also say that switching from the .45-70 to the .30 calibers was a mistake. After all, that ‘big heavy .45 bullet’ always ‘knocked em down’ whereas those pipsqueak ‘minor caliber’ .30’s required high magazine capacity (5 rounds vs. 1 round) to make up for the lack of stopping power.
I appreciate tradition and ‘classics’ as much as anyone else, but at the same time I’m not going to let that stand in the way of recognizing improvements in design.

=-=-=

Speaking of guns and ammo…the .40S&W conversion for the big Dillon arrived the other day. I was examining the dies and conversion and discovered that Dillon shipped me a .40 S&W carbide sizer die that was missing the carbide sizer ring. Ooops. A quick call to them got me the customer service theyre famous for. They’d send another die right out…no need to send back the other die. Keep it for spare parts or something. Good outfit to do business with, those Dillon guys.

The Dillon RL1050, by the way, Was. Not. Cheap. However, it does crank out 1000 rounds an hour without much fuss. Since factory ammo is so expensive these days, and reloading a thousand rounds on a single-stage press is a major time sink, this thing does start to pay for itself fairly quickly in terms of time and money saved. (And since this is the ‘super’ 1050 it’ll do .223, .308, .30-06, etc, etc. as well…..good to know since the South African .308 has dried up and gone through the roof when you can find it.)

Speaking of ammo, I saw a link to a news piece about how the military has started reducing its orders for small arms ammo. Read into that what you will. The practical result is that those facilities will have been tooled for producing huge amounts of .223 and they’ll need work. So….possibly expect to see availability increase and prices decrease in the future. Don’t bet on it, but don’t be surprised if it happens.

=-=-=

Elections are still ahead of us and the prognosis, as far as Im concerned, is not good. I can understand if you take everything I say with a grain of salt since Im basically a faceless stranger to you…I can accept that. But if you decide to not value my opinions on anything else, accept and act upon my opinion that if you do not start stocking up on spare guns and especially magazines very soon you are going to be kicking yourself after the elections. You don’t have to go nuts and sell the jet ski, just get some spare mags for your rifles and pistols. How many? By the dozen. Buy the dozen.

=-=-=

Still have the C Products AR mags. Not as many as before but still enough to take the edge off the upcoming election. Also have about a dozen of the ChipMcCormick 1911 mags left as well if anyone is interested. (Very nice 1911 mags, by the way.)

=-=-=-

Need a Titan complex? its sorta telling that theres no photos of any of the underground portions of the 57-acre complex. Probably flooded. Who can say? Cough up $10 grand and get a tour.
The eBay auction
The website

Group Buy #6

Originally published at Notes from the bunker…. You can comment here or there.

Okay, theyre up.

C Products AR mag, 30 rd., aluminum, black, Magpull follower
Packaged in quantities of 5 they are $12 ea. Discount on 15+ at $11@.
My vendor does not have a huge amount of these and I suspect that when theyre gone they’ll be gone for good at that price.
Standard boilerplate: Shipping is a flat nine bucks regardless of quantity. 4% transaction fee for our friends at PayPal. No such transaction fee for mail order or walk-ins.

Order ‘em while you can

They’re shipping today so they’ll be ready to head to your firebase or bunker by the end of the week.

I am getting less than 100 of these in this order.

Edit: 15% sold
Edit: 39% sold
Edit: 61% sold