Brent S
Top Poster
Phone apps are great for lists. most people always know where their phone is. And with it in your pocket you can add things to your list every time you think of them no matter where you are.
until the phone goes down.
do I have pen and paper? boy DO I have pen and paper!!!Here is a thought, look around your home. Do you have paper and pencil/ink stick to write a list down of any kind, if the grid were to come under a cyber-attack or EMP?
Back on subject here, I’m seeing articles now of how 30 million people are in immediate threat of starving to death. 30 million.... that’s a hell of a lot of suffering. Why isn’t anyone ever talking about birth control vs the need for more money to feed these people?
I can afford food, but I've recently started experimenting with edible wild plants.
I've cooked cattails (reedmace to you Europeans), and leached acorns. I've also found that thistle and plantains grow here in Ocala, Florida.
After acorns are leached and dried, they can be ground into a gluten-free meal and cooked like half-assed muffins or cookies.
Cattails are--quite probably--the most important edible plant that a survivor shouldbe aware of.Quite a bit of cattails up in the swampy areas around here. I believe it was probably a staple for the natives in the area. Have to try it one day. I believe used differently depending on the season. The heads can be used to make a flour, and I believe the roots used in a tea. You strip the outer, and eat the stalk?
I enjoy finding all the different edibles. More out there than people figure. I like the bunch berries and find quite a few late in the season, even after snow. Found wild cranberries, which are good. I think the best preserve I've had is from a small quantity of thimble berries, we picked, and my wife turned into jam.
I've planted cattail in our pond over the last few years. They start coming up in the spring, then the cattle, deer and elk eat them down to the water level. I'm going to fence a few acres off around the pond and plant cattail, willows and other edible water plants again.Cattails are--quite probably--the most important edible plant that a survivor shouldbe aware of.
1) Cattail down can be stuffed inbetween two shirts worn on top of each other (requires some sewing), you can make a garmet that is as warm as a down jacket.
2) There is an edible starch that can be harvested in large quantities from the roots. It can be cooked into ash cakes (dough wrapped spirally around a wooden stick, and roasted in an open campfire. Delicious!
3) There is a sticky, slimey gel between the leaves and the stem. This material is a good local anesthetic for the mouth.
4) The large, sturdy, blade-like leaves make excellent mats and/or shelter-covering.
And so on.
Everbody interested in prepping needs to read up on cattail. I've only scratched the surface.
Tom Brown Jr.'s books are a great place to start . . . if you guys are interested.
Even it sounds now rassistic (and no, i'm not):30 million or 300 million. I guess I really don't care about feeding the world. Over breeding always ends up in starvation. Quit sending food and medicine to the over populated third world country's. Let nature take its course. And don't bring them here!!!
"Tom Brown's Field Guide To Edible and Medicinal Plants"I've planted cattail in our pond over the last few years. They start coming up in the spring, then the cattle, deer and elk eat them down to the water level. I'm going to fence a few acres off around the pond and plant cattail, willows and other edible water plants again.
I'll see if I can find that book you mentioned.
And they are to stupid to figure it out! I have never understood "WHO", a supposed staff of scientist and such and they can't figure we are overpopulated? They can damn well say deer and other animals are overpopulated but Not people? The same goes with global warming, all the tree cutting and laying of concrete and asphalt, add in shingles and More people and cars gives you global warming! I am Not a rocket scientist but even I can figure that out! OK, no more ranting, the powers to be will not here me or pay any attention to me anyways!I've always said the human race will BREED itself out of existence, even if some major event dosent happen humans will outbreed the food sources and starvation and death will follow.
Even it sounds now rassistic (and no, i'm not):
Since the 70thies we feed peoples in Africa as @Schattentarn correctly wrote. Every year a few times different organisations collect money for help those people. The catholic church let the pope tell those people it's an sin to use condomes. The result we have seen in Europe since 2015 in an big mass: Trecks with tentausends of people who wanna life there where the money is on the street, free food everywhere (as they think).
What we became? Less rights to say what we think. We got limits to beware our on culture because it could hurt "guests". We got harder weapon laws. We need to lock our houses like an bank safe. We got terroristic acts, increased criminal records, raping, insecure places, more drug problems.
Thank for this to all those who dream about an "one race world" and "rescue everybody".
Don't missunderstand, i'm always agree to help those people who really needs our help. But i demande respecat about our citizens and i want the "guests" behave like guests.
Like an comedian over here said in an sketch: All the years we sent money to the 3rd world. And they didn't use it to optimize their situation. They collected it for the travel and now they are coming over... (He's blacklistet for that btw)
Hey, they do keep Europe supplied with illegal drugs.
The tubers on cattails are edible like corn while still green, the pollen is collected and added to your flour for baking, the leaves are woven into sleeping mats, if two mats are woven together and stuffed with the fluff from the tubers, it makes a suitable insulated sleeping pad, the roots are eaten raw or added to soups, the slime in between the leaves is a good pain and sunburn soothing agent and for dry skin...the whole plant is usable. The tubers are used to start fires when completely dry and pulled apart and soaked in oil or smeared with fat are good torches for light. Just getting the tubers to sort of glow in a fire but not burn and only produce smoke is helpful against bugs and mosquitos also...GaryQuite a bit of cattails up in the swampy areas around here. I believe it was probably a staple for the natives in the area. Have to try it one day. I believe used differently depending on the season. The heads can be used to make a flour, and I believe the roots used in a tea. You strip the outer, and eat the stalk?
Cattails are--quite probably--the most important edible plant that a survivor shouldbe aware of.
1) Cattail down can be stuffed inbetween two shirts worn on top of each other (requires some sewing), you can make a garmet that is as warm as a down jacket.
2) There is an edible starch that can be harvested in large quantities from the roots. It can be cooked into ash cakes (dough wrapped spirally around a wooden stick, and roasted in an open campfire. Delicious!
3) There is a sticky, slimey gel between the leaves and the stem. This material is a good local anesthetic for the mouth.
4) The large, sturdy, blade-like leaves make excellent mats and/or shelter-covering.
And so on.
Everbody interested in prepping needs to read up on cattail. I've only scratched the surface.
Tom Brown Jr.'s books are a great place to start . . . if you guys are interested.
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