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Friday, July 13, 2012

7/13/2012 -- Large incoming X-class Flare / CME = Multiple shots from SDO - YouTube

7/13/2012 -- Large incoming X-class Flare / CME = Multiple shots from SDO - YouTube

Get prepared!! NOW!! 

Free Solar Book

The Prepper's Pocket Guide: 101 Easy Things You Can Do to Ready Your Home for a Disaster

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120 Serving Breakfast Only @ $198 (120 Servings breakfast assortment. No entrees) - Order Now!

Food Storage Recipe - Pizza Crust Dough

This recipe has a moral to it!! LOL!! I had such a bad morning yesterday that I just got lazy and did not want to cook at all!! Worried about car (motor mount and tires) and other stuff that happened in the morning. So I got lazy and wasted $15.00! Gosh, do you realize what I could have done with $15.00? I could have went to Dollar Tree and got some stuff or anything , besides wasting it on delivery pizza. If I had had a better day I could have used my pizza dough recipe , saved money, and had more pizza.

Pizza Crust Dough Recipe

1 package of dry yeast

3/4 cup of warm water

2 cups of all purpose flour

1/2 teaspoon salt

1 tablespoon Corn Meal

In a measuring cup mix the yeast and warm water. Make sure the yeast is dissolved well. In a large bowl mix the flour, salt, and yeast mixture until well blended.

Cover the bowl and place in a warm place and let set to rise for about 10 minutes.

Oil your pizza pan and sprinkle the bottom with the Corn Meal. Put the dough into the middle of the pan and with oily fingers spread the dough out to the edges. Make a ridge around the outside of the dough. Now put your items on your pizza that you like. Start with the sauce. You can put on anything. Cover with shredded cheese. Bake at 425 degrees until it is done.

Moral of this recipe - DON'T GET LAZY! MAKE YOUR OWN PIZZA AT HOME! IT IS BETTER AND CHEAPER!



The Prepper's Pocket Guide: 101 Easy Things You Can Do to Ready Your Home for a Disaster

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Recipe For A Perfect Family To Make Survival Easier In Any Emergency!

This is the only recipe to have on hand. Even if you cannot cook , you will be able to create this masterpiece. This is a recipe for the one thing that will help with your prepping and survival. A recipe for the perfect family home-life.

Recipe for the perfect family home-life.

2 or more people

3 cups of love

1/2 cup of peace

1/3 cup of faith

1/4 cup of trust

2 cups of caring

1/4 cup of forgiveness

1/3 cup of sharing

Mix all of these together gently. The result will be a happy family that will be more able to weather any storm or emergency that comes their way. Any prepper knows that a good and strong family is one of the most important things needed in your prepping. You all have to be able to work together , trust each other, share with each other, care for each other, be peaceful with each other , have faith in each other, and most important LOVE each other. Have a strong family unit and your survival will come much easier.

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120 Serving Breakfast Only @ $198 (120 Servings breakfast assortment. No entrees) - Order Now!

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Homesteading : Back To Basics

This is one of my favorite books on my survival bookshelf. I look at my copy of Homesteading (Back to Basics ) book probably once a week. If not more. I has everything in it.

Book Description

Publication Date: November 1, 2009

Who doesn't want to shrink their carbon footprint, save money, and eat homegrown food whenever possible? Even readers who are very much on the grid will embrace this large, fully-illustrated guide on the basics of living the good, clean life. It's written with country lovers in mind—even those who currently live in the city.Whether you live in the city, the suburbs, or even the wilderness, there is plenty you can do to improve your life from a green perspective. Got sunlight? Start container gardening. With a few plants, fresh tomatoes, which then become canned tomato sauce, are a real option. Reduce electricity use by eating dinner by candlelight (using homemade candles, of course). Learn to use rainwater to augment water supplies. Make your own soap and hand lotion. Consider keeping chickens for the eggs. From what to eat to supporting sustainable restaurants to avoiding dry cleaning, this book offers information on anything a homesteader needs—and more.

Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

From instructions on making your own composting toilet to trimming the toenails on your llamas, this back-the-land guide offers a vast wealth of resources for the eco-minded, twenty-first-century homesteader. The crowded chapters cover growing and harvesting food; keeping livestock (and building structures to house them); incorporating renewable energy technology, such as solar panels, into existing homes; making crafts, household items, and toys; homemade health remedies; and earth-friendly interior design. With so many topics introduced in such a limited space, it’s inevitable that some subjects are treated more superficially than others; for example, a spread on stress management, which includes tips such as “take a walk,” seems out of place in a title filled with so much targeted, useful advice. Best are the practical specifics, and even city dwellers with no interest in taking up beekeeping or basket weaving will enjoy browsing this for recipes, gardening ideas, and, as the introduction states, other accessible ways to “take a few steps closer to a healthier, happier, and more responsible lifestyle.” --Gillian Engberg

Homesteading (Back to Basics Guides) is a book that should be on every persons book shelf that want to be more self-sufficient and self reliant.

The Prepper's Pocket Guide: 101 Easy Things You Can Do to Ready Your Home for a Disaster Ultimate Family Preparedness Pak

120 Serving Breakfast Only @ $198 (120 Servings breakfast assortment. No entrees) - Order Now!

Monday, July 9, 2012

Anti-zombie strongholds for sale - Yahoo! Homes

Anti-zombie strongholds for sale - Yahoo! Homes

These look like some great homes for being safe!! 

The Prepper's Pocket Guide: 101 Easy Things You Can Do to Ready Your Home for a DisasterUltimate Family Preparedness Pak

120 Serving Breakfast Only @ $198 (120 Servings breakfast assortment. No entrees) - Order Now!

ABCs Of Bulb Gardening

ABCs Of Bulb Gardening

Flowering plants that overwinter and multiply by means on fleshy stems of leaves are called bulbs. The bulbs we grow in our gardens today are native to temperate zones all over the world, the woodlands, meadows and mountains of the Mediterranean, Middle East, and North America. The Dutch have been extremely successful over the centuries in collection and hybridizing new species of bulbs and improving them for reliable garden performance. Tulips in particular, once played an important role in the Dutch economy.

There is no easier plant to cultivate than a bulb. Planted at the right time, in a loose, well-draining soil, bulbs will bloom punctually year after year and even spread (“naturalize”) if conditions are to their liking.

By planting a sequence of spring-, summer- and fall-flowering bulbs at the appropriate time, you can enjoy their blooms practically year ‘round.

Fall (late September through late November) – Plant hardy, spring-flowering bulbs: tulips, narcissus (includes all types of daffodils), crocus, eranthis (winter aconites), erythronium, fritillaria, hyacinths snowdrops, scilla, hardy cyclamen, lilies. In California and milder areas of the Southwest, also plant ranunculus, freesias, anemones and paperwhites outdoors. Store tulips, crocus and hyacinths in refrigerator for 6-8 weeks before planting. In all regions, store potted bulbs in refrigerator for forcing indoors.

Winter – In California, plant prechilled- hardy bulbs outdoors. In all regions, remove sprouted bulbs from refrigerator for indoor forcing.

Spring – Plant more tender, summer-flowering bulbs: achimenes, gladioli, alliums, calla lilies, tuberous begonias, ixia, crocosmia, dahlias, cannas.

Late Summer – Plant the late bloomers: fall crocus, fall- and winter-blooming hardy cyclamen.

Click here to browse bloomingbulb.com for #1 quality plants and bulbs.

The Prepper's Pocket Guide: 101 Easy Things You Can Do to Ready Your Home for a Disaster

Ultimate Family Preparedness Pak

120 Serving Breakfast Only @ $198 (120 Servings breakfast assortment. No entrees) - Order Now!

Sunday, July 8, 2012

Make your air conditioning dollars go farther - Yahoo! Shine

Make your air conditioning dollars go farther - Yahoo! Shine

every little bit of savings helps.

The Prepper's Pocket Guide: 101 Easy Things You Can Do to Ready Your Home for a DisasterUltimate Family Preparedness Pak

120 Serving Breakfast Only @ $198 (120 Servings breakfast assortment. No entrees) - Order Now!

Strawberries!

Home-grown, vine-ripened strawberries are among the garden's supreme treats- sweet, succulent, and bursting with flavor. Serve them in shortcakes, blended into smoothies, on ice cream, in cheesecakes or crepes, topped with yogurt or whipped cream, or simply savor them "as is" fresh from the garden. Grocery store strawberries, which are harvested early and ripened off the vine, can't begin to compare in sweetness and flavor.

Strawberries are also easy to grow in the home garden. The plants form foot-wide mounds of lush dark green foliage that can serve as an attractive ground cover. They require no staking or training, as do the larger berries, and only basic care. Once planted they will spread and continue to produce for four or five years before they need to be replaced.

Strawberry plants also grow well in pots, patio planters, even in hanging planters. While there are many varieties of strawberries, there are basically only two types: June-bearing (Allstar) and Everbearing (Ozark and Quinalt). The June-bearing strawberries bloom in the spring and produce a plentiful crop that ripens during June. The Everbearing strawberries produce both a spring and a fall crop, and continue producing some berries throughout the summer, more when temperatures aren't too hot. For the home gardener, the best strategy is to plant both types and harvest ripe berries over a long season.


The Prepper's Pocket Guide: 101 Easy Things You Can Do to Ready Your Home for a Disaster Ultimate Family Preparedness Pak

120 Serving Breakfast Only @ $198 (120 Servings breakfast assortment. No entrees) - Order Now!





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