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Monday, January 12, 2015

DIY 72 hour Kit For Baby


If your family includes a baby , meeting the needs of them during a crisis is a top priority. They can pick up on the stress of their parents during a hard time. It will be much easier to be able to reassure your child if you are already prepared for any situation and have items on hand that will make them more comfortable and things that they are used to you having. Have everything ready and on hand for your child , like their favorite blanket, toys, and foods.

Here is a sample list of some other things to have in your 72 hour kit for your baby:

Disposable diapers or cloth diapers.

Wet wipes.

Baby lotion and diaper rash ointment.

Garbage bags for any used disposable diapers.

Way to clean any cloth diapers. I used a Wonder Washer when I cloth diapered my son. It worked great.

Blankets and extra clothing.

Baby formula.

Evaporated whole milk.

Powdered milk.

Karo syrup.

Bottles and some extra nipples.

Baby food and juice.

Baby spoons.

Any medications that you think they might need.

Toys.

Snacks.

Books.

Games.

coloring books and crayons.

Their favorite stuffed animal or doll.

This is just a sample list. Every child is different and should be prepared for individually.




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A Tealight Candle Oven...


I seen this on Pinterest and had to go get my toaster oven out of the garage. Looks like such a great idea and it doesn't cost a lot. I bought my toaster oven at the dollar store , but I see them all of the time at thrift stores and yard sales. Need to stock up on Tealight Candles !! Would be a great way to get a hot meal.

http://www.thebusybhomemaker.com/diy-tea-light-oven-off-grid-cooking/


Activities For Kids with Homemade Toys

Activities For Kids with Homemade Toys: Easy Projects Using only Household Items was a free book for the kindle when this post was written. Great book for this time with a lot of kids cooped up inside. Get rid of cabin fever.

 Save a lot of money on buying toys by making them yourself with your kids. For the price of 1 cup of coffee you can have 25 tutorials and ideas of homemade toys and even more activity ideas.

All the toys in the book are made from the items you already have at home: plastic bottles and caps, plastic yogurt containers and lids, chopsticks, cardboard, show boxes, pool noodles, ice cream containers, skewers, old socks, broken umbrella, rocks, marbles, coat hanger, styrofoam packaging, broken toy pieces, cloth pins.

Book is full of beautiful pictures and free 4 template printables.

Create valuable and super fun memories with your children while making the toys.

Saturday, January 10, 2015

12 Tips to Follow If You Are Stranded in Your Car in Winter


Natural disasters do not have to be widespread to threaten your safety. A localized snow storm can put you at risk if you are caught up in it.
Here are some before, during and after tips that can improve your chances of survival.

BEFORE --
  • It is especially important to maintain your car during winter months. It is easy to neglect fluid levels, brakes, tire conditions, wipers and minor exhaust and ignition problems when it is too cold to check them. This can be a dangerous mistake to make.
  • Always keep your fuel level above half during winter months in case you are stranded and must idle your engine to stay warm.
  • Even a very basic automobile survival kit is better than nothing. A blanket, or sleeping bag, a flashlight, or 12 hour emergency light sticks, 2 gallons of water and a few energy bars can literally save your life. Light sticks can be placed on top of your car to act as emergency beacons at night. A red bandana can be tied to your antenna, or hung out the driver side window to signal for help.
  • If you will be traveling on the highway in winter, always let someone know your route, when you expect to arrive and then call them when you reach your destination.
DURING --
If you are stranded during a winter emergency take the following measures to increase your chances of survival.
  • Do not pull off on the shoulder of the highway, or on an exit ramp. Each year, many cars are struck from behind by other traffic, or snowplows. If you cannot get to a rest area, or populated exit, pull off the exit ramp and then park on the entrance ramp. Vehicles entering the highway are going much slower than those exiting.
  • Major truck stops are excellent places to shelter from a storm. They provide restaurants, groceries, even private showers, as well as telephones and up-to-date weather bulletins. For the most part, truckers are friendly, courteous and helpful.
  • If you are stranded, stay with your car. It is your best shelter. Do not attempt to walk to safety unless your destination is in sight.
  • As soon as you have pulled off in a safe place, get whatever survival gear you have out of the trunk and into the passenger compartment. If possible, keep water from freezing by placing it near a heater vent, or covering it with a blanket.
  • Run the engine and heater 10 minutes per hour for warmth. Open a window, at least an inch, on the downwind side of the car to prevent carbon monoxide poisoning.
  • Periodically check your tailpipe to be sure it is not covered with snow. Once the snow has stopped, brush the snow off of the top and rear deck of your car to make it easier to see. Work slowly to avoid perspiring. It is much harder to stay warm when you are wet.
AFTER:
  • Stay with your car until help arrives.
  • If you must leave your car put a note inside the front window telling rescuers where you have gone.

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607 Essential Oil Uses

607 Essential Oil Uses: FOR HEALTH AND HEALING, FOR BEAUTY, FOR PETS, FOR HOUSE, FOR OUTSIDE AND FOR FOOD. was a free book for the kindle when this post was written.

 This book contains essential 607 oil uses for health and healing, for beauty, for pets, for house, for outside and for food.Could be very useful for when you can't get to a doctor or just want to be healthier.

Friday, January 9, 2015

Make Newspaper Logs For Your Fire


Step One: Roll dry newspaper
There is no need to roll up the newspaper around a pipe because the newspaper isn't soaked and doesn't need to be rolled as tightly. Roll the newspaper just like you would a sleeping bag.
Step Two: Tie string around the ends of the rolled newspaper log
This is simply done in order for the paper to stay rolled up tightly when it is soaked.
Step Three: Soak newspaper logs
Place newspaper logs in a bucket of detergent mixed water and leave for 3 days so that the log will soak evenly.
Step Four: Dry out logs for two to three days.
The logs shouldn't be completely dry, you want them to still be a little bit damp so that they won't burn as quickly.

Thursday, January 8, 2015

Food Storage Comes In Handy During Winter

If you do not already have a food storage stockpile or are trying convince someone you know that they need one, all you have to do is turn on the weather. It is -10 right here now and I am so glad that I have a stockpile! It is so great that I do not have to get out. Little Man asked me to make some of his favorite dip for lunch today. It is a layered dip that has refried beans , cream cheese, and he dips his tortilla chips into it. Really tasty. And easy to make out of my stockpile. Cream cheese that I bought on sale a while ago and stocked up in the freezer and the refried beans made from my stockpile of Instant Refried Beans! If we didn't have a stockpile I wouldn't be able to make a lot of things without having to try and get out in this frigid weather.

So, if you are having a hard time trying to come up with a reason for needing a food stockpile - just stick your head outside and feel the cold. or look outside, some of us are having awful snow and ice right now. We are lucking here, a bit, all we have are the dangerous cold temps. Snow and ice on the way though.

Starting a food storage doesn't have to cost a lot of money! If that is what is scaring you or someone you know off. Look back through the archives on this blog and you will see tons of ideas on how to stockpile for very little money.

Wednesday, January 7, 2015

Winter Weather Survival - 10 Essentials You Should Never Leave Home Without!

Below are the 10 Essentials for winter weather survival that you should never leave home without! These 10 items should be in your car.
1) Clothing . You should always have fleece or pile socks, pants, shirts, jackets and hats in your car. A fleece blanket and goose down jacket and sleeping bag will ensure your comfort should you be stranded for any length of time without power or assistance.

2) Non-perishable food. You should have three days worth of food storage in your vehicle during the winter. Store MRE's or other dehydrated foods and power bars to stave off the hunger in the event of a prolonged stay in your car.

3) Water and/or water filtration capability. When you are surrounded by snow, you are surrounded by water, assuming you have a means to melt and purify the water. Water purifiers and purification tablets are a must for the climber, and you should have both in your car emergency kit. Remember, the human body can last weeks without food, but only a matter of days without water.

4) Knife, lighter, duct tape, utility tool and string. The simplest tools are always the ones that are the most missed in an emergency. Remember Cast Away with Tom Hanks? A simple knife and lighter would have changed his circumstances considerably and you should have both in your car at all times. Also, duck tape in an emergency is a must, you can manufacture any number of inventions with a little duct tape.

5) Communication. Your cell phone is vital. Make sure you have the means to recharge your phone with a crank device in the event you are without battery power. If you can't communicate with the outside world, you are really on your own.


6) Heat and stove. Your car emergency kit should include a camp stove and fuel for melting water and cooking food. A warm meal or drink soothes the soul in a long winter emergency, and will provide an indirect source of heat to boot. (Remember that a camp stove emits dangerous carbon monoxide, so you should only use one in a well-ventilated space. Open the car windows or cook outside when you use one.)

7) GPS. If you don't know where you are...you are truly lost. A good GPS unit will give you a sense of direction, but more importantly, it will give you a position for rescue. A portable GPS unit is a great addition to your car emergency kit.

8) Light. You should always carry a crank operated light and/or lantern for those unforeseen emergencies. Flash lights are good, but they rely on batteries that run out of power. Crank operated lights and snap lights for those long dark knights are the best companion you can buy in a winter emergency.

9 ) Hygiene & first aid. Don't forget to take care of yourself. Sanitation wipe for those wilderness privy's and cleaning needs are a must, and there is nothing better than brushing your teeth with real toothpaste after a long day in the wilderness. Basic cleaning soaps, gloves, lotion, essential medications (Benadryl, Tylenol, etc.), and basic first aid tools should be key ingredients in your safety kit.

10) Survival Book. There are many out there and I recommend you research them. Find your favorite and make sure you keep it in your car emergency kit. You never know, one day you may need to make fire from sticks...without a how-to guide, you may never see the glow or warmth of fire.


Food Storage Recipe - Chicken & Dumplings

So easy to make and so yummy! Plus it utilizes a lot of the items in my food stockpile.

NEED:

1 whole chicken

1/3 cup of dried whole eggs, like these Powdered Whole Eggs

1 cup of all-purpose flour

2 tablespoons powdered milk

1 1/4 teaspoon of baking powder

1/2 teaspoon salt

1 1/2 tablespoon butter or margarine

1/2 cup of water

Get out your stockpot and cook the whole chicken in a pot of water.

Save the broth and debone the chicken.

FOR THE DUMPLINGS:

Sift all of the dry ingredients together. Cut in the butter (or margarine) until the mixture is the consistency of the cornmeal. Add the 1/2 cup of water to the flour mixture. Mix it up to moisten the dry ingredients. Drop by tablespoonfuls into the boiling chicken broth. Cover and cook for 12 minutes. DO NOT REMOVE THE LID DURING THIS COOKING TIME.

Add the pieces of deboned cooked chicken to the broth to make a thicker soup.


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Wilderness Survival Handbook

Wilderness Survival Handbook was a free book for the kindle when this post was written.

When you head into the wilderness, you want to have some fun, to see, feel and experience the wonders. But a dream can turn into a nightmare, putting you in a survival situation, injured or lost. Those are the situations this book prepares you for. Full of invaluable information, it tells you how to deal with a self-reliant survival situation. From constructing shelter to starting fires. From purifying water to setting traps and snares. About signalling and how to navigate. The basics of first aid. You learn about weapons and tools you can improvise from the hardware store that is Nature. This book is a compilation of some useful tips and tricks that everyone venturing out into the wilderness should know about. Literally, a book full of awesome.





Affiliate Disclosure: I am grateful to be of service and bring you content free of charge. In order to do this, please note that when you click links and purchase items, in most (not all) cases I will receive a referral commission. Your support in purchasing through these links enables me to share more information and get closer to getting my family totally off-grid and on our own piece of land. This will let me share more and more information to allow , hopefully, for you to become more self-sufficient and able to become more prepared by reading my blog and purchasing items that I share with you that will help you. Thank you! :)