Friday, July 5, 2013

Why we are Moving to the Country

Our "nodding donkey" at sunset.
I've blogged about it over the past several years but now that I am posting YouTube videos of our family farm, I'm being asked all over again: "Can you tell why you are there and what you intend to do?"

It seems tough to put it into words right now for some reason. I guess because, over time, Wifey and I have seen so many things that have led us down this path that we simply can't remember them all. Every time we see a news article like Pro-Abortion Backers Tell Legislator 'I Hope Your Daughter's Raped'... and they Chant 'Hail Satan!' it screams at us that the world is going insane. 

Then we read yet ANOTHER case where the government is BEYOND out-of-control like: State Dept Spent $630K on Facebook 'LIKES" and Obamacare Penalties are Delayed for Big Firms while Individuals are still REQUIRED to Comply

 Hell in a handbasket is a reoccurring theme and I don't want to get caught like the 72% of Americans who are living paycheck-to-paycheck. Which is exactly what I was doing up until a few weeks ago. Now don't get me wrong, I don't typically run around saying the sky is falling. I do my due diligence when it comes to collecting my news. That last article, for example, was solely based on a sample of 1,000 people. However, I believe it to be a pretty good reflection of our current society based on what I've seen post-Katrina, Irene, and other disasters where people ran out of food in a matter of days...as did the food stores.

Life isn't going to wait for you Pilgrim...
But there's something else to the equation. There's an inner excitement at the thought of living self reliantly. Providing for yourself instead of relying on others. And ultimately, I simply don't want to work for someone else for the rest of my life. It harkens back to a conversation I had with my wonderful Grandma about a year ago.

We were talking about things and I decided to ask for her analysis on The Great Depression. So many people were beginning to compare the current financial situation to the 1930s and trying to come up with a nickname for our current troubles like The Great Recession, etc. I asked her, "What do you remember about the Great Depression Grandma?" To my surprise, she answered rather quickly and said: "Well, it didn't affect us much...we grew our own food on the farm." Wow.

Leigh, over at 5 Acres and a Dream, sums it up nicely in a guest post she wrote today: "My husband and I chose the homesteading lifestyle because we love to live and work close to the land. We love living in partnership with the natural world around us and our primary goal is to create a self-sustaining homestead. This includes a number of areas: energy, water, animals, and food, which includes feeding ourselves as well as feeding our animals." There simply is no such thing as a Golden Parachute anymore. Working your entire life for someone else no longer has any perks. And as far as I know, nobody ever said on their death bed: "Gee, I wish I had worked MORE."

So those are some of the reasons why we decided to head out to the country. I'm 42 years old and Wifey is 37. God willing, we have a handful of decades left on this planet. It is now my goal to create a self-sustaining farm that can provide for not only my immediate family and extended family...but for generations to come. Like one of my mentors, Joel Salatin, who has three generations working on his family farm and is doing very well. He was even invited to give a prestigious TED Talk (watch it if you have time, it is highly worth watching.)

 For those of you who are reading this and thinking that you just aren't quite ready yet...I'd like to share something with you. When it comes to putting your mind to something and getting it done, there is one man in American history who's achievements speak through his amazing accomplishments: General George S. Patton. Here is what he said on the  matter:

"A good solution applied with vigor now is better than a perfect solution applied ten minutes later.  Nothing is ever going to be perfect, especially during that organized chaos called war. In war, a good solution applied now can save lives, materials, and time. You can spend all of your time rethinking and revising your plans and never get the battle started, let alone won. There comes a time when you must simply stop planning and put the plan into effect. If you continue to wait for a perfect plan or for perfect conditions, the enemy will take control of the situation, attack you, force you into a defensive position, and possibly destroy you. Too much analysis causes paralysis." - quoted from Patton's One Minute Messages.

If you substitute "solution" with "plan" and consider your fight to be self-sufficient and independent from the government as a personal "war" then you'll understand how I am tying this all together. 

I hope this will help motivate some of you to follow your dreams. I am in the very first stages of following mine and I can tell you...I've never felt more alive nor felt that I was holding so many endless possibilities in my hand. Life is good.

~OJD


Thursday, July 4, 2013

Happy Fourth of July from Rural Oklahoma!

Happy 4th of July

our

Independence Day!


Found an old Flag in the farm house.
Visiting the neighbors on the Ford!

Have a safe and enjoyable 4th of July!

Survival Blog is BACK UP

JWR appears to have the basic no-frills HTML up and running on the Utah server.

To get your daily fix of Survival Blog, click here: http://64.92.111.122/


Headline from his site:

"A DDOS ("Ping") hacker attack on SurvivalBlog began just before midnight, GMT, on July 3rd. This was obviously timed for maximum effect since the hackers assumed that the Sys-Admins at our server site would be on vacation. Thanks for your patience while we get the full site back up and running on one of our backup servers."

 Again, this is a GOOD REASON to get the ENTIRE SB database on CD for under $5!


click ===> SurvivalBlog Archive 2005-2011 <=== click 
 Thank you, Capt Rawles, for all your hard work. And Happy Independence Day everyone!

~OJD

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Survival Blog Site Down (SurvivalBlog.com)

Utah server is attempting a dead redirect to Sweden
While checking my site stats tonight, I noticed a large number of people viewing my old post about SurvivalBlog being under attack by a hacker. A quick peek at SurvivalBlog.com shows it is in fact down.

Again, this is a GOOD REASON to get the ENTIRE SB database on CD for under $5!

click ===> SurvivalBlog Archive 2005-2011 <=== click

If you have the old off-shore address, don't bother. It has been taken over by someone else and is no longer affiliated with SB. I have deleted the link from my prior blog post.

I can confirm the Swede server is down at http://95.143.193.148/  and the Utah server @ http://64.92.111.122/ is still showing a redirect message (image provided).

Until JWR gets this handled, PLEASE do NOT try to visit SurvivalBlog.com. The last time it was down was due to a DoS attack (explained previously here) and the worst thing we can do is continue to "charge the gates" of his website. He'll get it back up soon. JWR is a smart cookie.

I'll keep you posted if I hear anything from JWR or Avalanche Lily. Pray for their safety and that this is a simple grid glitch.

~OJD

PS., while you're waiting for the site to come back up, pick up one of his incredible novels and enjoy some fantastic reading:

Book One: Patriots: Surviving the Coming Collapse

Book Two:  Survivors: A Novel of the Coming Collapse

Book Three:  Founders: A Novel of the Coming Collapse

Book Four: Don't buy this one until the OFFICIAL BOOK BOMB day which is October 1, 2013. It will help raise the book's awareness level on Amazon if everyone buys it on the same day which helps drive the book up the Amazon charts.

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

A Blessing Begets a Milestone

Courtesy of ccclongview.com
It is hard picking out a title for this blog post without giving away my victorious achievement today (link to the YouTube video.) I've been so very blessed lately with the way things are progressing with my new job and homesteading dream.  Even though my immediate family is not here to enjoy it with me in person (yet), I am thankful to have this blog and other forms of communication with which to share the events.

Being grateful for what you have is important in my opinion to keep you humble. When you start to take things for granted and expect things to bow to YOUR command, that's when trouble starts. I saw this first hand today so it is fresh on my mind for conversation tonight.

As a new employee in the local hospital, I am capable of performing many tasks. One of which is Sonography (ultrasound exams) but the hospital already has a contract with an outside company to provide Sonographers around the clock. This has been the norm at this hospital for quite some time. Since there is already someone fulfilling the need of ultrasounds, I routinely perform X-rays and CT scans.

It was interesting to witness the contract Sonographer today as he expressed disgust at his lunch hour being shortened by thirty minutes by my boss. He snorted "He's not MY boss, he can't do that! I've always had one full hour for lunch." He also verbalized a distaste for the fact that his new unannounced schedule change put him working from 8am to  5pm instead of his usual 8-4:30pm.

As my boss walked in the room, a short but heated exchange occurred. Mr Spoiled Tech stated that his hours have always been 8-4:30 and he would not be staying until 5pm. My boss quickly pointed out that a paycheck is cut to the tune of eight hours of work each day to his contract company. 8-4:30 with a one hour lunch is only 7.5 hours of work. "Therefore," he stated matter-of-factly, "you WILL be staying until 5pm or cutting your hour lunch by 30 minutes."

The tech hastily left the room and my boss was visible steamed. "I've had it with that guy," he said. "I'm making an Executive Decision!" He turned, looked at me and said "Are you up to speed with ultrasounds?" I have been dusting my boss with suggestions that I could cover the evening hour calls for ultrasound and cost him much less than the contract company. It just so happens that it would also put more money in my pocket too...

At that moment, he declared the evening call hours were mine from then on. I would be paid $15 per night just to be "on call" and if I do get called in for an ultrasound, I'll get paid 1.5 times my hourly pay for the duration of my visit.

And for that, I was grateful. Mr Spoiled Tech has forgotten how lucky he is to be employed in this recession. He has taken for granted the fact that he has more work than he cares to do. He clearly doesn't realize that there are people out there who would be MORE than happy to relieve him of his duties/work/money.

The plan is coming together, piece by piece.
So today I am thankful that I picked up more work. That can easily be called a blessing in disguise. What better to follow a blessing than to get home and complete a milestone? In an attempt to create a homestead on our old family farm, one of the crucial tools needed will be a reliable tractor. I took a few steps back today to reassess what I had already done to the old Ford.

As I considered some advice from several commenters, it dawned on me that I shouldn't take for granted that what I had already done to the tractor was correct. Turns out, the gasoline I had purchase under the belief that it was ethanol free regular gas was in fact diesel. Exactly what I questioned the young gas attendant about. Google searching taught me that diesel was dyed red in some cases and this proved to be what I had in my gas can.

A quick draining of the red tractor fuel and refueling with fresh REGULAR gas and I had the Ford 8N fired up in no time. The homestead's workhorse was now reborn. She'll need new filters and fluid changes but she runs like a champ. I look forwards to plowing gardens and tilling fields with her. For now, she is parked proudly in front of the farm house...basking in all her former glory.  Right next to a big, beautiful Orange Jeep.

~OJD



New Rules for the Farm


13) Diesel is Diesel is DIESEL...no matter what they call it. Regular diesel, farm diesel, whatever. If you aren't sure, ask someone over 40 years old in dirty overalls. NOT someone under 20 in bluejeans and a tank top.

14) Trust your gut. If it tells you that you might be wrong, then maybe you are. There's no shame in that...unless you keep ignoring it.

15) Be thankful for what you have. Nothing lasts forever.