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Forewarned is forearmed! >Unknown
The Lost Art of Self-Reliance: Forgotten Pioneer Skills
It's
good to be prepared -ask any Boy Scout or anyone who has survived
any of the numerous natural disasters [fires, earthquakes,
mudslides, snowstorms, hurricanes, etc.] which have pounded our
country during the past few years.
If
any of this -- or anything similar -- happens, it
would be beneficial to have a couple of useful
skills under your belt if things go south.
And
why not? Best case scenario is you can use these
skills to provide value to others. You could, for
example, teach people how to make a crossbow.
That’s
why it pays to be able to step out of the system
-- functioning or broken -- and survive without
it. And where’s best for one to learn the
forgotten ways of the self-sufficient? The
professionals, of course.
Today,
with the help of Bioprepper.com, we’re going to
do our part to revive the lost art of
self-reliance and share with you 25 forgotten
skills of the pioneers.
[Ed.
note:
Before you go, watch
these two videos
of life-or-death situations. In one video, a man
dies. In the other, he makes it out with his life.
(Warning: not for the faint of heart). These
videos will show you -- in clear view -- why being
prepared for anything is invaluable. SHTF or not.
Click
here.]
Pioneer life
has a special meaning in America. In less than 300 years,
civilization spread across a vast continental wilderness.
The pioneers
used to make soap themselves using the copious amount of wood ashes,
a natural result of their homesteading activities, with also a
plentiful supply of animal fat from the butchering of the animals
they used for food.
Soap with some
work and luck could be made for free. Soap making was performed as a
yearly or semiannual event on the homesteads of the early settlers.
As the butchering of animals took place in the fall, soap was made at
that time on many homesteads and farms to utilize the large supply of
tallow and lard that resulted.
On
the homes or farms where butchering was not done, soap was generally
made in the spring using the ashes from the winter fires and the
waste cooking grease, that had accumulated throughout the year. Soap
making takes three basic steps.
Trappers,
fur traders, miners, frontier soldiers, surveyors, and pioneer
farmers. The farmers tamed the land and made it productive.
Every
part of America had its pioneers. Whatever their surroundings, the
pioneers had to depend on themselves and on the land. Self-reliance
was a frontier requirement. Game provided food and leather clothing.
New settlers gathered wild fruits, nuts, and berries.
For salt they
boiled the water of saline springs. Maple sugar was made by tapping
maple trees in early spring and boiling the sap until it thickened
into a tasty sweetening.
Substitutes
for tea and coffee were provided by boiling sassafras root and
brewing parched corn and barley. With an ax and adze for cutting
tools, the pioneers made beds, tables, benches, and stools. They
split logs into rails to make the zigzag fence that enclosed their
clearings.
Pioneer life has a special meaning in America. In less than 300 years, civilization spread across a vast continental wilderness.
From the first
landings in Virginia and Massachusetts in the early 1600’s,
American settlers kept pushing westward behind an ever moving
frontier. Into wild country went hunters, trappers, fur traders,
miners, frontier soldiers, surveyors, and pioneer farmers. The
farmers tamed the land and made it productive.
Every
part of America had its pioneers. Whatever their surroundings, the
pioneers had to depend on themselves and on the land. Self-reliance
was a frontier requirement. Game provided food and leather clothing.
New settlers gathered wild fruits, nuts, and berries.
For salt they
boiled the water of saline springs. Maple sugar was made by tapping
maple trees in early spring and boiling the sap until it thickened
into a tasty sweetening.
Substitutes
for tea and coffee were provided by boiling sassafras root and
brewing parched corn and barley. With an ax and adze for cutting
tools, the pioneers
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Soap
Making
The pioneers
used to make soap themselves using the copious amount of wood ashes,
a natural result of their homesteading activities, with also a
plentiful supply of animal fat from the butchering of the animals
they used for food.
Soap with some
work and luck could be made for free. Soap making was performed as a
yearly or semiannual event on the homesteads of the early settlers.
As the butchering of animals took place in the fall, soap was made at
that time on many homesteads and farms to utilize the large supply of
tallow and lard that resulted.
On
the homes or farms where butchering was not done, soap was generally
made in the spring using the ashes from the winter fires and the
waste cooking grease, that had accumulated throughout the year. Soap
making takes three basic steps.
>Making of the wood
ash lye>Rendering or cleaning the fats.
>Mixing the fats and lye solution together and boiling the mixture to make the soap.
Food
Preservation
The
food preservation played a very important role in a pioneer’s life.
Not having a refrigerator his only way to maintain the food edible
was to preserve it.
The
most used process to preserve the meat was smoking. I’m going to
share with you an old recipe for curing and smoking hams. The process
of smoking is still used by a few die-hards, but most folks take a
shorter route to preservation -- canning, freezing or diluted methods
using “smoked” chemicals applied directly to the meat.
Old-timer
Everet Starcher of Sinking Springs gave his directions to smoking
hams in 1976. He was in his 80s when he shared his recipe.
Put your hams
on a table or flat surface where mice or nothing can get on them. Rub
Morton Salt Sugar Cure liberally over the cut surface of the hams.
Basic
Firearm Repair
Back in the
old west guns were something vital. Everybody had one. So the demand
for this skill was very big and everyone knew the basics to repair
their gun and had some basic spare parts around. I bet you think you
got everything you’ll need, right? Covered all the basics didn’t
you?
Bet
you forgot one critical thing that will keep you alive more than a
weapon or cleaning kit…
What
is it? FIRST AID KIT for your primary weapons.
Yea
I thought so. Firing pins, extractors, detents springs. Places won’t
be around to get parts. They are small and don’t weigh much. Pass
this on…
Raising
Livestock
The
ranchers went west to raise cattle. The open plains were ideal for
grazing huge herds, and the completion of the transcontinental
railroad in 1869 made it possible to ship the cattle to market in
large and profitable numbers. Cattle ranching was a tough business
that gave the West its cowboys. Cowboys tended the herds while they
were grazing, branded them when they were of age, fought off cattle
thieves, and managed the long drives of thousands of cattle over
hundreds of miles of open prairie to the railroads. They followed
well-known trails, like the Chisholm Trail, that have become a part
of the landscape of U.S. Folklore.
Blacksmithing
The
mighty smith of folklore was the blacksmith, who worked with iron and
steel and whose hammer wielded more force than his fellow craftsmen,
the tinsmith and the whitesmith, who worked in lighter metals. The
word “smith” derives its meaning from the word “smite,”
transformed over time to mean “a man who strikes.”
Blacksmiths
were valuable in every frontier community because they could make
tools: crowbars, axles, axes, plows, and other implements. They also
produced fine metal parts like hinges, hoops for wooden barrels,
nails, and pots.
The
blacksmith ranked with the cobbler as a rural philosopher, and his
shop, with doors open during the summer and comfortably warm in the
winter, offered men a receptive place for gathering and gossip. The
craft was passed on from master blacksmiths to young apprentices, who
were usually just boys when they began learning.
Today
many people associate blacksmithing with one who makes horseshoes,
but those specialists are more properly known as farriers.
Read
more at:
>>Get
a Good Quality Radio Such as a Baofeng Radio
They
have a multiband FM transceiver with an extensive frequency coverage
and they're pretty cheap at about $35 each-perfect for bug-out
situations and for rural areas with weak cell phone coverage and home
invasion purposes.
Additional
Resources
familyhandyman.com
8
Free Things That Are Not Really Free
Free
should mean without cost, right? But the word is used rather
loosely at times. Sometimes "free" things aren't really
free.
For
example, some things are free only if you're very careful, like
"free" checking accounts that come with
difficult-to-avoid fees and/or tricky and hidden requirements.
Consider the M&T Bank fiasco. When 59,000 of their "free
checking" customers failed to meet the requirements they
were charged almost $3 million in fees, and the Consumer
Financial Protection Board went after the bank for...Continues
here...http://everywaytomakemoney.com/not-really-free/
|
Yours
for better living,
Bruce
‘the Poor Man’
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2 comments:
It would take me about 100 years to learn all this - and I was a Boy Scout! Glad some video links were included.
Many great tools-thanks for sharing.
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