Poor Man Survival
Self Reliance
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ISSN 2161-5543
A
Digest of Urban Survival Resources
DIY Defense
Against Intruders & Booby Traps For The Home
It’s 2 AM, and you’re lying
asleep in bed. Your wife is snuggled next to you, and your young children are
slumbering soundly in their respective bedrooms.
The sound of the creaking back
door awakens you. You weren’t expecting any late-night visitors.
It could be an intruder . . . or
not. Maybe you forgot to shut the back door all the way and lock it, and the
wind’s blown it open. (Sheepdog Rule #24: Always check to see if the doors are
locked before you retire for the night.)
How do you investigate this
possible home intrusion quickly and safely? How do you navigate through your
house in a way that maximizes your safety when there could be a possible
attacker on the prowl?
In the tactical world, “clearing a building”
simply means investigating the premises for a suspected intruder. A building is
“cleared” if you confirm the suspect isn’t there or you neutralize the threat.
To get the inside scoop on how
execute this tactical skill, here are pointers from Mike Seeklander from the American Warrior Society and Shooting Performance.
First Rule of Clearing a House:
Only Clear Your House By Yourself as a Last Resort
In law enforcement and the
military, clearing a building is done in teams of two or more because it’s
safer and more effective. That extra set of eyes allows you to have a
360-degree view.
If you’re clearing your home,
it’s probably just you. Because you don’t have eyes in the back of your head,
your field of vision is limited, leaving you vulnerable to attacks in your
blind spots.
With that in mind, Mike
recommends that you only clear your own house by yourself as a very last
resort.
For example, if you arrive home
and notice that a window is smashed or a door is open, and you suspect an
intruder is still inside, don’t go in and clear your home alone. Stay outside
at a safe distance and call the police to report a possible ongoing breaking
and entering. Let the professionals take care of it.
If you live by yourself and an
intruder breaches your place while you’re at home asleep, stay in your room,
lock the door, call 911, and ready your weapon. Stay in there until law
enforcement officers arrive. Once they do, make sure whatever weapon you’re
using is holstered or put away, so they don’t mistake you for the bad guy.
The only situation in which you’d
want to clear a home by yourself is if you have loved ones in another part of
the house, and you’re worried about their safety. Even then, you must proceed
with extreme caution.
Bottom line: clearing your home
by yourself is a dangerous task. Only do it if you absolutely must!
Set Up Your Home for Successful
Clearing
Clearing a building is dangerous
because you can’t see through doors and walls or around corners. Consequently,
several tactics must be used to allow you to navigate a house while reducing
(but not eliminating) your chances of being blindsided by an attack. We’ll
discuss those here in a bit.
To further reduce the risks of
clearing your home, Mike recommends using technology and smart interior design
to increase your field of vision without putting yourself in harm’s way.
First, install security cameras
throughout your home. This will allow you to see where the possible threat is
without having to expose yourself physically. Nest Cam and Ring make affordable wireless cameras
that connect to your smartphone.
After you’ve installed these
cameras, think about how you can decorate your home so that your ability to see
around corners is enhanced. Place mirrors and reflective framed pictures in
strategic locations so that you can see into a hallway or another room from a
distant and concealed location. Motion activated lights are also an excellent
addition to place the advantage in your court.
Preparing Your Firearm
Even though the rifle is a generally superior
weapon, Mike recommends that most individuals use a pistol for clearing a house
as it’s easier to maneuver with than a rifle or shotgun. With that said, if all
you have is a rifle or a shotgun, use it. A firearm puts some much-needed
distance between you and the possible threat.
Whichever type of firearm you go
with, Mike strongly recommends having a light/laser sight mounted on it like a Streamlight TLR-2 with
grip activation switch. This makes illuminating and aiming in low-light
situations much easier.
Home Clearing Tactics
Choose Your Pace: Slow or Hasty
When you’re searching a building,
there are two paces you can take: hasty or slow. Which speed you use depends on
the situation.
If your loved ones aren’t in
immediate danger, take things slow. It’s safer for you and allows you to be
more deliberate when searching your home for intruders.
If you believe your loved ones
are in immediate danger, do a hasty search. Even as you speed up the pace, however,
you still want to practice good clearing tactics to keep yourself safe.
How to Hold Your Pistol When
Clearing Your Home
If you’re clearing your house with a pistol, hold your firearm
in a high ready position. This position allows you to maneuver throughout your
home quickly and with a reduced profile while simultaneously staying ready to
fire when needed.
Constantly Check Your Six
As you’re clearing your home, it can be easy to get “target
lock.” You become so focused on clearing a corner or a doorway that you become
unaware of what’s going on behind or to the side of you. As you clear different
obstacles in your home, keep your head on a swivel. Don’t become so focused on
one area that you become blind to everything else.
The Master Tactic of Clearing
Your Home: Slicing the Pie
When you’re clearing a building, you have two contradictory
goals: 1) find and eliminate the threat, and 2) keep yourself concealed from
the threat. If you go bulldozing towards an intruder, you leave yourself open
to attack. If you completely conceal yourself from your potential attacker,
however, it becomes hard for you to spot and possibly neutralize him because
doors, corners, and objects are in your way.
To navigate between this
strategic Scylla and Charybdis, we’re going to use a
building-clearing tactic called “slicing the pie.” Slicing the pie is also
known as “threshold evaluation” or “angled clearing.”
Slicing the pie allows us to slowly increase our field of vision
around corners, through doorways, and up and down stairs, all while keeping a
reduced profile. When you slice the pie, you use an angle to keep yourself
concealed and slowly step away from the apex of that angle to gradually reveal
a new “slice” of the room. When a new slice of the room is revealed, quickly scan
it from top to bottom for your threat or evidence of your threat. Once you’ve
noted that it’s clear, reveal another small slice of the room and scan again.
While the general concept of slicing the pie applies to corners,
doorways, and stairways alike, the details of how to approach each area differ
slightly, as we’ll cover below.
Corners are the most common objects in your house, and you don’t
want to barge right around them because you might run right into your armed
intruder. To traverse a corner safely, we’re going to slowly increase our field
of vision around it while minimizing our profile by slicing the pie.
Start off by getting as close to the wall as you can without
scraping up against it (you don’t want to make a lot of noise and give your position
away).
Slowly approach the corner and stop about 3 or 4 feet away from
it. Your pivot point will be the apex of the corner. Begin slicing the pie by
taking one sidestep away from the wall. Make sure you’re in that high ready
position. You don’t want your pistol or elbows poking out. Scan up and down the
slice of the room revealed to you. Once you’ve cleared that slice, take another
sidestep away from the wall. You should be making a semi-circle around your
pivot point, until you’re parallel with the corner.
Continue slicing the pie around the corner until you’ve seen and
cleared the entire room on the other side of the corner.
How to Clear Doors
Doors and doorways provide some unique challenges when clearing
a home.
First, you have to open the door in a way that reduces your
exposure to possible gunfire. Second, the doorway itself acts as a choke point,
making you an easy target for a would-be attacker if you were to just run right
through it. It’s for this reason that doorways are known as “fatal funnels” in
the tactical world.
But with a bit of stratagem and some good old pie slicing, you
can navigate through a doorway safely and securely.
First, you want to stay out of the fatal funnel even if the door
is closed. Last time I checked, bullets can go through wooden doors. Stand to
the side against the walls.
Check to see if the door opens in or out. You don’t want to
waste time trying to push the door open when it actually pulls out. You can
tell if a door opens in or out by checking the hinges. If you can see the
hinge, the door is going to open towards you.
When you approach a closed door, do so from the side the handle
is on. Keeping your pistol in the high ready position, put your non-dominant
hand on the doorknob, turn it quickly, and swing open the door. Make sure you
keep the muzzle slightly high, so you don’t point it at your hand while
grabbing the knob. If you have to push the door in, make sure you push hard
enough to open the door all the way, but not so hard that it hits the wall and
bounces back towards you.
While you open the door,
simultaneously step back. This provides some distance so you can safely slice
the pie, and is called “ghosting a door” because from the perspective of the
intruder, it looks like a ghost opened it.
Now we’re going to slice the pie.
This time your pivot point will be right dab in the middle of the doorway.
Sidestep in a semicircular path around the pivot point until you get to the
other side of the doorframe. When you cross the fatal funnel during your pie
slicing, pick up the pace. You want to spend as little time there as possible.
Once you’ve seen as much of you can into the room by slicing the
pie, it’s time to enter. Even if you’ve cleared the room while pie slicing, you
want to spend as little time in the fatal funnel as possible when you go
through the doorway. With your pistol in the high ready position, enter the
doorway from the side at an angle. Keep moving into the room at the same angle
to get through the threshold as quickly as possible.
Another way to quickly get through a doorway is to buttonhook
around the doorframe that you’re closest to.
Navigating Hallways
As you navigate hallways, keep in mind that they’re just giant
fatal funnels. To that end, never walk down the middle of a hallway. Stay close
to one wall or the other.
How to Clear T-Shaped Hallways
T-shaped hallways are two hallways that intersect perpendicular
to each other. They put you at a tactical disadvantage because you have two
corners to clear and to clear one of them means you’ll have your back to the
other.
We’re going to clear the left corner first, so we’ll need to be
on the right side of the hallway. Get as close as you can to the right wall of
the hallway and slowly approach the right corner. Stop about 2 to 3 feet in
front of the corner. Slowly clear the left corner as much as you can without
having your body enter the intersecting hallway.
Once you’ve cleared as much as you can, step back and move over
to the left side of the hallway so you can clear the right corner. Clear the
right corner the same way you did the left corner.
If you can’t get enough of a view
using this technique, Mike says you could “quick peek” the hallway by quickly
moving your head in and out of the intersecting hallway. Even if the intruder
had a gun, his reaction time isn’t fast enough to pull the trigger while your
head is poking in and out.
After clearing as much as you
can, enter the intersecting hallway the same way you’d enter a door. As you’re
going one direction, make sure to look over your shoulder to ensure the hall
behind you is clear.
You may need to ascend a flight
of stairs to completely clear your home. Going up stairs puts you at a tactical
disadvantage, but with some more pie slicing, it can be done in a way that
reduces your exposure.
Your approach towards steps
should be similar to a hallway or corner. Slowly slice the pie up the stairwell
before you enter it. In this case, the apex of your pie is the top of the
stairs. As you walk up the stairs, keep your back close to the wall. Take slow
steps up the staircase. As you go up a step, slowly slice the pie in the area
above you. Only proceed up the next step once you’ve cleared that slice.
Once you get to the top, you’ll
likely encounter a corner or a t-shaped hallway. Slice the pie and keep moving
on.
Clearing Obstacles in a Room
Once you enter a room, make sure
to clear places like the areas behind couches and drapes. Your apex on the
couch would be the corner of the couch. Do not leave that room until you’ve
cleared behind all the objects. As you leave a room, be sure to slice the pie
on the way out through the doorway. The potential intruder might have moved
there.
Practice, Practice, Practice
Clearing your home isn’t a skill
you can just read about and expect to know how to do when you need to use it.
You’ve got to practice it. Regularly. And it’s not difficult. As you walk
through your house and approach corners and doors, practice slicing the pie.
You don’t have to set aside special time for this. Just do it whenever you’re
getting up to get a drink of water.
Besides these “greasing the groove” types of exercises, you should set aside time to practice clearing
your home with a firearm. You need to get comfortable maneuvering while holding
a pistol. Practice proper safety skills and make sure your gun is unloaded
before you do. Practice ghosting a door with a firearm, slicing the pie in the
high ready position, and clearing t-shaped hallways. Include this in your
regular firearms training.
To reiterate, clearing your home
is a dangerous activity; doubly so if you’re doing it alone. You should try to
avoid it at all costs, but in the event you have to do it, you now have some
basic knowledge to give yourself a fighting chance.
As a last resort…consider booby traps,
and security measures such as alarms, reinforcing your windows, owning dogs,
etc.
Lately it’s seemed that the world is going to hell in a handbasket. Policemen are being shot, terrorist attacks are happening right and left, and the people of our once great nation are turning against each other right and left. And it doesn’t seem like things are going to get better anytime soon.
In the midst of all this mayhem, it’s important to know how to protect your home from intruders. After all, it won’t be long until attackers are not only coming after our nation as a whole, but are coming after our homes and after our families as well.
You can protect yourself, your family and your possessions by building some DIY booby traps. I’ve got some cool information and videos about which ones to build so you know exactly what you need to get started.
Now keep in mind I’ve included several types of booby traps in this article. Some are to give the guy/gal a warning, and others are meant to do serious physical harm. You can pick and choose which ones are right for you and your situation.
Note: Most if not all of these traps are illegal, so user discretion is advised! These are mere examples of what you might have to do if SHTF.
Regardless, in times of crises, it’s up to YOU to do what you can to protect yourself. So keep reading and you’ll discover how you can one-up attackers both at your home and at your bug out shelter with the help of these…
10 DIY Booby Traps For The Home
Now before you start learning about booby traps, there’s something you need to do first – and that’s have a foolproof method of proving the attacker actually trespassed on your property and/or tried to hurt you.
All of these booby trap ideas will be worthless if you can’t prove the attackers were on your property to start with. The perpetrator can easily lie and say they didn’t do it (or that it was someone else), and in a court of law your word will mean nothing without evidence.
To prevent this all from happening and to make sure your attacker is persecuted to the fullest extent possible, you’ll need our BRAND NEW Aura Plus Digital Vision Monocular to help you.
This survival tool is truly incredible. Because it uses high-quality, high-tech digital night vision, this monocular allows you to see clearly and crisply in the dead of night using a top-notch black and white LCD display. Unlike traditional night vision monoculars, this one uses the latest technology – which means there’s no blurry green screens and no annoying intensifier tubes.
The other amazing thing about this Aura Plus Monocular is that you can take pictures AND video with it, whether you’re in daylight or pitch black darkness. So if an intruder comes sneaking around your property, it won’t just be your word against him, but also pictures and a video showing footage of the entire crime.
The
Trip Wire Alarm
This is a great, affordable booby trap that is easy to set up and easy to execute. Simply place these trip wires around the perimeter of your bug out shelter/house to alert you of an attacker.
The Shotgun Show
Here’s a trip wiring system that packs a bit more punch than the one in #1. Check out the video to see this awesome booby trap.
The Automatic Assault
Now keep in mind the video below merely portrays a (mostly) harmless prank – however, you can use your imagination on how to tweak this for a real attack. P.S: If you’re not planning on using this method, it’s still funny to watch!
Warning: video contains adult language.
PM’s Guide to Home Defense-A Self Protection Package
More Resources:
- How
to Escape From Zip
Ties
- Mad
Max Apocalyptic Workout: Top 10 Exercises (Video)
- Planning
an Off-Grid Weekend for Survival (Video)
- Simple
Tips for Starting Your Survival Garden
·
7 Improvised Defense Weapons That Could Save Your Life
The problem is that emergencies are not able to be “compressed” into a format: they arise.
The problem is that emergencies are not able to be “compressed” into a format: they arise.
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Emergency Preparedness on a Budget
You don't have to drop a small fortune on name brand supplies to be ready for an emergency. Protect your family, home and budget with these tips.
You don't have to drop a small fortune on name brand supplies to be ready for an emergency. Protect your family, home and budget with these tips.
·
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Is there an ultimate rifle setup for survival self-defense?
(Video) »
When you're doing a job, using the right tool makes the job easier. This is true if you are doing carpentry, working on a vehicle, laying bricks or, defending yourself or family during a breakdown of civilization or martial law scenario. More »
When you're doing a job, using the right tool makes the job easier. This is true if you are doing carpentry, working on a vehicle, laying bricks or, defending yourself or family during a breakdown of civilization or martial law scenario. More »
·
Self-defense tips for older folks »
Every week our member service advisors at the USCCA get calls asking about self-defense strategies to help our older members. During a typical conversation, the caller will say something to the effect of, "I'm not as young as I once was and I can't do those drills. What can I do to fight better?" More »
Self-defense tips for older folks »
Every week our member service advisors at the USCCA get calls asking about self-defense strategies to help our older members. During a typical conversation, the caller will say something to the effect of, "I'm not as young as I once was and I can't do those drills. What can I do to fight better?" More »
Yours
for better living,
Bruce,
the Poor Man
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2 comments:
yowie zowie-some mighty mad max stuff for defending the homestead-great tips my friend-thanks!
In today's America one must take extra care to protect the homestead and family-too many thieves and nut cases running loose...thanks for the share.
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