Showing posts with label buckets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label buckets. Show all posts

Monday, January 13, 2014

Article pictures

Last week I submitted two articles to Backwoods Home Magazine. Below are photos which might be suitable for illustrating the articles. These are posted so the editor can choose which ones she wants.

These photos are for the article on kerosene lamps. Some are alternate shots of the same scene.

Lamp Photo 1 -- Washing soot from lamp chimneys. It's best to use a plastic tub or other means to keep the glass from bumping into the sink, which can easily break the chimney.


Lamp Photo 2 -- Washing lamp bases. This illustrates some of the variety of kerosene lamps.


Lamp Photo 3 -- Clean chimneys. Let these air-dry completely, because a wet chimney can shatter if placed on a lit lamp.


Lamp Photo 4 -- A wick trimmed to produce a crown-shaped flame. A little bit of charring at the tip is normal and won't affect the quality of the flame.


Lamp Photo 5 -- Two ways to trim a wick to produce a crown-shaped flame.


Lamp Photo 6 -- This lamp has the wick adjusted too high. The result is a huge out-of-control flame that uses too much kerosene and soots up the chimney. In this instance, the chimney becomes significantly coated with soot within ten seconds or so.


Lamp Photo 7 -- A sooty chimney after about ten seconds of a wick adjusted too high.


Lamp Photo 8 -- A properly-adjusted wick should not be visible over the top of the burner. Adjusting the wick too high is one of the most common reasons people are frustrated by kerosene lamps and smokey chimneys.


Lamp Photo 9 -- The proper way to light a lamp is to hold the match horizontally to the wick, not downward.


Lamp Photo 10 -- A bulk order of burner units which fit onto canning jars, allowing an ordinary canning jar to be converted into a kerosene lamp.


Lamp Photo 11 -- Spare chimneys, purchased at thrift stores and stored in liquor boxes, which have dividers.


Lamp Photo 12 -- A package of new 3/4" wicks. These can be found at most hardware stores.


Lamp Photos 13 through 17 -- A lamp gives enough lighting to read a small-print book if placed close by.

Photo 13

Photo 14

Photo 15

Photo 16

Photo 17

Lamp Photos 18 - 20 -- A collection of kerosene lamps, illustrating some of the variety.

Photo 18

Photo 19

Photo 20

Lamp Photo 21 -- A classic kerosene lamp


Lamp Photo 22 -- A canning jar turned into a kerosene lamp. Not as pretty, but just as practical.


These are photos for the Low-Tech article. Not too many, I'm open to suggestions.

Low-Tech Photo 1 -- Wood cookstove. An excellent multi-purpose tool which cooks, heats water, supplies heat to the house, etc.


Low-Tech Photo 2


Low-Tech Photo 3 -- Food staples such as beans, rice, spices, etc. are versatile and inexpensive.


Low-Tech Photo 4 -- Indoor clothes racks (either standing or hanging) are an excellent low-tech alternative to clothes dryers.


Low-Tech Photo 5 -- Scythes. (Lisa, take note: this photo is only available in 1003 kb resolution.)


Low-Tech Photos 6-9: Scything wheat.





Low-Tech Photo 10 -- Maps won't fail.


Low-Tech Photos 11, 12 -- Books are your low-tech friends.

Photo 11

Photo 12

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

New Year's activities

Yesterday -- January 1 -- I decided to start the New Year by organizing some of our preparedness supplies.


We tended to stash our items in buckets organized roughly by category, and each bucket has two labels. The first label is general:


The second label is specific.


But what I didn't have was an overall inventory. Just how many mousetraps, or rolls of dental floss, or bars of soap did we have? It was time to find out.

In the book Patriots by James Wesley, Rawles, he mentions a trade fair that was established several years into a societal collapse. Among the many small-but-essential items people needed were things like matches, mouse traps, canning lids, fish hooks, bleach, non-hybrid garden seeds, candle wicking, lamp wicks, salt, band-aids, razor blades, dental floss, toothbrushes, and cloth diapers.

The point of this scene was to highlight the importance of all the little things we take for granted, and which we don't appreciate until they're no longer available. This scene made sense to us, and we've tried to stock up on such things (except fish hooks and cloth diapers) since we use them on a regular basis anyway.

So I opened all the buckets and started inventorying. Matches. (Plenty.) Bar soap. (Plenty.) Lamp wicks. (Plenty.) Kitchen timers. (Oops, just one. Better get a couple more.)


As I went, I made notes of what items I was short on. Thankfully most of these household items are inexpensive, and I can just pick up a few things here and there in order to round out our stock.

But the biggest thing I wanted to get a grasp on was our medical supplies. Neither Don nor I have any significant professional medical education, so in the event of a serious medical emergency we would be dependent on others. Thankfully we're all in good health to begin with, but nonetheless accidents can (and doubtless will) happen in a "bleep" scenario.

We've squirreled away a pretty decent array of medical supplies, but we'd lost track of how much and of what variety. Time to spread things out, take inventory, and reorganize.


We divvied things up roughly according to function, then re-bucketed the supplies.


I made sure to label exactly what was inside.


(Forgive the misspellings.)


I also made notes of what additional medical supplies we might need. A transfusion kit? Maybe. More burn dressings? Absolutely. (In a non-electric world, burns will be a lot more common.) We also plan to add such unmentionable over-the-counter medicines as constipation relief, hemorrhoid suppositories, etc. Hey, you never know.

All in all, a very useful way to start the New Year.

Saturday, July 21, 2012

Guest post: Bakery buckets, a Prepper's best friend

I have a guest post up on the blog Getting Your Life in Order entitled Bakery Buckets: A Prepper's Best Friend. Go take a peek.


This is a neat blog chockful of good prepping info, so make it a part of your regular reading!

Monday, February 6, 2012

No room!

The thing about Prepping is it implies you have the room to store food and supplies. But such is not the case for everyone. In response to my post The Beauty of Bakery Buckets, a reader named Mrs T wrote the following:

I would love to do this but where do you store these huge buckets? I already have a full pantry from buying in bulk, no attic and only a over flowing outside storage building. Rodents and heat are horrid here in Texas. Any advice?

She has an excellent point. While I always suggest making room in one's living quarters that you might not have thought of -- under beds, extra closet shelves, that kind of thing -- or making addition room by giving unneeded possessions to charity or holding a yard sale, etc. -- clearly there's only so much you can do if your living space is small.

So, dear readers, what are your thoughts for Mrs T? Hers is not an uncommon lament, so any thoughts or advice will be appreciated by many.

Sunday, February 5, 2012

The beauty of bakery buckets

During my radio interview last Friday evening (which, by the way, can be heard here), the subject of bakery buckets came up. I mentioned such buckets in my BWH article The Seven Core Areas of Preparedness, but only as an aside. In fact, only as a caption on a photo. This was because I assumed everyone knew about bakery buckets. Seems I was wrong.


Back in our naïve days of preparing for Y2K, Don and I bit the bullet and bought 24 five-gallon buckets with screw-on gasketed lids. These have been superb buckets and we still use them, but they were expensive. Bakery buckets are a far better deal.

Bakery buckets are quite literally a prepper’s best friend. For the last couple of years, I’ve made it a policy to stop at our local grocery store’s bakery department and inquire about buckets. Sometimes there aren’t any available (others beat me to them), sometimes there’s only one or two, and sometimes I hit the jackpot.

One time on a happy “jackpot” occasion, I pushed my grocery cart around the store with eight or ten buckets inside, as I finished my shopping. A rather intense woman came up and asked, “Where did you get those buckets?” I replied that I'd gotten them from the bakery department, but apologized that I’d just cleaned out their available supply. “Check back often,” I told her. “They keep them for anyone who wants them.” While nothing was said about the purpose, I got the distinct impression this woman was a novice prepper who was thrilled to find a source for buckets.

Here are some advantages of bakery buckets:

• They’re cheap or free. Bakeries go through large quantities of icing, sliced fruit, fillings, glazes, and other sweets. Delis go through pickles and condiments. Once empty, those buckets will stack up. They’re almost always willing to get rid of them to eager customers. If they’re not free, most buckets will sell from fifty cents to two dollars each, a bargain. (Always be sure to get the lids!)

But watch it – not every bakery is generous. This isn’t a reflection on the bakery staff; it’s usually a company policy. I’ve found both Winco and Costco won’t sell bakery buckets for whatever reason, which is a pity because the bakery departments in both chains must go through buckets like crazy. A slight correction on Winco – they have buckets for sale, but last I checked they were at the exorbitant price of $6 each. That’s nonsense – there’s no reason to spend that much when other bakeries sell them at a fraction of the cost.

• They’re food-safe. Not all buckets are made the same, and if you’re going to be using your buckets for food storage, they must be food-safe. I’ve seen industrial buckets for sale at places like Home Depot, but they’re not for food storage so I never bother buying them. (Besides, bakery buckets are cheaper and can be used for industrial purposes as well.)

• They’re pre-cleaned. (Usually.) In my experience, the bakery staff is usually apologetic if the buckets aren't clean, and sometimes they’ll even ask if I can wait for a few minutes while they put the dirty buckets through the industrial washing machine (which takes about five minutes). Whatever was originally in the buckets was likely to be sticky, so having pre-cleaned buckets is a great blessing. On the other hand, the occasional unclean bucket is no big deal; a quick scrub with soap and water will usually suffice.

As a note, restaurants also go through many buckets and often sell or give them away – but they’re likely to not be cleaned. Just a head’s up.

• Buckets are pest-proof. They guard the contents against moisture, rodents, and insects. This doesn’t excuse you from using Mylar bags, dry ice, oxygen absorbers, or whatever other technique you prefer to keep existing insects from decimating your stored food; but it means outside insect or moisture problems are far less likely.

• The volumes are decent. Buckets range from two to five gallons; the average size is 3.5 gallons. A 3.5 gallon bucket holds about 25 pounds of heavier items like rice, beans, flour, powdered milk, sugar, or cornmeal. (Oatmeal is lighter by volume and will hold less by weight.) Five-gallon buckets usually hold about 40 pounds of food. I use two-gallon buckets for storing bulk spices and kitchen aids – pepper, cinnamon, cornstarch, etc.


• They store easily. Full buckets are designed to stack on top each other. Empty buckets are designed to nest. Either way, the benefits are obvious.


• They’re easy to label and inventory. For labeling, I put masking tape on the top and side with the contents listed in large block letters (always rotate stacked buckets so the tape is facing outward for easy identification).


• They store other stuff. Because they’re so readily available, they can be used for any items you want to keep compartmentalized. I have buckets for sewing notions, buckets for yarn, buckets for school supplies, buckets for miscellaneous household items (tape, mousetraps, clothespins), buckets for over-the-counter medicines, buckets for toiletries, buckets for matches, buckets for soap... the list is endless.


If the bucket contains dry goods, I put the category (such as “Toiletries”) on the masking tape. Then I tape an index card on the top of the buckets with a detailed list of what’s inside. This way I can add or subtract items as I put new things inside or take things out. I prefer not to use indelible markers to write on the buckets because sometimes the contents change. Tape allows me to label as needed.


• Buckets have endless uses. They’re not just for storing food or supplies. On a farm, buckets are most useful if they have handles, which bakery buckets do. We use the larger bakery buckets tucked inside an old tire (so it can’t be pushed over) for water inside livestock pens. Smaller buckets can be used as grain buckets. Even cracked buckets have their uses – while they won’t hold water, they’re fine for grain, salts, or other dry uses. My husband uses buckets in the shop to categorize small tools or hardware such as nails, screws, and other fasteners. We seldom discard a bucket unless it’s broken (in which case the sharp plastic edges can be dangerous).


• Charity. My friend Enola Gay has talked about bucketing up pre-packaged charity handouts in the event of hard times. Such charity buckets will hold a respectable amount of food, the contents stay clean and dry; and the bucket can even be used as a stool for sitting.

Buckets usually come in either round or square.


Use whichever size and style you prefer. My personal preference is to use round buckets for food, square buckets for other stuff.


Get a bunch of bucket lid lifters. They’re inexpensive – usually under $5 – and you can keep one wherever you have buckets stored. We have five or six lid lifters scattered around in convenient locations.


During the radio interview, one of the hosts mentioned how he found 300 buckets for fifty cents each off Craig's List (they came from a restaurant). What a windfall! He could either fill those 300 buckets himself and have an extraordinarily decent stockpile of food and supplies, or he could keep half for himself and sell the other half.

However you look at it, bakery buckets are a phenomenal deal. I urge you to start collecting them today.