This Feral Life Podcast Por This Feral Life arte de portada

This Feral Life

This Feral Life

De: This Feral Life
Escúchala gratis

Follow along with us in our adventures in homesteading as we share our tips, tricks, follies, and adventures. Become part of our virtual family and let’s grow together. We have many years of farming, self-reliance, DIY, canning and food preservation under our hats and we want to share it with you.Copyright 2023 All rights reserved. Economía Gestión y Liderazgo Liderazgo
Episodios
  • Food Storage and Radiation
    Sep 14 2023
    Today on this episode we cover: Food storage and radiation preparedness as well as talk about quite a few other side quests. I will forgo most of the intro and summary to instead post the write-up I had about the crazy scary dream I had that I discussed a bit in the podcast. I had a bit of a scary dream A Russian-sponsored group loaded a small 7kt improvised HEU nuclear device with a shit load of Cobalt 60 in it into a small panel van and parked it parallel to the CIA/Drone control building in San Antonio. Using a directional blast pattern they sprayed the whole area in a fan pattern out and away from southeast to northwest. The initial blast killed 1,930 people with the fallout reaching Kerrville at 1 rad per hour 10 rads per hour was up past Pipe Creek And 100+ Rads per hour out to Galm Road Tens of thousands of people would be affected shortly. We were out and about doing some shopping when the explosion went off, we were far enough that the trees and terrain blocked the brightest of the flash. We turned away and covered our faces anyhow. For some reason, I was wearing a dosimeter and it said we were in an area that had 14 millisieverts. We immediately left and worked our way south, to and then around back to the farm. All while freaking out a bit, naturally. I had to wake up and Google Cobalt 60 and millisieverts. Up until the dream I had no clue what either was, I even googled them in my dream, and dream google didn’t come up with any clear answer just bullshit. “a radioactive metal’ and ‘a measurement of radiation’ without giving me any useful information. Cobalt 60 it turns out is a highly radioactive material that’s relatively common and has been used to make what are called ‘salted’ radiation bombs, bombs specifically designed to make a ridiculous amount of radiation and deny the use of an area for an extended period of time while inflicting huge levels of casualties and overwhelm a medical system. It lasts a long time, and is very persistent. To convert a millisievert to a rad, you basically move a decimal place. Where we were shopping we got 1.4 rads per hour. A 400 rads dose kills 30-40% of the adult people exposed to it within 30 days. 10 rads can make you sick 100 rads will make you quite ill but you will recover fine… just get cancer in 20 or so years. Radiation is accumulative, if you are in an area that has 100 rads/hour showing up on a Geiger counter, you can stay there for 4 hours before you have a 30-40% chance of death. But within that first hour, you have basically guaranteed you will get cancer in some decades. If you are in an area with the background being one rad, you can stay there 400 hours before having a 30-40% chance of death. The average background radiation you are exposed to each year is 2.4 millisieverts or .24 rads. Potassium iodide is not a cure-all, but what it does do is it has a very strong affinity for the thyroid. It fills up the thyroid so that your thyroid cannot absorb any radiation. The majority of sub-lethal doses of radiation strongly affect the thyroid causing a great deal of issues. By blocking the radiation's ability to enter the thyroid you solve the biggest problem with the most vulnerable system in the body. Immediately shut down all air handling, air conditioning, and air in a home or vehicle as it will just bring in radioactive dust. Air and water does not become radioactive. Impurities, such as dust in the air and minerals in the water can though. Anything in a truck bed that is not in an air-tight container is to be considered exposed and must be processed prior to use. A mattress cannot be made safe after exposure to radioactive fallout. Once you have determined the area to be safe. Before turning back on air conditioning or air handling you must clean the vents with a damp cloth to get all the dust and consider the cloth as contaminated. Then you need to change the filters and consider them to be contaminated. Do not burn contaminated materials as you are just putting fallout back into the air to settle back on you and your equipment. Bury all contaminated materials in a safe place away from water sources. When a person has been exposed it is necessary to decontaminate them. Step one would be a loading dose of potassium iodide. After that they need to strip and wash themselves in a safe location with good drainage using ample water. They should triple-wash their hair with soap to remove any and all dust/oils that could hold onto dust. The contaminated person needs to start from the top of their head and work their way down. Quickly rinse your body off first to remove any surface contamination then wash your hair three times then wash your face, behind your ears, neck, and so forth down your body to your toes. Be very thorough and do not miss any places, it's your life in the balance. Radiation is accumulative. The water used to wash contaminated people should not be used to water animals or plants or be dumped ...
    Más Menos
    1 h y 35 m
  • TFL Basic Preparedness
    Aug 31 2023

    On this episode:

    We talk about basic preparedness, things to think about, and the basics and reasons behind a grab-and-go bag. a simple 72-hour kit and what you might want to keep in it and in your vehicle.

    We also cover:

    The dust bowl

    Precious metals suck

    Kerosene heaters

    staying warm

    lots of craziness in the news

    The Wafflehouse Index

    GTFO if you have a hurricane coming

    how to build a poor mans Berkey filter that works just as good for cheap

    Wood burning stoves

    keep your refrigerator closed

    don't eat snow

    The tree of the day is the Franklin cider apple, we also talk about growing basically any apple you want anywhere you want and just turn it all into alcohol.

    The plant of the day is the Sequoia Strawberry, a great berry with crazy runners that can kind of take over everything if you aren't careful.

    ThisFeralLife.Etsy.com

    ThisFeralLifePodcast@gmail.com

    Venmo @ThisFeralLife

    CashApp $ThisFeralLife

    Reach out to us if you would like to be a guest on the show and tell us your reason and story about what got you into homesteading and preparedness.

    Más Menos
    1 h y 29 m
  • How to monetize the equipment on your farm/extra income
    Aug 24 2023

    In this episode, we talk about how to turn all that neat farm equipment you own into cold hard cash and make it pay for itself. We give you a ton of ideas on how to make money, from planting trees to grading roads, dirt work, and land clearing and we tell you how to charge for it. We talk a bit about charging per job vs charging by the hour and in what situations charging by the hour will work out in your favor. We cover a lot of ground starting with the most expensive equipment and going all the way down to the shovel.

    We cover: Tractors and implements

    Trailers and hauling

    digging fence holes and planting trees

    Freeze drying for profit

    using your dehydrator

    canning for profit and trade, teaching lessons

    Why John Deere are kinda douches when it comes to Right To Repair and implements... but they are still good tractors and combines just expensive.

    Kioti tractors, TYM/Branson tractors, Mahindra get a shout out.

    sewing, and other small house hold things to make a profit at and how we have done it in the past and will in the future.

    The Tree of the day: Catalina Avocado

    Plant of the day: Texas Super Sweet Onion

    Etsy: ThisFeralLife.Etsy.com

    Venmo @ThisFeralLife

    E-mail: ThisFeralLifePodcast@gmail.com

    Find us on social media! Reach out and connect!

    Más Menos
    1 h y 36 m
Todavía no hay opiniones