Discussions

Redneck, I’m sorry to hear your garden hasn’t done well. Here in East Texas we’re Zone 8b, so our climate is similar to yours. This summer has been pretty brutal. However, as hot and dry as it is, it is nothing compared to the summer of 1980. The temperature wasn’t just above 100, it was relentlessly above 110 for about 6 weeks. Everything fried. There are a lot of poultry farms around here and they lost a huge number of chickens that summer from the heat. I haven’t heard of any this year. Last year we didn’t even have any days above 100. It was great! My garden this year has done OK. The onions, green beans, and potatoes came in before the heat wave so they did great. The tomatoes are kind of struggling, but they are still producing. I put up a 40% shade cloth this week. I think it’s helping. I planted the Celebrity variety, which is designated as a Texas Superstar by the extension service. I think one of the criteria is the ability to produce in the heat. I planted purple hull peas after the potatoes and they look great. There was even a bee buzzing around them pollinating yesterday. I’ve also planted peanuts as an experiment. I don’t know if I’ll get any, but they look good so far. My blackberries are Ponca and Prime Ark Freedom. The Poncas were planted in January 2021, right before Snowmageddon. I’m just glad they survived. They produced some this spring. The PAFs were planted this year and I’m hoping to get some berries from them later, but I’m not seeing any blooms yet. What are you putting in for fall?

This is a very interesting and timely topic. I live on a pretty busy highway and a few nights ago during a storm 2 college girls had a flat in front of my house. They tried calling the roadside assistance number on one of their driver’s license and were told to call 911. They did and a sheriff’s deputy stopped, but didn’t help. Eventually, he left and they called their insurance company and were told someone would be there in about 30 minutes. Finally, they decided to walk up to my house, which was definitely taking a risk since they had no idea what kind of people we would turn out to be. I seriously doubted my ability to break the lug nuts loose (and it was raining really hard), but we were able to find someone to help, 2 high school kids, a boy and a girl who lived close by. Also, by now the insurance company had called back and cancelled. Even the boy had a hard time with the lug nuts, but eventually he was able to get them off and change the flat and then they were on their way. They were about 6 hrs from home and had this flat happened a little sooner they would have been in a stretch of highway that had NO houses and very little phone signal. They literally didn’t have anything; no umbrella, no rain poncho, no flashlight except their phones, and had no idea of how to get the spare off. As I thought about all this, I came back to the issue with the lug nuts. I was talking to a friend about it and he mentioned a power tool that runs on the 12V in a vehicle. It’s called a torque wrench and I found it on Amazon. I’ve ordered one to keep in my vehicle in case I’m ever in the position where I have to change a tire myself. Has anyone on here ever used one of these?

In 1983 in Texas we had a similar event; snow on the ground and the temperature didn’t get above freezing for 2 weeks. I don’t remember electricity being an issue, but that was 38 yrs ago and I’ve slept since then. 😉 However, there is one very big difference. During those last 38 years the population of Texas has literally doubled and clearly the infrastructure has not kept up. As bad as the lost of power has been, the failure of municipal water systems is just as bad or worse. I’ve only recently joined the prepper community, but I grew up on a farm and my parents grew up during the Great Depression so I like to think prepping is in my DNA. 🙂 It seems to me that this current crisis is exactly what we say we are preparing for. The first two steps in TP’s list for beginners are 1) Build a solid personal finance and health foundation and 2) Get your home ready for two weeks of self-reliance. That was exactly what we needed for this event. Just those 2 steps would have saved a lot of people a lot of grief this week. All 254 counties in Texas were under a winter storm warning. There was literally no where to go to get away from it. Yes, there are warming stations, but the roads are impassable. I saw a road crew pass by my house last night with a grader. We don’t have snowplows in Tx. But even if the road is drivable, my driveway is not. It’s way too long to shovel by hand and purchasing a snow blower that I might use twice in my whole life is not practical. Making sure we could survive being stuck at home for a week is. By Monday the temperature will be in the 50’s F with the lows above freezing and hopefully, all this mess will be gone. I hope our elected officials use this crisis to determine what changes need to be made to the infrastructure and implement those changes. However, if they all (on both sides) just continue to argue and blame each other then nothing will get done and the next event will be worse.


Load more...

Redneck, I’m sorry to hear your garden hasn’t done well. Here in East Texas we’re Zone 8b, so our climate is similar to yours. This summer has been pretty brutal. However, as hot and dry as it is, it is nothing compared to the summer of 1980. The temperature wasn’t just above 100, it was relentlessly above 110 for about 6 weeks. Everything fried. There are a lot of poultry farms around here and they lost a huge number of chickens that summer from the heat. I haven’t heard of any this year. Last year we didn’t even have any days above 100. It was great! My garden this year has done OK. The onions, green beans, and potatoes came in before the heat wave so they did great. The tomatoes are kind of struggling, but they are still producing. I put up a 40% shade cloth this week. I think it’s helping. I planted the Celebrity variety, which is designated as a Texas Superstar by the extension service. I think one of the criteria is the ability to produce in the heat. I planted purple hull peas after the potatoes and they look great. There was even a bee buzzing around them pollinating yesterday. I’ve also planted peanuts as an experiment. I don’t know if I’ll get any, but they look good so far. My blackberries are Ponca and Prime Ark Freedom. The Poncas were planted in January 2021, right before Snowmageddon. I’m just glad they survived. They produced some this spring. The PAFs were planted this year and I’m hoping to get some berries from them later, but I’m not seeing any blooms yet. What are you putting in for fall?

This is a very interesting and timely topic. I live on a pretty busy highway and a few nights ago during a storm 2 college girls had a flat in front of my house. They tried calling the roadside assistance number on one of their driver’s license and were told to call 911. They did and a sheriff’s deputy stopped, but didn’t help. Eventually, he left and they called their insurance company and were told someone would be there in about 30 minutes. Finally, they decided to walk up to my house, which was definitely taking a risk since they had no idea what kind of people we would turn out to be. I seriously doubted my ability to break the lug nuts loose (and it was raining really hard), but we were able to find someone to help, 2 high school kids, a boy and a girl who lived close by. Also, by now the insurance company had called back and cancelled. Even the boy had a hard time with the lug nuts, but eventually he was able to get them off and change the flat and then they were on their way. They were about 6 hrs from home and had this flat happened a little sooner they would have been in a stretch of highway that had NO houses and very little phone signal. They literally didn’t have anything; no umbrella, no rain poncho, no flashlight except their phones, and had no idea of how to get the spare off. As I thought about all this, I came back to the issue with the lug nuts. I was talking to a friend about it and he mentioned a power tool that runs on the 12V in a vehicle. It’s called a torque wrench and I found it on Amazon. I’ve ordered one to keep in my vehicle in case I’m ever in the position where I have to change a tire myself. Has anyone on here ever used one of these?

In 1983 in Texas we had a similar event; snow on the ground and the temperature didn’t get above freezing for 2 weeks. I don’t remember electricity being an issue, but that was 38 yrs ago and I’ve slept since then. 😉 However, there is one very big difference. During those last 38 years the population of Texas has literally doubled and clearly the infrastructure has not kept up. As bad as the lost of power has been, the failure of municipal water systems is just as bad or worse. I’ve only recently joined the prepper community, but I grew up on a farm and my parents grew up during the Great Depression so I like to think prepping is in my DNA. 🙂 It seems to me that this current crisis is exactly what we say we are preparing for. The first two steps in TP’s list for beginners are 1) Build a solid personal finance and health foundation and 2) Get your home ready for two weeks of self-reliance. That was exactly what we needed for this event. Just those 2 steps would have saved a lot of people a lot of grief this week. All 254 counties in Texas were under a winter storm warning. There was literally no where to go to get away from it. Yes, there are warming stations, but the roads are impassable. I saw a road crew pass by my house last night with a grader. We don’t have snowplows in Tx. But even if the road is drivable, my driveway is not. It’s way too long to shovel by hand and purchasing a snow blower that I might use twice in my whole life is not practical. Making sure we could survive being stuck at home for a week is. By Monday the temperature will be in the 50’s F with the lows above freezing and hopefully, all this mess will be gone. I hope our elected officials use this crisis to determine what changes need to be made to the infrastructure and implement those changes. However, if they all (on both sides) just continue to argue and blame each other then nothing will get done and the next event will be worse.


Load more...