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Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Urban Survival Planning - Defending Jim's Last Article (Chapter 24)

From UrbanMan: Wow! Never thought Jim's posts would generate so much skunk! Took me back to a much earlier age where by ex-wife was having a piece of me!

Let me tell you about Jim (not his real name of course). Jim works government contracts in the Information/Technology/Computer hardware field. He was working in my office one day where he heard us talking about guns and he asked "if we carry guns all the time, why do we need a bunch of personal guns at home?" Therefore Jim was started to be exposed to Survivalist thinking, and preparing for any type of collapse,....and this was about the same time I opened this site. In fact Jim was one of the people who urged me to do this. Up until then if you asked Jim what he thought about Preppers, he would be thinking right wing, cammie clad, six fingered inbred extremists.

I thought it would be a good idea to have a person newly exposed to the survival preparation concept write a periodic article for this site. Jim agreed. I edit his writing very little.

In the past, what? maybe 16 months?......Jim has bought about six to eight months of prepared, long term food as well as added a routine to stock a months worth of pantry items. He has also bought silver and a little gold. Being predisposed not to like firearms, Jim now has several,....not the guns I would suggest for survival, but what he was mentally willing to have.

Not hurting for money at all, he has also acquired a lot of survival gear: tents, sleeping bags, all mmanner of odds and ends,.....good rugged clothing and boots,....

Jim's son is in college about 50 miles away. Jim has raised his son by himself since his wife was killed in auto accident when the boy was seven years old. He has introduced his son to the survivalist mentality where his son thinks it is "cool". I have helped Jim developed some "no comms" plans and linkup points. He not only understands the concept of this but has taken to my instruction in "load signals", and "far - near recognition and danger signals". Since he finished his contract at our facility, I don't see him very much, but communicate mostly by e-mail. It's kinda hard to teach him field or trade craft from an e-mail or even over the phone, but he was an apt student early on.

Jim has developed a plan to bug in but also a contingency to bug out to a safe location in a family cabin next to a government forest. He has also emplaced several small caches there. I have reviewed his primary, alternate, contingency and emergency routes from our City to his son's college and from both locations to the cabin and think he got a A+ in this endeavor.

He has made it a point to learn how to read a map and use a compass. And has conducted practicals at this art which is being replaced by GPS in this day and age.

Anonymous said in response to Jim's Chapter 24: ....stopping by the store to buy another gun and ammo? seriously? i almost laughed out loud when i read that one,......I re-read Jim's article and he said "I would have liked to stop in at the sporting goods store of a gun shop and buy another gun..." I think Jim's has the common sense to avoid situations he is unprepared for. Entering into a mob scene at a retail location would be one of them.

Maybe Jim and the Anonymous commenter both assumed alot on the scenario I gave Jim. My intent was to get Jim to think about items and material he is going to need, so he doesn't have to rely on trying to battle massive hordes for that all important lantern mantel, or box of matches or second propane tank.

Anyway, exercises develop lessons learned,...the idea is to learn from these lessons. I think Jim did. He just bought an SKS a couple days ago, for $180 including three detachable 30 round magazines, however the SKS was in the original stock with the semi fixed box magazine. Jim e-mailed me to tell me about his purchase and to find out how to convert the gun to using the detachable magazines.

3 comments:

  1. ask jim if he has purchased a cleaning set and gun cleaner solvents and oils for his new purchases. i've got a big cleaning set put away as well as a bore snake for every caliber i own (those are great for quick cleanings and keeping the bore in cleaned/oiled/ in good shape during times of exposure to the elements)

    these will be very important in a potential situation where the firearm is not always safely in the case or gun safe but maybe carried about the property in all types of weather or carried in vehicles etc...

    you won't be running out to get these supplies last minute either - and yes you can use other things oils etc, but better to just be ready ahead of time. they don't go bad and it is also a hedge on inflation in mostly petroleum based products like this.

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  2. I only saw three tiny flaws in Jim's plan. First was the part about "I'm going to phone my son" when everyone in the world will be on the phone and the lines will be jammed. He will not be able to reach his son, not to make plans, not to give instructions, not even to say good-bye. The second flaw was the part about "I'm gonna drive to fetch my son" when everyone in the world will be driving somewhere or other and the roads will first be jammed, then blocked entirely, leaving those people stranded. They will be among the first to die. Third was the little flaw with "Then I'm gonna stop at the store to get what I need" and any disaster plan what begins with "Wait for the disaster, then go to the store" is doomed to failure. But kudos to him for at least having a stockpile and a fundamental knowledge that the world is a dangerous and unpredictable place.

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  3. While I have made different choices in my firearms since beginning my preparation efforts only about 9 months ago, I have been very encouraged to read Jim's Chronicles. It shows that someone with very little or no background can learn and acquire new skills and knowledge. I myself was in near complete blissful ignorance a year ago. Like many others though, events around us have changed that, and I'm grateful the for the knowledge shared through sites like this and stories like Jim's.

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