If you've landed on this blog by mistake, please follow this link:


www.Minnesota.PreppersNetwork.com

Please update your bookmarks and the links on your sites.



Join our forum at:


Friday, February 20, 2009

Stage One, Scene Two

Let's continue the discussion of city-country a few more sentences, then travel to the store for some preps...

When it comes to "who is better equipped to do what, where", I am reminded of Paul's explanation of the body. "Can the eye say to the ear that it is more important to the body?" In my thinking, each part is important to the survival of the other. No matter what time period we look at, cities and rural areas have co-existed, each relying upon the other for various needs. So as to which is a 'better' place to be in a SHTF scenario is a debate that will only be settled by experience. Regardless our locale or situation, we will all be coming to the party and will have to adjust to the kinds of entertainment the host provides.

Life in the city will surely be an experience in survival. Shopping centers will be more plentiful, if they can get products to sell, and providing one has the funds to purchase. And what kind(s) of store fronts will be open is certainly going to be up for debate. Will people be buying flat screen TVs or new cars or salad foods in January? So much depends on the availability of-- oil. If the product can't get from A to B, where one lives is going to become a moot point. If the cost of transporting products is exorbitant, who is going to be able to afford it?

Life in the rural/country will surely be an experience in survival. Finding parts to repair or equip machinery or fuels to operate them is going to be expensive, if even available. Who will make them, transport, stock them those products we can't grow or jury-rig? If the farmer can't sell his product, growing more than needed will be a waste of time, effort and seed. I don't see farmers or ranchers being that senseless.

Regardless where one lives, there are going to be problems with looters/freeloaders/et-al (these are the 'sheeple' who either did not prepare or prepared too late or too little). The dangers of living in small groups is certainly valid. How many neighbors can one trust to give aid when it's needed? How many will decide they 'need' what another has and do their best to take it? We live in a society of 'keeping up with the Joneses' and this leads to a mentality of 'share and share alike' (sound familiar? it should: it's the Dark Lords current policy). Those who have will always be prey to those who don't. Regardless where we live, it's going to be a challenge to keep what we have, or don't have. Abel had the blessing and Cain killed him because of it. Are we to think complete strangers will be more kind?


Scene Two

Eo-ipso, trade routes will be something that will be not only necessary, but mandatory for people living in either situation. Farmers will need to get products to a market, city folks will need to get the products. Both sides will need to get their noodles together and decide on how this is accomplished. Products produced in communities will need end-users, and rural folks will need a way to find them. The solution? Compromise and free enterprise. Living where I do and having the equipment I do, part of my 'plan' is to provide fuel for heat and cooking, building and repairs. How do I get paid for the product?
If our esteemed Uncle deflates the value of currency in his foolishness of printing more useless paper, why would anyone in their right mind want more of it? (Unless they didn't stock toilet paper or fire starters.) Rather than 'sell for cash', I barter for needs. Now I need a trade route. (DUH!)
Options for trade routes are limited only by our imagination: we can use the hiway system, rivers and lakes (in MN). Air and rail will probably be exorbitantly cost-prohibitive as well as, in my mind, useless for the 'common man'- which we will most all be. All our trading is going to be localised. So in trade routes, we have to travel back nearly a century for our examples.
(I'm 'thinking on the fly' here, so bear with me.)
Perishable garden produce will be certainly shipped shortest distance to market at the opportune time. I see opportunity for enterprising people creating 'canaries' in their homes and marketing these locally. Or groups- one 'cans' tomatoes, another corn or carrots, whatever. The barter system grows. This, of course, implies those people have several thousand reusable jars and lids on hand.
Some foods, such as cabbages, some fruits and spuds, carrots, onions, beets and 'begas, etc, will be able to survive longer periods with proper root cellars and people will be able to store them until needed- if they have the cellar. Those who have large areas to create the cellars will be able to barter throughout the year for such produce. My imagination tells me any people living north of California and Florida can pretty much eliminate oranges and grapefruit from our diet, as well as any other citric fruit. Unless someone can come up with a barter-trade route for them. And someone will, don't doubt it.
Ranchers will be capable of getting their product to market 'on the hoof'' as was done a century ago. Someone is going to open a neighborhood slaughterhouse. Of course, the Bambi/PETA crowd is going to raise a stink more irksome than the slaughterhouse, and keep it up til their bellies are screaming. (Just had a thought: is a society in such scenario going to tolerate those kind of people much longer, if at all?)
All this is considering that all neighborhoods will be relatively safe environs. In efforts to insure this, I see a growing need for 'neighborhood watch' groups. (Especially if the law enforcement agencies continue to cut back personnel and equipment.) Here is another opportunity for an enterprising group- so long as they are kept in check and don't become a criminal, graft, element. Here again, the neighborhood will have to be part of the solution, guarding each others interests.
Another aspect of the barter system is going to be money: either the lack there-of or those who desire to 'barter' in gold.
My personal opinion- and please, I am not an economist, have no aspirations to be, nor am I familiar with bullion other than experience in attempting to use it a couple of times- is that those who try dealing with 'common' people through use of gold or silver are going to be sorely disappointed. Having done some prospecting in the past, I know a little about gold, but not much. I know what it looks like in the wild, have held a couple gold coins and still am not sure I could tell the difference. For one, neither gold nor silver will be part of my barter system. I suspect the same will be true for the vast majority. Who is going to be set up with the tools to decide if 'this' is silver or 'this' is gold? (Especially those of us with store-bought teeth?) My opinion is that those who want to deal in gold or silver had better have some marketing tools and products to trade. (Does "a loaf of bread will buy a bag of gold" sound familiar?)
F-o-o-d is going to be the rule of barter in nearly all circumstances.
And how this food gets to market is going to be the big opportunity for an enterprising few who have already considered the problem and worked on solutions. Horse drawn wagons? Bicycle? Trade fairs/farmers markets?
Publius brings out some interesting questions.
Just some food for thought.
God bless, prep on!
Shy
(Apologies for the rambling.)



9 comments:

  1. Pay attention everyone! Here is one very wise man! Thanks Shy, you really hit the nail on the head with this post!

    Tom

    ReplyDelete
  2. I like what you are saying and couldn't agree more. Nice analysis.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Sounds good. I think the bambi/PETA people will starve themselves out of the equasion in a pretty short period of time.
    I'd start a trade route with ya, but I'll be on the West Coast.
    Good to know food might be more practical than gold. I can find/make food easier than I can get gold. Good post.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Now that is getting it right. Everyone should read this because Shy has nailed it. People have always found a way and I see no reason to think they will do any differently now. Great post my friend, keep it up.

    ReplyDelete
  5. This is exactly what I have thought every time I read "prepper" writings telling us to buy silver and gold. My family and I cannot EAT precious metals. Nor can we burn them to keep us warm on cold MN nights. I figure it is better to store up things that we can use, or that will be direct barter items. Blankets, rope, tools, food....all these things would actually be immediately useful in a barter system...

    ReplyDelete
  6. Great post and how true it is that some will always find a way. I think sometimes we must get close to or hit bottom for the best to come out, but when that happens there will always come a way for the strong willed to survive. Very interesting read
    God Bless and keep up the good work your doing getting the word out
    Santa

    ReplyDelete
  7. "(Just had a thought: is a society in such scenario going to tolerate those kind of people much longer, if at all?)"

    If the balloon goes up abruptly (or maybe even not-so-abruptly), I predict that the main effect will be to literally drive about 30% of the (surviving) population insane within 24 hours. Worldviews will be obliterated, including and especially for those who have focused their worldview on very narrow, unimportant issues. PETA will cease to exist in a blink of an eye, and will no longer be a concern.

    Regarding gold/silver, most of the people I've heard advocating collecting those seem to do so only AFTER you've secured your beans, bullets and band-aids. I think most people (Rawles comes to mind) are simply stating that a $100 bill is never going to be worth squat again once TSHTF. Precious metals hold their value better, and while not immdediately or directly useful, if you have everything else you need and want a way to continue to prepare, you could do worse than gold.

    For my part, since I'm in MN, I tend to think that firewood and lumber will probably always maintain their value...though of course it's much harder to store and transport than precious metals. But it will always be valuable, as everybody will always need to warm themselves and build things with wood.

    I'd also guess that at least in the earlygoing, fuel of pretty much any kind will be in high demand. Diesel, gasoline, propane or whatever. Hard to store, but will be solid gold for the first few years post-TEOTWAWKI.

    $.02

    ReplyDelete
  8. Dan- you obviously are a deeper thinker than I, and I agree whole-heartedly about the issue oriented people going belly up quickly when real issues step to the foreground. Hadn't thought about the psychology of others in my preps, just my own and obviously, I am not thinking I'll be switch-hitting after a collapse of any kind.
    Yes, I can see your point about precious metals yet my feeling is it'll be quite a few years down the road before people really trust their judgment at recognizing them. Rawles, and others, are certainly right: get the basics out of the way, first. I lean more toward bullets and bandaids, then beans, in light of recent political developments :-D .
    (I wish I had a bank full of $100 bills, dang ammo's going up and so is food!) Being a prepper on the 'poor side', I tend to dismiss having any kind of cash flow, and metals beyond nickels and dimes are wayyyy outside my means.
    So, like you, I'll stick to tangibles for barter: wood products, some 'precious metals' in the form of lead (reloading) and a few tradesman skills I've accumalted over the years.
    Thank you, also, for your letter: I have a post planned for it, although a few down the road. Got to get the basics covered first. Eats before treats, my Friend.
    Amen, Barefoot. Beans will be much more valuable the first few years, IMO.
    NiteWalker- thank you. We shall overcome, have no fear.
    Umm, Maitreya- do you think we could sail from Cali to the Gulf, up the PapaWater and... might be a trade route :-D (I've been thinking sails a lot lately!)
    Rock- thank you, always good to have encouragement.
    Tom, thank you, Sir. I owe it all to Publius for it was he who got me thinking about it a bit more than I had.
    God bless, All. Thank you.
    Shy

    ReplyDelete
  9. Shy:
    Wow- you are a deeper thinker than you give yourself credit for.
    I'll add my 2 cents later. I'm tapping this out on an iPhone at the neighbor's house. I am babysitting because they are at the impound lot. Their car got towed by the generous city. They've been in line outside there about 5 hours. Another friend was also towed. Two of my old favorite bars just went out of business- or rather, the state shut them down for back taxes. How does the state think that will get them their money?

    My company scared everyone on Friday, implementing a 3 phase plan to survive. Much higher deductible health plan. No 401k matching, etc.

    Things do not look good here. My family expenses are too high to do enough prepping, despite my side biz repairing electronics. I think the iPhone is going.

    ReplyDelete

Keep it clean and pertaining to topic, please. Thank you.

Minnesota Preppers Network Est. Jan 17, 2009 All contributed articles owned and protected by their respective authors and protected by their copyright. Minnesota Preppers Network is a trademark protected by American Preppers Network Inc. All rights reserved. No content or articles may be reproduced without explicit written permission.