The Prepper Broadcasting Network - Matter of Facts: Don't Forget
Episode Date: March 3, 2025http://www.mofpodcast.com/www.pbnfamily.comhttps://www.facebook.com/matteroffactspodcast/https://www.facebook.com/groups/mofpodcastgroup/https://rumble.com/user/Mofpodcastwww.youtube.com/user/philrabh...ttps://www.instagram.com/mofpodcasthttps://twitter.com/themofpodcasthttps://www.instagram.com/cypress_survivalist/https://www.facebook.com/CypressSurvivalistSupport the showMerch at: https://southerngalscrafts.myshopify.com/Shop at Amazon: http://amzn.to/2ora9riPatreon: https://www.patreon.com/mofpodcastPurchase American Insurgent by Phil Rabalais: https://amzn.to/2FvSLMLShop at MantisX: http://www.mantisx.com/ref?id=173*The views and opinions of guests do not reflect the opinions of Phil Rabalais, Andrew Bobo, Nic Emricson, or the Matter of Facts Podcast*With decades of combined experience in the preparedness community, Phil and Nic have had plenty of time to reflect on all the things they forgot when they first started out. We hope you'll join the boys in some honest reflection, and chime in with what you forgot for the benefit of everyone else. Matter of Facts is now live-streaming our podcast on our YouTube channel, Facebook page, and Rumble. See the links above, join in the live chat, and see the faces behind the voices. Intro and Outro Music by Phil Rabalais All rights reserved, no commercial or non-commercial use without permission of creator prepper, prep, preparedness, prepared, emergency, survival, survive, self defense, 2nd amendment, 2a, gun rights, constitution, individual rights, train like you fight, firearms training, medical training, matter of facts podcast, mof podcast, reloading, handloading, ammo, ammunition, bullets, magazines, ar-15, ak-47, cz 75, cz, cz scorpion, bugout, bugout bag, get home bag, military, tacticalÂ
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Welcome back to the Matterfags Podcast on the Prepper Broadcasting Network. We talk
prepping guns politics every week on iTunes, Stitcher, and Spotify. Go check out our content
at MWFpodcast.com on Facebook or Instagram. You can support us via Patreon or by checking
out our affiliate partners. I'm your host Phil Raveley. Andrew and Nick are on the other
side of the mic and here's your show.
Yep, welcome back to the chit show. Nick is with me. Andrew
is not last I talked to Andrew was the other night. He's told
me he joined a hippie commune gave away all of his guns. And I
think they said they were going to promote him to the head
Kool-Aid mixer, whatever that is must drink a lot of sugary drinks in that little hippie commune. But yeah, he seems like he's doing what he's doing with his night vision
Only this look the other hosts got discount night vision
It wasn't that much of a discount
that much of a discount. It never is. It never is.
No, if that that that deal was a tell me what you tell me
what you think is fair and I won't complain about it.
And that'll be that.
Mm hmm. Oh, yeah.
For something like that, especially with the hours he had on him.
That was either way it was going to work out good.
Oh, yeah. And I mean,
it let him upgrade to duals, which made him incredibly happy.
So, you know, yeah, I'm always happy to help a friend.
But let's do the admin work really fast. We have one little mini debate because we start in the
Patreon chat. I'm curious how me and Nick are going to come down on probably the exact same side of
that issue. Maybe, maybe. And then we'll get to the topic which is don't forget because you know
We've all had that experience of forgetting things and then later on down the road
We realized we forgot things and sometimes feeling pretty freakin stupid for having forgotten the thing
So I'm hoping the listeners can appreciate the fact that we're like being very vulnerable and open and saying hey we screwed up
Learn from our mistakes not your own. It's much less painful to do it that way.
And less expensive.
Yeah, less less expensive, less painful, less unfortunate
doesn't always make for the best stories though to hear about.
Oh, yeah, my friend told me don't do that. So I didn't like
doing it anyway, is usually a better story. More entertaining,
especially for the friends. Oh yeah.
Yeah, there's a video somewhere of me getting lit on fire on YouTube.
If you guys dig around deep enough.
So we were having a bonfire at my parents place and I had just learned how to mix thermite.
Holy Jesus, Nick.
Oh yeah, it was great.
It just goes from like a grainy dark shot to a silhouette of me in pure white
So nowhere near that entertaining but before I get to the admin work you'd since now you've made me think about it
Me and a bunch of idiot friends on one particular holiday that I don't recall which one
But it's one that involves lots of fireworks and in this case and involve lots of fireworks. And in this case, it involves lots of fireworks, me and three stupid friends. No adult
supervise, well, we were all over the age of 18, but no responsible adult supervision, no adulty adults, and a
quite a bit of alcohol. And we got the bright idea to buy a fireworks stand out of sparklers.
That'll do it. And then we duct tape them all together so that
they were like, I don't know, two feet in diameter, about the size of a small tree trunk.
And we dug a hole in my friend's front yard. And we made a sparkler bomb. Hold up a second.
Don't be even in the punch line. We weren't smart enough to make a sparkler bomb. So we
put them in the hole, we pulled the one in the middle out lit it on fire and then we we took several steps back and
Once the fireworks started we took several more steps back
But yeah that what happened wasn't a bomb because in order for it to be a bomb you need like to contain the pressure
And we didn't really do that because we left the top open
So what happened was that sparkler burned out a little bit that it lit the ones around it
So what happened was that sparkler burned out a little bit, then it lit the ones around it.
And those lit the ones around that and so on, so on, so on,
until you have like a two foot diameter,
like rack of sparklers all burning at the same time.
It made a flame as tall as the roof of my friend's house.
It sounded like a jet engine firing.
It was fantastic.
It was equal parts amazing and terrifying. Like there was
a brief moment in that where I just looked at that and sheer terror was like, Oh Christ,
what have we done? You know, you can light dirt on fire if you get it hot enough. Yes,
Nick, I actually do. Oh, my wife just commented. It was New Year's Eve. Oh, yeah. It's a perfect
time to do something like that.
Yeah, she saw the video of it, which I thankfully don't think is on YouTube anymore.
But yeah, as soon as it finally burned its way out, some idiot friend of mine was shouting,
put it out with gasoline.
We stopped him.
We stopped him.
But.
That'll make it so much better.
Yeah. If there's a way
to make that entire tragedy any better. Oh, there's always a way
to make it better. But anyway, so patrons if you'd like to be a
patron support our insanity. I'm not promising you any more
fireworks related mayhem but you might hear a couple of stories
here and there. And that's always fun. If you're
interested in merch, those links are in the show description.
You know the drill.
You hear this at the top of every show.
You probably ignore it and you're ignoring me right now
so I don't know why I'm bothering.
Cyprus Survivalist, our first event is March 8th.
It is next freaking weekend.
So if you're in the vicinity of Southeast Louisiana
or you don't mind a drive to listen to a knucklehead
rant a rave about preparedness
and a couple of this family members, you should
consider coming those links are also in the show description.
And if you're coming, like, say hi, don't be don't be a weirdo
just show up and then show up and hide out the back of the
class and then leave like I'd like to say hi get to know you.
Actually, I tell you what, if one of you manages to stand in
the corner in a trench coat and creep
fill out the entire time, I will find something to send you.
Okay.
First of all, you have to understand that a few of our patrons who are probably listening
to this right now are going to be in the class and I don't encourage any of y'all because
I know what y'all look like.
I encourage all of you.
I don't encourage any of y'all to try to creep me out.
I will not be the only one armed at the event. Just behave yourselves control
yourselves for this one moment.
The chat is blowing up Gillian said she was there for the mayhem
I must have blanked that out because there was a lot of
alcohol involved at the time.
It's forgivable. Yeah.
Raggle, fraggle. I sent you an email. Did you get scared with Matt? So yeah, I talked to your friend, Matt. He said that, uh, he'll keep us in mind.
He's not, he's not looking to fill a schedule right now. So I said, cool beans.
And if he reaches out, cool. And and if he doesn't then that's also cool
Mm-hmm. I mean I I know how it is with content creators
Like you get shows like this where we don't usually have a guest so I could usually like drop somebody in whatever week
We want to and move the schedule route, but for for shows that are run like his is where?
It's him and a guest every single time He has probably booked out months in advance
He has to be just just just from this side of the from this side of the camera
He has to have months of people stacked up and then he has
alternates for all those people just in case and I know because that's how I used to do things with
Sean Heron from farms radio network
because like I was an on-call alternate for him
for several months because whenever somebody
would flake at him at the last minute,
sometimes I get 45 minutes notice,
sometimes I get a day, but he would just be like,
hey dude, are you free?
And if I was, I'd jump in.
But you have to do it that way
when you're a content creator running that format of show.
There's no way to fly that by the
cedar pants. Yeah, it will burn you down every single time.
Yeah, even if I think even if you pre record, you know, if
you do it live, you absolutely have to do it that way. But even
if you pre record, if you got a week or two pre recorded, I
mean, if you end up with an open week, now suddenly you're
scrambling for two weeks later.
Yeah, but me having done pre-recorded shows, like, you
know, y'all notice it's not something that we this podcast
has done terribly often. And there are lots of good reasons
for that. But probably the best ones are, you know, if you want
to talk about anything that is like pertinent time sensitive,
even show announcements get really, really tricky when you're trying to do when you like, if you if you
pre record a show, you can't just sit on it in a vacuum for
months, right? Because sooner or later, the content goes stale
sooner or later, something goes something happens to make that
show not make sense if it gets released too late. So like, I
usually don't resort to it unless it's like I know for a fact
We're gonna be out of pocket next weekend. We put a show on we get it scheduled and then it's going out within a week
But I digress also you miss out on all this back and forth and this fun with all the with everybody in the chat
exactly
Okay, so
Since this started getting debated quite passionately in the
signal chat with all the patrons, you bunch of sociopaths, I love y'all so much,
is the president pro-second amendment? Now there are lots of big feelings around
this issue and I don't, I just want to encourage y'all down this road with me for just a minute
I'm not saying he's more or less pro Second Amendment
Then an alternative
I'm just taking that at very face value and saying is he pro Second Amendment?
And I would go so far say I don't think anybody in politics at any at any level today is pro-second amendment.
Okay. I would agree with that. Yeah. No, there might be that. I will give you, like you and I are, I will give you, there's probably five people in politics at the federal level today who are
my definition of pro-second amendment, which means I can build pipe bombs in my backyard and cash carrying machine guns out of my local gun shop
You know like that is that is my metric for a pro Second Amendment, and I understand there's probably people in the chat
It's already lighting up saying well. He's better than so and so in this end together. I
I'll give you that he might yeah, it's it's pretty easy to be better than insert politician here
There's a lot of really shitty politicians.
But is our president currently Trump? Is he pro-second amendment? No, he is pro-Trump.
And if he thinks appointing or doing or signing something that is slightly pro-Second Amendment will help him in some way, he'd
probably do it.
Yeah, but even...
He's going to do the exact opposite if he thinks that's going to benefit him.
Yeah.
Let's be realistic here.
That's the kind of politician he is.
But even if we take this out of that vein of like, is Trump pro-Second Amendment?
His son is. At least seems to be more leaning that way.
You know what?
I don't even, again, I don't even know that,
I don't even know that most of the people
that are in y'all's heads right now
are pro-second amendment,
because to me, pro-second amendment means
we get rid of every single law, every single regulation
at every level that has any impact on the right to
keep and bear arms period and discussion until we get down to people can put cannons on private
warships again.
Like you have to understand what pro-second amendment means in my vernacular.
It means there are no restrictions.
It doesn't mean stop screwing with gun rights.
It means unravel this apparatus that's been built
for 200 years to continue to chip away gun rights.
It means if I wanna put an AR-15 on my back
and walk in through the front of the White House
on a tour, that's okay.
Now, I don't think there's more than I don't think there's more than three political
figures at the federal level in our entire country that would tolerate that. And I'm
being generous by saying three. Like if I said, Hey, second amendment rights, keeping
bear arms, I should be able to open carry an AR 15 through the front door of the White
House on a tour as long as I don't hurt anybody with it. Most people will not tolerate that.
So that's why I, that's why I go to that.
And this isn't me trying to be like contrarian
or argumentative.
This is just me saying, see, he's not on that level.
And I don't think he is.
Now, I will happily admit,
it doesn't take a lot of work
to be better than the alternative
or better than what we've tolerated in the past.
Undeniably.
Any positive movement towards gun rights and away from gun control is
a win in my book. I'm just,
I'm very wary of hero worship and I'm very wary of the community at large,
the gun community, the preparedness community,
the whatever you think you fall into. I'm very wary of people saying, we won the war, we can sit on our butts for
the next four years or two years or whatever you think you can.
Because my point of view is, is I'm like, no, we haven't won a war.
We haven't even won a battle yet.
Like, show me these laws getting struck down.
Show me these judges who are still trying to stand behind these laws,
get chucked on their butts out in the street.
Show me where police are getting fired for enforcing gun laws.
Show me real movement on this issue.
Don't tell me, well, Trump's better than Harris would have been because that's no duh.
That's not good enough though.
That's not enough for me to like not to win and say, okay, we can chill for the next couple
of years.
Yeah, great. He's better than the alcoholic wine. And I mean,
really it's not a high bar. Oh, great.
He's better than then another elderly man suffering dementia bully for us.
We've done a fantastic job. Yeah. I honestly,
we deserve better as a country. We do. Well, we deserve better as a country,
but we're not going to get it until we start acting like it.
But see, for that reason, I don't think we deserve
better as a country.
Because in order for us to just...
You have to understand where I'm coming from, Matt.
I firmly believe
you get the government you tolerate.
True.
And while I am very quick
to admit that I wasn't even a voting age before most of these laws were signed in,
where most of these laws were signed into law. I'll even go so, I mean, even the assault weapons ban of 94, I was 12.
Yeah, I was four. So yeah, it's one of those situations where it's like now since 2001 when I could legally vote like I have been very consistent in my beliefs.
I have been very consistent in my activism, even when that got me lots of weird looks from people when I'd say, yeah, we should be able to cash carry rocket launchers and everybody would freak out. But like, I've been very consistent and I feel
like the gun community's made huge strides in the right direction since then. Comma, however, comma,
we ain't there yet. It ain't time for the victory lap. It's time to double down. It's time to double
down, put foot to butt and start really making some headway in my humble opinion. I agree. Yeah,
I agree. But yeah, Trump not,
Trump is not pro-second amendment guy. Trump is a pro-Trump guy. Yeah. Now that means, unfortunately,
that's what you get with national level politicians. The politicians are pro themselves,
for the most part. That's really what it is. You just have to pick, well, you just have to vote for
the one that you think pro them aligns best with your interests. Beat me to the punch, but yeah, that's the
truth of the matter. You pick the one that you think is going to most advocate for the
things you think are important and is going to screw up the least, which I think is exactly
what I said the other day when somebody posted something about him and Pam Bondi and everything.
I was like, Jesus, can he just please not screw this up for a couple of months?
Yeah. But hey, we're all human. We all screw up.
Yeah. Now, speaking of screwing up, to forget is human now we talked we started talking about this yesterday and
You know at this point Nick like even higher I would say more than just casually in the preparedness mindset
We do have a podcast well, but even but even if we didn't have a podcast about it
Like we've both been doing this for quite quite long enough
To recognize some shortcomings in our original thinking.
Yep. I would agree with that wholeheartedly.
Yeah. So I thought it would make an interesting discussion
to go through like some things that the two of us
just dug out of the brain box.
And we'll probably think of everything
as we go through this list.
Things that we didn't originally think about
and then realize down the road, oh,
that might be important.
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, it's easy. It's easy to overlook, you know, little things. Like the
first one I think you've got up here is batteries. Yeah. Now somebody out there is going to be
like, well, of course you have batteries, but hear me out here. So I've got it. So, you know,
20 years ago, I feel like most people's firearms collections didn't live and die by the battery
operated things that were attached to them. Like most people were so so using iron sights.
Thank you, Raggle Fraggle. You freaking smart ass. Yeah,
I go to change and feel about not having a chainsaw.
I have a chainsaw and I have a spare bar and I have like seven chains and four or five
gallons of freaking like, you know, sealed up fuel and not.
You can learn from your mistakes.
That's exactly what this is about.
I learned from my mistakes and none of y'all let me forget it.
Thank you.
Gosh, no, that's what you keep us for
Anyway batteries so like 20 years ago, you know If your average firearm owner had no firearm that dependent on batteries everything was still iron sights for the largest part
You know like flashlight mounts were largely
DIY stuff. Yeah, and and even even like the idea of like
Yeah, and even like the idea of like having,
the idea where the average firearm owner actually had a flashlight attached to their firearm,
even that wasn't really, I would say, the mainstream yet.
And if 20 years isn't far back enough, go back 30 years.
My point is like, there was a point in the past
where the biggest thing you had to be concerned about
with your firearm collection was mags and ammo and keep it rust off of
them. Yeah, but now in the modern era, that thing behind me
lives and dies off of three battery battery operated items.
The red dot takes a CR two and I understand that's a weird
battery for a red dot but you know, stick with me. That's what
it eats. And the light takes a rechargeable 16 650, but it can also eat off of
a pair of CR 123. And then the lamb eats off of the CR 123. And
if you want to talk about the night vision that runs with that
gun, because it's pretty much built out for night vision, that
thing eats double A's. Nice. And then the strobe eats a CR123
and the hearing protection eats a pair of triple A's.
Like my point is, is that all of a sudden in 2025,
we have a lot of firearms related stuff
that all eats batteries.
And at one point,
this was the only thing firearm related,
my little EDC light.
This was the only thing I had that little EDC light. This was the only thing I had
That I carried all the time that ate batteries, but now we're in a situation where like it's not enough for your farm collection to
have
But actually the next thing on this list after batteries
But like to have magazines and ammo and cleaning supplies and you got to get out now
You need all the freaking batteries to run all of it.
And you better have them stacked up pretty deep
because some of these damn things eat batteries quickly.
Yeah, they do.
And you know, my little point on batteries here is that
I'm starting to make the switch over from
just disposable batteries to rechargeable batteries.
It's like the rechargeable double A's, triple A's,
lithium ions for my different lights, lasers,
and all that sort of thing.
Just because the duty cycle on those,
if I recall correctly,
is like five or 6,000 charge cycles, full charge cycles.
Now that's an awful lot of time.
My EDC flashlight, I charge it every two months,
and I use it every day at work.
You not for a long time, but just it's an inspection light for me at work. Yeah. And I
have two batteries for that lithium ion rechargeable. If I recharge them once a month, 5,000 charges
each sets, what's 10,000 months. I'm probably going to break that flashlight well before those batteries die
and I can charge those flashlights off my
I think it's called a nomad foldable solar panel. Mm-hmm
So, you know Now the only thing I will give you Edison aside to that based on some personal
personal experience and some personal concerns
Mm-hmm. I will never fully convert over to rechargeable batteries for a couple reasons.
Oh, no.
Yeah, there are definite downsides to them.
Well, and it's not most of the ones you're thinking of, probably.
My worry is I have a PBS 14.
It's a $4,000 piece of equipment.
It runs on double A's.
Yep. $4,000 piece of equipment it runs on double A's Yep, have you ever had anything with a leaky double A in it ruin the electronics in the contacts?
Yeah, I refused to allow that to happen to a
$4,000 piece of equipment so less of a problem with rechargeable lithium batteries in the old lead acids
But true what you're saying, but the only thing I'm willing to run in that
Specifically is energizer ultimate lithiums and only that because that is exactly what the DOD specs
Specs for their PBS 14 and they're not their double-a rated night vision
Yeah, yeah, absolutely
If you have a piece of equipment like that and and you want to run factory recommended whatever do it
The the investment I mean like how many?
Double A's are you gonna go through in a year in your night vision? I mean, I forget how many hundreds or thousands of hours they're rated for per double A, but I've got like two dozen of them.
Right, but in your hour rating is in the hundreds to low thousands of hours per battery.
I want to say it's a couple of thousand,
but I don't honestly care.
Your exposure, the amount of money you're having to spend
to cover that is pretty limited.
But the old mag lights, those things have burned
through double A's in a couple of weeks of everyday use.
Yeah, but that all be in the case.
The weapon light I have that takes 166 50s. I got that specific body from Arasaka specifically because I can run CR 123s in it.
And at this point, every time I buy anything that eats CR 123s, I buy another bulk 10 pack of
stream light CR 123s. I couldn't honestly tell you how many I have lying around the house. I think I've got one
in the truck and two in the safe and good probably one in the
wall safe and two or three on this back shelf. I've got
frickin CR 123s everywhere. And I admit, they have a shelf life.
That's a thing. I am happy to admit that you know, they are
decades for lithiums's isn't it?
Because I think my my rechargeable lithium's when I bought them they had a
An expiration date on them. That was at least ten years out. Yeah, but at this point expiration I mean, I don't know if they actually go bad. They probably just lose efficiency
Yeah, well, I mean at this point like I burn through x amount of them just keeping my edc light, you know charged up and I use that thing daily
So yeah, it is what it is. But you know, I I will say I was doing some testing with um, some
1632 rechargeables that steward had provided to me and um
I i'm not quite ready to like report on that yet,
but I don't think I'll be playing with those for EDC use.
Not as time or energy, not as energy dense, you think?
Well, that's a given.
The worrying part to me is see, I had one loaded in,
I had one loaded in the optic on my Swamp Fox
or the optic, the Sw Fox optics that that's on my
Scorpion and that has shake awake. So I left so for all the longest time
I was always turning it off after use turning back on when I wanted to use it and
That seemed to be working just fine. And then I thought to myself it had shake awake
So why not just leave it on and might as well try it out
Well, I verified that it was indeed turning the the the emitter off
After it sat still for a while. I
Loaded it up in the safe. I left it. I didn't touch the didn't touch it for several months
I went to take it out to the range and I'll be damned if that friggin battery wasn't deader than a doornail
Fortunately, I carried a spare so I swapped it out right there at the fire line, did what I had to do.
Brought it home, charged it back up, put it back in the red dot, turned it off this time, put it back in the safe.
Pulled it out a couple months later, dead again.
Interesting.
So now...
Peristetic charge. Well, but it was turned off. So do I have an issue with parasitic
charge that I never saw using disposable batteries and I only see with this lithium rechargeable? Or
do I have an issue with the lithium rechargeable that is not holding a charge? Is not there yet. A smart battery.
You're thinking like after it zonked itself, it didn't come back alive.
No, I'm thinking like,
so there are some lithium batteries nowadays
when you charge them,
they have a little microprocessor in them.
It might be not a microprocessor,
but it's like a little computer in there
that stops itself from charging when it hits full.
So like overcharge protection built into the battery, that overcharge protection, it does
draw a small amount of current out of the battery to keep itself functional.
I'm wondering if maybe that was enough parasitic drain on the battery to drain it over a couple
of months.
This is a 16, this is a 1632 size battery.
So I'd be shocked if it had anything
Decated in it, but still if it has anything in there at all like that I mean, it made me just maybe it's just a bad one. I mean, I don't know how many that's actually
That's why I'm not really I'm not ready to damn it yet. I just know that like I I had trust issues and
Now I have more trust issues with it.
So it will be a very long time before I am willing to trust
life saving equipment to things I'm not intimately familiar
with.
That's fair. Well, this is why you have to test your equipment,
test it, test it and test it to failure. I mean, if, if you
don't manage to break it, congrats, you bought something
good. But if you do, at least you know where it breaks.
Yep.
So the other thing is spare parts.
Now, we've talked about this on this show
before many, many moons ago
when we were talking about like mostly firearms.
I think it's reasonable that if you have any piece
of what you consider to be emergency equipment,
and this extends to like
Chainsaws, for example. No, I don't have a spare chainsaw. I think raggle-frag will drop that one on me
I don't I don't have a spare chainsaw yet
It's on my to-do list but for the one chainsaw
I do have I have quite a collection of spare parts extra chains a spare bar
I got everything I could think of.
If I was like in the middle of using it,
stuck the fricking bar in the, you know, in a tree.
Right in there.
And I've got, I don't know, seven or eight extra bar nuts.
I could literally just like spin the bar nut off,
leave the whole bar in the tree, go get the spare,
put the chainsaw back together,
and then free, you know, free the first bar.
Carb kit?
Not a whole carb kit.
I have like the fuel filter and fuel line
and spark plug, air filter, basically a tune up kit.
Get a carb kit for it.
Cause the one thing that always goes wrong
on small two stroke engines is
if it's not the spark plug being followed out
or the spark arrestor being full of crap from the oil. It is it is your
carburetor. And then fuel line, of course, because the fuel line
because those things they set for three to five years and then
you end up using it and there your fuel lines dry and cracked.
Yeah, I will I will say though that Stuart had given me some
advice to before I put it away every time like before I put it
away for any length of time to always put some
Some what do they call it the engineer fuel the stuff you get in the cans. That's like oh, yeah the ethanol free fuel
Yeah, I always run some of that through it and then you know dump whatever's left out and then sit there run it
You know run it pretty pretty good until it just purges the lines and everything out and since I've been doing that
The border to Wisconsin and by the ethanol free
Fuel they have up there for off-road ATVs and stuff. The only reason I like the engineered stuff though
Is that supposedly as long as it's sealed they say it's good for like X number of years in storage
So I've got several gallons
Sitting there in storage and now I use it because I don't use my chainsaw super often
I mean, I've got plenty of like,
you know, the steel, two-stroke oil and everything if I had to mix my own.
But I use it sparingly enough that I just use the engineer fuel and don't worry about it.
I mean, I have my yard is quite large and I have 40 or so large trees on my property.
So I'm having to fire up my chainsaw
a couple of times a year to deal with something.
Or if it's not in my property,
it's not one of my family's properties
because a lot of us live on large lots
with big old trees or near places with big old trees
and then storms knock them over into our yard
and make them our problem.
But yeah, that's part of being out in the boonies
whereas you're in the suburbs
Yeah, but spare spare parts is just a given to me like, you know
If you have if you have a our 15th in your collection spare magazines is a no-dub moment
But you should also have like an oops kid and Springs and a whole whole spit whole spare bolt
Carrier group is a really quick fix for most problems
It is like any anything you count as a
mission essential piece of equipment that if it goes down in emergency, you
are screwed. If it's not rational to have an entire spare other thing because of
cost or whatever else, it makes sense to have parts so that you can you can deal
with the immediate problem as best you can and then you can go fix
The the thing that is causing you headaches like after the issue we have with hurricane ida where my generator was misbehaving
I bought Two set two full sets of a carburetor fuel line fuel filter air filter spark plug
And I bagged up one whole set in a vacuum bag and it's sitting back there in the shed with the generator
So if I ever
have another problem with that thing, I don't have to sit there fooling around with it trying to run
carb cleaner through its throat or anything. I literally just take the freaking carb off,
throw it into the woods, put the new one on, prime it, rip it and go.
You will want to check that every few years though because sometimes the carb seals in those kits
can dry out and crack. That's just a part of you think even if it's been, you think even if it's been
vacuum bagged or you're talking about the one that's on the generator,
talking about the one that's vacuum bagged, because I've seen them,
because I don't know how yours came.
I've had them where they've come vacuum packed and the seals
have been bad in the vacuum pack.
Now, granted, who knows how long that's been sitting there.
But and I've only seen it one time and that was on a carb kit for a Yamaha three-wheeler.
So once is enough.
So I mean, that carb kit should be from the night, could be from the 90s.
Yes, yes.
So now if I have to explain to people why you need tools and diagnostic equipment, I
think we need to go back a couple of steps. And like, I'm not professing that everybody needs to go and put their local Snap-on dealer through, you know, their kids through college.
But I'm saying that like, as a, not even, this isn't even homeowner. This is like basic adult stuff. You should have bare minimum tools. Yeah, I mean, if you're a homeowner, even more so if
you're living in an apartment, yes, it's good to have some
limited stuff just so that you can correct catastrophic
problems and prevent them from becoming worse. Set of channel
locks, screwdriver set, pipe wrench, dead blow pipe wrench.
Strap wrench is a good one to have,
a good solid strap wrench.
One of the chain ones, better than the rubber ones.
They will damage things more often,
but they tend to grip a little better.
One thing I really recommend people have
that I don't see people talk about too often
is the circuit chaser.
I don't know if that's a proper name for it.
It's a little plug. You mean like a test light? No, it is the circuit chaser. I don't know if that's the proper name for it. It's a little plug.
You mean like a test light?
No, it's a circuit chaser.
You plug it into your wall
and then you've got a wand end that takes double A's
and you can follow that back to your breaker box
and to the breaker that that outlet is hooked up to.
So if you have an electrical problem
and you're not sure what's going on,
you can find out what breaker it is
and flip the right breaker the first time.
Just for saving yourself some hassle.
Hacksaw, raggle, that's a very good one.
Bolt cutters is meh.
Hacksaw will do the job of bolt cutters.
Plus in some places carrying around bolt cutters
is suspicious.
They call it evidence of mischief. It's intent. Just like carrying
around lock picks. If you're not a locksmith, your local laws, you're going to need to look
into on this one. Some states and some localities have mischief laws, where if you're walking
around with things like a crowbar and you're not going to and from a job site or bolt cutters, lock picks, sledge hammer, you know, it basically
just trying to catch burglars before they burgle, which I don't know if you can do that because
you've not committed a crime, but multimeter. Multimeter is a good one to have. And here's
the thing, I'll be the first to say that like, I understand not everyone is gonna wanna like it
hardcore and electrical work,
but I'm telling you just a reasonably priced multimeter
from your local hardware store
can be such a freaking lifesaver
because I'll be the first to admit that electrons
are voodoo and black magic as far as I'm concerned.
And it's really helpful to have the little demon machine
tell you what's going on before you get shocked by it.
Yeah, and a lot of times you can find how-tos
for how to check all that stuff online on YouTube.
I mean, YouTube University, man, you can,
while we have it, use it.
Heck, I use it at work for diagnosing some of our machines.
We have a lot of Haas machines,
and Haas, they put out YouTube videos on how to diagnose
and troubleshoot their machines on YouTube.
It's fantastic.
It saves me a ton of time.
Probably because it saves their customer service line a hell of a lot of effort.
It can.
Yeah.
And you know what?
All the better for it, man.
They have to give you the free diagnostic talk anyway, so they might as well skip a step
and have you call them knowing
what the problem is. Is there anything else we could put in here? Tools, diagnostic equipment.
I mean you could go down this rabbit hole for literal ever and say you should have plumbing
supplies and everything. Safety gear. I thought we had that in here. I don't think you have safety
gear in here but I'm talking safety glasses. If you in here, but I'm talking- We can lop it in our tools.
Safety glasses.
If you've got a chainsaw, face shield and chaps.
Gloves.
Gloves.
Gloves, gloves, gloves.
Listen, I'm gonna be the first to say,
everyone y'all can line me up
and call me everything under the sun you want.
I have gloves in my tool.
I have three sets of gloves in my toolbox. I have another set of gloves that
stays with the chainsaw. I've got a set of gloves that stays
in my truck. At all times. I like gloves. I, I currently work
in a nice little air conditioned white collar office job. You can
all you can all goof with me as much as you want about it. I
don't care when it's raining hot or cold outside. I'm nice and comfortable and you can all kiss my lily white behind about
it. But I put myself through college, working in trades, I put myself through college working
on active flight lines as a flight line refueler. I did it working as an HVAC guy. I did it
working as a pool guy. I did it working in, in the NTB shops and mechanic shops doing
tires and oil changes and alignments and all that kind of
stuff. I have in the same day Nick, cringe with me about this
sliced myself right here through this web between finger thumb
and on this on both hands in the same day. Actually, no, no, I
think record. It wasn't the same day. One hand was on a same day one hand was on a Sunday one hand was on a Monday
I distinctly remember that though Sunday a buddy of mine came over and we were doing something with his car and I just
it was a sharp it was a sharp edge on a piece of the the engine subframe and
I didn't see the sharp bit or that you know the little booger it up in and it went
I am right through the web between my thumb and forefinger.
And then Monday I was doing breaks.
I was doing a BBA BBS break upgrade on a Ford Mustang.
And some something that was sharp went right through this part of my hand.
And I'm sitting there looking at my two hands.
I think forever to feel, oh, it's going to take.
Well, and I was still working, so I had the job done. So, it's gonna take well and I'm
still working. So I had a job done. So you know, that was
like, that was already already had this hand wrapped up. So
then I'd literally like piece of gauze out of my toolbox. And by
the way, you should have medical supplies. That's I'm sure that's
on here someplace where we talk about that we talked about that
just couple of sets go you know, medical supplies I see get
talked about a lot more than safety equipment to be fair. You
know, the safety equipment can keep you from needing the medical supplies.
It can yes.
With gloves.
If you are working with rotary power equipment, take the gloves off.
Unless they are the blue easy tear nitrile ones.
You know the really thin ones, half the time when you put them on, they break open anyway.
Yep.
Those are the only gloves that are acceptable
around rotary power equipment.
Cause nothing will ruin your life faster
than wearing gloves and screwing up
on rotary power equipment.
Lathes, mills, drill press, table saw,
anything that's got a spinning motor
that you are gonna be around. You know, I hate to say it, but angle grinder, you should not be wearing gloves
because that thing can grab that glove and suck your hand into it.
Yeah. You're going to get your finger cut once in a while doing that stuff
because you're not wearing safety gloves.
But gloves are the reason why I watched a kid hamburger his hand in our apprenticeship classes
back in the day. He got confident, he got cocky, he went to wipe chips away from a vice on a bridge
port with a moving cutter. And the bridge port roughing end mill, I don't know if you guys know
what that is, imagine a corn cob but made of hardened steel. Well, the finger of his glove
got pinched between the workpiece and that cutter, and
it pulled most of his hand through that mill before it got shut off.
Yep.
It's the only time I've ever seen a tourniquet used near a mill.
And here's another thing that will not apply to most of y'all, but it most certainly applies
to me.
Beard.
If you have a beard that is longer than one inch, you'd better get really familiar with
the little pack of the cheap rubber bands that your wives and your girlfriends and your
daughters use.
And any long hair.
I keep one permanently with the gloves, with all the safety gear for my chainsaw.
And on top of that, I always take my beard and bunch it up and tuck it down the front
of my shirt anytime I'm messing with anything that is spinning because I have this intense
fear that one day something is going to grab hold of this luscious, beautiful beard and
yank my face right into it.
So I would like to avoid that if at all possible. Yeah. I
really hope that none of you guys have been exposed to the Russian lathe
accident video. If you got a weak stomach don't go looking for it. Don't look that up.
You'd be better off looking up. I've shown you exactly why you should not wear gloves and long
sleeves while working with a lathe. You'd be better off googling blue waffle than
that horrible experience.
Yes, you psychologically, yes, you probably would.
But yeah, you gotta be really careful
around spinning objects.
Stuart wants us to start over buzz off.
Oh Stuart, you missed me telling everyone
to dress up in creepy trench coats
and stand in the corner while Phil talks
at his little event coming up.
You also missed everyone giving me crap
for the 11,000th time about not having a chainsaw. Thank you, by the way
Yeah. Yeah. Well, hey, you know what we live and we learn
and actually no, I don't braid it because
You should for Halloween dress up as a dwarf. I I do okay
I have braided it for Halloween a couple times. The problem is it's like
Braiding it invariably leads to a lot of hair getting
pulled out and broken hair. I mean, it's fine for every now and then, but seriously, if you're trying
to grow a beard long, like it constantly falling out and getting yanked out by the braids is
problematic. Yeah, that would, that would probably not be ideal. It's also a thing if you like keep
it braided for like semi permanently that's one thing
Yeah, but if you're braiding and I'm braiding you're just it's like taking a piece of metal and folding it back and forth
It's gonna weaken it. Yeah, absolutely would
All right garage supplies vehicle fluids filters in the oil I make a habit of having everything I need in the garage to service
Every single fluid almost every single fluid, almost every
single fluid in either one of our vehicles and do an oil change. And I also keep spare
air filters and cabin air filters for both vehicles just sitting on the shelf. The only
thing I don't keep around is transmission fluid because I don't know enough to do my
own transmission flushes. It's just
something I am not going to do and it's not something I would need to do very
often. Except on my lawnmower that hydrostatic fluid needs to be
changed out every couple years so that I did have to learn how to do. Yeah not a
lot of clearance in that motor. I'm actually that's actually one of the
things on my to-do list for Gillian's Jeep is to figure out how to change the transmission fluid in her Jeep
because I mean on the one hand
there's a fairly good mechanic that literally is at the very front of this subdivision who could do the work or
I could just buy the stuff and do it myself
The problem is that I need a scan tool
They'll interface with her Jeep and my scan tool is from the early 2000s and it has no freaking
idea what the hell Daimler Chrysler put into that ECU so it's yeah that might be
that might be one of those where the investment you would have to do in a new
scan tool might outweigh the benefit there yeah now on the other hand because
Toyota doesn't believe in doing anything new ever
I mean I troll module is identical
Yeah, that that ECU is literally the exact same one from 2005 and it probably isn't that dissimilar from anything from the 90s. So
it might be all I know is I plugged in that old scan gauge from like
2002 and it just that Toyota and it started talking to each other immediately. So when I
didn't do my there's not some codes it's missing. But it can
do all the basics kind of deal. I mean, the newer the newer
codes say like that the next gen codes. But I will say that it's
happy enough with the data that like I can read the transmission
temp sensors and everything
I have the transmission in real time like it it doesn't seem to be having any problems. Well, that's good
That it's probably fine then yeah, they just left it the same
But that's the reason why I changed the transmission fluid in my own truck
Right and also because I wanted to like do a full flush on it get all the old stuff out put in us some a full
Synthetic that was a red line
flush on it, get all the old stuff out, put in a full synthetic that was from Redline. So I have extra fluid because it's not something I can just go to a local auto parts store
and get.
And that, yeah, that makes sense.
That sometimes becomes the problem.
Although I will say that this whole extra filters, extra oil thing came in super freaking
handy during COVID.
Yeah, because when, when we started seeing supply chain and start to stutter everything like you would think
towards coma
Five million of the stupid things on the road and there's got to be ten million one
you know one gr v6 is in existence and
Finding an oil filter for one wouldn't be that difficult
But I'm gonna tell you I went to the local Autozone several times and they didn't have them on the shelf
I'm gonna tell you I went to the local Autozone several times and they didn't have them on the shelf
Same problem as 9mm ammo everybody needs it and that that turned out to be the problem because it was so common They only had somebody on the shelf and with the supply chain stuttering they kept running out now
It wasn't a problem for me because I always had one sometimes even two sitting on the shelf
So I just got into a mode honestly for a while where every time I've drive by there, which it's not far from home
So that was fairly often. I just pull in and if they had a filter on the shelf, I bought it I bought another
five five a five quart jug oil and then an extra quart because I always I need about five and a half quarts to my
Oil change. Mm-hmm
And I would just buy that and put it away and if I already had enough to do two full oil changes on both vehicles, then I was good for a while.
Oh, yeah. Yeah.
But I made the point of doing that for a good year during Covid when the supply chain started stuttering.
And I'm going to tell you, I never miss an oil change.
I never had to stretch one out.
I didn't have to play Russian roulette with my engine and say, well, you know, it's only been 6000 miles.
Maybe I can go a little bit further because I just don't, I came from
a generation of 3000 mile oil changes. So I'm already a little leery at the 5,000 mile
oil change, even though judging by the oil, it's not hurting anything.
Look, man, if you don't make time for maintenance, maintenance makes time for itself.
Yep. Either you handle it before it becomes a problem or it will become a problem to handle
you. Yep every time
Yeah, and while we're on this and while we're going through this things like shop towels break clean
RTV silicone
Dry film lube. I mean see foam see I don't play with see foam
I've never liked see foam, you know, I I have used it on small engines and it has been
surprisingly effective at cleaning crap out of carburetors and stuff. But that was for like
light duty lawn equipment. So if it screwed it up, okay, not a big deal. It's not my daily driver.
Raggle fraggle. If that's 10,000 miles on a diesel, I'll give you that but if that's a gas engine you and I need to have a discussion
Because I'm gonna tell you
That Jeep out there the owner's manual swears. That's an 8,000 mile oil change. I did that one time
And when I pulled that oil that oil, huh? How weird was that oil it was?
It was screwed. I'm gonna be polite in case somebody's got kids around
Raggle-fragile just said yes, it's a diesel. Okay that that's fair. Yeah, I'm just I'm just saying like I did one
8,000 mile oil change on that Jeep Grand Cherokee and that was the last one it ever saw
I've done them 5,000 miles like clockwork ever since oil is coming out much much cleaner now
But I'm just I'm just I'm just
I'm just telling you
Oil change is so inexpensive compared to engine problems. You might as well do it
Slightly more often. I'm just saying I don't give a damn what the manufacturer
Squares up and down that bake you can stretch it all change interval out to if the first number doesn't start with a five
I'm gonna start giving you a weird look.
I just don't, I don't care.
I don't care what the salesman says.
I don't care what the tech say.
I don't care what the engineer says.
They're not gonna be there in 100,000, 200,000 miles
when I still expect that thing
to not poop its piston rings out.
Yeah, that's fair.
Here's a weird one that some of y'all probably
didn't see coming, needle thread, webbing, buckles,
and patch material.
Does anybody here play tactical tailor
and play with your own web gear?
Yup.
I will happily admit that I probably do the ugliest
stitching out of any of y'all.
Any of you out there can probably run a nicer cleaner
Prettier stitch than I can and if you think you can't you come down here
We can that we can compare but my stitching is ugly. It looks does it work it freaking works. It's
It's ugly as hell, but it works. It looks like a meth a meth head
You know autist did it which isn't too far from the truth. Most days, not meth.
Caffeine is my drug of choice. This was coffee at the top of the show,
but ran out of mine. That's why did you do that to yourself?
Who hurts you caffeinated water? Okay. I got, I got Sarah plus.
It'll be fine. But I'm just telling you like, you know, there,
there's somebody out there that is going to be thinking to themselves, well, you know, there's somebody out there that is gonna be thinking to themselves
Well, you know when yes when the s hits the HTF or whatever
we're all gonna have to do this out of the other and it's not even about that to me it's more like
how many of us have been inconvenienced because we ripped a stitch or we ripped a seam or
How many two laces in the middle of the day? Yeah, or I'll give you a perfect example
the How many? Austin, you two laces in the middle of the day. Yeah. I'll give you a perfect example. The man purse, thank you, Stewart, back there on the shelf, that's highly modified from
a factory, from just an off the shelf product, but I'm the one that did all the sewing.
I'm the one that fixed all that stuff in there.
The thigh strap on my ED, my battle belt, the holster for that, that's me. That's
me getting the webbing and the buckles and sewing it all together and everything and
double and triple stitching it to make sure it wasn't going to let go. I've got an old
Chai Comm chest rig, think Vietnam era. You stick with me on this. As a goofing around
project, Nick, I got the wild
hair at my ass to take all the little toggles and everything off of it and sew
that entire thing back together with like one inch little nylon buckles instead
of okay instead of just tie you back together like I'm supposed to. All the
flaps now have velcro fix so it's. It's semi modern, like you can actually rip it up
and it's got little pulls and everything on the tabs. Like, I
did all that on a lark just to see just see how it worked. I
took one of the grenade pockets and so to stitch down the middle
of it turn it into a twin pistol mag pouch. Perfect. I do all
this stuff, most of it just goofing around and see if I can
see if I can make it work.
Cause I'm just curious and I like to fool with stuff.
But there's something to be said for being able
to keep your clothing and your gear intact
and be able to fix it when things go bad.
I mean, this is no different than the tools
and the spare parts and everything else.
Cause unless you're gonna resort to like, you know,
spike cod pieces and loin cloths, we're going to need our...
But you're going to have to stitch those anyway.
Yeah.
Sooner or later, you're going to have to be able to fix the stuff that you're wearing
or it's going to be a bad day.
Now, this is one thing I know I did text you and it's not really on the list here, but
it is.
In this same category, spare boot laces, spare boot laces.
Keep them in your truck, keep them in your boot laces, keep them in your truck,
keep them in your toolbox at work, keep them in your go bag. Yeah, you can use paracord
to make yourself a pair of boot laces. I've done it when I forgot or I welded welded something
in the the slide cut through my boot lace, but they don't stay tied quite as well as
a purpose made shoelace. shoelaces, they're a little more rough than like your
paracord or your nylon nylon cordage.
I'm not too proud to admit.
I have tie when I've broken shoelaces and I've tied the two
broken ends back together.
You can only do that so many times before you start running
on the length of the shoelace.
That is not a permanent solution.
That is a stay laced till I get home problem.
But you know,
like when you're playing around with cutting torches and you got hot slag dropping on
them, you go through a lot of boot laces.
Ragglefragle said leather working tools. I mean, that's fair point. If you do a lot of
leather working, you should probably have the stuff you need to, to, you know, mess
with leather. I don't you know belts
But by but for that same reason I mean like, you know, most of my web gear most of my gear that isn't nylon It's kydex. You know, guess what? I've got spare kydex and spare rivets and all the stuff to basically
I mean like I built the sheaths for a pair of knives and I've basically just got all this stuff lying around
to like build a handgun holster if I really wanted to.
It's not terribly difficult to do.
I mean, it can be, if you don't have the right gloves,
rather painful to hot form that stuff manually by hand.
Be a man.
Yeah, I mean, you can do that or you could like,
I don't know, have the right gloves and just
not burn the shit out of your hands.
Yeah, I don't have the right gloves.
You just had to work very, you had to work very quickly.
Yes, you do.
I mean, I had gloves, they just weren't the right gloves, but you got the job done.
Yeah, leatherve will do. So I will be the first to admit that for more years than I am proud of or would like to
admit, my food preps did not include spices or seasoning.
And that omission now-
That is an oversight.
That is an oversight, but you know what?
Like that kind of falls into the heading of a lot of things that my wife pointed out that like, Hey, dumbass, you better go get the stuff you need so that our food doesn't taste like, but. And now I have like literally an entire bin of just baking supplies.
and I can think of, and then I have a five gallon bucket that is all baking supplies
and that also has more baking supplies
and seasoning and spices are kind of included
because someone out there is rolling their eyes
thinking that's not a necessity,
but I'm gonna tell you, life is too short
and life is too hard sometimes
for you to be eating crappy food.
And seasonings are way too cheap right now
for the value they add to your life.
And salt is very, very, very critical. More important than most people realize. Your body needs salt.
It never goes bad. Yeah, it literally doesn't. It's literally a mineral. So, you know, that's one of those
things like toilet paper. It doesn't expire. So why would you not keep extra around? Yes. Do seasonings expire? Some of them do. They
get less flavorful, less potent, double the amount you put in there and figure it out on the fly,
man. It's not that difficult. Sam's Club sells one pound containers of most of your spices for
about the price of two of the little grocery store McCormick's containers. And those are like a couple ounces and this is 16. So,
you know, spend your money wisely. Um,
if you want vacuum packet and put it away. But I mean,
I think on average we go through, we cook a lot at home.
So we go through about one of those, depending on the spice,
one of those one pound containers every six to eight months.
So.
But that's also worth pointing out,
you don't have to buy a one pound container
of something you only use sparingly.
Correct.
But in my kitchen, if I was doing nothing but buying
the little bitty chinchy things of black powder
and salt of Tony Sachery's, yeah.
I mean, we use Tony's sassurys like it's freaking oxygen around here.
Same for oils. So fats and oils, beef tallow, Crisco, whatever you
want to use, please don't Crisco is bad for you. Same with
vegetable oil. That's bad for you. Try to use good fats and
store good fats.
This is why I cook lots and lots of bacon and sausage because pork is a gift
from God. Yes, it is. So is the tallow.
And I salvage all 100% of the bacon grease and the sausage grease and,
you know, try to like not pour a bunch of the crap from the bottom of the pan,
but I keep at least two big old huge jars that stuff in the fridge at all
times. And that's, that's what I season my cast iron with.
That's what I cook with. I mean, anytime I don't want stuff to stick to a pan,
I just take a finger, run around the rim and throw a lump in the pan. Yeah.
One makes everything taste like bacon. It does. One word of caution.
If you are going to render your own tallow, do it in the garage. Do not do it in
your house because all of your soft fabrics are going to smell
like beef tallow for the next eight months. Is that the voice
of experience? Yes. Yes, it is. Yes, it is. How mad was your
wife? Some of my t-shirts still come out of my out of my
closet smelling like beef tallow.
I mean, that doesn't sound like the worst thing on earth.
It's just alarming.
And that smell sticks around.
Yeah.
It's a beef tallow is amazing.
Beef tallow fried steaks.
Fantastic.
Using it in baking.
Wonderful.
But do it outside or in the garage.
And it does take all day.
So, you know, plan accordingly.
Cleaning supplies.
Now-
Yeah, you don't see that one discussed
a whole terrible lot online.
It's one of those,
oh, everybody knows to keep soap around.
Yeah, but how much soap do they really keep around?
So like my thought my thoughts are again, like leaning leaning back on you know, COVID
times, because at least in the last 10 years, that was definitely one of the weirder
experiences of my life. It definitely wasn't on my bingo card. But you know, it was what it was.
But I can tell you that for that period of time, and I'm sure I
wasn't the only one, things like Clorox wipes, alcohol, Lysol, antibacterial soap,
all that got really thin on the ground super, super freaking fast. It did.
Especially, like my wife wife she works in childcare.
Your wife's a teacher. The schools didn't have any of the
Clorox wipes and stuff because that stuff got used up really
fast. Yeah, they were buying as fast as they could but people
were going through it even faster.
Supply and demand man.
Yeah, I mean laundry soap doesn't go bad. Keep that on the
shelf. Bleach does go bad over time. So you do need to you do
need to rotate that. But
yeah, have enough for a couple months of use. It doesn't take
up that much room on the shelf.
Yeah. And I mean, thinking about cleaning supplies, like, you
know, we could, we could also get out of the realm of just
like cleaning and start thinking about like cleaning our bodies
Like what personal hygiene products are you gonna use like a I'm in in products another good one
Yeah after the great toilet paper scare of 2020
2020
Yeah, 2019 2020. Yeah after the great toilet paper scare
Like I think most people would understand intrinsically that you need
toilet paper and paper towels and things like that. But like
how much deodorant do you keep around? How much toothpaste do
you keep spare toothbrushes under the sink? Like, I make a
point every single time my wife or daughter tell me, Oh, I'm out
of this, I go buy two. Yep. And then the next time they tell me
they're out, I give them the one that
I held in reserve and I go buy two more because you know, like I went to the I went to the
store not too long ago, my daughter needed toothpaste. I had an extra tube under the
sink. She wanted a different kind of toothpaste. I was like, okay, so we went to the store.
She picked up one off the shelf and I said, No said no no get the two-pack And she was like, but I only need one and I'm like you only needed one this morning
Get the two-pack
You're gonna go through it so and a lot of times when you buy them in those multi packs are cheaper anyway
But even if even if it's not to me even if my same price
Yeah
And you gotta understand that like if you are still at that base level of preparedness
Where you are fully in the mode of I need to cover the basics. I need to deal with the mission critical stuff
I'll deal with the it'd be nice to have later
Then that's one thing but once you get to a certain point in this game
It's no longer about how do I keep from starving to death and it becomes how do I not be inconvenienced?
by life. I would argue that cleaning supplies are as important as not starving to death
because disease will kill you faster than starvation. I mean there is merit to that idea but
here's the thing is it the end of the world if you don't have your preferred kind of toothpaste?
Like if you would have to substitute whatever for whatever because this is all they have the store is at the end of the world
No, is it an adult? Is it annoying?
Yeah, so then to avoid annoyance go buy two of the stupid things and put one underneath your sink
Like that's if you have picky children, it could be the the end of their day
Yeah underneath your sink. Like that's if you have picky children, it could be the the end of their day.
Yeah, but this this comes back to around to the idea that like, there are things I do in the house,
not because it's going to kill us if it doesn't get done. But because I want to insulate my family
from the aggravation of things not going the way we expected them to. So if it's something as simple
as like, this is the kind of underarm deodorant I like to have, I want to have more than one of them. If this is, if this is the thing that would make my wife and daughter's day a little bit nicer, I want to have that thing. I don't want to have to say, oh, the store doesn't have any, because Phil is going to look at himself in the mirror and say, dummy, you should have put, you should have bought two and put one under the sink and then we wouldn't be in this situation today
Like that's you know also like
you know Everybody talking about the government layoffs that are going on what happens if you lose your job
Would sure be nice to not have to go to the store and spend that six dollars on whatever if you already had it
Sitting at home. Yeah, maybe it's not it's not much but that frees up that money for something else
Well is more mission critical. I'm gonna I'm gonna tell you having been the situation of being laid off for I
Was laid off for three months right after my daughter was born
That was three months. That was three months. I spent like taking care of her, taking care of my wife and grilling myself job hunting.
So it was, it was a thing.
But, um, but you know what happened to all of us at some point, but you know, it made
the savings count stretch a whole lot further.
First of all, the fact that I had a savings account and second of all, the fact that we
had think we had things kind of lined up where we weren't in, we didn't immediately have to go out and spend money on non-mission the fact that we had things kind of lined up where we weren't in it. We didn't immediately
have to go out and spend money on non-mission critical stuff because we had things kind of at a good starting point. Now,
years later, but ours 12, by the way, so it's been a hot minute since she was born. But like now, if, if it came down to,
oh, we got to, we got to pull the belt as tight as humanly possible,
I think we could get our grocery bill down to probably like 50, 60 bucks a month.
And just cut out all the non-essentials.
And just eat out of the pantry for the next six months if that's what we had to do.
Yeah, fresh fruits and veggies, dairy products, that kind of stuff.
Yeah. And I mean, even then, we'd cut back on a lot of that. I mean,
I'd be the first to admit, like, every time I go to the store, if I have less than five gallons of
milk in the fridge, I buy up to that amount because we make our own coffee creamer, we do a lot of
cooking here in the house, a lot of baking. Like, every time we go to the grocery store,
I spend a reasonable amount of money. but it's also because like I stocked
that fridge and that pantry in such a way that we're going to be, we're going to be
cooking with fresh ingredients a disproportionate amount of time.
Well, and you're actually, if you, so look at it this way, how expensive has eating out
gotten?
Oh Jesus.
So let me-
You are spending significantly less money than you would be if you did not have a deep stock pantry
and you had to go out to eat.
An average trip eating out with me and the girls,
me and my wife and my daughter,
with tip is usually like 80 to a hundred bucks.
Oh, I believe that.
And I mean, me and my wife,
it's hard to get out of a restaurant for 50 bucks.
And an average grocery run for the three of us for everything we're going to need for a week.
And that's usually like, I mean, that'll usually run us about a hundred, maybe 125 a week.
But that's what I think for me and my wife for like 200 for two weeks. Yeah. Something like that.
But that's also for two weeks. But that's also with the understanding that we're buying like
lots of milk, lots of butter, lots of meat, lots of meat, eggs.
Like I've told my wife and daughter many, many times, and this is totally off subject, but here we are.
Of all the places we're good, we would try to save money if we had to save money.
I'm not going to compromise on the quality of our food.
Agreed.
I, right, wrong or otherwise, you can argue about in the comment
section. I wholeheartedly believe that the things you put into your body have a direct impact on
your health. And if I would like to not be stuck on a daily medication in my old age, I better be
treating my body a little bit nicer now. And eating the right things and not stuff my body full of processed crap. Absolutely. So all that being the case, if that cost me an extra $100, $200 a month at the grocery
store to buy more fresh stuff, I am emotionally at peace with that because it only took one
investment in the future. It only took one peruse through my dad's medicine cabinet after he had
open heart surgery to realize all the daily medications that he had to take at that time and start,
start doing the math in my head about what all that was costing. Thank God,
he has insurance, but if he didn't write and immediately I was like, okay,
if I have option a or option B in front of me,
I will take the hit at the grocery store.
Yeah. And you're sending your daughter up for success too,
because if you teach her those healthy habits and get her hooked on that healthy
food, her life is going to be better.
And it's going to be easier for her to make those decisions in the long run.
Unfortunately, I've also gotten her hooked on espresso. So, well, you know,
that's going to be asked to have their vice. And if it's espresso or meth, I choose espresso. So well, you know, that's gonna be asked to have their vice. And if it's espresso or meth, I choose espresso.
Yeah, it's just not a cheap vice. Unfortunately,
deeper than meth.
Keep all your teeth to thankfully. There you go. And
this is the last thing we have in here. I think this is one you
dropped in some kind of an image system.
Yeah, it doesn't have to be anything extravagant.
Put a whiteboard, stick some magnets on the back
of a whiteboard and put it on your fridge or freezer
and every time you pull something out, write it down.
Then you have your grocery list pre-made for you.
You know what's not in the fridge.
If you keep a deep store of canned food, flour, rice, that kind of thing like me
and Phil do, heck, honey, whatever, keep a list of what you
have and what you've used, even if it's just a rolling list in
like a Google Doc or Google Sheets or a notebook that you
keep at the at the kitchen counter, some way to manage what
comes in and what goes out so that you don't have things going
bad on the shelf. Because that's just wasted money at that point. Yes, things are good
past their expiration dates a lot of the time, but some things aren't. And it would sure
be nice to know that you have two flats of green beans before you buy the third flat
of green beans at Sam's Club that you're not going to eat in the next six months. Okay. Grocery stores do it. Businesses do it. If you're going to keep a deep pantry, you should do it too, because
you're never going to keep track of it all in your head. At least I can't.
I'll be the first to admit, we recently did a clean out on our pantry, and we found some things that have been
expired for longer than I was comfortable with.
Yeah, it happens.
So, emergency energy source. I mean, I have a 5k generator and I have a Jackery.
So, I have some methods available to me to keep the fridge and the freezer from falling
immediately. I was actually toying with the idea and I'm just I'm not I'm not totally there on whether or not the next chunk of
Preparedness money needs to go to this or something else because you know how my brain works
Like I have a I have a list of projects and it's always about what's the next thing to get money spent on and
Priority list. Yep. Yeah, and my wife keeps throwing home-improving projects in that list
I'm some of my stuff down to the bottom, which...
That's all right.
That's a thing.
But your home is your biggest investment.
But one of the things I've been thinking about
or looking at is basically building a Jackery from hell.
Like, get a reasonably sized rolling toolbox,
or like a rolling, like a rolling equipment box,
and drop into it a
400 amp hour 24 volt battery lithium iron phosphate battery. So yes, a very big 60 pound
battery probably get something like a 3k a 3k combination inverter charger and solar
charger. The one I kind of have in mind, if I ever call correctly, will take 800 watts worth of solar
panels. That's a lot of panels. Yes. Well, my thought process
for this is build again, thinking about the fact that
like I have a Jackery 1000, it'll spit out 1004 watt hours
of power, it'll it'll it'll surge to 1,500 watts and
It'll run a thousand watts continuously on the AC inverter. It will run my fridge and my chest freezer
It'll run them both comfortably
Okay, the problem I'm gonna have with that is that it is charge limited on the solar set the solar charge circuit
And it's only a thousand and four watt hours of power. So it's really at its happiest running a campsite for a camping weekend.
It's not really meant for what I pressed in service for occasionally here.
So what I've been fighting with is do I invest the money in like a 13 K tri fuel
generator, which would run about 10,000 watts on propane or natural gas, spend
the money to have a natural gas pipe to the back of the house.
But take the cap off, put a valve on, and be able to run the generator on natural gas.
Or get a pair of 60 or 100 pound cylinders
Chain them up to the back of the house so they can't you know fall over and then run the damn thing off propane That's another option
Propane will sit back there quite happily for years and it's not gonna go bad like gasoline will and then when I should keep
It out of the weather. Yeah, and this is all underneath the covered porch. So I've got a good setup there
or do I invest what would probably end up being a bit more money and put together this
Jackery from hell.
And then I would have 400 amp hours times 24 volts worth of power on tap.
And I would have as many solar panels as I feel like laying out in the yard and running
cable to like, this would be something that I
could take with me, it wouldn't be built into the house. But on
the flip side, it's one of those things where it's like, the
jackery from hell would run the fridge freezer and most of my
other power requirements with impunity, it would not run it, I
don't think it would tolerate as well running a pair of AC units.
Probably not. Like when you do have it, you do have a
generator. So you do have a small generator. It's not big.
Well, there is a AC unit.
Hmm, be marginal. But again, here's the thing. I can either
put this money into a solar setup that I would not have to worry about fuel
I wouldn't have to worry about any of that nonsense and I don't have to worry about oh
I only have so many days with gasoline
It's like as long as I can get the solar panels out in the Sun for a couple of hours
We can just run with impunity or I put this I put this a little bit less money into a very large generator
take the the 30 amp hook up on the house and redo it to a 50 amp,
and then get a pair of 100 pound propane cylinders and I'm done.
And that is like all the power requirements I could need minus the central air.
Now I went with a generator as well instead of solar.
I went with a 10k dual fuel because at the time they didn't have the tri fuels out yet.
It can be upgraded to a tri fuel, which I am thinking about doing, and then
setting up a natural gas hookup over there.
Cause I have the handiness enough to do that.
Um, I went with a 10 K because I didn't feel air conditioning was necessary
where I live.
Yes, it's nice to have.
Yes, it makes it easier to sleep, but it also cut the price of my
generator almost in half, not needing to run a big air conditioner unit. We don't get enough sunlight,
enough hours of the day in half the year for solar to make sense for me. Most of the time
when I would need it, it's during a winter storm or after a winter storm. We don't often lose power for very long in the summer.
If we do, it's, you know, six to 12 hours, but if it's in the winter, it's, you know, two to four days.
So for me, generator was better than solar. Down south where you're at, Phil, to me, it's kind of a toss up.
You're so far south, you've got good sunlight if you can get the panels at the right angle
for probably three more hours a day than I do.
Yeah, and when you bear in mind the fact that my single most pressing use case for this is
late August, early September hurricane
season.
Yeah.
As soon as the freaking thing passes, we're going to have lots of heat, lots of sun.
Like the only real hitch there and the only reason why something like a Jackery really
comes in super handy is that I really don't want to have the generator out in a hurricane or in the rain getting
jacked up. And I'm not totally comfortable with the idea of having it close enough to
the house to be under the covered porch, because then by definition, it's close enough to the
house that exhaust could start kind of seeping in through. It's kind of it's kind of, it's kind of, if you're, it shouldn't be enough to be a problem.
You used the word there.
Shouldn't be.
Yeah, shouldn't be.
It depends on your house.
I mean, I run my generator, my 10K generator runs right, actually right over there, right
on the other side of this wall here.
And we have a carbon monoxide detector in this room in the basement.
And we have one upstairs in the room next to where that generator runs when we are running it and it's
never noticed any carbon monoxide so uh yeah my house with my generator it seems to be okay currently
but there's there's the beauty of having that that jackery though is that it's basically a
battery and a power inverter it is i can plug the damn thing in indoors. It's quiet
Like it's like you said there's kind of like there's pluses and minuses to either one of these situations raggle fraggle
I have the model number. I don't have it handy though
But he asked what specific model generator am I looking at?
It was a third. I remember it was a 13k tri-fuel which 13k is a big
freaking generator is it blue I don't remember blue ones are duramax yellow ones are generac
I want to say ones are generac I want to say this was Westinghouse Westinghouse is yellow
uh there's a green one that I can't remember all right the green one might be firman I think
that I can't remember. All right the green one might be Furman I think. Could be. Anyway. And then of course there's your Harbor Freight Predator Generators. I've heard a lot of good things about
the Harbor Freight Predator Generators. They're a knockoff Honda motor. I mean I haven't heard bad
things about them. My only issue is like I want to do some more research into the models I'm looking at because is
Santa Claus on your roof?
My dog is going absolutely insane upstairs.
I don't know if you guys can hear that, but she is flipping a shit.
I heard her that time.
My wife must be getting home.
But yeah, the only reason I'm not a chair.
The only reason I'm looking at a 13 K is just because when you run it on propane or natural
gas, like the output
Decreases and I want something that will comfortably do what I want to do on the lowest power setting of that fuel available
Sure. I mean it just makes sense to do it that way
It's it really is just a question of like it's a 30% reduction
Going from gasoline to propane because I believe it's 7K for my generator, which is a 10K generator.
And so if you go with the 13K,
yeah, you're looking at like 10.
Yeah.
I think it was like nine and a half, 10,000,
which is still a boatload of power.
Oh, it absolutely is.
I mean, I am able to run my refrigerator, freezer,
my 220 heat pump, my 220 pump in my boiler, which is a natural gas boiler, and then my, I believe
it's a three quarter horsepower well pump, all at the same time. And I think I could
even do laundry with that thing, with all of the stuff kicked on at once. And I've still
got over surge overhead of like 20%. But
it does rev the generator up and goes through fuel faster that way. So yeah, but this generator would fit on the trailer that I had and I could afford it. And it took propane because I did not
want to deal with the hassle of a gasoline generator I got it
I got to take some pictures and do a write-up on our on our site for that generator one of these days
The weather's finally turning nice. It's not
Minus 20 in my garage. Oh
It's the high today was 73 down here. You should move
Look after all the crap you gave me when it was snowing down here,
y'all all earned that.
Yeah, yeah, we do.
But you know what?
It's just about summertime now,
so construction season's gonna kick off here
in a couple of weeks.
Yeah, and very shortly,
it'll be 100 and screw you outside down here.
Yeah, we get that here too, but less humidity.
All right, well, I mean, that's about all we really had, man. I
like I feel like after all these years, we've had enough time to
like think about the things we probably should have thought
about at first, but we weren't there yet. And I'm just hoping
we see missing. Yeah. And I mean, quite frankly, quite
frankly, for everybody that was in the comments, like a lot of
things are pointing out are perfectly valid and reasonable. It's just,
I think to me, this always comes back to the idea that once
you've covered your bases, once you have gonna kill me in five
minutes dealt with, then you start branching out into what
would make my life suck less. And sometimes that is as simple
as like, okay, in the name of full disclosure,
we're not like the biggest health nerds on, on earth, but we have been trying to
eat better.
I keep literal bars like from Aldi.
So it's, they're like real chocolate and don't have all the preserves and the
crap in the high fructose corn syrup.
But I keep bars of emergency chocolate.
It's smart in the kitchen.
You know why? Because I live with two girls and emerge. Sometimes
emergency chocolate is the only thing standing between me and a
painful death. So you know, boys and girls out there. Sometimes
you need to have emergency chocolate, not because it's
going to kill you not the head might kill you, but not because
it's going to theoretically kill you if you don't have it because it makes your life suck a lot less. Do
you know why there's 40 pounds of coffee beans on that back
shelf because if Phil doesn't have his coffee, I'm going to
be a lot grumpier than I would have been otherwise, no matter
how bad the world sucks. Absolutely. This all just goes
back to the idea that, you know, like if there's something we
need, we should have it if there's something we want, and we can
afford it, we should have it. If it's worth having one of it's
probably worth having two of and it's worth having two of you
should probably have 10 of them. And you should do the things
necessary to make sure that you and your family are well
maintained and happy, no matter what the world around you
decides to do with it.
Absolutely.
All right. Well, for the listeners who joined us,
Nick is going to be out of pocket next week.
I'm not 100% certain yet
if I'm just going to give me and my family
a bye for next week
because Cypress Survivalist is running their first event
next weekend.
And like my wife and I are already anticipating
being thoroughly down to the wire, trying to take care of last
minute things, and probably like hide from the world at our house
on Sunday, and no one's allowed to call or intrude. Because you
know, when you are when you are a slightly on the spectrum
introvert, the idea of standing up in front of strangers and
talking is the most terrifying thing on earth
And I'm only doing it because I think it's important
It is important. Yeah, so yeah, if if you see me next week, I
Don't know
Maybe I'll get my wife to come on and join me
But you won't see Nick and I don't think you'll see Andrew cuz Andrew had to take a step back to deal with
personal stuff and family and work and all the adulting crap.
He got silly and got promoted.
You know, don't do that.
I mean, I got promoted and ruined my life.
He got promoted and took him away from the podcast.
Just getting promoted is just it's for responsible people.
Yeah, we don't want any of that responsibility in here.
All right. Well, we don't want any of that responsibility in here. No
All right. Well, if you can't be responsible at least be
Good at escaping responsibility and if you feel the need to be responsible for somebody be responsible for yourself starting right now
Talk to you later. Yeah. Bye night I'm going to be a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a
little bit of a
little bit of a
little bit of a
little bit of a
little bit of a
little bit of a little bit of a So Thanks for watching!