The Prepper Broadcasting Network - Phoenix Survival - Pallet Projects, Chickens, and Meshtastic
Episode Date: June 26, 2025www.pbnfamily.com use code B2 and get 25% off your membership! JOIN US! ...
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Path back to st-
You're listening here, to KBN.
You're path back to stability here. Thanks for watching! There we go.
Sorry about that.
Good morning, everybody.
This is Jay Furg with Phoenix Survival.
I am back live.
Yes, the lighting is not great.
The system is a little slow for some reason today.
And I have a toddler.
Yeah, right here underfoot.
So I'm sure you can hear him.
Good morning.
I am so happy to be back.
And just to let you know,
I will get all this set up even better,
but I am now the Phoenix Homestead.
And any of those who have been following,
there's been a lot that's been going on personally, internationally.
The world is chaos.
And I don't try to say it with a smile, but the fact that it's madness. Firewolf Forge, let me know how the audio is doing.
I only was able to stream on YouTube and X right now,
and I'll have to post it later on Rumble.
Again, I have a child who wants to push every button he can.
Well, I'm on the computer because he thinks mommy has a toy, I have a child who wants to push every button he can.
Well, I'm on the computer because he thinks mommy has a toy, he should have a toy.
Okay. Let me know if the sound goes out in any way.
Again, I'm trying to get all this where I like the sound and it sounds too.
There we go. That's a little bit better.
All right. Well, I think what it is, sounds too, there we go. That's a little bit better.
All right, is, well, I think what it is,
it's where the microphone is.
I have to adjust, but I only have one place
to put it right now, so I apologize.
I think it's also all the open space.
I'm used to a smaller space to podcast in,
so I'll have to set up with the other room.
Okay, good. So we're seeing
what's going on with the world. I have seen a number of recalls, be it bottle water, tomatoes,
packaged food, frozen food, chicken, all sorts of things with huge issues of E. coli.
And then the manufacturer of Niagara water and all of the subwaters that they package
have been known to cause other illnesses along with E. coli.
And then there was another water brand that was causing bloodborne illnesses, which is interesting that we say it as preppers as long as we've been preppers
that in essence the government's trying to kill you and in its own way it kind of is. If you think
about it, the whole issue of people are getting sick off of what's supposed to be safe to eat or drink.
So I am we've been saying this for years, those who knew me when I was a family affair.
For my previous podcast, now that I'm in Phoenix, I am always pushing self sustainability and
self reliance being able to do it yourself being able to provide for your family, being able
to offer more than what you can get at the store. One, it's more cost efficient to be able to grow
yourself. Yes, it's hard work. No one said being able to grow your own plants and being able to
process your own animals is easy, but it's well worth the hard work. It is worth being able to process your own animals is easy, but it's well worth the hard work.
It is worth being able to provide and feed your family.
And I tell you what, it really does take the strain
off of versus going to the store.
Most of the fruit that you get are berries
are covered in pesticides.
And a lot of those pesticides have been known to interact
and affect the human body.
So I think strawberries and blueberries
are some of the worst fruit you can get from the market
because it has the heaviest and most toxic type
of pesticides on it,
that it does affect the reproductive system
for males in certain degrees and females,
it causes other health issues.
So we as a culture, especially in the US,
we use a lot of things that are not allowed in other countries,
which is funny, considering we are considered a first world.
But what we need to do is look at being able to self
sustain for ourselves.
So those of you who have been following my Instagram,
I planted some banana
trees in the garden that I got locally. There is a gentleman who lives here who actually grows several
sets of banana trees in his yard and he says they produce small bananas and we'll see how they do.
I plan on actually ordering another set of bananas but apparently it's very common for people to have their own banana trees here which is interesting it's western North Carolina remote western North Carolina we're
going to keep that always on the DL because I do want to keep our privacy here I had no quarrels
about being open about living in Myrtle which we left Myrtle Beach at exactly the right time.
The number of shootings that have happened out in the open, the number of
injuries and fatalities, human trafficking, which they were all there,
but it's gotten even progressively worse.
The city itself has grown to a point that it wasn't self sustainable.
And it definitely wasn't well for us being able to have a garden and have our animals and not have people in our stuff, which was a big issue of people always want what you have.
People want to benefit from what you have. People want to benefit from what you have.
That's the problem is I'm just trying to provide for my family,
not feed everybody else around me who wants what I have and thinks that they can take it.
I don't know if you can hear him in the background,
but he's definitely, definitely singing around.
But, but no, so we are out here.
Um, my older, older children loved it.
They loved my oldest one loved to be able to hunt squirrel.
We were able to, you know, if we had to trap raccoon, we've, which we have to
keep an eye out because we do have predatorial animals here.
So raccoon, foxes, coyotes, bobcats,
these are things we have to keep out for,
keep mindful for, bear watch.
There is a mother bear with her cub wandering around.
Again, I'm not out to kill these animals.
I will defend myself.
I will defend my livestock. But we had a great
day yesterday. We were butchering turkeys. And I tell you what, it was, it was actually
fun. I enjoy it. I've never had an issue with butchering animals. And for me, my partner
grew up inner city Baltimore, and had worked at a kosher butcher, but had never
actually done it.
Now, mind you, yes, I ended up being a bit of a control freak.
He helped me put the turkeys into the kill box or the kill cone so I could comb and then
I'd make him carry them over and I was the one processing out the meat.
But for me, it's been something I've done for years.
Now mind you, it's been a large gap of years in between the last time I butchered to now,
but it was a lot of fun.
We had a great day.
And for those of you who don't have this lifestyle, I tell you, you're really missing out.
And maybe not on the animal part, but for me,
knowing that I'm doing something good for my family or my friends or whomever I'm handling
this for, it makes a huge step. Being able to start over, being able to even just get
things to where you want them to be. Wow, I just realized my camera makes me look really like blurred too. I feel like it's a bad drawing or animation
So
Sorry, I digress I got distracted by seeing myself on the camera for a moment
Alright, so for example, I am hatching a bunch of chickens from the incubator and those
chickens.
Yep, that's the problem.
I need to put up a blocker on here so it sounds clearer now to me.
I hatched quite a, well, I had several eggs that I got from Ohio Dale's Avery
look her up on Facebook she's amazing when I was up there at the Heartland of
self-reliance expo see if I can lean this down without dropping it on me I've
already dropped it once all right there we go and no it's better this way I
don't know we'll figure it out I went to the Heartland of Self
Reliance Expo in Ohio and I was teaching spinning up there and I met a lot of amazing people,
a lot of people in the Amish community, very nice folks, did some bartering.
Very nice folks, did some bartering. And it was great.
It really was amazing.
Well, I met Miss Christine from Dale's Avery.
And she was like, here, I brought eggs to send home with people.
I don't know if they're going to hatch.
We had seven hatch.
One was a shirama, shiramo chicken, which mind you, their chicks are like this big compared to a normal size chick
and my partner didn't know they had hatched on a weekend i had to be out of town so i'm trying to
drive back and he thought he was helping so i can't be angry but he stuck that little chick in the brood in box with the regular size chicks. And one of my Polish chicks used it as a warming spot
and laid on top of it or stayed on top of it
under the heat lamp and ended up suffocating the little one.
It happens.
If you've got different breeds,
then you do have to be mindful and to keep them separated
or you'll lose them like we did.
And so another one died, which sometimes happens.
I mean, unfortunately it is sad, but it is the way the world, some of the chicks
are strong enough to just hatch, but not actually keep going.
And even though, you know, you want chicks and you want to see them survive,
sometimes it's better to let the weaker ones weed themselves out.
So I've got five Polish chicks right now at two weeks old.
Is that right?
Yes, two weeks old today.
And so I've got another set of six week old chicks, no, eight week old chicks.
I've got some older ones down the hill with the bigger girls, but they're in a containment
coop. So then the bigger girls get acclimated to them before we add them in. And then I
have more eggs in the incubator, but none of my goose eggs hatched. And the reason for
that is anytime you order eggs to ship, it is a gamble of whether
or not they are going to be still viable. And it's not just the gamble of whether they were viable
in the first place. It's the fact that the shipping process can't shake them so hard, it literally
scrambles them. So out of seven, no, eight eggs I received, one was cracked and shipping.
The other six were so badly shaken that none of them took and
we ran it through the full amount of time I had one become a bomb egg.
If anybody knows what a bomb egg is, when it's sitting in the incubator, it starts to ooze and little like bubbles of liquid on the side.
That is literally a ticking time bomb.
You want to get those eggs out as quickly that that egg, especially that egg out as quickly as possible,
because at any point in time, it could literally explode and then the bacteria that's built up in it will ruin
all the other eggs and they won't be viable because
that bacterial can seep into the other eggs.
So it's been very interesting.
I've heard great things about nurture right,
which is what I had for the goose eggs. And then I have my farm innovative.
And I am finding I'm having better humidity control my farm innovative than
my nurture right.
So it's definitely a learning curve.
But I have at least 12 out of 22 eggs in the farm innovative that seem viable.
I haven't checked every single one, but I checked a few.
I'll check the rest once we get to the 10 day period.
And then any non viable eggs will come out at that point.
But it's a mixture of buckeye, black copper, moran.
I have a couple, the buckeye is a heritage.
I would love to get my hands on some more Rhode Island Reds because that's what I had
previously.
And they have some of the best egg productions.
So in our house, you know, it is it goes a long way, especially when I have a little
one who eats four eggs a day for breakfast, three to four, usually four
depending on how he's feeling. So eggs are a huge thing in our house. I don't
know if you can hear him. And then he goes quiet. So mind my egg journey we have you know I could tell you this if you get an
opportunity to live more towards the lifestyle you want it take it because I
can tell you moving from Myrtle Beach to North Carolina to the type of land I
wanted to even if not 100% regardless of
what it is being able to move out to the country and to the lifestyle I am a
custom book customed and more comfortable with has actually helped my
mental health immensely and it just I felt like I was becoming more depressed
in the city it was taken away away from our, our wellness.
Our, our, your mental fortitude is really what gets you around, right?
Well, I flourish in this environment.
I am happy in this environment.
So yes, we have a broken washing machine.
So as soon as I'm done here, I have to go to the laundromat.
I actually need to take apart the washer before I go so
I can go by the parts store to see what it is I need to replace.
And you know what, it's just a part of it.
There for a moment when we first moved out, I was hand washing the clothes,
which mind you, I don't mind doing.
But it did let some of the clothes which mind you I don't mind doing but
It did let some of the clothes stack up and when I had four kids in tow
It just wasn't feasible to hand wash everything
So now I'm just gonna take a quick look to the wash machine at the at the laundromat and then just
Bring it home in the dryer
Yeah, there's no shaming going to the laundromat. Just, I mean, it's fine.
I just have to have quarters on hand.
So I've cashed out like $20 in quarters just so
I have a bag full of quarters to be able to do it.
I don't mind it, but it is take away the convenience of being
old just to wash my stuff here and throw it in the dryer.
But at least it doesn't get my house hot. You know that's someone else's problem
now. I don't know if you can hear him. He's a squeaky little thing. But so I
I've had a lot of there's a lot of current events going on besides the
current events in my life.
I've received lots of messages.
I have my friend who is back towards Myrtle message me about Israel and Tehran.
It's just interesting that, yes, the world is a bit chaotic.
Things are a bit crazy.
Oh, you can't hear him. Okay. $18.25. Yes. I feel like,
especially since I'm going to jump back again, the laundry, the work clothes, and I find that since
I work remote during the day, I usually stay pretty comfortable. So I don't get too many clothes dirty, but my partner
is in construction.
And so that's one of those things I'm not going to slack on making sure he has clean
clothes, let alone stinky clothes left in the house if I can help it.
Let me pull this up.
Yeah, I had a friend reach out to me talking about Israel's dropping bombs
on Tehran right now, which we have all seen. They dropped one. I saw an article recently
they dropped one that caused a 3.0 earthquake because they hit Iran's nuclear. Right. Sorry, Firewolf, I just saw.
Let me see if I can pull this up.
I think I saved it.
I'm trying to get this pulled up. They hit their nuclear structures or their factory and it caused a 3.0 earthquake.
We're seeing madness on the other side of the world,
but we're not talking about,
we're seeing madness here.
We've got the no Kings rallies hitting all over places
this today. We've seen protests and ice and everything else in Los Angeles. And
the
yeah, so yeah, it is. It is just crazy that everything that's going on. So, you
know, it's one of those things where even more so now than ever we need to who know Kings Day and we're working in
Uptown oh no fire were fire wolf are you seeing that directly and if so can you
tell me what it's like there? Because I've seen where there are different protests in
different areas and some even near here in essence. So I've been instructed, well not instructed,
requested not to go out today if I could help it. But life doesn't stop for me just because other
people want to hold rallies. Now I'm not gonna go intentionally into the areas
where those rallies are being held. I am staying armed and I'm keeping my head on
the swivel. You won't see me walking around with my nose and my cell phone
because frankly that does me no good if someone's approaching. Let me see, I think I saved. Dallas is quiet.
Okay.
I, yeah, I haven't been to Dallas in years, but we're not there yet.
Okay.
Right.
And then I'm seeing, they were holding some protests and rally and you have these
people who are illegal immigrants and they admit that they're illegal immigrants and they're holding
the Guatemalan flag wrapped around their shoulders and people say it's injustice. But if you're here
illegally, what do you expect to happen?
Other countries deport people for being there illegally, even US citizens.
So why do you think this country would be any different on upholding rules or laws that
are in place that other countries do not allow. US citizens have been arrested for less in Mexico than we allow to get away with here.
And now people were terrified, I saw it on our newscast where people were terrified
that ICE was going to come to rally Raleigh, North Carolina and seize individuals. But the thing is,
But the thing is, is if you are absolutely out in the open that you are an illegal immigrant, what do you expect?
And for those of you who don't realize, ICE got the way it was in Los Angeles because
it got violent.
Violence does not do any good purpose. A peaceful protest will be looked over a lot more than the violence that ensues.
What do you expect?
Violence begets violence.
And I hate that.
But at the same time, innocent people and pedestrians and standbys are getting hurt.
For what? Now on top of this, we are seeing a huge influx of AI.
We're seeing where AI is being used to create a narrative that doesn't exist or
isn't there or however you want to spin it.
So AI is getting to be a very dangerous item.
I'm not a huge AI person.
I am not pro AI in the sense, yes,
I see there are some benefits to it.
But at the same time, you are gonna hit a point in time
where you can't believe what you see or hear
because AI has twisted things in a way
that makes it almost impossible to believe.
What? That's it now. Hold on.
The 2.1 billion machine behind.
Yeah, I saw that it's Christy Walton
was behind the No Kings from the Walmart Empire. It's just it's it is just
madness and if that is not enough for you to start being proactive for your
family then what is it gonna take? What chaos or what direct hit to your family, is it going to take for you to start prepping for your family?
Why are, you know what Firewall Forge and anyone who's listening live,
please jump in the comments and say, but what do you believe it's gonna take for
people to actually start being proactive?
Prepping is a lifestyle, but it's also an insurance of being able to provide
for your family because times get hard, times get tough.
And if anyone is a good example of it,
I'm gonna say it's myself.
I have been through hell and back.
And you know what, my preps and being able to feed my family
and provide for my family,
even when there is so
much uncertainty was my peace of mind, was my happy pill for those chaotic times that
I could feed my family, that I had enough money put up to be able to save for a rainy day,
or if my car broke down, or we didn't have enough money for gas,
you know what, having that 20, 40, 100 bucks, whatever it is,
something is better than nothing.
Having it put away is what gets you through those rainy days.
And people just don't seem to realize that having that insurance
is going to be the best thing.
And I agree with you, Firewolf.
I'm going to, let's see, can I make this show on the, there we go.
I'm not prepared enough.
And you know what?
That is always my mindset on certain things of being able to make sure, hey, I need to do more.
I need to make sure I've got this.
I can always improve what I'm doing.
But Firewall, what do you think it's gonna take
for people just to start?
Now, I've noticed, I feel like our generation,
for the most part, have started really putting in the effort
to live a little more sustainable.
We went out for the first time in a while for dinner last night.
We butchered turkeys during the day and I told my partner, I was like,
I just don't want to cook.
And we had a great evening out.
And mind you though, going to a restaurant with my food allergy,
because I make everything here. I get there and they offer me
food and I tell them I have a soy allergy and the girl goes, oh we have street corn. I'm like,
I would love that but it's got bannings which has soy. So you have to be proactive in what you do
and what you eat and how you live.
We attempted to go to breakfast somewhere that morning. And I can tell you this, I like doing my own breakfast at home.
So after this, I am going to run by the butcher cause I'm out of bacon.
I have to get to a point to learn how to cure bacon, which James, I know you're
listening, I need you to resend me how you cure your
bacon because I definitely, I need that, actually I probably need that book he's
always showing the charcuterie board book on how to smoke your own meats. That
that is a goal and has been a goal for ages so I do plan on building a smoker
and slowly get into it.
But I don't know where I went off topic, I'm so sorry.
But yeah, finding that the modern world,
how they eat versus how you eat was very interesting.
Went to a cute little restaurant in the morning for breakfast, but
it was just pure sugar that we all felt sick after a few bites. And it was good food, I
guess. I mean, but yeah, we can't do sugary food. It's funny how once you live a certain
way, even for us, even for a month or two,
living the way we have, it's been phenomenal.
I cook every night for supper.
Yes, that seems like a lot, but when you live in a homestead
and when you live in a means where you have to do everything,
it's not as easy as driving down the street or ordering a pizza
because you live somewhere where food just doesn't get delivered. It's nice to be away from the world of
modern conveniences. My partner works all day, just about every day, and so being
able to provide a hot meal at the end of the day when he comes home and gets off work, being able to pack his lunch for the next day.
It's kind of, it's gratifying to know that
as my partner is providing for our family,
I'm providing for my family as well.
And yes, it turns into the whole role thing,
but you know what, I don't care.
I enjoy cooking, I enjoy feeding my family.
I enjoy getting up first thing in the morning, making a little one breakfast, getting him
situated for the day, tending to the chickens, and then starting my day.
It's just how it works.
You find a flow that works for you, and it just takes off.
Let's see.
Ta-da. Okay. Oh, ha! People were ignorant. Yes, that is very, very
true. So I have an example of, I remember where I was going earlier, on the chickens.
So I have the five chicks that hatch, the little Polish hens. And yes, they're for food birds, but when you're giving free eggs that are fertilized,
you don't look a gift horse in the mouth, right?
I had an issue of where I was keeping them in a brood and box in the house in a tote
with a heat lamp.
Mind you, this was where my pantry space was going to be and I needed the space back.
So I had seen this little project online where people had been using like the watermelon
boxes or the fruit boxes or the stuff that things are stacked in because it's a giant
cardboard box.
So I go into Olly's and I see that they have the carpet boxes and through the giant boxes,
but they have wood structure built inside and I'm like, oh, that'd be perfect.
I can easily lay something over it.
I can attach the heat lamp to the wood.
Nothing's getting overheated.
Nothing's going to melt.
So I go in there and I ask, can I have that box?
And it was on a Friday and she goes, yeah.
I was like, but I can't do it today.
Can I come pick it up tomorrow?
Well, mind you, it's a giant box, like giant, OK?
I can easily sit down in it, lay down in it, no issues.
I was like, I have to break it down.
So she made sure nobody broke down that box
and left it for me, that I came before they opened the next day.
And I picked up said box.
Oh, there he is.
I picked up said box and the gentleman who willed it out says, how are you going to get
that in your car?
Mind you, I drive a little Nissan Rogue and my partner is like, oh, strap it to the roof.
No, it's cardboard. So I actually took my pocket knife
and I scored where all the staples were originally
and lifted that wood piece out of the box
and fit that in the car.
And then I broke down the box like you would any box.
I cut the tape, folded it up, got it slid into my car
because this gentleman's like,
you're not gonna fit that in your vehicle. I'll be surprised. While I was
doing that, I had a family and another family's pull up just sitting there
watching me as I'm working on this giant box to collapse it down to fit it into
my car. I got it into my car and it is now my brood and box for my chicks out
in the carport,
which has been enclosed in a fence and covered over the top to keep the predators out.
And I tell you what, it has been the best option for a brood and box ever.
And the fact that this place asked me, do you need pallets too?
It's like, absolutely, they go, go well come and get them anytime you want. So being able to find a local resource for
items or things that I can use to make my life easier, it's just going to take
a little work. I am absolutely fine with it.
And I'm glad I didn't strap it to the top of my car because wind
and rain do not work well with cardboard. So sorry,
the light. Firewolf, where were you? Okay, back. Did you run off? But it goes to show
a little ingenuity can go a long way. I mean, I when I went in there and I saw that I figured
I'd ask and the worst that they would say is no.
And a lot of times these companies and businesses
just don't want to have to deal with it.
It's one less thing that they then have to break down.
They're happy for you to take it off their hands.
It's one of those resources, just like for me,
I like to go to cattle feed stores.
And if they have the empty molasses buckets, I'll ask if I can get the
molasses buckets, because those are what I prefer to grow my root vegetables in.
So I only have two so far, but I mean, it takes time to find it, to get to know
your surroundings and get used to the area that you live in.
He's just cramming things in my desk drawer. know your surroundings and get used to the area that you live in.
He's just cramming things in my desk drawer. I can't even be mad.
But yeah, I'm going to have to fix this.
I'll have to get one of those little wind sound things just to cover the back.
I think that would help.
Firewolf, with the hand up here,
has that helped with the audio any?
I feel like it has on my end.
If he's still there.
So this morning we are only on YouTube and X.
I didn't get rumble or Instagram set up and you know what that's okay it happens.
I'm just glad to be back. I'm glad to have
interest in things to tell y'all. What are you doing? Okay. It's been great though on the Phoenix
Homestead. That's just what we're going to refer to it. If you're following my Instagram, you will
see posts. I did post pictures of the chicken, the turkeys
that we ended up butchering. I ended up, for those of you who are not following me on Instagram,
feel free to follow me. It is phoenix underscore survival. I am on rumble, which I will probably
after this post it up onto my personal rumble. I am on TikTok sort of, I haven't been posting. I need to,
I have a Facebook. I haven't been, I'm not the world's best at posting on here.
I've got to get my YouTube set up too.
But I do plan on putting more videos and content of the things that I'm putting
into the ground or the animals that I'm processing out.
And you will get to see those.
And if you're squeamish, don't watch.
I'm just gonna say it that way.
But for us, it's a part of our household.
I have my bibs outside that are covered in blood
that I have to definitely get washed.
We ran into some situations with the turkeys
where processing out six,
four of them were viable. The only reason why the other two weren't processed, one had
some serious wounds and infection that all I could do is give her a mercy kill. It was
healed that way so it was an open wound but you could see there was other issues
another infection form and then another one where the bird looked great i cut her open and i find
a pus pocket on one of her legs which for those of you who know any birds that go broody
even with turkeys they'll pluck out their feathers and then they'll use that and lay on it,
which if they're broody too long can create sores.
And sometimes you can't prevent that.
And so the other bird who had the pus pocket on her leg, even though her breasts look great,
those type of infections do end up becoming systematic and going through the bloodstream,
that it just wasn't worth risking illness
or potential sickness for anyone else.
So those animals were put down and then we'll start over.
And it just means those birds will be processed out sooner
and not be allowed to go broody as long as they were
the next go around.
So everything that is done is done with making errors. out sooner and not be allowed to go broody as long as they were the next go around.
So everything that is done is done with making errors, learning, finding out what's best,
but has not discouraged us in any bit.
I mean, four out of six and one of them being a huge Tom, like the turkey breasts were ginormous, like ginormous.
Like when I say, when I say the turkey breast was big, it was big.
Go to sleep.
It is 8.25 AM here.
I have been awake since 5.40 AM.
My day is just going actually if I'm
on here too much longer I'm probably gonna have let most of my day go away.
So good morning to you though if you don't like it you can go to bed. But we
are yeah that they were huge turkey breasts. I mean when I say they were this
big they were literally that big
They were probably about five pounds each minimum
it took some work to butcher him to get every bit of viable meat and then the
Legs and quarters were ginormous. I mean he was a heavy bird
There was no me picking him up and moving him by myself at all. I was thankful I had two people to help.
Yeah, he was huge.
The girls were heavy too,
so we have to fix our kill cone method.
And I told my partner the kill cones
because I'm only five foot two,
have to be much lower to the ground.
Dishes are done.
Dishes are always done first thing in the morning
after breakfast and right after supper at night.
All dishes are done, but thank you.
But finding out what works for you on a homestead
is number one, making sure that everything's finished,
everything's finished,
everything's maintained.
But for us, for the kilkones is making sure they're at a level that I can easily process
these animals out by myself.
Thank you, considering my nails are plain and not polished.
Thank you considering my nails are plain and not polished. Thank you
But So for us the co cones have to be much lower just because if I am going to be the one
You know if I'm processing animals out when he's not off work
I need to be able to manage it by myself and lift in a
40 pound bird above my head was not viable.
And these, these birds flop and have talons and claws like crazy that I actually, actually
we had a moment where one of the bird's wings got loose when we were turning him into or
turning her upside down into the kill cone and her wing got loose and she smacked the crap out of all of us. And I thought
I was going to have like a black eye because there's a lot of force in those birds and
turkeys are not weak animals by any means. And turkeys are very strong and very stout. And it's like wrestling an adult or a teenager.
They are very, very stout and relentless
and they're gonna do their best to get away from you.
People say turkeys are easier than chickens. I like them both. I really do. So our goal is to get back to we have the chickens. We're hopefully going to have more but hopefully to have some turkeys and rabbits. Rabbit meat is amazing. Rabbit meat is super high in protein. They are super fast and easy to produce.
And they're great all the way around.
Eventually, though, my dream animal to have,
even if it's just like two or three, would be a couple sheep.
Yes.
Oh, Fireworks, that's right.
You do your videos on processing out rabbits, correct?
Because I think I followed some of yours on Instagram, no,
on TikTok.
And then I think I follow yours on Instagram as well.
The rabbits are super easy to process out.
So our squirrel is like cheating the system
with how easy they are to peel back and clean.
But it's good meat.
It may not be much meat, but if you're hungry,
squirrel is actually very delicious.
I have to say, my 15-year-old, when he killed
and processed out some squirrel,
you let these kids cook what they kill
so they can learn what to do and how to do it.
You'd be surprised how well squirrel and
raccoon cook up, especially if they're done correctly.
The hardest part is rabbit is cute.
I love that you said that, rabbits are cute.
For me, I don't know, I don't allow myself to get attached to my animals and the pet sense,
because all of my animals have a multipurpose of feeding my family or fiber rabbits being
bred with a meat rabbit, so then I produce fiber and meat.
Even though fiber rabbits can be eaten,
they just don't produce as much meat in the long run.
But neither do wild hares, don't have as much meat in the long run. But neither do wild
hares don't have a lot of meat on them either. But for us, I yeah, I can see
where rabbits are cute. I actually had a harder time butchering hogs when my
friend had cooney cooney American guinea hogs because they were like giant pets
who all they wanted was back scratches and tummy
rubs. So that one was probably a little harder for me to process
out than the rabbits were. But that's why we now make sure we
have the proper tools to be able to do it quickly and to do it
efficiently. And I am at a point where I actually need
to sharpen my filet knife.
I need to get all of my tools back up
because after the work we did yesterday,
maintaining your gear is gonna be number one.
So cleaning up the area,
making sure everything's disinfected and put up.
We like to maintain a very clean work area and making sure everything's disinfected and put up. We like to maintain a very clean
work area and then clean everything up and resharpen all of our blades afterwards as well because
you put it through some work. So the first thing you want to do is maintain your equipment and
make sure everything's good for processing. I'm going to tell you right now. Yes, so we are talking. Hi, Donald. You are jumping on. I'm Phoenix
Survival Jay Ferg with Prepper Broadcasting Network. We are, I'm a prepper and we're talking
about preparedness and I'm just giving, I've been off air for a hot minute, so I'm just
giving an update on what's been going on and processing animals.
So prepping for us doesn't mean, oh, you're not disturbing, I promise, join in. I actually
love the comments. It isn't necessarily for the end of the world, but we're ready in case
the world doesn't. So it is a homesteading lifestyle for myself.
And preparedness has been a lifestyle all my life.
Okay, you skirted around Dallas.
That's phenomenal.
Being able to bypass those areas is amazing.
For me, I'm thankful this isn't a weekend
where I have to drive through Atlanta
because with where I live now,
there is no bypassing Atlanta.
I have to go straight through the heart of
it when I travel. And I can tell you, I don't care to drive through Atlanta at all.
I've done is barely walking, waking up. Oh, is it okay. So Firewolf says that Dallas is
born with riots. It's always a flop. So we'll see. I'm
I'm hoping I don't run into anything when I run into town. I'm going to actually go out of my
way to avoid the areas in which I know there's going to be some no king
protest and other things going on. I'm going to be in tow with a toddler and a pistol.
So why risk or put myself in a potential danger?
If you cannot stand Atlanta, never go to Philly.
I'm not a big city person to be honest with you, Donald.
I like my country setting, but the traffic and the stops in Atlanta are just a little much.
I've lived in Dallas. I've lived out towards Atlanta
I've lived near Memphis there. I just don't I'm not a city person and you know what? There's nothing against the people who like it
It's just not for me
Personal preference, but yes, I have no intentions. I can promise you I'll never go near Philly
But I'm I won't go to New But I won't go to New York.
I won't go to New Jersey.
Just not my bag.
So maintaining good equipment is going to be a big one.
My partner found I had some new loppers for the garden.
And he used that after the kill cuts were done just to make it
easier so the head wasn't flopping he just cut the whole head off with the
loppers which is fine because the turkey was so big to get him through the kill
cone his head got through but there was no getting his head out to pull the
whole bird out of the kill cone so we actually had to take his head completely
off after he had been dispatched to be able to bird out of the kilcone. So we actually had to take his head completely off
after he had been dispatched
to be able to remove him from the kilcone.
So it is interesting,
the different things you learn and use
towards being able to butcher and process.
Vinegar is an amazing friend
for disinfecting and killing bacteria.
I know a lot of people like peroxide,
but I like using vinegar.
I always rinse off my tables with vinegar and wipe things down with it.
I have a cooler that's kept nearby,
gallon-sized bags, nitrile gloves, folks.
I use gloves in the kitchen when I'm cooking or handling raw meat,
just for my own peace of mind, less washing of my hands.
I still wash my hands like crazy even after taking gloves off,
but having that barrier kind of helps.
So gloves are a staple in our house at all times.
And actually once I get off the air here with y'all, I will be jumping,
well, laundry and then blackberry picking.
I have had a huge uptick in deer around my blackberry bushes
and that when I pulled in this morning,
there was one laying down in the side yard
that I was like, okay, I have to watch these berries
every morning and every day as much as possible because the berries are on the verge of turning.
And if I wait too long, the deer will out eat them or out will beat me to them and eat all of them.
So then there won't be any blackberry jam or jelly in the house.
And blackberry jelly is my absolute favorite.
I am a sucker for a good blackberry jelly or blackcurrant. And so I am,
my goal is to beat these deer to the berries so I can get enough to start cannon and have some,
some homemade jellies here. He's actually being phenomenal. And I can't believe he's not made a noise.
But it's going to be interesting.
It's going to be good.
I think for those of you who are following me on Instagram, you're going to see a lot
more posts and upticks.
I will have more actual content to speak to you about on the weekends, but it has been
a crazy month and a half, two months.
I don't know.
I don't think the last time it popped on, it was right before Ohio at the Heritage
Self-Reliance Expo, or sorry, Self-Reliance Conference in Ohio, which I will be there
again next year if Jeff wants me there.
Loved it. Loved the people there. Made some great friends. And then I'll be at Prepper Camp this year.
So if you are not familiar with Prepper Camp, you need to check it out.
Prepper Camp is amazing. It is a three-day event. The cheapest you will ever pay for an event.
Tickets will start to go up.
There are, it's three days, 64 classes a day.
So you can choose a class, you know, there's four,
was it four classes?
No, six classes every hour.
It is amazing.
So I do textiles.
I talk about the different animals for homesteading for making textiles because I do spin wool.
We have cheese making, self-defense, gray man, solar, herbal, cheese making, wine making, bee keeping, axe throwing, everything, everything. Tannen hides, it is super family friendly,
family friendly, and you can camp on sites
and there's food and people.
It's probably the safest place in America
that entire weekend.
And I wouldn't give it up for the world.
The Rick and Jane Austin who have started it
are some of the best people you can meet.
It's a great event.
Between that and Ohio, the Heritage Self-Reliance Conference, those are two events I won't miss
for the world.
I make sure no matter what, I am there.
Even if I weren't to present, I would be there.
It's phenomenal.
So look into it, start prepping.
Jane Austen, no, not the 19th century author.
She is an author,
but she actually talks about homesteading and preparedness.
They do look up the secret garden, secret cattle.
Hey, Firewolf, do you happen to have a link to that
that I could throw in here?
Hold on, let me pull something up for quick.
They have some amazing books, Pride and Prejudice.
No, no, I'm familiar with Pride and Prejudice.
It's actually, I am a huge bookie.
I love my books, I love the classics, but no, not the same author.
This one is a modern Jane Austen and she is a queen.
She is a badass who does everything.
Cheesed ice cream, raises animals, runs a homestead.
Like she's a badass.
Oh crap, Firewolfwolf you usually have that.
That's all right but look look them up uh the hold on let me see I'm afraid if I jump off the screen
I will lose people so let me see if I can do this. I don't know if you can see me. I don't know if it's still there, but we are.
This is why I need to get secondary screens. All right, hold on. I'm going to look up this
book real quick. I have actually one of his books behind me and I should
probably just grab that but I want to grab a link and place it in here so let
me do this.
Alright folks and mind you I'm just grabbing a link. I'm not getting anything from this, even though I do have an affiliates page.
This for me though, is just sharing.
Mother of Pearl, why is this being so difficult?
What? Okay. I don't know if I lost you at any point.
I'm going to post this in here.
I just did a copy and paste at the link.
Oh, wow, that's huge.
It's not what I wanted.
I put it twice. So if you go to that link, it's Amazon Secret Garden Survival Camouflage Garden, Camouflage Forest by Rick Austin. Look them up. This duo is the, he is known as the godfather of prep in and she is just amazing.
She has some books as well that she's written.
You know what? I think I know what I need to do.
Let me do it this way.
But it is astounding what they do,
the lifestyle that they have, they teach.
They're probably one of the only camps around that doesn't charge people, what other places do for the events.
The tickets start out around six, I believe,
60 and then they do go up over time,
but they don't make profit off of what they do.
They do it for the sharing education and helping other individuals.
Let me see if I can.
I'm trying to see if I, here we go.
I'm trying to see if I can get logged into.
I hate to do it on my affiliate,
but if I do it that way,
it'll give a shorter link.
I don't like this one.
All right.
Yeah, they've got several books that they've actually published,
and I absolutely love it.
All right, here we go.
Get link.
I'm getting the link real quick and I'll get it.
I'll put a better one up.
I apologize.
Thank you all for.
All right.
Yeah, short link.
Here we go.
Copy. All right. Yeah, short link. Here we go.
Copy. Okay.
But yeah, look into their books. I did post that in here. I did do it through my affiliates because I knew it would give me a short link. If you'd like to support, please do. If not, no biggie. But there is the short link. I'm going to actually delete my previous one because it's too big on here.
Perfect. All right. So for those of you who are not on YouTube and did not see the link,
you can put this in. And this will show you one of Rick Austin's book, The Secret Garden or Secret Garden Survival.
It actually talks about gardening out in the open and how you can
form it around just other plants and people don't realize it's a garden.
I believe they actually live by the same system where they have this ton of
acreage or a very small amount of acreage with lots of lots of
food production, which is very similar to the way I'm trying. I have a large area. We'll say it's around 20 to 80 feet in both
directions. But what I'm doing is I am I threw out a bunch of buckwheat and I let the buckwheat bloom,
which I found out buckwheat is a natural and nitrogen fixer,
which is great. Yes, people eat buckwheat pancakes,
but I did not throw it out for the purpose to harvest this year.
I will find out how to harvest and process out,
but I let my buckwheat grow and bloom and go to seed
and letting it reseed itself to keep doing it
because it's just fixing the soil.
Well, the area had lots of plants and there's roots
and all sorts of stuff in the way.
And truth be told, I'm not worried about tilling it.
So I'm doing a no-till method
in which I am literally just digging up and
clearing the spots where I planted things and I'm letting everything else die around it.
Because it's just gonna feed the soil.
I don't care that there is grass or weeds or other plants growing as long as it's
not interfering with the plants I'm growing.
Because honestly, as it dies down, it's going to re-feed the soil, it's going to re-plant itself.
I mean, it's going to keep adding to the soil itself, and it's just going to fix it.
So yes, my garden's not pretty, picture-tilled areas, but you know what?
My garden is still producing.
I've got bananas in one corner, I've got pumpkins in another, and my squash and cucumber and
tomatoes are starting to take off.
And as long as my garden is producing and it's less work I have to worry about in the
long time, in the long of the whole thing, then I'm just happy to be able to produce
food for my family. I know some people are against machine. Are you against even shallow hand
tilling with tools? I'm not. I'm really not. I do want to get one of the hand twist tillers
or ground turners. I just don't have that anymore. Over the years, it got lost or it got broken.
And mind you, I'm not against machine tilling.
It's just where I have my garden,
it's not feasible to machine till.
I do have a tree that takes up part of the area
and that tree has been for,
yeah, I'm fine with the twister one.
I don't have one, I need to get one.
But it would make it easier
for where I'm gonna exactly plant.
But a machine tilling is not feasible for the type of soil
or the area I live in, which is fine.
I can still produce a garden in this very clay dense soil
with no issues, just tilling is not feasible.
I'd hit more rocks and roots than it's worth.
Again, a hand twist till tool, I'm for, absolutely for.
I probably should get one while I'm out.
I actually have a dry erase board right behind my computer.
I need to write that down on there.
But I'm not against the tools of it.
Just there's no point in tilling up an entire area
if you're not gonna use every single square inch.
And truthfully, the trees or the weeds or the plants that live there, I mean, yes, I crumple them
down and move them out of my way for where I'm going to put my garden, but all of that is going
to get re, you know, die and feed into the soil that I'm really not too worried about it. I like
a little bit of an easier sense of gardening than more stressing about all the other plants. I live in southeast Pennsylvania.
We got amazing soil here. Thank God you can till until here. No, that's wonderful. I have
had gardens, mind you, for those of you who don't know me who are new, I lived in Mississippi
for 10 years. I'm originally from Arkansas, and the gardening is very different everywhere.
I had a garden in Myrtle Beach.
In Mississippi, I did till.
I had an entire area that I tilled it,
and then I would mound garden and lay down plastic.
Because that area was, I don't know,
it worked for there.
It worked great for there,
but Tilland does not work for here.
And I'm fine with it.
I am at a point in my life, I'm okay with there being weeds.
The weeds are just gonna die and feed the soil.
So if it's one less thing I have to worry about,
the only other thing I have to build is a compost. I'm going to use the pallets that I'm going to go pick up from
my ollies and I'm going to make a two bay compost so then I can turn into the secondary
bay. But yeah, my partner was like, oh, why don't you get a hand crank compost bin? And
I'm like, why? I'm going to spend twice as much money for something that's going to rust in a very short
period of time.
I'm good with the physical labor.
I grew up in the deep south.
I am okay with the heat and the work because I grew up very poor in a very physical labor
type of family where a good day's work is a hard work.
So for me, I'm flourishing in
this. I love it. Now, gardening, not everyone gardens the same. Some people do the back
to Eden method. Some people, I don't mind actually taking old tree stumps and composting
or breaking down into a garden. I've done that where I've done raised beds,
where I've put tree stumps or wood or even hay in there.
So as it breaks down, it feeds the soil compost bin.
Looks like something I need. I am learning here.
Nope, that's fine. Feel free to ask questions.
Composting is wonderful.
So when I lived in Myrtle Beach and we mowed the yard and there was
a lot of extra yard clippings I actually tossed it into the chickens because the
chickens love to scratch and pick through it but a compost bin is
wonderful because whatever can't be fed to the chickens throw in the compost so
broken leaves and stems we we we throw everything and let it break down and
refeed the land here.
It's how it was being done before we showed up here. It's how I'm going to continue doing
it while I'm here just because it works. I mean, I live in a very dense forest area,
so if the forest is flourishing the way it does from everything that breaks down that's left there then I
I like it. Ooh Firewolf, you know a compost guy
Tell me more
Tell me more so we can share that information
But it's just one of those things some things I will let fall die and compost itself right where it lays and other things
It's just easier to put into a compost bin.
Uh, most of my table, actually all of my table scraps go to my chickens.
My chickens destroy it.
Uh, whatever is left of the scraps that they didn't eat, like the rinds of the
cantaloupe, then I will, Spurko, what's Spurko?
Is that a person?
Um, I will gather up the rinds and the things that they didn't pick at.
And then those will actually go into the compost.
So then one less thing, break it down even more.
So do you mow your lawn with a bag and just cut the grass to remain where it is?
Actually, so I live in a very hilly,
well, I live on a mountain.
The terrain is sloped as I'll get out.
Oh, it is a person, Jack Spurko.
Okay, thank you.
I actually use a weed eater
and I manually go through and I cut things down.
When my oldest was here between me and his fathers, he likes to do the yard work.
I enjoy doing the yard work.
So everything that we weed eat or mow down, depending on if it's in our lawn,
I actually gather that up and that gets thrown into the compost.
But a lot of the times if it's on a side region where
we don't do anything on, we'll mow it down.
And we'll just kind of let it lay there for a little bit.
And then we'll collect it up and put it over in the compost
or toss it to the chickens.
In the past, I have used a bag.
But when I was mowing like three acres,
we used a rye and mower.
And so we just gather up the clumps that way or try to blow them in a way where they clump
so then we could rake them.
But I don't have a push mower.
I have a weed eater or one of the hand disc mowers, and which then everything's gathered
up afterwards.
It is Jack Spurko.
All right, Firewolf, you have to tell me more about Jack.
Is he like a YouTuber?
Is he a podcaster?
Is he a website?
If he's composting, I definitely need to look that up.
Yeah, so Donald, if you are leaving the grass where it is, in a sense it is, but composting,
I let it break down where it's at, but actual composting is when you have an air, ah, the
survival podcast.
Okay, thank you.
I will look into that.
Composting is where you set everything and you're at what it does is it's
adding heat that heat on top of itself is breaking it down twice as quick and so that is being turned
into usable nutrient rich soil that you can then use in your garden or wherever you're going to
plant and it feeds it. So what it is is you're breaking down all of the components of everything you're putting in
there to feed your plants or promote good,
healthy soil that you can use everywhere.
So I actually am one of those people that all of my goose eggs that did not
hatch, well, none of the goose eggs hatch,
but all the eggs that were bad
that I pulled from the incubator.
Before I planted my tomatoes,
when I dug out all of the soil,
I actually put the eggs in the soil
and then planted my tomato plants on top of it.
And the reason for this is the eggshells in our house
from our chickens get recycled back into the garden
and sometimes fed back to the chickens because the
chickens need the calcium and the plants thrive off the calcium tomatoes love it and as the eggs
break down and rot in the soil it feeds the soil.
Oh no Firewolf I'm so sorry apparently he made it all the way out to work to not even
have work. So why did they call you to come in if you can't go anything? I'm so sorry,
Amanda, hear that. Oh my God. That is ridiculous, especially for a drive like that for you.
But no, so everything that we use in our life here in our garden, the eggshells can be fed back
to the chickens, you can bake them,
which I have done in the past,
only because it makes it easier to absorb into the soil.
It should pay you for your drive.
Right, I agree.
Firewolf Donald says they should pay you.
Let me make sure sometimes X's comments don't pop up. No, OK.
You can feed the eggshells right back to the chickens. It is not going to hurt them.
Actually, they need the calcium. When I give my chickens grit I prefer given oyster shells because it is calcium it is going to break down. It is good for their system you
want them to have good strong eggs not enough calcium in fact affects the egg shell development
and sometimes you'll get soft eggs or crinkly eggs they're just different factors so you
want to have good healthy birds to be able to produce good healthy eggs for you and
your family.
Yeah, is that so?
But I have definitely rambled on for a good hour straight, no commercial breaks,
no nothing. And I'm probably gonna end it here because I do I am approaching on nine
o'clock which is normally my normal showtime but today and probably in the
future I'm gonna go a bit earlier just so I have more time to do everything I
need to here I will be yeah if there's anything you're curious about or
interested and let me know check us out out at prepperbroadcasting.com
if you wanna become a member, join us.
It's cheap, all right?
It really is.
I think, what is it?
Firewolf, is it five bucks a month?
Is it even that?
I don't know.
And we have a promotion going on for Father's Day.
So I should have all of this on here.
I don't know why I didn't put it up,
but we have, this on here. I don't know why I didn't put it up, but we have,
here we go.
Here's our banner, become a member today at pbnfamily.com.
You can use, I believe it's promo code PBN20.
No, we have one, dads?
I will have to find it.
We have a promotion going on for it.
I believe it's PBN20, but I'm not 100%
sure. But yes, go to PBNfamily.com, become a member, join us, follow us at Prepper Broadcasting
Network. We're on Instagram, YouTube, Rumble. I just did not go live on Rumble today, which
is so unfortunate because I do see a good turnout on the numbers. But yeah, feel free to join us. We have lots of interest
in stuff that we talk about. Each of the hosts are from very different walks of life. I just
do a Saturday morning and I stream live on my Instagram. This is it for us. This is it
for me. My life is this.
So Donald, I'm going to put this up here before I go anywhere.
And just say real quick, he says here, I like prepper stuff, but my wife is terrified of
the woods and I can never take her out to nature really.
Baby steps, because her being confident in what she do will make things a lot easier.
The woods are not for everyone.
I was married to a man who was not a prepper by any means.
I am totally the prepper or was before my new partner.
And,
okay.
She's from Liberia, Africa.
No idea what happened there.
They call it the, yes.
So things are very different. Just make sure
you're confident in what you do and your skills and she will learn to trust your confidence,
PTSD and trauma from whatever she went through or may have gone through or seen through someone
else is not something that that goes away overnight. But your confidence will give her
confidence to trust you should an emergency
ever happen. Don't force it on her. It takes time. You seem like a very, very sweet and
understanding gentleman. So I imagine just be confident in what you do. She will learn
to trust that. But yeah, so let's see, I am.
Yeah, he's getting chatty.
So we're gonna definitely have to.
Yeah, let's see.
Is this it?
Yes, there we go.
Look into going to, if you're interested in Prepper Camp. Donald, if
this is something you're interested in, it is in Saluda, North Carolina, but it
is a three-day weekend. There are amenities around if this is not
something that you think you could handle on its own. But hey, that nub, I am
so sorry. I'm actually jumping jumping off I wish I had known
that. I came on super early today but I will make sure to set it up at a better
time for me even if I have to shoot you a message because I know you're a busy
man like Firewolf. But I hope you all have a great weekend. Be on the lookout
if you're interested in following me on Instagram.
It is phoenix underscore survival.
It is my Phoenix Survival Emblem.
Let me throw that up there real quick and then,
there it is.
That's the emblem you need to look for.
All right, folks.
I hope you have a great weekend.
If you're interested in anything that we talked about
or have questions on anything else, feel free to reach out to me.
I am here on YouTube, X, Instagram, Rumble.
You can reach us at Prepper Broadcasting Network or even PBNfamily.com.
So take care, have a great weekend, and just enjoy the day.
