cthia wrote:
Nice post Northstar. Very nice. Thank you.
I am Native American. My family and tribe teaches all of the things you mention. And then some. It is part of right of passage to learn these basic things. At an open pauau (pow wow) many of these things are taught. Making a fire with only the tools of nature is a critically overlooked skill. Preserving food with only nature. Clothing. Hunting skills. Bow and arrow is like a gun to us. One should also have the skill to hunt, in snow, in wilderness, etc. And to trap, alive. Knowing nature's natural foods. Roots. Berries. Worms. Snake. Many many insects. The agave worm (found in Tequila bottles) are very nutritious and delicious. Many different ants of course. And several types of worms. There are many things that people take for granted. We all have wells. Guns are fine, but ammo runs out. One should know how to make and use a bow and arrow, a slingshot ... both types. Medicinal herbs. Fishing with just rope, vine, etc. And many would be shocked at what can be used as bait. Can you make a knife with just the tools of nature? Can you filter water with the tools of nature. Can you locate possible shallow water sources from the presence of certain flora? At open "pow wows" it is shocking how many cannot use a compass, or navigate by the night sky.
There is much to learn. Native pow wows are an excellent course.
Hi cthia. And thanks. It is spooky to me how few folks are capable of handling even a few weeks ice storm power outage let alone anything more serious widespread and long lasting. eh. I'm only up for 4-6 months, generally anymore. Too old to deal with more serious anymore and know it. eh. Longer term my goose is cooked. And I know it. Ce la vie.
My family does its own rites of passage, one of the many things sets us apart from the larger society. eh. I like them. For girls the big one is the year you take over cooking Thanksgiving dinner for a crowd, 23 people in my case, The older women step back and you are chief cook, doing most of it, directing what when to get everything out there in proper order and all of it gracious and delicious. I was 14. The sense of accomplishment was... wonderful. The males had their own thing out in the woods on Candlemas, Feb 1 in our thinking, though technically the cross quarter is counted mid point between the solstice and the equinox, thus 'cross quarter'. Snow on the ground, Washington state forest all around. My gr gr uncle told me about his. Was quite something.
I would say folks should not let the ideal be the enemy of the better than nuthin'. Nor should they either get all paranoid...or all complacent 'will never happen'. No one wants crap to happen, but sometimes it does. And it does not send out warnings. eh.
Gods know First Nations folk learned about godawful pandemics the hard way. Terrible. So terrible.
Well, so three more books for anyone's pandemic reading list.
Deadly Outbreaks, by Alexandra M. Levitt
The Viral Storm, by Nathan Wolfe
Pandemics, by Peter C. Doherty
The MSM has pretty much stopped talking about Ebola, though it is still raging in West Africa.