PREP What You Can Do To Prepare For an Israeli Attack on Iran This Fall

twincougars

Deceased
What You Can Do To Prepare For an Israeli Attack on Iran This Fall

By John Robb
Here's a seemingly small event that may throw the entire global economy into a convulsion this fall.
Israel may, after years of speculation, attack Iran's nuclear facilities.
Today's New Yorker interview with Meir Dagan (the former head of Israel's Mossad), adds some great insight into the Israeli decision-making on this issue. It shows that there is currently a fight, tooth and nail, between a national leadership team that wants to attack Iran this fall and a smart bureaucracy that opposes it (e.g. Meir has become a vocal dissident due to his opposition to it).
If the attack does happen, the most obvious impact will be a spike in oil prices (with most other forms of energy spiking in sympathy). There will be others, but for the purposes of today's letter, let's focus on finding ways to reduce our vulnerability to an oil price spike.
In fact, let's even narrow it a bit more. Let's focus in on the one thing you can add to your home that will make it resilient to energy disruptions (from shortages to rationing to price spikes): a pellet stove.
Here's an example of a pellet stove in action (photo by designer Tal Goldstein).

This stove is called an insert. It fits into an empty chimney frame. It burns wood that has been shaped into small, dry pellets.
Pellet stoves are an investment in a home's adaptability (remember that word, it's important).
How so? They burn renewable and energy sources. They are easy to maintain and use. They are safe. They are extremely cost competitive (my pellet stove is much more cost-effective than my natural gas heating system). They offer a high degree of fuel flexibility. They are available everywhere and competitively priced. The list goes on and on.
In short, a pellet stove and the purchase of a pallet or two of pellets will radically reduce your vulnerability to any disruption in the Persian Gulf this year and for years to come.
By the way, if you live in an apartment or small home that doesn't have a fireplace, here's a pellet stove from US Stove that fits into a window frame (like an air conditioner insert). It's a little pricey at $1,400 or so, but the payback period is likely quick. Unfortunately, early reviews of this model indicate that it has problems with the auger jamming, but once that gets fixed...


Final note. Contrary to uninformed opinion, pellet stoves allow you to become MUCH more adaptable to future energy disruptions/opportunities (even the dystopian, and very unlikely, TEOWAWKI zombie apocalypse) than standard wood burning stoves. My upcoming energy report will explain why.

Gutter Gardens
Here's an interesting idea from reader Lee:
The attached pictures are of my "gutter garden" consisting of 4? sections of vinyl gutter attached to 1×4 boards attached to the south window frames.

The large chard plants were planted last December and I've been cutting outer leaves every so often. I'm told chard is a biennial plant so they should be good for another year!
Since they are inside, they stay very tender and mild flavored unlike the tough rubbery plants in my outside garden. Because I live alone my greens consumption is just enough to prevent scurvy, buying greens especially during winter, means most of them end up as chicken food before I get around to eating them. Having an ongoing supply of greens during the winter lets me eat all I want with no waste.

The gutters make watering very easy and I use a flood and drain system with vinyl tubes connecting the levels then back into a jug for reuse. I fill the upper gutter with nutrient solution (llama manure tea), let it soak awhile then drain into the lower gutter for a soak then drain, abour 30 minutes total. I have chard, bok choi, arugula, chives and parsley planted. The planting containers are 4x4x6 plastic pots, by using flood and drain irrigation the roots are supplied with oxygen as well as nutrients.
I enjoy your blog, we need all the help we can share.
Thanks much Lee!

Stay warm this winter,
John Robb



https://cs962.infusionsoft.com/app/hostedEmail/577367/2753834404f61b07

I'm not so sure I agree with the pellet stove. Grid failure and all that, but OK for short term maybe.
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Bullwinkle

Membership Revoked
A pellet stove requires electricity.
They are nice but I got rid of mine the next spring after we moved in
so I could have a heat source that does not require me to be dependent on someone else.

After the SHTF, it will not be the one who is best prepared that will survive.
It will be the one that is best able to adapt to changing circumstances.
 

CGTech

Has No Life - Lives on TB
hmmm, biggest problem I have with pellet stoves is... you have to buy the pellets... no pellets.... no heat.. no good....
 

Border guard

Inactive
Luckily, I have a fireplace insert pellet stove, a generator and a solar panel capable of running the stove with an inverter and deep cycle marine battery. If power is lost I have a chainsaw, bucksaw, axes, wedges and a source of firewood. My arthritis will hate me but so it goes. The pellet stove insert comes out easily and after I have burned my four tons of pellets in the hearth in a colander, I will burn green firewood. I have a set of tire chains and a flue brush to clean the creosote from the chimney, if I need to, as the fireplace will burn hot. Being adaptable is the key because conditions may change at a moments notice. I have enough gasoline with Stabil stored to get me away from here but the roads will be a nightmare and a breakdown in the wilderness without cover in a cold vehicle isn't appealing - might as well embrace THE change. I'm old, have plenty of guns with ammo and have prepped faithfully - you can't outrun nuclear winter.
 

colonel holman

Veteran Member
get a real wood stove... heat, cook surface, wood pile, pleasant flames to light the dark evening. served us well for 10 days in subfreezing Maine ice-storm grid collapse 10 yrs ago.

This backs up propane and solar setups. backups to backups to backups
 

Border guard

Inactive
Oh yes, I also have a barrel stove kit which can be worked into the fireplace. I have built a couple of these in the past and they will burn up to 48 hours on one load, heating a 1,200 square foot house. Here is one http://www.amazon.com/United-Abrasi...=1348172598&sr=8-3&keywords=Barrel+Stove+Kits But just a suggestion build it outside and fire it up outside to burn off any residue or paint or live with the fumes inside. The barrel stove kits work extremely well, especially those that have second barrel option for a heat exchanger. I used three foot lengths of wood and heated a formerly all electric home in the '70s for next to nothing, buying stumpage, hard wood pallets and slab wood to heat with. You won't have to worry about staying fit if you heat with wood. ;)
 

Hfcomms

EN66iq
get a real wood stove... heat, cook surface, wood pile, pleasant flames to light the dark evening. served us well for 10 days in subfreezing Maine ice-storm grid collapse 10 yrs ago.

This backs up propane and solar setups. backups to backups to backups


Absolutely agree. There are a lot of folk up here that think they are ahead of the curve because they have the outside wood fired boilers. To be sure they are much more efficient than a standard woodstove but they are useless when the power goes down. Some do have backup power that can work for several hours or even days with a genset but when look at long term outages the simpler the better. There are even woodstoves which are of little use grid down because they depend on fans to circulate the heat. A standard woodstove is hard to beat.
 

Border guard

Inactive
Buy two in case you crack a casting - one for parts. Been there done that - sometimes cast iron will let you down, get a steel stove like the Wonderwood http://www.ibuywoodstoves.com/product/USS0001/US-Stove-B2941-Wonderwood-Circulator.html example only - shop around, which is made of steel - you only have to worry about gaskets and rust. Buy some gasket material and stove cement. The barrel stove is the best stove and the cheapest out of all the wood stoves that I have used and it heated the best. Plus you can remove the kit materials and use them on new barrels.

Absolutely agree. There are a lot of folk up here that think they are ahead of the curve because they have the outside wood fired boilers. To be sure they are much more efficient than a standard woodstove but they are useless when the power goes down. Some do have backup power that can work for several hours or even days with a genset but when look at long term outages the simpler the better. There are even woodstoves which are of little use grid down because they depend on fans to circulate the heat. A standard woodstove is hard to beat.
 

Marthanoir

TB Fanatic
In the living room I have an open fireplace but in the kitchen I have a Stanley range, heats all our hot water, runs the central heating radiators , kicks out a pile of heat, you can cook on it and bake in it, burns anything combustible,

View attachment 94598

I have been thinking of reopening the fireplace in my bedroom and putting in a small cast iron stove, just in case of an ice age ;)
 

Flippper

Time Traveler
I would take a wood stove over a pellet stove any day. I've had both, the wood is far more efficient, you can burn anything (I did-only cut kindling once then learned to make a fire without it) which cuts down on your waste on garbage day, you can cook and heat water on it, and if it's an airtight, it will burn for many hours on a little bit of wood and put out minimal particulates. They also have fan attachments that should work off a solar and battery set up easily.

I like the window garden, but if I'm blocking the sun in winter with plants, I would go all out and cover the windows with plants.
 

Flippper

Time Traveler
Marth, I've been wondering about your "Stanley", I'd never heard of one before, glad you posted a picture, be a handy little stove to have!
 

mecoastie

Veteran Member
I have a Stanley in pieces out in the shed. Picked it up for short money but it needs an overhaul. Wood heat is our primary heat and I will say it is inice listening to the guys at work bitch about the price of oil when all I have to do is go out back and cut.
 

CapeCMom

Veteran Member
We have a wood stove too-third year coming up heating the house with it. This year I invested in two of those Echo-Fans that use the heat of the wood stove to propel the fan blades and distribute the warm air through the house. Has anyone used these before? I like the idea that they don't use electricity. I also invested in an indoor "My Buddy" propane heater for our bedroom. It's over the garage and furthest away from the stove so it gets really cold up there. I'm going to put in on the tile bathroom floor and have the thing blow into the room.
 

Marthanoir

TB Fanatic
Marth, I've been wondering about your "Stanley", I'd never heard of one before, glad you posted a picture, be a handy little stove to have!

Very handy to have, we do most of our baking & cooking with it, we have an electric hob & oven for those days in the summer when we don't light the range, the big door with the dial (temp gauge ) is the oven, the one next to it is the fire box,
Full measurements are 90cm wide, 93 cm high, and 57cm in depth.
It will heat a total of 10 radiators plus your hot water tank.

If you can find one I highly recommend getting it
 

Marthanoir

TB Fanatic
I have a Stanley in pieces out in the shed. Picked it up for short money but it needs an overhaul. Wood heat is our primary heat and I will say it is inice listening to the guys at work bitch about the price of oil when all I have to do is go out back and cut.

If you need parts give me a shout I can try and put you in touch with somebody.
The manual is available online in PDF form
 

twincougars

Deceased
We have two wood heating stoves, one wood cook stove, and a pellet stove. The pellet stove is good if we are going to be away for a day in the winter. It keeps the house temperature up while we are gone so we don't come back to a freezing cold house. We also have electric heaters, but rarely use them.
 

Scotto

Set Apart
In the year 2000, there was a horrible ice storm here. Power was out for a month and a half in my area.

When the power came back on and things got to normal, every single person here with a pellet stove ripped theirs out and bought a woodstove. They ran out of pellets and quickly found out you can't burn firewood in them, and they needed electricity to start some and run the blower/circulating fans in them. Useless.
 

momof23goats

Deceased
pellets like corn stoves are for the dumbest of the dumb. won't work when the pwoer is out. hummm, going to get really cold here in michigan, if you don't have something to keep you warm.
I have a huge pot bellie in the parlour, a homecomfort cookstove in the kitchen, and a wood furnace in the basement.
Now I cook on the cookstove, which also heats several rooms, cooks great food, and bakes wonderfully.
and when the power is out, I can fire up tjh pot bellie in the prlour, between the cookstove and the pot bellie they will heat the house.
but being in the north, it is wise to have heat in you basement so there are no broken pipes.
yes, the wood furnace will keep the basement and first floor rooms, at about 50, with out the blower, but I can always hook u p a battery, and use the blower if I want. so I have several options.
 

Fred Farkel

Contributing Member
We have a wood stove too-third year coming up heating the house with it. This year I invested in two of those Echo-Fans that use the heat of the wood stove to propel the fan blades and distribute the warm air through the house. Has anyone used these before? I like the idea that they don't use electricity. I also invested in an indoor "My Buddy" propane heater for our bedroom. It's over the garage and furthest away from the stove so it gets really cold up there. I'm going to put in on the tile bathroom floor and have the thing blow into the room.

We have used an Echo-Fan for 4 years. It works well for us, but does NOT move a large amount of air. It does even the temp around the stove, and seems to warm into other areas.
 

Countrymouse

Country exile in the city
In the living room I have an open fireplace but in the kitchen I have a Stanley range, heats all our hot water, runs the central heating radiators , kicks out a pile of heat, you can cook on it and bake in it, burns anything combustible,

View attachment 94598

I have been thinking of reopening the fireplace in my bedroom and putting in a small cast iron stove, just in case of an ice age ;)

Stanley Stove as sold by Lehman's:

http://www.lehmans.com/store/Stoves...rford_Stanley_Wood_Cookstove___17120100?Args=
 

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Marthanoir

TB Fanatic


Excellent ,
Over here you can pick up a used one anywhere between €300 & €1000 depending on condition, a lot of peole ripped them out and fitted pellet stoves when the .govt started offering grants, problem is you couldn't get the pellets ans when you could they had to be kept bone dry, no moisture , not a good idea in the Irish climate.
 

Jeff B.

Don’t let the Piss Ants get you down…
At one time, I was looking at pellet/corn stoves and liked what I saw. Fortunately another line of thinking intersected that one and I gave the whole "electrcity dependent" thing a bit of thought. Now I'm campaigning to get the wife on board with ripping out the fake fireplace and putting in a wood stove to use as an additional/alternative heat source. Obviously, we're not cold like many of you northern folks, but I still like the idea of being able to generate some heat without power.

I consider my near miss on pellet/corn stove to be the first benefit from becoming more aware of preparedness. I was pretty close to pulling the trigger on one of those and would be pretty angry with myself now if I had.

Jeff B.
 

DrJerry

Inactive
CHECK YOUR LOCAL LAWS BEFORE INSTALLING A WOODSTOVE. I was raised around wood heating. My grandmother wouldn't cook with anything else. Heated with woodstove when I lived in Oregon (20 years.) Bought this place, it had a woodstove/insert in it. I thought it was cool. One of the selling points of the house. Then they got outlawed and I had to take it out. Had to pay a Certified Scrapper to take it away. Can't burn wood. Causes Global Warming. Jerks.
 

Halfdar

Cold and pissy
We have used an Echo-Fan for 4 years. It works well for us, but does NOT move a large amount of air. It does even the temp around the stove, and seems to warm into other areas.

We have one as well.... it seems such a good idea, using thermoelectricy to power the fan. Our experience is much the same as yours, Fred, and firends who bought the 3-bladed version have not reported any real increase in performance.

And, they are made in Canada (in Wiarton, Ontario!!!!);)
 

Marthanoir

TB Fanatic
CHECK YOUR LOCAL LAWS BEFORE INSTALLING A WOODSTOVE. I was raised around wood heating. My grandmother wouldn't cook with anything else. Heated with woodstove when I lived in Oregon (20 years.) Bought this place, it had a woodstove/insert in it. I thought it was cool. One of the selling points of the house. Then they got outlawed and I had to take it out. Had to pay a Certified Scrapper to take it away. Can't burn wood. Causes Global Warming. Jerks.

From the Lehmans website, The Stanley is exempt from EPA regulations and is legal for sale in most of the USA. However, it is not legal for sale in the state of Washington.

you guys really have to stop letting retards from running for any position of authority, its ruining your country,
 

10-22

Contributing Member
Thanks for the link on the Stanley Stove. I didn't know they still made these.
My grandma had one just like this. Peach cobblers,blackberry cobblers,you name it. All from a little stove. I doubt if she paid $5895 for hers. The food was so much better on the wood stove.
Good information to know on the pellet stoves. I have been looking at the little window units. I never thought about the pellets running out or being priced above reach.
 

Marthanoir

TB Fanatic
Thanks for the link on the Stanley Stove. I didn't know they still made these.
My grandma had one just like this. Peach cobblers,blackberry cobblers,you name it. All from a little stove. I doubt if she paid $5895 for hers. The food was so much better on the wood stove.
Good information to know on the pellet stoves. I have been looking at the little window units. I never thought about the pellets running out or being priced above reach.

Oh yeah , Waterford Stanley is still going, the factory is still here in Ireland http://www.waterfordstanley.com/
 
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