Practical information/skills
8.26K subscribers
570 photos
85 videos
230 files
509 links
Requests and suggestions to
@despertarferro
Download Telegram
https://www.artofmanliness.com/

Very good for normies, for those who read this and are just starting on being fuctional in life, autistic and people with bad parenting.

Get Character
Get Style
Get Skilled
Get Ahead (Personal Career
Get Strong
Get Cultured
Get Social

"Get action; do things; be sane; don't fritter away your time; create; act; take a place wherever you are and be somebody; get action". THEODORE ROOSEVELT

#General #Personal #Social
#Coronavirus , Start taking zinc gluconate, 2-4,000mg of vitamin c a day and the NAC supplment if you can get it easily.
The_complete_survival_shelters_handbook.pdf
9.6 MB
Complete Survival Shelters Handbook

A Step-by-Step Guide to Building Life-Saving Structures for Every Climate and Wilderness Situation.

Chapter 1: Shelter Fundamentals
Chapter 2: Making Debris Shelters with Your Bare Hands
Chapter 3: DIY and Modern Material Shelters
Chapter 4: Modern Store-Bought Shelters
Chapter 5: Mental Preparedness #Personal


#Survival_skills #DIY Shelter, Building
surviving pneumonia: 5k subs special, https://t.iss.one/wuhappening/322

The hospital systems in most countries would be completely overloaded if only 1% of the population was infected with Corona-chan. It is therefore important to know how to manage the illness at home.

Basically, if you get sick but you don't get pneumonia you must just be careful not to infect others, you've just got a cold, you won't die.

If you do have pneumonia (likely if you have fever, chest pain, shortness of breath, and generalized body pain) then you are very sick and at risk of dying.
But even then, most hospital treatment for a viral pneumonia is supportive and can be done at home, only the most serious cases require monitoring and equipment that can only be found in hospitals and which requires trained doctors.

Pneumonia basically kills you in two ways. First is direct damage to the lungs resulting in inflammation and pulmonary oedema, stopping effective gas exchange and in already sick people even causing heart failure.

The second way it kills you is from the loss of appetite. people who are sick dont drink or eat, they become weak and dehydrated, and the succumb to the illness or dehydration.

There is a lot you can do at home. the most important is to make sure the sick people eat and drink, protein shakes and powdered rehydration solution (both cheap and easy to find) are good here, but plain old water is just as good.

Treating the lung pathology is hospital is usually done by giving oxygen. This isnt feasible for most people, but if you have a nebuliser at home you can nebulise saline to help clear secretions. If you don't have a nebuliser, then salbutamol asthma pumps in most countries can be bought over the counter and can be used to make breathing easier by dilating the lower airways. Inhaling steam also does the same thing.

Taking medicines can help with a fever. NSAID medication such as ibuprofen, or aspirin for adults.

Everyone can benefit from chest physiotherapy (google for instructions) which helps clear secretions from the lungs.

All of these steps can help prevent respiratory failure, the severe consequence of pneumonia. Stay safe, and wash your hands. @wuhappening
00ef82e5bb5a5e8c865747fe8136b276.jpg
862 KB
Vegetable Growing Cheat Sheet

-Vegetables for a plot garden

-Vegetables for a patio garden

-Planting, care and Harvesting

-Companion planting

#Supplies
👍1
basic-book-of-knots-and-lashings.pdf
2.1 MB
Knots and Knotting

Types and care of rope

The Six basic Scout Knots and Hitches.

-Whipping

-Splicing

-Lashing

Proyects.

#Survival_Skills #DIY
https://t.iss.one/mhz1488/896

Water:
You should store 1 gallon of drinking water per person per day you are preparing for. You can get away with half of this in an emergency situation, but if you’ll also be out doing strenuous activities I’d suggest going ahead with a full gallon. Don’t forget, pets need water, too: my rule of thumb is a half gallon for every 50 pounds but your mileage may vary. It may be best to record how many times you fill the water bowl in your house per day, and the capacity of it and go from there. (When you have that value, I’d multiply it by 1.5 to be safe).

Water is cheap, easy to store, and in an emergency can be the difference between life and death.

Personally, I like purified water using reverse osmosis. I’m not a fan of spring water but many people are.

You can buy water in cases of bottles, 1 gallon jugs, or 5 gallon jugs. You can also get NEW food-grade blue 55-gallon drums and store your water there.

I like a mixture of bottles and drums. Bottles allow for ease of access and ease of transport. They are also cheap enough. $50 should get you more than 12 cases of 45 16-ounce bottles (or 67.5 gallons). That’s over 2 months of water for one person, or around 4 months of water in a real SHTF scenario.

Purified water comes clean, free of bacteria and chemicals (check the bottler’s quality report) and other unwanted things. It can store for a long time just by keeping it out of light and heat. When storing your own water, you must take precautions to make sure it is pure enough to be shelf-stable. The best option is to make sure the water you’re storing is pure and free of bacteria going in. This means boiling, purifying, or otherwise treating the water before it ever goes into storage. Water purification tablets work well for this purpose, but make sure you always keep some on hand for emergencies. If there is ever growth of anything in your stored water, you should throw it out.

Don’t ration drinking water. If you’re thirsty, drink water. If you’re low on water, drink water then work to secure a new source of clean drinking water. Rationing food makes sense as the body can live much longer than it tells you it can without food, but dehydration happens suddenly and severely and can keep you from making further rational decisions.

When drinking water from an unknown or untrusted source, use a filter like a sawyer, purification tablets, or boil the water for a full minute prior to consumption. Boiling will kill bacteria, filtering will filter out things like heavy metals and do a decent job removing bacteria, distillation will do both.

Chlorination also works to make water safe to drink. Use only pure bleach, non scented, non anything. Use 1/8 teaspoon per gallon of water and let sit for 30 minutes. You’re looking for your water to have a slight odor of bleach. If not, it’s possible you miscalculated volume, or that something in your water is keeping the bleach from working. Retreat the water once more and if still no smell of bleach, find another source of water.

#Water
Practical information/skills
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lodpf5SRjDw #Survival_skills
1.Dakota Fire Hole (Discreet/Smooth burning)

2.Tipi Fire (Fast setup/Fast burning)

3.Fire Torch (Slow setup/Slow burning)

4.Top-down fire (Slow setup/Slow burning)

5.Log cabin (slow setup/Fast burning)

6.Star Fire (Quick Setup/Long burning)

7.Lean Fire (Quick Setup/Quick burning)
Forwarded from Deleted Account
Forwarded from Deleted Account