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Moderator: Peak Moderation
Possibly not as a full time paying job, whether payment be in money or in kind. As a useful skill in addition to medical, farming, or other useful skills, certainly.UndercoverElephant wrote:No future for a wild food expert then?![]()
Robert Heinlein, in [i]Time Enough for Love[/i] wrote:“A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects.”
I've been thinking of legally buying several thousand pound's worth of cigarretes and then holding onto them for about half a decade. It would not surprise me to see their retail price double. It's legal to buy them. it's legal to store them, they are non perishable as long asd they are kept dry and, as far as I know it's legal to sell them since the duty has already been paid when you first bought them.UndercoverElephant wrote:I'm sure this has been discussed before in some format or other. I can remember a list of what was valuable during the siege of Sarajevo, but Brighton post-peak-oil is not the same as Sarajevo besieged by Serbs twenty years earlier.
I have cash in the bank which is just going to devalue as prices go up. What should I be buying now and putting in storage for the hard times?
Shoes, towels, lighters...anyone got a list?
What I'm really interested in is smaller stuff which doesn't degrade over time and is likely to become much more expensive in real terms.
Sounds good. Nicotine is natural insecticide.MrG wrote:I want to start growing it anyway for insecticide, for which it is very effective. I kill blackfly on broad beans by collecting peoples fag butts (rollys only) soaking in water for a few months and then spraying on the critters - they don't like it up em. Trust me this really works very well.
You and 59 million other people? I think the future of a food forager's life style is written in NYC. Especially as the resource becomes more valuable.MrG wrote: I am entirely confident in my ability to successfully cultivate (or forage) in this country.
I'm already working on that one.MrG wrote:Steve and UE.
I've been thinking about doing both these tobacco related plans, buying up loads of tobacco (which only ever increases in price) and also growing and learning to cure it. It's one of the most addictive drugs known to man and a large percentage of the population are currently hooked on it - so it's a no brainer really isn't it. And most importantly I don't smoke tobbaco. Kicked that paticular habit about 13 years agoso 'don't get high off you own supply' as they say.
I want to start growing it anyway for insecticide, for which it is very effective. I kill blackfly on broad beans by collecting peoples fag butts (rollys only) soaking in water for a few months and then spraying on the critters - they don't like it up em. Trust me this really works very well.
Why stop there UE.. with your knowledge of plants your halfway to reinventing yourself as the sheriff fatman of the long emergency. I've been thinking along those lines.. Alcohol, Cannabis, Opium, Tobacco, Magic Mushrooms (both of the common native types which I'm sure you know well), Salvia Divinorum, Valerian all of these things I can produce from plants (and fungi of course if we want to get technical) which I am entirely confident in my ability to succesfully cultivate (or forage) in this country.
Not while times are normal you understand. It's just easier to have a job! But in some sort of post collapse society I think there's always going to be a call for the worlds second oldest proffesion.
Add in a bit of knowledge about herbal medicine which you could build up now, asprin from willow, comfrey etc. etc. All fits in with your wild food thing.
A masterplan!You spend enough time foraging in remote places to teach yourself to guerilla grow sativa, save seeds and develop a strain that can do well in the more shady hidden places.
Yeah, I really need to get into brewing....I Need to learn about distillation too. And about growing hops. (Incidently if you can grow hops you can grow cannabis pretty much they are closely related). And gruet beers, need to learn those... most of the herbs the monks used to put in their gruet beers are perfectly legal, Damiana (aphrodisiac) may have got banned recently in that Holland and Barret law, Wormwood, got that growing on the allotmentgonna try adding it to the slow gin this year.
... anyway I'm offt o make another batch of plum wine