BHM’s Emergency Preparedness guide is heading to the printer again
Wednesday, January 9th, 2008Here’s a timely email I received yesterday about the magazine’s preparedness guide:
I am a recent subscriber to your Backwoods Home Magazine and I thoroughly enjoy it. It is the only magazine that I subscribe to that I read from cover to cover. I want to thank you for putting together the wonderful Emergency Preparedness and Survival Book which I received with my subscription. This book is priceless. I’m so impressed with this book that I ordered more for family. My husband and I aren’t hard core homesteaders, just ranchers living quite a ways from the nearest town but we’ve always had at least a 6 month supply of supplies on hand. With the world situation being so unstable, we decided that we needed to expand our supply and this book has been so very helpful. Thank you again.
Sincerely,
Camille Habermacher
Utopia, Texas
Just the other day the office staff and I were discussing how soon we had to send this book back to the printer for its fourth printing. Stocks are getting low so we’ll no doubt reprint in a month or two. The Emergency Preparedness and Survival Guide is a valuable book, full of information you will need if you are to survive an emergency in relative comfort. With more and more economic forecasters predicting a severe downturn in the economy later this year, this book may become very handy in the near future. It contains 296 pages and sells for $21.95. Inexpensive for what it contains. A lot of people order it in bulk — 10 copies at a time — at the big discount we give, and give them to their family and friends. If other readers would like to check it out, click here . If you’d like to read a couple of sample articles from the book, click here and here.



I’ve just about finished establishing my new overflow firewood storage area. It’ll hold a little more wood than I thought — at least 6 cord. Since I can already store about 4 cord under cover, and my average winter use is about 2 cord, that will give me about 5 years worth of firewood storage, 2 years of which will be under a wood roof and the rest under a tarp. Not bad!
I gave up using my chainsaw to get out the stumps and roots in the middle of the spot I had chosen for the overflow area. There were too many rocks and dirt embedded in the roots. A running chain just needs to touch dirt and it’s dull. So I hired a neighbor, Shawn Crouse, to bring up his stump grinder and take the whole mess out.
A stump grinder is one of those super nifty machines that have an ingenious, but simple, design. Made by Carlton, it weighs 1600 pounds and its 27-horsepower motor turns a grinding wheel that contains 20 carbide teeth. The set of teeth cost a hundred dollars to replace but Shawn said he can get through about 10 big stumps with one set. Rocks tend to dull the teeth.
He operated it with a remote control attached to a long cord so he could guide the action of the grinding wheel up close. One carbide bit worked its way loose during the grind so he had to stop and replace it.
here. Every time BHM gets in a shipment of magazines or anthologies, they are on skids (pallets), for which the magazine is charged $17 each. Highway robbery? I agree. I’ve given lots of skids away, burned some, and my kids have used them to build a clubhouse. This project used up 22 skids.




