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Remembering
Sept. 11, 2001

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Issue #74
March/April, 2002

This issue is Sold Out.
All articles and features are included on our Thirteenth Year CD.
Click on General Store to the left.

Articles listed in red are available to read online. Just click on the listing


DEPARTMENTS
6  Publisher’s Note

7  Editorial:
    Personal guns getting to be in style

77  Ask Jackie:
    Pickled hot peppers, sunflower seeds, dill pickles, preserving seeds, Brunswick stew in a jar, bitter milk, canning jam, and canning pesto

31  Ayoob on Firearms:
    Sensible gun choices after September 11th and Reality confirms arming pilots

47  Irreverent joke page

24   The gee-whiz! page

23   Poems: Grandma Ruth, Jim Thomas

80  Letters
87   Advertiser Index
83  Classified ads (pdf)
83  Classified ad form
91   BHM books
88-89  Subscription Info

90  The last word:
    Silveira's 1st Law: Every group needs a black sheep

Order form
or call Toll Free 1-800--835-2418

Cover 74
ABOUT THE COVER
     Jackie Clay shot the photograph for the cover in a high country meadow in Yellowstone in 2000. She and her husband go there every year to observe the elk in rut. They hiked in before dawn and caught the elk just as sun rose. “It was cold,” she said. “About 10 degrees. The elk was bugling. What you can’t see, because they’re lost in the fog, is a pack of wolves that howled back.” She laughed. “What you also don’t see is the hair on the back of my neck as it began to stand up.”
FEATURES

Self-sufficiency

14   Disaster preparation   By Dr. Gary F. Arnet
      If a major catastrophe happens, are you ready to deal with it? Most people have nothing in place to take care of themselves or their families during widespread disaster. And, as Dr. Arnet points out, despite vague promises by national or local leaders, you will be on your own. In his article Dr. Arnet provides you with an overview of what to expect and how to prepare for the worst

26  Nuclear terrorism   By John Silveira
      If terrorists get “the bomb,” the world is never going to be the same. John Silveira talks about how the bomb works, what happened in the two Japanese cities that experienced the bomb, what will happen in an American city if terrorists detonate one here, and the possible ways they may get their hands on one.

37  Harvesting the wild   By Jackie Clay
      To Jackie Clay and her family, hunting is not just a sport, it’s a way of getting food. In this, the first of several articles, she tells us how she hunts deer, moose, and elk, how she field dresses them, then butchers and preserves the meat.

48  Storing fuel   By Rev. J.D. Hooker

53  The return of home emergency shelters takes on a dual-purpose approach   By Jeffrey R. Yago, P.E., CEM
      There is no longer a national defense program in the United States. But Jeff Yago shows us that there are still ways the self-reliant can protect himself and his family in the event of a natural disaster or the unthinkable—nuclear war. Yago surveys the types of shelters a family can build or install, the accoutrements to look for, and how a shelter can serve other purposes if the bomb never falls or that tornado never comes.

Farm and garden

8  Grow, grow, grow   By Alice Brantley Yeager
      Whether times are good or bad, a garden can make you more secure.

14  Raised bed gardening — neat and productive   By Alice Brantley Yeager
      Raised bed gardens are easy to create and can make gardening easier and more enjoyable.

64  Raised beds, concrete blocks, and clay soil   By John Dunbar

Building and tools

49  Tools and hardware for the backwoods home   By James Ballou
      A certain degree of self reliance is obtainable by those who have the knowledge and skills, resourcefulness, courage, common sense, and tools to perform most of the tasks necessary to their own survival and way of life.

Country living

22  Morels...a taste of springtime   By Linda Gabris



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