I was reading Wendy's post over at Surviving the Suburbs about giving up her dishwasher to save electricity and become more eco-friendly, and it struck me that we all have our little guilty electric pleasures that will be hard to give up. I'm sitting here listening to my electric coffeemaker gurgling on the kitchen counter, and wondering how long I would need to pedal a bicycle generator to get my morning cup of joe.
There are so many things that we North Americans take for granted, and just never consider how difficult it would be if the lights went out for a very long time. Growing up, we didn't have an electric coffeemaker. Mom made it on top of the stove using a percolator; it went camping with us and made coffee just as happily on the camp stove as it did on the electric stove at home.
Many of my relatives had large kitchens with both electric and wood-burning cook stoves in them. One of my aunts had an oil-burning cook stove for use in the winter. One thing I remember vividly is watching my granny stick her hand into the over to gauge the heat and whether it was hot enough to stick a tray of cookies in. I wouldn't have a clue what felt hot enough. Mom's stove had a thermometer on the front of the oven door.
We've probably all seen those camping gadgets for making toast or popcorn, but these are not new inventions. There was a time when these are what people used. I remember sitting in front of the fire with a wire basket on a long handle full of popcorn kernels and watching them pop. I grew up with all those non-electric tools, although I will admit that when dad came home with that first electric coffee maker when I was in high school, that produced genuine excitement. With that baby in the house, my first major addiction was born. Mmmm, coffee!
Nevertheless, when I look at a lot of food storage sites, and prepper sites, even though we all talk (and write) about preparing for a time when there might not be electricity, we all have all kinds of electric gadgets for prepping with. Now that's ironic. M.D. Creekmore addressed the same issue in a recent post, 4 Unique Ways to Preserve Food. Honestly, I read a post from someone who is using an electric pressure cooker to can small batches!
This has driven me to an obsessive search for all those old-fashioned non-electric tools that my mother used to use. Amazon has an amazing selection of these products, and the prices are not bad at all:
My two cents' worth on prepping, food storage, survival, and other topics of interest..
Showing posts with label camping. Show all posts
Showing posts with label camping. Show all posts
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
Friday, November 19, 2010
Socks
I'll bet you don't have as many socks in your bug out bag as Oregon Mike has in his backpack. He uses socks as little mini pack bags in his backpack for camping, and so forth. I think that in addition to extra socks for wearing, if worse comes to worse, you could have lots of extra socks to spare if you follow his fine example. Hope his fiancee doesn't do him an injury for absconding with hers.
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