Gun show find

Originally published at Notes From The Bunker. You can comment here or there.

Well I can cross off the ARMS #22 set of QD rings from my Amazon Wish List. Was wandering around the gun show and found a guy selling a pair for $65. Thats almost 50% off the new price. These babies will get mated up with my IOR M2 scope and mounted on one of my flattop ARs. Eventually, I hope to put together something very similar to the RRA Coyote rifle which will then be the new home for this arrangement.

Saw a few other goodies of interest but Im trying to behave and not spend any money. Although I did pick up a nice Hensley and Gibbs bullet mould for a mere $5…that would have been criminal to pass up.

Link – Palmetto State Armory “Hope N Change” AR lower

Originally published at Notes From The Bunker. You can comment here or there.

In Celebration of our dear leader’s historic presidency, we are proud to announce the pre-sale of a very limited edition commemorative lower. Crafted from Forged 7075 T6 aluminum, anodized and hardcoated black per mil-spec, these feature a special rollmark and a serial prefix of “YES WE CAN.” In addition, the safe and fire positions are labeled “Hope” and “Change”. Your paid order reserves one of these special lowers. Lowers are expected to start shipping August 15th.

I like lowers with non-typical markings…you know, the kinda stuff that instead of saying ‘safe’ and ‘semi’ and ‘full’ say things like ‘safe’, ‘tshtf’ and ‘teotwawki’. Although, from a practicality standpoint, I rather like the lowers with the HK-style pictograms.

Anyway, I wonder if the Chuck Schumer commemorative AR lower can’t be too far behind.

 

Cannery trip photo

Originally published at Notes From The Bunker. You can comment here or there.

Yay Mormons! Trip to the cannery went smoothand quick. Got my goodies and was outta there in a lot less time than I anticipated. My thanks to the local LDS members who allowed me to accompany them. (Technically, I could have gone on my own invite but I feel more comfortable going with someone as their guest.)

 

The new Zumbo

Originally published at Notes From The Bunker. You can comment here or there.

Tam, over at View From The Porch, has a lovely piece about someone stepping on his own dick over the proposal being bandied about to ban the internet/mailorder purchase of ammo by lowly civilians. His idea is that if we surrender Poland, maybe the Germans will leave the rest of Europe alone.

At which point, his Facebook exploded.

So, a guy who makes his business selling ammo is supporting restrictions that will force people to come to him for his ammo. Okay, it’s a bit self-serving, but at least I can understand that. But then it gets clouded in the Neville Chamberlain-ing Bill Ruger-ing of ‘maybe if we throw this one guy out of the sled, the wolves will stop chasing us.’

Back-pedalling and ‘what I really meant was…’ has already started. I dunno about you  but if the zombie apocalypse was going on and this guy was the last source for 9mm ammo, I’d forget about my Glocks, go all Daryl Dixon on the zombies and lead ‘em straight to this guys shop.

Blegging done, ALICE packs, Gun Show

Originally published at Notes From The Bunker. You can comment here or there.

Well, I’m officially done blegging. That doesn’t mean you can’t donate if you want to, it just means I’m done mentioning it. About two dozen folks were kind enough to fling some greenbacks at me for operating expenses, including one fella who went old-school and simply stuffed cash into an envelope and sent it in. All told, it’s enough to things humming for about the next three years…assuming prices on hosting don’t suddenly skyrocket. My most sincere thanks to those that donated and I hope to make you glad you did.

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Picked up a couple ALICE packs w/ frames the other day. The ALICE packs are pretty dinosaur-y, but they’re usually cheap and make a good secondary or tertiary level of backup. What I really like most about them is their ability to be used with a cargo shelf for hauling things like fuel cans and ammo boxes…anything large and fairly bulky can get strapped to the frame and carried. Someday when a person needs to manhandle five-gallons of water down a trail to a remote rally point, these babies will be just the ticket. Old Grouch has a decent deal on a frame/straps/shelf combo as well as a frame/straps/large bag combo. And if you’re a surplus junkie like me, you’ll really love the ‘used-n-musty’ ten-dollar medium packs…looks like they come with straps, so thats worth ten bucks on its own.

The ALICE packs arent my first choice for running out the door (first choice is my Kifaru bags), but for stashing a loaded pack somewhere ‘just in case’, having packs to hand out to unequipped guests, or hauling jerry cans ….a good choice.

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Gun show at the UM Field House tomorrow. I will be there all three days looking for bargains, catching up with acquaintances, doing a lot of ‘damn I wish I had the money for that’, and possibly..if Crom smiles upon me…buying some small odds-n-ends. Militia of Montana honcho Johnny Trochmann will be there and he always has useful stuff. Since it’s the largest show (and one of the oldest) in Montana it draws in vendors that normally don’t do other Montana shows. I need to keep an eye open for more Uzi mags and parts. Should be interesting to see how the markets are since the Colorado shootings…even without that event in the background, the fact that its an election year is enough to put the buying/selling markets into a state of heightened activity. Nonetheless, it shall be fun and I am greatly looking forward to attending. If youre in the region it’s Friday-Sunday at the University of Montana in Missoula.

Gifties – Pt. II

Originally published at Notes From The Bunker. You can comment here or there.

Happy, happy, joy, joy! As the mailman climbed outta his truck to give Nuke his MilkBone bribe I noticed the familiar Amazon box in his hand. (The mailman’s hand, not Nuke’s.)

Could it be? Dare I hope? Birthday gifties! w00t! (My birthday is next Tuesday…I’ll be 45. I should buy myself a Sig 220 or something to commemorate it.)

A very generous soul plucked a few items off my Amazon Wish List and had ‘em sent to yours truly. Well, I don’t know about you but I’m not exactly a ‘Do Not Open Until Xmas’ guy sooooooo……let’s crack this thing open and see what we got!

Ahhhh…..I’ve been very eager to try one of these. I love the notion of getting the advantages of Nalgene and still be able to have backwards compatibility with my older canteen covers and the like. Definitely going to have to check this out and see how it fits with a canteen cup and a few other accessories. Surprisingly, this thing is much more flexible than I was anticipating…I was figuring it would be a hard Lexan-like product like the traditional 32 oz. Nalgene bottle. Not so. It’s about as flexible as a regular GI canteen. (Are they even using those anymore? Seems like its all-CamelBak, All the time.) I have a feeling I’m going to wind up getting a few more of these and retiring the GI canteens down to a tertiary level of redundancy.

Next up, a package of Tuff QuickStrips…I got a couple of these a few weeks ago and still haven’t gotten a chance to go to the range and try them out.  I’ve played around with them a bit and they are dead-ringers for the Bianchi strips in .38./.357, just scaled up. I have a very nice 1983-era reintroduction of the S&W M24 that I like to carry from time to time. (What can I say…too much Skeeter Skelton on my reading list when I was a young, impressionable 19-year-old) N-frame speedloaders can be a wee bit bulky, so these strips should be just the ticket for carrying some spare ammo discretely and unobtrusively while still retaining a speed advantage.

And, finally, a copy of TM 5-125 Rigging Techniques, Procedures and Applications. In the last few months I’ve developed an interest in non-powered methods of moving large, heavy objects…which means rope and pulleys. Some day there’s going to be a time when you need to move debris off the road, pull stalled cars out of your way, move heavy obstacles from your path, and lift/lower heavy gear into/outta the back of a vehicle. Can’t rely on electric winches, although theyre darn nice to have, so I figured this would be as good a place as any to start reading about how set up gin poles, windlasses, and that sort of thing. I loves me some TM’s and FM’s.

My sincere thanks to the generous reader who sent these birthday gifts along. I very much appreciate it and I’ll try to review these things and report back on ‘em so we can all get some use out of it. Again, mucho thanks.

A month of living on a zero-based budget

Originally published at Notes From The Bunker. You can comment here or there.

Note: A followup to this post can be found here: A Month Of Living On A Zero-Based Budget – Pt. II

If you really think about it, preparedness comes down to several key functions. One of those functions is resource management. What is resource management? Resource management is making the most efficient use of the resources available to you while conserving, preserving, managing, maintaining and monitoring those resources for future usage. Or, to cut it down into a one-word definition that doesnt quite fit, resource management is largely about budgeting.

We know that after a major crisis the most valuable resources we have are the things we need for our survival, safety , and continued comfort, right? We want food, water, shelter, light, heat, medical attention, security, communications, and that sort of thing. Once the crisis starts our opportunity to acquire those things through ‘conventional means’ (like driving down to CostCo) is usually limited or completely unavailable. Thus, after a crisis, what you have at that moment is one of your most valuable resources. (Not the most valuable resource, but one of them.) Managing those resources becomes one of your key preparedness skills and objectives….after all, you can’t just crack open all your MRE’s and have a party for the neighborhood and expect to have something to eat the next day. You have to manage, or ‘husband‘ as they used to say, your resources so you always have options.

What is your most valuable resource before a crisis? Well, this is just an opinion, but it seems to me that your most valuable resource before a crisis is whatever enables you to get all the resources you’ll need for after the crisis. Currently, in our fairly moderately-civilized clime, the most valuable resource at the moment is money. Money is, if you think about it, an amazing multitiool of concentrated energy. Trouble is, most folks seem to handle their money poorly…and the missus and I were pretty much in that group. Oh, the bills got paid, we had our enjoyments, and we were never hungry…but we weren’t getting as much put away for a rainy day or for goals in the future. So, for the month of July, we decided to live on a zero-based budget. A zero-based budget means that you know you’re going to earn ‘x’ amount of dollars that month, so you write up a budget that spends every dollar of that amount. When you subtract how much you spent from how much you made, the answer should be zero. If your answer is a positive number, that means you didn’t plan propely where all your money should go, a negative number means you overspent.

Lemme give you a very stripped down example. Lets say you bring in $2000 in a month. Once you subtract everything you plan on doing with that money, you should have $0 left. You might think “$500 for rent, $100 saving, $100 auto expenses, $300 groceries, $100 entertainment….”, etc, etc, until you’re down to zero. Thats a zero-based budget. If you wind up needing more money for auto expenses you have to pull it from somewhere else…like groceries or entertainment. If you need an extra $25 for gas that month you’re gonna have to live with $25 less entertainment or something….but all the numbers need to add up to zero.

So, we decided to give it a shot and see how it would work out. We knew that there was a good bit of impulse buying in our behaviors and that sort of thing. We wrote up a budget, made a stack of envelopes with each one labelled with its purpose (‘groceries’,’fuel’,’dog expense’,’dining out’,’entertainment’, etc, etc, etc.) and put the cash into the envelope that was allocated to that function. Going to go put gas in the truck? Take $20 from the ‘fuel’ envelope and put gas in truck. Ordering pizza? Take $10 from the ‘dining out’ envelope and go get the pizza. What if we burned through the ‘dining out’ envelope and still want a pizza? Well, you can take $10 from a different envelope but that means you have to deal with $10 less in that envelope’s subject…maybe pull $10 from ‘groceries’, and now we have $10 less for groceries that month. So you have a definite interest in staying on your budget as well as creating a realistic one. Savings came off the top…in this case 25% went right into savings via direct deposit…so it was easy to pretend it wasnt even there. The remaining 75% gets budgeted to take care of us for the month of July. (And, yes, you could simply use a debit card and keep track of things rather than having cash segregated into envelopes but there’s a very emotional component of spending cash that just isn’t there when using plastic…fishing $20 out of your pocket and watching it disappear makes you much more careful about how you spend it than a piece of plastic does…thats why they give you chips to play with in Vegas rather than cash.)

What did that mean for average day-to-day living? Well, it required a bit of impulse control. There was about $10/day budgeted for ‘spending money’, but you couldnt spend more than that without repercussions. Want to buy a pair of $295 boots? Go ahead, but then you have only five bucks pocket money until the end of the month…so weigh your choices. Grocery shopping meant actually doing some math and comparing prices, which is something I’ve always done but was something the missus never really showed too much interest in. And, yeah, there was a little grumbling about ‘why shouldn’t I be able to just drop $100 on [item] if I want’? But, having stuck with the budget for a solid month, we have more money in the bank at the end of the month than if we had not. And we have a better idea of how much we spend and on what. Previously, like many folks, money got spent like this: pay the bills, buy groceries, whatever is left is free to spend. Sadly, that’s not a really good plan.

Several of you reading this are going to say “Hey, this sounds really familiar” and it should, it is pretty much exactly what Dave Ramsey promotes on his radio show. I’m not a Kool-Aid drinker by any stretch, and I disagree with him on a couple things, but the zero-based budget part and the ‘baby steps‘ are probably the two things about this guy’s money-handling philosophy that I can wholeheartedly endorse. I can endorse it because, for us, it works. We have no debt except the mortgage, we have an amount of money on hand for emergencies, and by following a budget (which really isn’t confining or restrictive if you plan it right and keep your eyes on the big picture) we’ll have a much larger emergency fund (six months of expenses) socked away so that if, Crom forbid, something ugly happens we’re in a position to ride it out. Example: our water heater went Tango Uniform a couple years ago. Not cheap to replace. But, since we had a bunch of cash set aside for emergencies we just went ahead and had the new one put in immediately…with no hiccup to our day-to-day finances. That emergency fund was then replenished from monies that would have been directed into savings over the next few months. No crisis.

Now at this point I’m sure a couple folks are trying to see how this ties into the general theme around here of preparedness. Let’s say the monhtly income around here is ‘x’, and once savings are taken into account there is 3/4 of x to use for a budget.Preparedness becomes part of the budget. There can be an envelope somewhere marked ‘storage food’ or ‘preparedness’ and you can budget whatever amount you want for it (as long as your overall budget still zeroes out). So, maybe instead of dropping $500 into savings every month, $200 into dining out, $100 into entertainment and $100 into a vacation fund you decrease each one of those by, say, $20….and you now have a new budget item of ‘preparedness’ and $80 to spend every month on it (or carry that $80 to the next month to buy bigger-ticket items) and your budget still comes out to zero.

One of the biggest reasons people give for not preparing is that they say it’s expensive or they just don’t have the money. By budgeting, and sticking to that budget, it’s amazing how much money you find that you actually have. If you dont think so, try this experiment..think about how much money you made last month, now try to think where it all went. At some point you’ll come up with a number short of the amount you made and figure “I have no idea where the rest of it went”…see, thats how you wind up not having enough resources to do the things you want.

One big facet of preparedness is resource management. For us, money is another item or resource to have in place against that upcoming Rainy Day….right up there with the cases of Mountain House, South African ball, jerry cans of fuel, and MagLites. The best way that we’ve found, for us, to husband this resource is through the method above. Might work for you, might not. But even if it doesn’t, that doesnt mean it isnt a good idea…it just means you might need a different method.

I’m already 50% past my usual self-imposed limit of 1000 words but I should mention that this months experiment in budgeting would have been completely impossible without the amazing self-discipline of the lovely missus who really threw herself into this experiment. I was curious about her opinions about this months experiment….she said that while there were moments where she didn’t like feeling she couldn’t spend money on something, she did like the fact that at the end of the month we had more money in the bank than in the months where we didn’t budget. And she’s a smart enough gal to have an eye on the big picture…a little dissatisfaction in the short term from having to deny yourself something is worth the payoff of later on being able to do things you really want to do. And, of course, she likes the security of having a wad of cash available in case theres an emergency.

So there you go…one month on a zero-based budget. We both think it was a successful experiment and this months budget will get a little tweaking here and there but otherwise, we think it was a great success.

Strongly suggested reading: The Total Money Makeover: A Proven Plan for Financial Fitness. This is the book that lists out everything mentioned above, provides worksheets and templates for budgeting, and is just generally an excellent motivator. Be warned there are some religious themes in there, but they can be ignored without detracting from the contents.

Cannery trip planned

Originally published at Notes From The Bunker. You can comment here or there.

w00t! At this point it looks like we are on track for a trip to the local LDS cannery in a couple days. My mission (so to speak) this trip is to round out incomplete (“broken”) cases. Since a case holds six cans of product, any quantity of product I have that is not divisible by six gets supplemented. For example, according to my spreadsheet we have 15 cans of sugar. That means there are two full boxes of six cans, and one partial box of three cans (12 + 3 = 15) So, I’ll get three more cans of sugar and that’ll give me a total of 18 cans, or three full boxes of six cans each. Get the idea? I’ve about five different broken cases to top off.

If you’ve never been to an LDS cannery, it’s an awesome place. You know how when you go to CostCo or Sams Club you wonder if people are looking at you funny when you roll up to the register with a cart full of six cases of canned vegetables and five 50# sacks of rice? You wonder if people think you’re weird or something.. At the cannery, if you don’t walk out of there with a hand truck full of cases of canned food they look at you weird.

Prices? Uber-affordable. Matter of fact, here’s a link to their page with .pdf and Excel formats of their order list. Check the prices…good stuff.

There’s no requirement that you be a member of their church (or even a believer in anything). They start the session with a small ‘bow your head and give thanks’ moment, which I usually use to check the laces on my shoes, but other than that the whole thing is completely religion-free. You are, however, expected to put in some sweat equity….you can’t just buy the stuff, you gotta take part in the canning process. You might be asked to run the canning machine, weigh the product as it’s put into cans, put labels on cans, add dessicant to the cans, whatever. I’ts an assembly line where every one gets a role…probably a good thing since it means you gain familiarity with the process of how stuff is canned. That familiarity is handy because they will also let you buy cans and lids to use with their portable can sealer that you can check out for home use. In case you want to can stuff they don’t sell….like ammo.

Anyway, they provide an awesome service and I encourage everyone to check them out. (Locations)  I usually offer to buy lunch for missionaries when I see them wandering/pedalling down the street…it’s my way of saying thanks. It’s this sort of thing that makes Mormons my favorite religious group. (That and their hot women.)

Acquisitions

Originally published at Notes From The Bunker. You can comment here or there.

Well, blogging isn’t just doing the low-hanging fruit of posting links to interesting things. Sometimes, ya gotta make an effort. So, let us recap and round up whats going on here Commander Zero’s Post Nuclear Bunker Of Love and Taqueria….

Managed to pick up a few goodies the other day…a recap:

This place is closing up its doors in anothe couple weeks. I was in there last week and everything was 50% off. Picked up a couple pairs of boots and, other than that, didnt really see much I needed. But, hey, really nice GoreTex insulated military desert boots for $25/pair in my hard-to-find 10W are reason enough for me to rejoice. There wasn’t much of anything else he had that I wanted…I have all the right-handed ALICE pack straps I need. (Seriously, it was a stack of, like, 150 shoulder straps and all were right-handed. WTF???)

In addition to the boots, from other sources I picked up another military sleep system. This takes care of the redundancy I’m after and I can now stop collecting the darn things. As you know, one is none and all that jazz. These will go nicely, I think, in the carriers I picked up from SG a few weeks ago.

The Missoula Gun Show will be this coming weekend so I’ll keep my eyes open for any other targets of opportunity. And, it is rumoured, we may have a trip to the LDS cannery to look forward to this weekend as well…in which case I’ll finally get to round off some ‘broken’ cases that I’ve been wanting to get taken care of.

Link – Photo tour of Soviet era shelter

Originally published at Notes From The Bunker. You can comment here or there.

Well, here’s something you dont see everyday. An extremely well preserved fallout shelter from the Soviet era. I’m running both links through Google’s translator since, as they said in ‘Transformers’, “[Russian alphabet] looks like every key on a calculator that you dont use!”

Automatic translation isnt an exact science, so let’s keep the snarky commentary about mistranslated words out of comments.

Link

Link