Learning skills to meet threats

Viewing 14 posts - 1 through 14 (of 14 total)
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  • #15351
    Pacific Northwest
    Participant

    Northern Saskatchewan you can build trenches it has the most sun of all of Canada build it like a Greenhouse.

    As for eating off the land check out FF

    Learn the four F’s fruit, fungus, foliage, and flowers.

    I sustain myself in the lower mainland if I want to pretend there is no monies is dandelions (warning: dehydrates you), daisies, clovers, dead nettles (has skulls on it, living, stinger-less), nettles, horsetail (warning: dehydrates you), plaintains (few variety) also check out Garliqs Urban Foraging Guide(looks like his foraging school website is down 🙁 if someone can get ahold of him he use to have a free garden for people to eat, and learn from). If your in BC I can show you some stuff I know you can eat maple leaves, young pine needles, and, there is a host of other edibles like White Locust (A white flower from a tree with a short flowering period Christ use to eat with honey)… I know quite a few edible things around Vancouver some of it you would never have known for example Chickweed is one that comes to mind you have definitely passed on side walks as well as not limited to purslane which thrives in poor soil. There are ginko trees around that I like to gnaw on the leaves as well. If you get a commercial juicer and throw it all into a juicer then turn the pulp into patties with a nut paste you can cook them into falafel. I am kind of a former boy scout so I use to live in igloos, and, all types of stuff. My dad was big on making sure I would live through an apocalypse.

    #15138
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Maybe it’s time for a White Reconquest of Canada.

    #15135
    Dave
    Participant

    @Rosetta
    Fishing is easy, there’s really nothing you need to learn. Just have the proper license and the right rig (hook, line, weights, bobbers etc.) which depend on what you’re fishing for.
    Gutting, filleting, and cooking fish is also pretty easy, 30 minutes or so on youtube should teach you how.

    Hunting is harder. You can teach yourself the basics on processing animals with a couple hours on youtube. Stalking, shot placement, etc. requires practice. Of course you also need to haul the animal back home, which will require planning and multiple people if it’s larger than a deer.
    I would offer my help, but I’m in Oregon. The act of getting proper registration to get across the border, let alone to hunt, means that I may as well just conquer Canada. Given the corona bullshit, conquering Canada would probably be faster.

    • This reply was modified 3 years, 6 months ago by Dave.
    #15008
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Learning to hunt and fish and prepare the meat is something I’d like to do, but I really need some guidance. I don’t think I will be motivated enough to do it alone, unless of course I’m forced to, as in, life or death.

    #12956
    PARADOXICAL003
    Participant

    Im in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Anyone want to hang out?

    My plan is to just hang out around the mall of Polo Park at 11:00 – 1:00 next friday, buy only if one of you responds, I’d be in the food court eating some noodles.

    I don’t care who comes, it would just be nice to sit with you and chat about meinkraft or whatever.

    I want to start networking.

    #12196
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Oh, and I wanted to point something out—-because leftist infiltrators like (((Julia Ebner))) join our websites to gather information and then release it on leftist websites, I think it would be best if you made a PRIVATE thread where you approve potential members and (I say it as a woman) don’t let women in, because the libeling articles I know about were written by (((women))), and obviously it’s women who do this because of the men-to-women ratio so they lure men to open up about their political views etc. and then publish the information they gathered.

    It wouldn’t be good if they saw and read such threads, especially if you decide to meet in real life eventually, and if you choose a specific location.

    They might be taking screenshots etc. and then hand it to antifa and other terrorist organizations.

    #12193
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Sorry, my bad! I assumed that if it’s so easy in the Lower Mainland, then it’s easy everywhere.

    My family here grows a lot—-vegetables, berries and fruit trees, and they have so much crops that they have to give it away to their neighbors. But it’s all in the Coastal Region and Lower Mainland.
    You are right, it’s very wet here, so yes, not all crops could handle that.

    That’s why I would focus on the native, wild edible plants and the rest I would grow in a greenhouse or covered garden boxes.

    I only grew tomatoes and peppers. But indoors.

    Berries I harvest from wild bushes.

    Sea cucumbers I have never eaten. How do they taste?

    #12185
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    @Malg My understanding is that when British Columbia was first settled by Europeans that there was a deal of problems growing crops because of the extremely wet climate. I am not sure if this was in reference to the Vancouver Island or the Lower mainland as well. When I was in Fort Langley I went to the museum to the Hudson bay company on the Fraiser river I think they mentioned this, I would be interest in knowing your experience if you have planted things in BC. Actually on thing I did see as an interesting food source from watching the hunting show “MEAT EATER” was that you can harvest as many sea cucumbers as you wish, they looked rather strange but when we “dressed” them and removed the undesirable parts it looked like scallop meat.

    #12184
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    It IS absolutely possible!!!
    The South is very warm.

    As for the Crows’s reply: are you serious?
    BC and no berries?
    Never in my life have I seen such ABUNDANCE of black and salmon berries!
    We don’t have them in Europe (in the wild).
    I could literally eat every day straight from the bushes on very popular trails, and some other hikers would bring bags to fill them with berries.

    #8533
    Math
    Participant

    Is it possible to make farms in Canada or is the weather hostile?

    I am from Argentina and here it is much easier to isolate up, I guess.

    #7109
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Fear is something that is managed and impossible to banish for fear is one of the human motivations. It’s also meant to keep you alive, along with the adrenaline it produces. Learning to manage fear is a worthwhile skillset to acrue for any walk or pursuit in life. In terms of living off the grid in a completely isolated and disconnected manner, it might not be the best of ideas. Yet, living in the big city is also not the answer. The future will be the neglected areas of the country you are living in. A neo-pioneer attitude is necessary in order to develop the intentional communities required to preserve european genetics and traditions. Note, the rash of invaders remain in the big cities. They do not venture outside well established infrastructures. These intentional communities will be a challenge but it is what whites are good at.

    #5951
    crow
    Participant

    The greatest, best, and most useful skill you’ll ever (probably not) learn, is to walk away from fear.
    Have nothing more to do with it.
    Easy to say, almost impossible to do.
    But I can attest to the fact that it is – in fact – possible.

    This, alone, is a life-goal worth choosing to pursue.
    There is no more effective self-defense skill, either.

    #5885
    crow
    Participant

    I lived for two years alone in the British Columbia wilderness, when I was 18, and knew nothing about doing such a crazy thing.
    You need to be no younger than 18, and no older than 18.
    There is almost nothing to eat! The winters are lethal and the summers are filled with aeroplane-sized mosquitoes and black-flies.
    I froze, melted, got sucked dry, starved, became dehydrated, injured, and lonely.
    All I could find to eat, that whole time, was:
    Grouse. Squirrels. Trout. Almost no berries.
    Once in a while, I saw a deer, and once, a moose. The odd bear and wolf.

    Don’t do it 🙂

    If you do, then good luck to you. It might not kill you, and if it doesn’t, you’ll be stronger for it.
    Endeth-here the wild-woods-lesson.

    #5093
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    What I anyways wanted to learn more about is the skills experience of finding food from within the forests.

    What are some skills and experience from others such as which vegetation, berries, etc to use and consume.

    Also in reference to our white societies becoming increasingly hostile towards whites from non whites, there are other defenses such as toning down threats to oneself via use of language. That is, using the correct words to tone down threats that one receives.

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