#phm#ryland grace#rocky the eridian#project hail mary spoilers





seen from Germany
seen from China

seen from Singapore
seen from Türkiye
seen from Ukraine
seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from Chile
seen from Yemen
seen from Morocco
seen from Switzerland
seen from Australia

seen from Germany
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Greece
seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Germany
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United Kingdom

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Gardening and rotating crops
Radoslav Angelov, Bulgaria IG: theradoslavangelov IG: radoslavangelov_ifbbpro
You Never Know When a Natural Disaster or an Attack on Critical Infrastructure Will Happen. #preparedness #SelfReliance #Independant #JustInCase
Not to brag but these are some really nice green beans. This is the sixth basket we’ve picked so far from our garden. We blanch them then vacuum seal them, we will get enough to last us until next season.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
In light of the new Trade War that the U.S. just started with Canada & Mexico, & threats to begin one with the EU;
What do you think is MOST IMPORTANT for individual citizens to prioritize, when facing food shortages?
Low-Cost Meal Recipes
Low-Cost Food Shopping
Food Preservation
Urban Food Production
Suburban/Rural Food Production
Strengthening ties to Local Community & Outreach programs
As a side note, I'll begin writing again, with posts focusing on all of these topics.
Let me know in the comments if there's any practical survival/preparation tips you want information on, which I didn't include here.
When cell phones and internet go down...
If you're in one of a myriad of marginalized groups who know they can't count on the government to help them, then this post is for you.
I feel like I'm cramming messages into bottles from my fairly niche interest (radio, emergency comms) and chucking them into the sea of Tumble in the hopes it reaches people it can help. What happened in Spain and Portugal recently and some of the cell outages we've seen in recent years - they're is a great example of why back up communication methods aren't just for doomsday preppers.
If cell phones and internet (and possibly power) went out, how would you communicate in an emergency?
Note: this is geared toward the US. It's where I am and it's all I know.
If I only had ~$25
I'd grab a Beofeng UV-5R ($18-$25) if I thought I might study to get my ham license eventually ($15-$25 test fee + $35 FCC fee),
OR
If I knew I didn't want to test for a ham license and thought I might pay $35 for a GMRS license eventually, I'd pay a little extra up front and get a Beofeng UV-5G plus GMRS radio (~$35)
While this would not allow me to transmit usually, this would allow me to:
call for help in an emergency - the license requirement for transmission is lifted in the event of a genuine emergency
listen to weather frequencies - it will not turn on and give you the alert but if you know bad weather is coming, you can turn it on and listen for alerts as they come in. Weather stations give alerts for a fairly broad area so you'll be able to hear about any significant storms as the move into and through your area.
listen to local repeaters - repeaters, in my experience, are kind of a combination of a megaphone and an internet chat room. You set the frequency and the PL tones (password sounds your radio sends) for the repeater and then you can hear people from much further away. This is one, just fun to listen to on a given day but two, a great way to find out information if your area is experiencing an event but you don't require help. Some even have EAS weather alerts (thought this still won't turn your radio on if it's off in an emergency). Use repeaterbook to look for repeaters in your area and use CHIRP to program them into your radio - tutorials abound.
For ~$15 more you can upgrade the UV-5R to a bigger battery and USB-C charging (UV-5G comes with USB-C charging).
This can be thrown in a go bag if you need to evacuate or your housing is unstable. You can have your handheld radio monitoring a local repeater while you have a car or portable radio listening to commercial or public stations for updates.
If I only had ~$100
I would get a GMRS license ($35) and a Beofeng UV-5G plus (~$35) and a single Meshtastic node (~$25).
If I had a little extra, I'd grab a second Meshtastic node for a roommate, partner, family member or nearby friend.
This would get me the ability to not only monitor frequencies but the ability to talk on them in non-emergency times which would be helpful practice. Some GMRS repeaters have regular "nets" - it's basically a meeting on air where someone invited folks to tell them/radio in their call sign (radio license ID basically) and then they confirm they heard you. This gives you a chance to test your equipment.
The GMRS license covers your family so they can pick up a radio as well and then you'd be able to communicate with them as well (as long as they're close enough; 1-5 miles but varies by terrain, more range if using a repeater). It's not a phone so the conversation would be heard by other people but this is great for wellness checks or a quick check up.
Meshtastics add the ability to text people and share GPS coordinates with people near by - encrypted if you so desire. The range is much less (I've only tested it to about a mile currently though with tweaking more is possible). This adds an important link in your communication plan - asynchronous communication. As long as the device is on and paired and in range, you'll most likely receive a message. It does drop occasionally but that's pretty rare. My nesting partner and I often have to rely on them because the internet and cell signal is so poor up here but they serve us incredibly well for that. Beyond the Emergency Comms use, it's just nice for morale to be able to text during an event. Best part is, if you're in an area were other people have them too, you can bounce your signal further for no additional power.
Past this amount of money, I'd still get my GMRS license and encourage my friends and neighbors who didn't want to study for the ham license to get theirs. Then I'd get my ham license and buy the best handheld I could afford - probably one of the value Yaesu models - so I have several ways to both coordinate among my loved ones and get any needs to a net in the area during a disaster.I'd get and pass out several meshtastic devices to people who were within range that I might want to commincate with. I'd look into back up power for recharging (I like my Jackerys).
Amateur radio is a deep well and this barely touches on it of it. Don't let how vast it is keep you thinking it's too complicated for you. I promise it's not. I'm very much a noob myself but I'm happy answer any questions that I can.
This is part of self care - ensuring you can care for yourself during chaotic events and emergencies to the best of your ability. Even a little bit of preparation can keep something like storm outbreak or power outage from turning harmful or even deadly. Learn what you can. You've got this!