Saturday, December 12, 2015

reviews/ads


REVIEW

Corona Corn Grinder

Two is one and one is none.  Whether we are talking about a third generation night vision scope, an assault or battle rifle, or a $400 grain grinder, you can’t just have one.  If you only buy the best and the best breaks and you don’t have a back-up because you only bought the best and hence can’t afford another one, you are a moron.  A soon to be dead moron, which sucks if you are you but which is great for the rest of us as you and your defective DNA are soon removed from the gene pool.  Only buy the best you can afford two of, not the best of all.  So, forget the best grain grinder.  Go with the Pretty Darn Good grain grinder, the Made In Mexico or Made In Columbia corn grinder the Corona brand.  Do NOT buy cheaply made quality compromised crap from China.  Corona has been made for decades down in Latin America and is a quality brand sold affordably to peasant families. 

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The grain eaten by most Latinos of modest means is corn.  Corn is in my opinion the crack whore of the grain family, better than nothing and deficient in many ways.  And a corn grinder is NOT the same as a wheat grinding mill.  But no matter, you can easily mill wheat in a corn mill with a bit extra work.  A little more work and you save 90% over a wheat grinder.  A corn grinder will mill wheat kernels if you run it through three times.  First on course grind ( the wheels set far apart ), then on middlin ( wheels closer together ) and then on fine ( wheels just apart from touching.  Do NOT run anything through a mill with the wheels touching as you will grind metal into your flour ).  That is all there is to it.  And Corona brand, available for around $40 after shipping at Amazon ( search under CORN GRINDER or Corn Mill, NOT grain grinder or wheat grinder.  Or, just go to my blog page or web page for an easy graphic ad to click on ), is your best bet on affordable quality.  When I was a young lad of ten I was chained to the table grinding the weeks worth of flour for all our bread, and if a skinny young punk can grind lots of kernels through a manual primitive grinder, so can anyone else unless you are like ninety or so.  And if you are that old you shouldn’t be trying to survive the Apocalypse.  Remember the 80/20 rule.  Eighty percent of the function of a more expensive tool, but at 20% of the price.  Don’t buy any other kind of grinder.  Buy a Corona.  Just remember the brand of beer.

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REVIEW

Wool Blankets

Punk ass whiny bitches don’t like wool.  Oh, it’s SOOOOO itchy, merciful sakes and heavens to Betsy!!!!  Do you know how easy it is to stop wool from itching?  Wear a friggin cotton item underneath it.  Duh!  A poly beanie, then a wool beanie over that.  A long sleeve T-shirt under a wool sweater.  Etcetera.  And since wool blankets go OVER cotton sheets, what’s the damn problem?  Wool cannot be beat by any synthetic material in terms of affordability and performance.  It doesn’t catch fire like synthetics.  It is far warmer ( except for down.  But then, fur is even warmer.  It is also natural like wool, so I should say any natural method is FAR superior to synthetics ).  It can get wet without insulating performance being downgraded.  It is a technology that will transfer seamlessly into the Apocalypse, unlike synthetics. 

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You must have wool.  Period.  Yes, most blankets will be a blend, not 100% ( you can easily find 100% wool in caps and sweaters and mittens, but for some reason almost never in wool.  And if you do find it in wool, the price is insane.  Better to buy a blend for $20 than an all natural for $200.  2 is 1 and 1 is None, remember? ).  But far better than anything not wool, so no matter.  Surprisingly,  Amazon really doesn’t have many deals on wool blankets.  You can’t beat the deals from


In fact, if Sportsman’s carries it, odds are you won’t beat the price anywhere else.  And the quality, while not Top Tier, is middle of the pack, NOT crap quality.  I recommend this company for ammunition and all winter gear, plus for most surplus gear.  The selection is always changing, so never hesitate to buy when you find a good deal.  I just bought a half dozen brand new Swiss military wool blankets for $17 each, and I got free shipping due to e-mail offers you get as a club member and regular customer.  The great thing about them is that they are over four pounds each.  This is a Must Have feature.  If a wool blanket doesn’t list the weight, do NOT buy it.  A two and a half pound blanket is far less warm than a four pound one ( yes, there is the total size to factor in also, but the weight is a good general guideline ).  Also beware the cheap $5 “emergency” blankets.  Far less wool, and cheaply held together, they are almost a one use throw away item.  Long gone are the quality $5 wool blankets they were selling ten years ago.  Now, if it is under $15, careful.  Research properly. 

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With a dozen wool blankets in storage, you are completely good to go for power outages and grid down situations.  With suitable insulation underneath, and one to three wool blankets over you ( along with a down comforter, but more on that in its own review ), you can sleep soundly with the INSIDE temperature at twenty degrees Fahrenheit or lower.  Wool blankets.  Only jungle dwellers or optimistic morons refuse to stock them.

END
 
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14 comments:

  1. If you recall, I posted on these blankets a while back james. The sportsman's guide had the Swiss surplus blankets, which are bigger and heavier than most. And at that time, they were expecting the French surplus blankets, which were even heavier than the Swiss, to be in shortly. I just went to the site and it appears that no sooner than the French blankets arrived, they sold out and are on back order again. They also appear to have gone up in price, and the dimensions are now smaller (apparently this blanket comes in different versions, or sportsman's guide has the dimensions listed wrong?). The Italian wool blankets were said to be the best bargain at one time, weighing in at 5.5lbs (the French blankets that spg was selling previously were the same weight) and costing around $20. No longer is this the case, and they are no longer a bargain. Below is a link to the exact blanket that spg had previously.

    I'd say that you can't go wrong with either the Swiss or the French blankets (the one's in the link below). I guess I'm a snob (probably picked it up from the short time I spent over that yuppie, pc survivalist guru's site) but if I had the extra money, I'd get a Hudson Bay wool blanket, the king of all wool blankets. But of course, I would only do so after having several of the cheaper blankets as stock.


    https://www.majorsurplus.com/french-wool-army-blanket-orange-62-x-82.html

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    1. Our conversation was obviously prominent in my subconscious as I had to order them ( most of my other blankets were stolen by the ex-step-daughter recently- a long story I probably won't get into ), so I thank you for that. I won't miss that $100 as much as I embrace the wonderfulness of another half dozen near top notch blankets.

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  2. I thought that I would add this as well James. And that's that as much as I love wool, I'm not so sure anymore of just how much wool blankets offer in terms of warmth vs cost?

    One thing that I've noticed is that most of the wool blankets being sold today are actually pretty thin. A cursory glance of the reviews at Amazon even indicate that the supreme deluxe of all wool blankets, the Hudson Bay blanket, has gone down considerably in value over the years.

    I have a quilted 100% polyester blanket. It sort of resembles a down quilt, and is thick and lofty. That blanket placed over my thin main blanket easily keeps me warm in my RV with no heat when outside temperatures drop down to the 20's. For mostly indoor use, I suspect that blankets of this type, if purchased from a thrift store, are probably a better bargain than most wool blankets being sold today? Just be sure that it is 100% polyester or acrylic, and ideally has a good amount of loft such as the one that I have.

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    1. My best results with indoor temps being in the forties or below was two or three wool, then one blanket as you describe, kind of a puffy polyester, then a down comforter. If I relied on just wool, I'd have too much weight on top of me. But without any wool at all I wouldn't be as toasty. Also, this way, I add or subtract as the weather dictates and never need inside heat.

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  3. I have read (no 1st hand experience) that sandwiching a mylar blanket in between two economy wool blankets is pretty warm. I guess pretty warm depending if you live in the South or North.

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    1. I would image the crinkle crunching noise would keep you awake most of the night, though.

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    2. True that (crinkly sound) - I hadn't considered that. I tried sleeping with the cheap blue plastic tarps and the sound of the wind flapping that mofo was like trying to sleep in a potato chip factory. I'm a pretty light sleeper and it did bother me.

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    3. I wonder if folks consider the mylar sound as both an attraction getter and a sound masking others approach.

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  4. I'm about to make a wool blanket out of old sweaters I got at the thrift store. I took them to the laundromat and washed and dried them on hot. So they're pre-shrunk and denser. Not quite boiled wool density or all that felted, but better than before, and the little bit of felting will hopefully stop them from unraveling before I sew them up. I'll cut them into big squares or rectangles, and sew them together, then probably put a polyester backing on them to hide the seams.

    The sweaters cost me about $10 or so for 4 or 5 of them, on sale last year one day. They're all 100% wool.

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    1. I wish our thrift store got more wool. Its been about a year since I snagged the last one.

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  5. I'm the minion from above that posted on the wool blankets James. I had a free shipping, as well as 10% off coupon from the sportsman's guide, so I decided to order that Military Surplus Polartec Blanket that they have, and give it a try. It's made from the Polartec 300, which is the heaviest Polartec available, so I think that it might be a good blanket. I'll let you know when I get it.


    10:21; look into the version of mylar blanket that's embedded to a tarp. I've had both, and the tarp versions are not as noisy, and much more durable. Truthfully though, I'm skeptical that they work as well as claimed? I think that one of the better tarp versions in conjunction with a wool blanket would probably be pretty effective though.

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    1. 10:21 here. Years ago, I remember sleeping under a sleeping bag covered with the heavier duty survival blanket (olive drab one side - silver reflective other) and there was a significant amount of condensation the next morning when I woke up. Exterior bag surface wasn't drenched, but definitely wet. I just remembered that experience - had forgotten about it until I read your response.

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    2. First I'd heard of the condensation issue. Good to know.

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  6. Check out the SOL Escape Bivvy 10:21. Reflective, and said to be breathable. I think they sell a blanket as well.


    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0075ZS096?colid=2P9H5MHEI5D99&coliid=I1YMKL1UYBYTBD&psc=1&ref_=wl_it_dp_o_pd_nS_ttl

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