OCT
31
And Then There Was a Dinner Meeting
By:

Last week, I had din­ner with three oth­er prep­pers.  One was new, and the two oth­ers I have been in touch with for some time.  We all live in North­ern NJ, and are con­cerned with the econ­o­my , job growth, Bug­ging In , Bug­ging Out , etc.  The con­ver­sa­tion twist­ed and turned in many direc­tions.  We talked about form­ing a group, buy­ing prop­er­ty, where to buy prop­er­ty, who is look­ing at prop­er­ty for a Bug Out Loca­tion ( BOL ), what the cost of the prop­er­ty is, the like­li­hood of actu­al­ly being able to make it to that prop­er­ty either on foot or via vehi­cle, etc.  We dis­cussed who had kids, the inevitable bug out / bug­ging in con­ver­sa­tion, how to do both, what some of our indi­vid­ual bug in and bug out plans are, etc.  One of the guys is grow­ing his own wheat, and is just plant­i­ng his win­ter wheat as we speak.  He also explained how he is grind­ing his own wheat into flour, and learn­ing to bake, etc…

The new guy, a Den­tist, is also an avid prep­per , gun own­er who is active­ly tak­ing class­es and tac­ti­cal cours­es, was look­ing to con­nect with sev­er­al oth­er like mind­ed peo­ple.  He was a friend of one of the oth­er guys at the table.  He turned out to be a pret­ty open and nice guy, and I look for­ward to chat­ting with him again soon.  Not to men­tion I have been look­ing for a new den­tist.

With Occu­py Wall Street start­ing to get stressed, vio­lence is sure­ly around the cor­ner.  That said, every­thing we spoke about is spec­u­la­tion.  But one thing was mate­r­i­al, which was the fact that OWS is a cur­rent and present issue for poten­tial issues to ignite going for­ward.

Anoth­er item that came up was the pulling of troops from Iraq by the end of the year and this let­ter my friend received about his kids school, and emer­gency drills that are hap­pen­ing every cou­ple weeks.  Check this out:

Dear Par­ents,

As of Novem­ber 1, 2010 the Sen­ate and Gen­er­al Assem­bly of the State of New Jer­sey has enact­ed a law cov­er­ing school secu­ri­ty drills. Every prin­ci­pal of a school of two or more rooms shall have at least one fire drill and one school secu­ri­ty drill each month.

Two of each of the fol­low­ing school secu­ri­ty drills are required dur­ing the school year.

Lock down – imple­ment­ed when some­one or some­thing in the build­ing may cause harm.

Bomb threat – imple­ment­ed when a bomb is sus­pect­ed on the premis­es.

Evac­u­a­tion – imple­ment­ed when a haz­ard is sus­pect­ed in the build­ing.

Active Shoot­er – imple­ment­ed when some­one has intent to cause phys­i­cal harm with a weapon.

Two addi­tion­al drills are need­ed and can be on any of the above men­tioned or:

Shel­ter in Place – imple­ment­ed when a dan­ger is emi­nent out­side of the build­ing

Reverse evac­u­a­tion – imple­ment­ed when a chem­i­cal spill is sus­pect­ed near the build­ing and stu­dents are out­side

Evac­u­a­tion to relo­ca­tion site – imple­ment­ed when dan­ger is emi­nent in or  near school build­ing

We have been advised to make our announce­ments for these emer­gen­cies con­sis­tent and sim­ple. There­fore, when we prac­tice a lock­down an announce­ment will be made say­ing, “This is a lock­down.” We will be prac­tic­ing these drills through­out the year. The chil­dren are pre­pared for these drills by the teach­ers. The terms might be alarm­ing but this is the direc­tive from the State.

Please dis­cuss with your child the need to prac­tice and be pre­pared for all emer­gen­cies. Please con­tact me with any ques­tions or con­cerns.

This prompt­ed a cou­ple of ques­tions,

  • Is this hap­pen­ing in any oth­er states and schools?
  • Does this coin­ci­den­tal­ly coin­cide with with the with­draw­al from Iraq for some­thing big­ger?
Maybe a lit­tle tin foil hat , but it was still a top­ic of con­ver­sa­tion.
Com­mu­ni­ca­tions came up, and was a heavy top­ic of con­ver­sa­tion. I pref­ace the rest of this top­ic with the fact that we are not an orga­nized prep­per group, just a few con­cerned cit­i­zens that have prep­ping in com­mon.  That said, we are all inves­ti­gat­ing HAM, CB, and oth­er com­mu­ni­ca­tions meth­ods.  We decid­ed two things:
  • To all test com­mu­ni­ca­tions with each oth­er in the event any one or all of us need­ed assis­tance dur­ing a cri­sis.
  • To look at a stan­dard set of com­mu­ni­ca­tion equip­ment to test with, with­out going broke.
I recent­ly bought a Mid­land Hand­held CB , a mag­net­ic whip anten­na and one of the oth­er guys sug­gest­ed a par­tic­u­lar HAM Radio Unit as well.  We also decid­ed to start meet­ing every cou­ple weeks, so I am assum­ing that the group will want to start test­ing com­mu­ni­ca­tions as we can.  Unfor­tu­nate­ly, I have not tak­en my HAM license seri­ous­ly enough and have not stud­ied for it yet.  How­ev­er, I think now that there is some exter­nal moti­va­tion, I may get on top of it…

The result was a good meet­ing and din­ner, and I look for­ward to get­ting togeth­er with these guys again in the next cou­ple of weeks…

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
5
COMMENTS
By: suburban
nov
1

In reply to Mr-Jones .

Mr Jones — Always good info. THANKS

By: Mr-Jones
nov
1

CB FRS/GMRS and the various HAM bands are all useful withing their sphere and different strengths and limitations. With a GMRS license, you can use more power on GMRS frequencies, repeaters and radios that output up to 50 watts. Some GMRS radios have integration GPS or interference eliminator codes to keep you from having to hear everyone on the same frequency but GMRS/FRS radios have restrictions when it comes to using external antennas. CBs are great for talking to truckers, can use hi-gain external antennas, but are restricted to 4 or 5 watts of output. The main restriction to the world of HAM radio is that you need to learn a little bit about how to operate them and get a license, but you would be better served using any radio system with that knowledge. Once you do, HAM radios have incredible, range, tons of options, hi-tech features, powerful transmitters and antennas, in handheld, mobile or fixed radios. Other options to consider are MURS, Marine, Shortwave and Air Band Radios. Each one has a different purpose. Some HAM radios can be modified (illegally) to transmit on multiple bands and can receive many different bands in addition to several HAM bands.

By: suburban
oct
31

In reply to suburban .

In fact, after giving is a bit more thought, each type of communication device can be considered a “level” of communications…

- Walkie Talkie type FRS/GMRS Radios — Considered Local Comms (within a mile)
— CB — Considered Regional Comms (within 10 — 20 miles)
— Ham — Regional / National / Global Comms

I may be wrong, but I think it would be smart to have all three at hand if need be…

By: suburban
oct
31

In reply to MasterPo .

Agreed… Both are useful in their own ways, however. CB being more available to the citizen, is a good way to listen in to the road while on a road trip to find out what the truckers and other CB users are reporting on while on the road. I could have used one the day after Hurricane Irene for road flooding and closures due to down trees, power lines, etc.

By: MasterPo
oct
31

Ham and cb are very different. Even for short local communications ham is more involved.

Build a Mobile Website
View Site in Mobile | Classic
Share by: