Prep Monday – Brrr, It’s Cold!


Okay, so it’s not “cold” cold. Yet. But it’s pretty chilly out there at 50 degrees and overcast. And colder at night, of course.

So are you ready for that?

It’s one thing to stock up on food and water, and even cooking fuel, and sure, you think about the cold weather – the real stuff – right around the corner. You might have insulated sleeping bags, blankets, long johns, and a host of other “keep warm” items.

But has reality sunk in? How much time do you spend outside your cozy office or home? As I’m writing this, I have the thermostat set at the usual 70 degrees, but I’m still chilled from earlier and so I turned on the space heater at my feet. I’m quite toasty!

Is that a good thing? Right now, yes. For prepping, no.

Here’s my theory:

I understand that people actually live in Arizona, right, where temps get up over 100 during a pretty regular basis. Obviously, they’re a lot more used to it than, say, someone from Canada (yes, I said Canada on purpose and you know who you are!). So heat likely bothers the Arizonans a lot less than the Canadians. The opposite also holds true: those who are used to the Southwest would be frozen in Canada, yes?

Now, I know what’s best for me in terms of prepping, and if I weren’t freaking out over a few #firstworldproblems as the cool kids say, I’d totally have the thermostat reflecting the outside temp – and a couple windows wide open – and this space heater would be out in the garage somewhere.

Even if you have fuel for cooking and some thermal undies and all, the more you can get used to actual temps and not the man-made variety, the better of you’ll be when SHTF. You won’t be shivering (much), you won’t be cranky and whiny and wanting to huddle under a blanket. You will thrive. You will become acclimated.

What better way than to start now? Your utility companies might suffer a bit, but your bank account will be much more stable.

How to MacGyver a House When You Can’t Make Coffee


Since I dropped the ball – again – for Prep Monday, and am having a hard time getting my act together for today’s bookstore post, my friend and colleague Janet Cannon graciously stepped in and offered the following blog post today for your reading pleasure:

For those of you who don’t know, MacGyver was this cool dude—played by Richard Dean Anderson on a TV show in the 80s—who could make a bomb out of bubble gum, a paper clip, and a click pen. He had the most amazing powers to take the ordinary and make it extraordinary by simply imagining what it could be and making it so. Even if he did have a mullet, we can forgive him, because he was drop-dead gorgeous anyway. Still is. And he was smart. Very smart.

However, not all of us have a 180 IQ. Writers are always looking for that cool factor when it comes to plot twists, character traits, and memorable settings, but we can’t detect always the laser tripwires with baby powder and cigarette smoke. The cliché becomes cliché. Sometimes we need other sources to help us break into the prison to free our ideas.

That’s why I’m always trolling the Internet for the next weird thing. Or an old weird thing. Or two weird things that people haven’t put together yet. The Internet is a great resource for putting together a house when you don’t have a builder’s permit.

Here are a few resources to try out. Enjoy!

http://www.stumbleupon.com/ Randomness galore!

http://www.howstuffworks.com/ Tells you how things work.

http://www.nationalgeographic.com/ Inspirational photos, crazy animals, and interesting characters.

http://www.mapmyrun.com/Create a map of your location based on a current place or measure out distances from real place to real place. Lots of cool uses.

http://www.theonion.com/ Goofy articles that may spark some writing ideas.

http://thelongestlistofthelongeststuffatthelongestdomainnameatlonglast.com/Just for fun!

(Incidentally, Jan is one of RHP’s anthology authors – you can order your copy of Spirits of St. Louis: Missouri Ghost Stories HERE.)