Archive for the ‘Zombie Gear’ Category

Survival Lube for the Zombie Apocalypse – Fluid Film

We’ve been busy this summer deep in the wilds of the American West honing our arcane arts preparing for the slaying of zombies to come.  This nifty product is just a little taster of the many new skills, products and gear we’ve learned about this season. 

When you need to hose down a Z and light it aflame you can forget WD40 and Lemon Pledge, this is the stuff you’re going to want.  Fluid Film® leaves a lasting film of lanolin and is solvent free so you can feel good about composting your charred zombies.  It also works exceedingly well as a wilderness fire starter and is a long lasting lube for your Zombie Axe for those dark damp nights in the forest.

Here’s a short video showing Fluid Film® – Wilderness Fire Starter Extraordinaire in action deep in Northern California’s Ishi Wilderness in the dead of winter.  Why take chances with primitive fire starting when your life is on the line?  Cheat with this stuff; for starting fires it’s better than gasoline.

 

Stay tuned.  2012 is on our doorstep!

Zombie Shopping

I think the toughest part of dealing with the fast approaching Zombie Apocalypse is coping with our own Pre-Zombie behavior.  That is to say, while we aren’t out literally performing cannibalistic acts, we are cannibalizing ourselves in a way.  We cannibalize our ability to prepare and survive.

Just like Zombies we are compelled to do things that are inherently anti-necessary for our own survival.  Zombies don’t NEED to eat human flesh.  They don’t ever die, and the flesh munching doesn’t revitalize them.  While it’s true that it helps them reproduce, how necessary is reproduction to a life form that never dies anyhow?  You’d think they could just eat a person once in a rare while to keep their numbers up, replacing those hit by busses or shot by drunken hunters mistaking them for deer.  But they don’t, they eat as many people as they possibly can and because of this, humans will inevitably try to annihilate every last one of their species rather than finding some quasi-happy medium like we do with Great White Sharks and Grizzly Bears.

Now I am thinking of one anti-necessary thing in particular that we do as humans preparing for the inevitable and fast approaching Zombie Apocalypse and that is shopping.  It has been so deeply engrained in our modern culture that we can’t help it.  It is like we are being compelled by a dark and sinister force deep within our own being to buy crap that we don’t need in order to feel whole.  Of course we don’t feel more complete when we buy unnecessary crap, not at all, we just have a new set of problems like where to put the newly purchased stuff, how to maintain it, how to pay for the interest expense arising from its purchase, how to protect it from theft, and on and on.  If we’re feeling incomplete it probably has something to do with the breakdown of first the tribal structure then the extended family and then the destruction of even the nuclear family, leaving us feeling empty and alone.  Buying stuff cannot fill that hole in our lives, so let’s not kid ourselves.  But I am digressing a bit.  The point is, every dollar you spend on some impulse buy, or a “want” buy diminishes your ability to put your dollars to work SAVING YOUR GODDAMNED LIFE.

 

Relax, I’m probably just about as bad at this as millions of other festering, fiscally irresponsible Americans, however I have come up with a few strategies to help put the dollars that I just can’t hold onto into things that stand a chance of helping me survive when the Z-shit has hit the fan.

So since I’ve identified that I have a problem I decided to come up with a plan.  My plan was not to stop the shopping, not to fight the urge, although I try to as much as possible, but to work within certain budget limitations putting the dollars I would spend anyway into useful tangible goods, and in some cases services (such as taking a Wilderness Medicine course (i.e. “Wilderness First Responder”))  The first thing I did was to realign my perception of what I would like to buy by asking the question, “How does this thing help me when Zombies start ambling down the street eating the afternoon commuters.”  Quickly I lost interest in cool clothes, expensive cars and iPhones.  A good start!  However, I started developing an obsession with really expensive knives, machetes, axes, and things that go boom. 

Also a problem…

So the next step was to start asking the question, “Is this thing going to give me the best bang for my buck in regards to being prepared to survive a prolonged Zombie Onslaught.”  Looking around and seeing that I own six bowie knives that cost 200 plus dollars each but only a couple months supply of very cheap rice and beans and no good means by which to cook them when I could have diverted a fraction of the bowie knife funds to food storage and had a year’s supply of food stashed away with money left over, left me doubting my situation.  So it was time to take stock of things, really figure out how I see the Z-pocalypse playing out and working up some plans for dealing with it.

So I started putting together several rough and flexible plans by answering a few simple questions. 

  • What did I need to hunker down where I am?
  • What did I need to get out of Dodge in my vehicle?
  • What did I need to get home safely if vehicles stopped working?
  • What did I need if I had to “bug out” on foot?
  • What skills did I need to spend time and money learning?

 

Not being one for focus I thought it would be best to get cracking on all of these more or less simultaneously striving to get a minimum level of acceptability across the board.  That gives me something to work towards, and when I feel like I have the minimum survival supplies for each scenario covered, then I can start to polish, refine and improve each strategy with more and better gear, take advanced critical skills courses, read more books, etc.  

This way I’m not fighting the Pre-Zombie symptomatic urge to BUY, BUY, BUY that we’ve all been so deeply infected with, instead I’m taking that assaulting energy and in a deft aikido like move, redirecting it to inflict a powerful blow against my enemy, death.

I’m still blowing money that maybe I aught to be saving for a rural piece of land with lots of wild game and a big garden, but I justify it to myself by arguing that if I devoted all my money to saving for some future goal then a hyperinflation struck and wiped out all of my savings, or if the Z-pocalypse came fast and early I would have wasted that cash resource, saving it and never using it.  Life is a balancing act and so is preparing to survive the Zombie Apocalypse.  Good luck!

That said, if you do still happen to have a little extra cash on hand, you may want to check out some of our Zombie Apocalypse Gifts and Attire at the new The End Is Here store!  Oh the irony!!!

The Zombie Axe – How to Choose the Best Axe

Zombie AxeI have found over the years that there is a lot of information on the Internet about axes, yet very few of the people writing about them have any real experience in working with them.  With the Zombie Apocalypse nearly upon us I feel it is high time to solve this issue.

I have spent the last four years of my life living and working in designated Wilderness areas in the Rocky Mountains where motorized equipment (chainsaws) are not allowed, falling trees, building log bridges, clearing trail, etc, all with crosscut saw and axe, and it would be fair to say that I’ve learned more than a little about axes since then, particularly given that they are something I’m very interested in in general anyhow.  Of course I won’t have the time or gumption to share everything I know here about axes, it would take a full book to do so but I can give a good primer for folks who are new to the axe ( or ax depending on your spelling preference ).

First off it’s best to ask why you think you need an axe?  Axes are specialty tools, one axe will not fit all your needs, though some are more versatile than others, there will always be sacrifices to be made.  Do you need to split firewood, buck (that is chop through logs), fall trees, hew logs (flatten out surfaces for building), limb trees, split kindling or cut off the heads of thousands of the maurading undead? 

Think about this seriously, it’s important when the axe meets your wallet. 

 

Splitting Axes and Mauls

The first thing people ask when they learn about peak oil or come to believe some other sort of apocalypse is upon us is “Should I buy an axe?” then “What kind?”  So try to think through what you think is the worst case scenario in the future you envision, chances are a chainsaw may suit you better.   Really even an EMP attack won’t make a chainsaw not work and they use so little fuel even in a major scarcity you aught to be able to aquire enough to cut your firewood.  You just might not be able to drive to the gas station to pick it up.

A splitting axe / maul and some splitting wedges on the other hand is probably the most likely tool that you’re going to need, the need to split firewood to heat your home, assuming firewood is available is a real possibility. 

This also is the easiest axe to purchase.  Every hardware store sells some cheap piece of crap with thick, obtuse edges that will accomplish this task.  Look for a long handle 35 inches or so.  It’s safer (goes into the dirt instead of your shins when you miss your mark and gives you more power for dealing with the notty stuff. 

A neat trick for splitting firewood that I’ve seen is mounting an old tire on top of your splitting stump into which you place the logs to be split (yep you can fill it up not just split one at a time) and instead of the wood falling off onto the ground after each blow and needing to be reset, it stays in place on end in the tire and can be split over and over until you have it split to your specs.  A bonus is that the axe handle hits the tire and stops the bit from going into your splitting stump and destroying it.  Your stump will last for years this way instead of maybe for a cord or two depending on your firewood type.

Gransfors Bruk Splitting MaulNow of course I just said that any old piece of crap will split firewood, which is true, especially if you sharpen it and apply large amounts of force, but the best splitters start out thin at the cutting edge and quickly and smoothly taper to a thick obtuse angle.  Check out the Gransfors Bruk splitting mauls / splitting axes if you want the best.  I’ve used these, and found them to be superlative, though a bit pricey of a tool to solve a problem that a $35 hardware store maul will solve.

Also don’t forget your splitting wedges and make sure you have some sort of heavy sledge hammer (5lbs plus) to drive them with when you have to split rounds that are large in diameter, any axe or maul is likely to get stuck in big rounds if the type of wood you have doesn’t readily split from the outside of the log round working in.
Bucking and Falling Axes

Axes intended for bucking (chopping) and falling tend to be similar and are largely interchangeable in nature.  I would, however, caution against using a axe with a head heavier than 4lbs for falling.  It is an order of magnitude more physically challenging to swing an axe horizontally with good accuracy than to swing down with one and as such a lighter head will make your work much less punishing.  I also recommend a longer handle as it is safer for falling work.  Glancing blows when you’re working at waist level or above are ueber scary.  I like a 2.5 to 3.5 pound axe head on a 35″ handle for falling trees. 

As far as bucking with an axe goes, there is very little reason to base your choice of axe on this action as it is generally more efficient to use a crosscut saw to buck larger diameter logs, both in terms of energy spent and amount of wood wasted.  Only if you work on a trail crew or are into competition axe racing would you likely need something geared towards axe bucking.  That said a 3.5lb double bit axe with a 35″ handle works very well for this task.  Keep one bit sharp and filed acutely for the bulk of the work and then when you are about to finish your chopping flip the axe around and use the other bit that you keep a more obtuse (and thus more rugged) edge on in case your final blow goes into the dirt or strikes a rock.  You won’t damage your sharp acute edge this way. 

Single bit versus double bits…  While in many cases a single bit axe can outperform a double bit, the difference is marginal.  A single bit has the benefit of being able to pound falling wedges (use plastic or even better magnesium wedges, but avoid steel as it can damage your axe), but you don’t have the benefit of having the second more obtuse cutting edge that you can use when working around rocks or other places where you might damage your axe.

Personally I find a 35″ 3.5lb double bit axe to be the most versatile axe out there and thus chose it for much of my backcountry work.  The major drawback is that to get a good one you’re going to have to pay out the yin yang or find a vintage axe head at a garage sale and re-hang it with a good handle.

A good alternative would be the Iltis Ochsenkopf (or oxhead) 2.5lb falling axe with a 35″ handle.  It is a European design so it may look a bit strange with it’s belled out bit, but I can assure you it is a fine tool, the only downside is that you may, as I have, find the handle to be uncomfortably thick, so you may end up re-hanging it or at least filing it down with a wood rasp to get a thinner more ergonomic grip.  This company makes double bit axes as well, but they don’t really float my boat as the design is a bit to unconventional for my tastes.

A note on axe head weight.  You may have seen some of the massive axes in the lumberjack competitions.  These beasts are impressive tools indeed but super highly specialized for working for just a minute or two.  The extremely strong lumberjack racers who only have to work for a minute, instead of all day will chose axes from 5 to 8 pounds in head weight.  These heavy axes will wear even the most massive of lumberjacks out in short order so they really aren’t practical for actual WORK.  Avoid them unless you’re looking to compete for show.

 

Limbing Axes

Limbing is one area where a competent and experienced axeman can still outperform most people running a chainsaw.  Don’t believe me?  Drop me a line if you’re in my neighborhood and we’ll race for cash.

When it comes to limbing, a falling or bucking axe performs well and if you are strong can even be preferable but for most people it will be to their advantage to acquire a more maneuveable 28 – 30″ axe with a head around 2.5lbs.  Your aim will be better with the smaller axe.  If you want something new, I would recommend the Gransfors Bruk Scandinavian Forest Axe for an excellent limbing axe , they are fine hand forged tools that take an exceedingly strong edge, hold it and don’t chip, otherwise shop for a vintage American head and re-hang it with the right length handle.  Remember to stand on the opposite side of the log that you are limbing whenever possible for safety.  A shorter axe is often more dangerous because a glancing blow is more likely to go into your leg than the dirt, but what you gain in controllability with the smaller axe often offsets the danger.  It’s all about having the right tool for the job!
 

Specialized Axes

I’m not going to get into specialized axes here or I’d never finish writing this article and you’d never finish reading it.  There are many, including axes for hewing, cutting sod, short handled light weight double bit cruiser axes etc.  These all have a place but unless you’re seriously into primitive cabin building or have a highly specialized job like a tree climber / arborist, they should probably be avoided as they often require learning a specific technique for a specific task.  Generally speaking you can perform most of these specialized tasks relatively well with a regular bucking or falling axe.
 

Axes for Killing Zombies

Ah, the Zombie Axe!  This is what you’ve been waiting for.  First off, Kudus for realizing that an axe is a superior zombie slaying device to the ubiquitous machete.  Don’t get me wrong, I have great respect for machetes especially after having lived in the Jungles of South America, they are phenomonal tools under the correct circumstances, and a great hand-to-hand weapon against humans, however, when it comes to the maurading undead, you’re going to need more penetration than a machete offers, a machete’s strength is in its shearing action, especially when employing the pinch grip, whereas an axe’s strength lies in its force over area or pounds per square inch (PSI).  An axe can sever a head or penetrate a skull.  You just can’t do that as easily with a machete, particularly penetrating a skull.

So, the strength of the axe being recognized, what then is going to make an axe a good zombie slaying weapon.  The answer is SPEED!  A heavy axe is more than likely going to be too slow and too inaccurate when swung not only above the waist but above shoulder level.  It’s really hard to swing an axe at that height, especially when you have to do so with accuracy over and over again.  I know, I’ve had to do it to fall trees on steep slopes where my face cut was above shoulder level.  It was exceedingly difficult.  So the type of axe that benefits us the most here is going to be one with a light head and comparitively long handle. 

I’ll take my 2.5lb Iltis ochsenkopf falling axe, but mind you, I AM a pro.  A limbing axe might be OK too, but I would highly recommend that you look into a tomahawk.  Long handle, light narrow bit = fast swinging high PSI weapon.  A tomahawk is also highly portable and many include a hammer poll on one end which may even be a preferable weapon when you want to crack a skull but not risk getting the bit stuck in said undead cranium.  Sure a tomahawk can’t sever a head in one blow, but it can easily sever the spine.  Contrary to popular belief, Zombies can be paralyzed too, severing the spine is an excellent way to disable a ghoul.  You can also take away it’s iPhone for an equally devastating blow.  Imagine what you could do to an iPad with a tomahawk!!!

I recommend the Cold Steel Trailhawk as an economical weapon.  However if you want the best edged weapon money can buy, I can recommend Custom Tool designer Mike Gapp’s custom Tomahawks  Equinox Coronado . He can put together a long super tough composite handled custom profiled weapon that you will serve you exceedingly well should the hordes of undead rise and take to the streets.

If however, after all this the equinox coronado hawks are still a bit out of your price range and you still prefer a machete, or, and I shudder, a sword to an axe or hawk, I would encourage you to compromise with a Ditch Bank, a wicked brush clearing tool that sports much thicker steel than a machete and a longer two handed handle.  Long enough to gain enough force to sever heads easily if the edge is well maintained.  Ugly but effective, and still can do double duty in actual work.

Now a few technical notes to wrap it up:

 

Selecting a good wooden handle

When chosing an axe handle you want straight grain that runs parallel to the head of the axe.  To see this you’re going to want to look in two places one, the end of the handle opposite the head and two in the eye of the axe head.  If the grain runs in the right right direction (towards the cutting axe and not perpendicular to the cutting edge) then you are half way there.  Next you’re going to want to make sure it is good hardwood.  It should be ash or hickory, and the grain should be tight.  Bigger spaces between the grain often indicate a handle that is less strong.  It is probably best if the handle is NOT coated with a clear lacquer.  If it is, that is OK, you’re just going to want to sand it off when you get it home and then rub the sanded handle down with linseed oil, try not to buy “boiled” linseed as that just means they’ve added some seriously harsh toxic chemicals to make it dry faster.  You don’t need to be soaking that into your skin.  As far as fiberglass or the yellow pastic handles go, one word, Don’t.

 

Sharpening

Uhg…  Sharpening is almost another book unto itself, but you’re going to want to have a large mill bastard file for when you’ve chipped the hell out of your axe or if you want to customize the profile, and also a round axe stone for when the edge just needs touching up.  This is going to take some practice so I highly recommend you find someone who is experienced in sharpening with a stone and file and get them to SHOW you.  If they use a bench grinder immediately stop listening to them, you can do a lot of damage to an axe in very short order with a grinder including, in extreme cases, ruining the temper on the axe rendering it garbage.  Don’t do it.

One final note, if you are a total bum and just want an all around axe that is going to survive your being exceedingly abusive to it, spare a fine tool like the Gransfors or Iltis axes from your abuse and get yourself an Estwing, it will serve you well and nobody is gonna cry if you do bad things to it. 

Anyhow, I realize the limitations of this article but I hope I’ve given you a good starting point from which to learn more about the axe and make your first purchase if you still think you need one.  There is much to learn. So don’t be shy, ask questions in the comments section below, If they’re reasonable, I’ll be happy to answer.  But bear in mind I’m busy preparing for the onslought myself so be patient if it takes some time for me to get back to you.

Cheers!  And on the field of Zombie Battle, let us show them our hearts and then show them theirs!!!

Fly Swatters – Critical Apocalypse Survival Tools

Gallipoli DVD at Amazon.comOne thing about a real zombie apocalypse that Hollywood has totally missed the ball on is the flies.  If there are millions of rotting corpses walking around or even just lying around, there sure as shit are going to be flies… LOTS of em!  This occurred to me recently when I was watching an excellent documentary about the battle between the British / Allies and the Ottoman Turks at Gallipoli in World War 1.  By the way, I highly recommend this film to any of you fellow history buffs out there.  Very few films cover the senselessness of war and the idiocy of politicians commanding armies as well as this one.  Anyhow, I’ve recently become an intensely interested student in the two world wars as they present some of our best case studies for what might happen in the event of a twenty-first century apocalypse, with or without the zombies.

The image in Gallipoli that struck me was the problem presented by the flies.  Thousands of corpses lying about, rotting in the hot Mediteranean sun, thousands of tons of human excrement and tens of thousands of live but still stinking human bodies crowded onto that penninsula brought on an unbelievable swarm of flies.  The flies crawled over the rotting corpses, the mountains of shit, the sick and dying soldiers and then over EVERYONE’s food and beverage.  It was unavoidable; they were everywhere and on everything, crawling on your eyes and into your mouth.  And they spread disease.  Dysentery became an epidemic and between the machine gun fire and dysentery the battle resulted in nearly half a MILLION casualties.

Can you imagine what would happen if some sort of armageddon turned 80% or more of Los Angeles or Manhattan into corpses?  Heck, even a couple dozen corpses in your neighborhood, or one in your home or yard is going to be a problem.  So you’re going to have to be prepared to deal with this.

My first recommendation is to get yourself some LIME .  No, I don’t mean the green citrus fruit.  Lime is a chemical powder that is used in gardening.  It is useful for two things beyond soil treatment.  The first is keeping the stink and flies down in an outhouse or, if you’re stuck indoors under seige by zombies you can sprinkle a little bit over each deuce you drop into your poo bucket.  Yeah, yeah, I know, you can burn the bodies, but do you really want to waste the last gasoline or diesel that the world is ever going to be able to produce?  Also you have to think about the fire risks here and the potentially unwanted attention a bonfire might attract.  Cover the bodies on both sides with a good layer of lime and if you can bury them too, well away from any water source they might contaminate, this is even better.  The same rules apply to dealing with human excrement.  Try to get it under a foot of soil and a good 100 feet (30 meters) back from any water source.  Either way, the lime will buy you time to deal with the unwanted human matter, be it corpse or shit.

The second thing I can recommend is something that has been widely lost to today’s climate-controlled, urban, sterile environment dwellers, the lowly fly swatter.  Sounds silly, I know, but, damn is it a boost to morale to have the right weapon to fight your enemy.  And flies aren’t just an annoyance, they mean disease and maybe even madness.  They could even be carrying the virus that caused the zombie outbreak itself!!! 

First off, I’m not even going to get into sprays.  You don’t need to be breathing that toxic crap when your body needs to be at peak performance.  You might keep some around for a major offensive just in case you get innundated.  But if you keep your stronghold sealed with screens at the minimum, you should be able to manually knock these little bastards back to the land of the dead and maggots they crawled out of.  Fly spray is a non-renewable resource; once it’s gone, it’s gone.

Anyhow, the way I see it you have two options with your tactical fly swatter decsion.  One, buy cheap and buy lots.  I find that the wire handled swatters with the plastic heads are superior to the all-plastic versions.  They have better slap and tend to provide a bit better reach.  Here’s an example of a good cheap fly swatter.  The more fly swatters you have, the more recruits you can arm in the fight for health and survival of the human race.  If dollars are an issue, this is the way to go.

The second option applies to those of you who are interested in quality.  For the discriminant slayers of zombies and flies, these 

beautiful tanned leather swatters on oiled cherry wood shafts

may be your Excaliber of the Flies!

Whichever way you chose to go, you will be glad you are prepared when the swarms of those who come with the walking dead breach your perimeter defenses and bring filth, disease, madness and death into your stronghold.

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