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Reducing Your Sound "Footprint" by Countrytek
I've been lurking about SurvivalBlog for about six months now, and have found
a lot of useful information hereabouts. There are lots of good tips about
securing your retreat and making it less visible. One thing I have noticed
though is that there appears to be a blind spot. Why go to all the trouble
to screen your retreat location from view and practice nighttime light discipline
if you are going to announce your presence far and wide audibly?
One thing I've noticed lately is there is a lot of discussion on stocking
up on two-cycle and bar oil for chainsaws. For those of you who live in the
hinterboonies
already: Think back a few months to woodcutting season. I'll bet if you stop
and think about it, you would be able to locate your neighbors for a couple
miles around
- at least - based on the sounds of their Stihl and Husqvarna--nobody uses
Homelite or McCulloch anymore--chainsaws. For those of you not familiar with
life in the hinterlands yet: The crisp airs of autumn and early winter carry
the sound of chainsaw exhaust for miles. Those things are shrieking banshees
that scream "Here I am!" Not only do they announce your location
to the world-at-large, they also mask the sound of anyone approaching the woodcutter's AO.
So, even if you post a security detail around your work party, they are
going to be relying solely
on visual contact to detect approaching hostiles.
To me, the better route would be to leave the chainsaw in the emergency stash,
and do your woodcutting with a crosscut saw. Yes, the misery whip "sings," but
its slight ring doesn't carry nearly as far as the chainsaw's blare and shriek.
(For those who don't know -- The crosscut saw got the nickname "misery
whip" because an improperly set and sharpened crosscut saw is exactly
that: a miserable implement to spend your days with. Caution: Caring
for and using this device requires some skills.)
Side Note: You did notice that I didn't say "Forget the
chainsaws!" didn't
you? I live in 'quake country and - due to misguided forestry practices over
the
past century - anyone who lives outside of town these days lives in wildfire
country. When I want to get through the roof of a collapsed structure quickly,
I'm going to reach for my trusty Stihl, not a crosscut. And, two men with
chainsaws can clear a firebreak a lot quicker than two men with a crosscut.
Just save the chainsaws for the times that saving time and lives is more important
than keeping a low sound profile. There are always trade-offs to be made in
survival situations.
You don't give up all that much in efficiency - if you learn to use and care
for your saw properly - by using a crosscut instead of a chainsaw. I'm told
that wasn't until the 1960s that a chainsaw was able to beat a two-man saw
in log bucking contests. Those of you who take in logger rodeos know that those
bucking saws are the chainsaw hot-rods -- they're anything but stock.
If you have the personnel available, you could send out multiple three-man
teams with one two-man saw per team. The "odd man out" would serve
as part of the security detail for the wood cutting operation. The cutting
team would put their LBE and
rifles aside - but close at hand - while the security person would retain his.
(Yes, women can hang-to with men on a cross-cut once
they learn the pace. I'm saying men for language simplicity.) Every 15 minutes
the saw crew could take a 5 minute break and one of them could rotate with
the security man. That way, each man spends a maximum of a half-hour on the
business end of the saw before getting a 20-minute break. Once everyone is
used to the drill, the interval between breaks could be stretched to a half-hour.
By sending out multiple teams, you get a larger security detail, and it would
be most effective to stagger the breaks so you always have one - or more -
security man on point. This reduces the risk of everyone having to rely on
sidearms until they can fight their way back to their rifles. (Which is the
purpose of a sidearm, in my book: It exists solely to fight your way
back to the rifle you shouldn't have let get out-of-reach in the first place.
Or, to acquire another rifle when yours breaks or runs dry. Bad troopie! No
cookie!)
Don't have the personnel? Then use a one-man crosscut saw and have your lovely
bride or elder son be your security detail. Whatever you do, don't get
in the habit of sending out work details without a security detail! That's
the
easiest way there is to take casualties and leave the door open to deadly infiltration.
([They see someone wearing familiar clothing and say] "It's Okay! That's
just Bob coming back from cutting wood!")
I am wholeheartedly against "going it alone" post-TEOTWAWKI.
If you're single and alone in the world, you need to
build a support group of like-minded
individuals that you can rely on. They're just like finding
the perfect bride: They are out there. The problem is finding
them. Trust me - I know from experience.
I come from a large clan (We're Celts -- the term clan has significant meaning
for us.), so I'll be relying on family. My Dad insured that my brothers
and I were all well-familiarized with the crosscut saw as a tool for doing
real work. Along with the scythe, the #2 shovel, and a host of other "old
school" tools.
Once you become familiar with man-powered tools, you will be surprised what
you can do in a day.
One way to reduce your exposure is to cut your wood to cord length (4 feet)
in the woods, cold deck it, then transport it back to the retreat via horse
and sledge once the snows come. (Personally, I'd leave it cold-decked for a
year,
and
then transport it once it's seasoned -- much easier on the people loading the
sledge and the horses pulling it. You should have at least two years' firewood
stored at the retreat before TSHTF anyway.)
You can buck it to stove length back at the retreat with a one-man saw. Better
yet would be
to have a water
powered buzz saw at the retreat. Quiet, but much less work! Any cord lengths
that are too heavy to throw up on your shoulder to tote to the cold deck can
be hand split with a maul and wedges. Most hardwoods are much easier to split
green than once they've seasoned. This brings up another point: Using steel
mauls and wedges is just like ringing a bell. So learn how to fabricate a wooden
maul and wooden splitting wedges. It's not all that hard, and the benefit of
having your maul and wedges go "thwock" instead of having that
high-pitched ping of steel hitting steel is worth it. (The secret is to fashion
your wedges from green hardwood rounds, then set them aside to season for at
least a year. You can 'smith up some top rings for your wooden wedges and put
them on hot on the seasoned wedges that you've soaked in the rain barrel for
a couple days. The hot rings will compress the grain on the wedges so they
don't split when hit with the maul. You do the same thing on each end of the
maul head, but - of course - the rings are much bigger.)
Here are some sources for crosscut saws and the necessary tools to maintain
them:
If you want a good quality new saw at a bargain price, Woodcraft.com
carries
a five-foot German two-man saw for $74.99:
Lehmans.com carries
the saw
accessories that will allow you to maintain
your saw.
The Federal Highway
Administration has a series of articles on using and caring
for crosscut saws.
Have you caught on to the fact that when you live in the hinterboonies you operate
on
a
different time scale than the insane pace that city folk try to maintain? You
have to learn
to think and plan in a completely different manner when you are attempting to
be self-reliant for the long term. It's not an easy adjustment. That's why I
agree with Mr. Rawles: You want to be [long hence] settled in and living
at
your
retreat when
this post-modern world comes down around our ears.
One last admonition on "Sound Security:" Buy a [hunting] bow. Learn
how
to use it. Learn how to stalk and take game with it. Learn to have confidence
in
it
and in your ability to provide for your family with it. Learn how to make a bow
from wood from your woodlot, and learn how to make and fletch arrows. Then, when
the Schumer goes through the turbines, leave your rifle slung while hunting and
take your meat with a well-placed arrow. Rifle reports carry even further than
a chainsaw's banshee shriek. Save your ammo for the hostiles. - Countrytek
JWR Adds: I addressed noise discipline in my novel "Patriots:
Surviving the Coming Collapse",
but you are right that it has been insufficiently addressed in SurvivalBlog.
Thanks for sharing your comments on this subject. regarding bow hunting:
Keep in mind that most state game regulations prohibit carrying a rifle
when bow hunting, so your last comment would only apply to an absolute TEOTWAWKI situation.