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cyclops1771 ago

I just finished reading one of those "wormhole" books where the island of Nantucket gets mysteriously ported back to the Bronze Age (roughly 1250 BC). -- for thos einterested, it is titled Island in the Sea of Time by S.M. Stirling.

Anyways, it discusses the items that are of importance - metalworking/forge management is HUGE. Machining is another. Farming and seed management/storage is the third. Of other note is livestock and encyclopedae, so they can look up things (no more internet.). They are somewhat saved by abundance of resources, and somewhat avoid the issues that an apocalyptic situation would have today - mass riots, desperate groups and marauders.

Got to have so much firepower to protect anything. Gasoline is a huge deal. Refrigeration is gone, so food storage becomes an issue. Having solar/wind to keep food refrigerated would be a massive issue. Clean water would be an issue. Where to vacate waste would be an issue. Start there, and work towards machinery and metalworking.

mohammed_was_a_fag ago

I never considered encyclopedias/books. Weird how irrelevant they seem now.

cyclops1771 ago

I keep my "herbs as medicines" giant book, my "plants as food" giant book, and my "how to make wine" book safe and secure at all times. everything else is secondary!!!

mohammed_was_a_fag ago

When my grandpa passed I made sure to keep his books that showed how to do all sorts of things: how to build/design a proper drainfield, how to properly lay bricks and morter, how to build trusses, etc. It's from 1903, from his father. It's super fragile but I just thought it was so cool. He dropped out of school in the 8th grade bc of TB. Then finished high school education in the army. He built houses for living and sold them, with lumber that he cut from trees he fell. He is a true inspiration to me.