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Looking after the Bees

It’s the end of January and not a time I’d be bothering with the bees all snuggled up and keeping warm over winter normally. This year though is different. The mild winter and the spells of warm temperatures have tricked the bees into thinking that there is no winter. They have still been out and about during the September to now period which is where they normally stay in because of the cold. This means that they haven’t recognised the winter and reduced their numbers to allow them to survive with no food being available to be collected.

Just been out checking today and they are still fairly active. Instead of being in a nice ball to keep warm they are still wandering all over the frames building new comb and although they are at reduced numbers they look like at late summer strength. Definitely not winter strength and certainly well above the numbers for the available food. They will be relying on their stored food for survival.

I’m pretty lucky. Because I don’t take all the honey away at the end of the summer they still have all the food they need. Most beekeepers take the honey away for themselves and leave enough for a reduced hive or for those that take it all they have to feed the bees over the winter. With hives not being on reduced bee levels many will not have left enough for the bees in the hive. For those who are feeding anyway they will have to feed more than normal but should detect that when they check feeding levels. Being paranoid of course I’m feeding my bees now as well just in case although so far they have not touched it relying on what they have in their own stores.

I’m guessing that means that this year they will get off to a quick start, unless we have a really cold snap for a few weeks, and I’m planning on taking advantage of that by splitting my hives early on. I’ve already procured the new hives plus all the fittings and treated them for the British weather. They are now ready to go and I will place them over the next few months so when the weather does start to improve I can then split the existing hives doubling the number of hives in my apiary.

If I do it early enough then I have the capability of repeating any splits where there are issues and the splits don’t make it. Although I have done it twice before from my original hive to bring me where I am now and those went well you can never be certain and having contingency is always good or if I want I could even split again anyway for a further increase in the number of hives I have.

So current situation is that I am ready for this years beekeeping and ready to move when the time is right and in the meantime I must continue checking on the bees to make sure that they don’t run out of food. If they start eating the feed I must keep it topped up until food is available from nature.

Looks like it could be a good year for the bees and my apairy.

Is prepping by stealth becoming a norm?

Was at work this week to meet a new manager who had joined our company. Nice enough guy and I think we will get on well. During the day he was asked to supply some details on his life history for the company newsletter and they also ask new starters to define a single statement that defines them as well as to state a fact that nobody else would know about them.

His single statement was ‘Be prepared’. A bit short for the magazine but one that sounded good. A real boy scout but enquires found he had never been a scout. His fact that nobody else would know was he owned his own smallholding. That got people talking.

However as I enquired I discovered that although he has his own 10 acre smallholding with a few cows, horses, goats, ducks, chickens and some game birds. A 10 acre wood with ponds and lived almost entirely off his own land he did not class himself as a prepper. He was just self sufficient. He moved there four years ago in response to the way the country was going and he thinks it is going to hell in a handbasket. He doesn’t however see the total collapse scenario and not because the government is competent but because he thinks it will collapse slowly and will stop before it hits rock bottom. He lives far enough away from major cities that he doesn’t see any significant risk from hordes visiting and plundering his home. He doesn’t have a large stock of food stores but he probably has enough for a few months not counting what he gets from the smallholding. I suspect his not much is more than most of us.

He also seems to live in a very gun relaxed county as he has several firearms and loves to go out shooting for deer and rabbits at least once, preferably twice, a week. This non prepper is in a much better situation than I am.

As you can imaging we had quite a chat and I’ve been invited down to his place for a night out shooting. Whoo Hoo.

While we were talking about his past in the team meeting I had noticed he worked in a place I had worked near Bath. He had joined just after I had left and enquires discovered that one of my close friends, a long time prepper, was the one that got him looking at moving out of the cities. Small world.

I didn’t tell him about this site as he seemed very dismissive of preppers. Seeing them more in the mould of survivalists who were more interesting in stocking up with firearms, ironically he has more than most of us, and simply preparing to survive in the woods but with no real long term strategy. Interesting talk from a non prepper.

So leaving it that we would arrange something I got on the train home where I called my aforementioned close friend. I told him I had bumped into this guy and what was said and he laughed. He said that the guy was so much like we were but didn’t recognise himself as a prepper as he didn’t see himself making any plans. It was simply a way to save money was how he justified it.

Funnily enough I was contacted by one of my old work colleagues for some advice this week as well. We have discussed prepping in the past and she has helped me with my preps. She was looking at selling up in London due to all the crime and buying a smallholding out West somewhere, I think she meant the Wild West, somewhere like Torquay, the way she was talking. I asked her why and it appears that the family is fed up with the way things are going and fear for the future. They though Cameron was going to fix it and are disappointed with the way things are going. She always looked on the positive side. They want somewhere they can be self sufficient and as she and her hubby can work over the Internet, with occasional expense paid trips, they were looking to move and semi retire. No, not prepping she insisted just time for a move and a well deserved reduction in workload.

Seems there are a lot more of us than we think although the media has done the damage around the label prepper and made it unpalatable to your average person in a similar way they have demonised survivalist and survivalism. So people just do it, they don’t label it to make themselves feel better. Bit like all the tory voters who just denied it in the polls to avoid being tormented by socialists they just put their heads down but voted as they wished.

Perhaps this new group think explains why I have so many lurkers on the sites. If so, good luck to you all.

Blood Groups

MaryN just asked an question on the forums about Blood Groups which made me realise that I had forgotten mine and also couldn’t remember what Blood Groups were compatible with others. It is an area of great interest containing areas of concern and is more than knowing your blood group and looking at a chart which is an impression we all have.

The following article has been pulled together with information from several sources and should be validated before use. Survival UK bears no responsibility if you use this information without medical advice. It is intended as starter information only and if there are medical facilities available you should use those rather than try anything yourself. This is information intended only for aid after an event when no other options are available.

A blood group is a classification of blood based on the presence or absence of inherited antigenic substances on the surface of red blood cells (RBCs). These antigens may be proteins, carbohydrates, glycoproteins, or glycolipids, depending on the blood group system. Some of these antigens are also present on the surface of other types of cells of various tissues. Several of these red blood cell surface antigens can stem from one allele (or an alternative version of a gene) and collectively form a blood group system. Blood types are inherited and represent contributions from both parents. A total of 35 human blood group systems are now recognized by the International Society of Blood Transfusion (ISBT). The two most important ones are ABO and the RhD antigen; they determine someone’s blood type (A, B, AB and O, with +, − or Null denoting RhD status).

ABO blood group system

The ABO system is the most important blood-group system in human-blood transfusion. The associated anti-A and anti-B antibodies are usually immunoglobulin M, abbreviated IgM, antibodies. ABO IgM antibodies are produced in the first years of life by sensitization to environmental substances such as food, bacteria, and viruses.

Phenotype Genotype
A AA or AO
B BB or BO
AB AB
O OO

Rh blood group system

The Rh system (Rh meaning Rhesus) is the second most significant blood-group system in human-blood transfusion with currently 50 antigens. The most significant Rh antigen is the D antigen, because it is the most likely to provoke an immune system response of the five main Rh antigens. It is common for D-negative individuals not to have any anti-D IgG or IgM antibodies, because anti-D antibodies are not usually produced by sensitization against environmental substances. However, D-negative individuals can produce IgG anti-D antibodies following a sensitizing event: possibly a fetomaternal transfusion of blood from a fetus in pregnancy or occasionally a blood transfusion with D positive RBCs. Rh disease can develop in these cases. The presence or absence of the Rh(D) antigen is signified by the + or − sign, so that for example the A− group is ABO type A and does not have the Rh (D) antigen.

Other blood group systems

33 blood-group systems have been identified, including the ABO and Rh systems. Thus, in addition to the ABO antigens and Rh antigens, many other antigens are expressed on the RBC surface membrane. For example, an individual can be AB, D positive, and at the same time M and N positive (MNS system), K positive (Kell system), Lea or Leb negative (Lewis system), and so on, being positive or negative for each blood group system antigen. Many of the blood group systems were named after the patients in whom the corresponding antibodies were initially encountered.

Blood Plasma

Just to complicate things a bit more there is Blood Plasma. Blood plasma is the pale yellow liquid component of blood that normally holds the blood cells in whole blood in suspension; this makes plasma the extracellular matrix of blood cells. It makes up about 55% of the body’s total blood volume. It is the intravascular fluid part of extracellular fluid (all body fluid outside of cells). It is mostly water (up to 95% by volume), and contains dissolved proteins (6–8%) (i.e.—serum albumins, globulins, and fibrinogen), glucose, clotting factors, electrolytes (Na+, Ca2+, Mg2+, HCO3−, Cl−, etc.), hormones, and carbon dioxide (plasma being the main medium for excretory product transportation). Plasma also serves as the protein reserve of the human body. It plays a vital role in an intravascular osmotic effect that keeps electrolytes in balanced form and protects the body from infection and other blood disorders.

Blood Banks

Before an event we have blood banks that take donors blood, type all the components and store it or process it. when it is processed the plasma and other components are separated in a centrifuge and stored separately. This leaves much of the blood usable with simple checks as most of the antigens are separated out. Currently we can ensure that the correctly matched blood type or plasma is given to the recipient after we have screened anything we don’t like out of the donor blood.

Red blood cell compatibility

  • Blood group AB individuals have both A and B antigens on the surface of their RBCs, and their blood plasma does not contain any antibodies against either A or B antigen. Therefore, an individual with type AB blood can receive blood from any group (with AB being preferable), but cannot donate blood to any group other than AB. They are known as universal recipients.
  • Blood group A individuals have the A antigen on the surface of their RBCs, and blood serum containing IgM antibodies against the B antigen. Therefore, a group A individual can receive blood only from individuals of groups A or O (with A being preferable), and can donate blood to individuals with type A or AB.
  • Blood group B individuals have the B antigen on the surface of their RBCs, and blood serum containing IgM antibodies against the A antigen. Therefore, a group B individual can receive blood only from individuals of groups B or O (with B being preferable), and can donate blood to individuals with type B or AB.
  • Blood group O (or blood group zero in some countries) individuals do not have either A or B antigens on the surface of their RBCs, and their blood serum contains IgM anti-A and anti-B antibodies against the A and B blood group antigens. Therefore, a group O individual can receive blood only from a group O individual, but can donate blood to individuals of any ABO blood group (i.e., A, B, O or AB).

If a patient in a hospital situation needs a blood transfusion in an emergency, and if the time taken to process the recipient’s blood would cause a detrimental delay, O negative blood can be issued. Because it is compatible with anyone, O negative blood is often overused and consequently is always in short supply. According to the British Chief Medical Officer’s National Blood Transfusion Committee, the use of group O RhD negative red cells should be restricted to persons with O negative blood, women who might be pregnant, and emergency cases in which blood-group testing is genuinely impracticable.

Red blood cell compatibility chart

In addition to donating to the same blood group; type O blood donors can give to A, B and AB; blood donors of types A and B can give to AB.

Red blood cell compatibility table
Recipient Donor
O− O+ A− A+ B− B+ AB− AB+
O− Green tickY Red X
N
Red XN Red XN Red XN Red XN Red XN Red XN
O+ Green tickY Green tickY Red XN Red XN Red XN Red XN Red XN Red XN
A− Green tickY Red XN Green tickY Red XN Red XN Red XN Red XN Red XN
A+ Green tickY Green tickY Green tickY Green tickY Red XN Red XN Red XN Red XN
B− Green tickY Red XN Red XN Red XN Green tickY Red XN Red XN Red XN
B+ Green tickY Green tickY Red XN Red XN Green tickY Green tickY Red XN Red XN
AB− Green tickY Red XN Green tickY Red XN Green tickY Red XN Green tickY Red XN
AB+ Green tickY Green tickY Green tickY Green tickY Green tickY Green tickY Green tickY Green tickY

Table note
1. Assumes absence of atypical antibodies that would cause an incompatibility between donor and recipient blood, as is usual for blood selected by cross matching.

Plasma compatibility

Blood plasma compatibility is the inverse of red blood cell compatibility. This is because the antibodies responsible for adverse reactions are carried in the plasma: type AB plasma carries neither anti-A nor anti-B antibodies and can be transfused to individuals of any blood group; but type AB patients can only receive type AB plasma. Type O carries both antibodies, so individuals of blood group O can receive plasma from any blood group, but type O plasma can be used only by type O recipients.

Plasma compatibility chart

Plasma compatibility table
Recipient Donor
O A B AB
O Green tickY Green tickY Green tickY Green tickY
A Red XN Green tickY Red XN Green tickY
B Red XN Red XN Green tickY Green tickY
AB Red XN Red XN Red XN Green tickY

Table note
1. Assumes absence of strong atypical antibodies in donor plasma

Rh D antibodies are uncommon, so generally neither D negative nor D positive blood contain anti-D antibodies. If a potential donor is found to have anti-D antibodies or any strong atypical blood group antibody by antibody screening in the blood bank, they would not be accepted as a donor (or in some blood banks the blood would be drawn but the product would need to be appropriately labeled); therefore, donor blood plasma issued by a blood bank can be selected to be free of D antibodies and free of other atypical antibodies, and such donor plasma issued from a blood bank would be suitable for a recipient who may be D positive or D negative, as long as blood plasma and the recipient are ABO compatible.

Just to complicate things even more

Things are not able to be calculated as easily as the above implies as there are exceptions such as an Rh D-negative patient who does not have any anti-D antibodies (never being previously sensitized to D-positive RBCs) can receive a transfusion of D-positive blood once, but this would cause sensitization to the D antigen, and a female patient would become at risk for hemolytic disease of the newborn. If a D-negative patient has developed anti-D antibodies, a subsequent exposure to D-positive blood would lead to a potentially dangerous transfusion reaction. Rh D-positive blood should never be given to D-negative women of child bearing age or to patients with D antibodies, so blood banks must conserve Rh-negative blood for these patients. In extreme circumstances, such as for a major bleed when stocks of D-negative blood units are very low at the blood bank, D-positive blood might be given to D-negative females above child-bearing age or to Rh-negative males, providing that they did not have anti-D antibodies, to conserve D-negative blood stock in the blood bank. The converse is not true; Rh D-positive patients do not react to D negative blood.

This same matching is done for other antigens of the Rh system as C, c, E and e and for other blood group systems with a known risk for immunization such as the Kell system in particular for females of child-bearing age or patients with known need for many transfusions.

What happens when I need a transfusion now?

If we watch what goes on now. In the event of a requirement for a transfusion the first thing they do is type the blood. In the event of an emergency they use plasma or O type blood in you until they get your type. Remember that all the antigens are processed out so this is as clean as you can get. Then they will use your own blood type when it is identified.

Out in the field, or in some of the hellholes around the world with little or no medical facilities, in an emergency they are forced sometimes to just plug someone into someone else simply with knowing their ABO and Rh blood group systems and using a simple needle set ignoring the other blood group systems. This is more like an event situation where we don’t have access to screened blood and death will be the alternative. It can lead to death but they were going anyway and this is a last ditch attempt to help them.

What does this mean for me after an event?

When someone needs blood you will need to know what blood is compatible with them and who can provide that blood type. Unless you have prepped well you won’t have any available plasma or whole blood outside what is in your bodies as blood banks will not be practical after a major event. You will not have any way of testing it either in the heat of the moment.

With a bit of luck your family groups should all be compatible and you are more likely to know their medical history. This will be valuable in finding the right donors.

With 35 blood group systems and 50 antigens there is a lot to consider although the main ones which are critical for transfusions are the ABO and Rh blood group systems. The others are less important but may have adverse effects if the donor is incompatible with the recipient. Unfortunately as we will be unable to screen for these we will simply be going with the odds and using the main ABO and Rh blood group systems. There will be issues with some donors and recipients. It can’t be helped which is why we must never do this unless there are no other options.

If you have the capabilities you will be able to extract and store blood. You may also be able to separate the plasma and the whole blood and store those for 40 days if the temperature is kept about 4oC. Most of us will not have the capability for that after an event and the best we could do is to extract blood and process it as it is required without any storage or processing. The only advantage of being able to extract and store blood is if you are going to perform some surgery for example or are expecting a fight and want to stock up just in case. Blood is sterile when extracted but like everything contact with the outside contaminates it and the sooner used the better, even if stored. Currently blood is treated with antibiotics before storage. That again is unlikely in our world after an event so blood storage increases risk of infection.

What should I do next?

  • Create a medical file for every member of your group
  • Make a note of the blood group for everyone in your group
  • work out who can provide transfusions for everyone else. Record that information in the medical file.
  • Purchase some transfusion kits for your medical kits
  • Ensure the blood type compatibility info, and names, are with that kit
  • Hope you never have to use it.

HF E Mail System

The first of the articles pulled from the forum site.

These articles are posted on the forum where they can be discussed but as the forum is not ideal for data retrieval and the articles quickly get lost I am going through the forum and posting any that need to be available on here.

So, yes. There is an email system that can operate independent of that information super-highway that we call “the internet”, using an HF radio of your choice, and a sound card interface. This was the idea when the system was first designed (it’s been improved upon, and we’ll get into that a bit later). First, I will explain how it works, and then I will provide installation and operation instructions.

So, buckle-in, this is going to be a MONSTER post!

Oh, and before we go any further, just know that a lot of HF hams out there HATE people who are using this system. Oh well. They’ll get over it.

Here’s How it Works

There are 5 “main hubs” located around the world. Those hubs are:
San Diego, CA
Brentwood, TN
Halifax, England
Vienna, Austria
Perth, Australia
All 5 hubs are able to communicate digitally with each other on HF. Under ideal conditions, you should be able to establish a connection directly to one of those hubs. When you send an email while connected to one of the hubs, the hub will accept it, store it, and then forward it to the other 4 hubs as well, so that your recipient can access the incoming email on any of the hubs around the world.

To do this, you will use an email client, which will handle all of this for you, automatically. The client interfaces with your radio, in the same way that, FLDIGI does, for example. The difference is, the client will be sending all kinds of commands to your radio without you needing to get involved. It works like Outlook. Anyway, back to how the system works. . .

There are also a kazillion relay stations that are a part of this network, for those who cannot get a direct connection to a hub. This, of course, might be simply due to too much traffic, and not necessarily a propagation issue (it is estimated that there are over 20,000 users world-wide at the moment). Anyhow, the point is, as long as you can send and receive email from a hub or a relay station, then you are in business! They will process the flow of the message to the recipient for you!

When this system was first introduced, it relied exclusively on PACTOR modems to send and receive data. However, those things aren’t cheap, and so a sound card version was developed so that no special modems are needed. If you do have a PACTOR modem, you can still use it, though. In fact, more relay stations are still using that instead of the sound card (or WINMOR) way of doing it. They say PACTOR is a bit faster. As far as I’m concerned, that’s not worth spending over $1k for a PACTOR modem. I would need a better reason than that.

Oh, did I mention that it can also work P2P?

Download and Installation

Now, I know what you’re thinking – you can just download and install it. And, you’re partly right. But starting a few weeks ago, they started a new requirement that you create an account with them, and this process is kinda weird. So calm down and follow these steps to the “T”:

STEP 1: Download RMS Express

RMS Express is the actual client program that you will use. It’s a lot like Outlook, but with some extra stuff that allows communication with your radio. As with everything else, download it, unzip it, and install it. Then, run it.

STEP 2: Setting it Up (The Client Itself)

I think the new version has a wizard of some kind that helps you to set up your initial (basic) settings, such as your ham radio call sign, grid location, etc. Here is a .pdf file from MARS that has a setup procedure, as well as some other stuff that you don’t really need. This part isn’t too difficult.

Make sure that when you enter in your call sign, you add a password. In the past, this was optional. In the next few weeks, the system will not work for you, unless you are registered. This can be any password you want.

STEP 3: Registration

Right now, you are using this client in the “internet mode”, because you haven’t set up your radio settings yet. In this respect, it functions exactly like Outlook. Before you create an account, you will need to send an email to yourself – preferably, your normal email address. Remember, you should have entered in a password of your choosing during your setup process (step 2).

Click the first icon in the upper left corner (New Message), and fill in the “To” and “Subject” boxes, and a test message of some sort. Then, press “Post to Outbox”. It will take you back to the main screen. Then, click “Open Session” at the top center, and a new box will open, showing you the dialog of what is happening as the message is being sent. Once it’s finished, you may simply close that box.

(Note: To just check your email in the future, all you have to do is click the “Open Session” button. If there is any new mail for you, it will be downloaded during this process, and posted to your inbox.)

Go to your other email account, and make sure the message went through. If it did, then you may finally register. Go to the Winlink website, and enter in your call sign in the lower box. Click the “Send my Password” box. Congratulations, you are registered.

Radio Configuration

First, the bad news: This is probably going to be a bitch. Take a deep breath and stay with me.
The good news? You only have to do it once.

If you aren’t already using digital modes, and have never interfaced your computer and radio together, you need to stop what you are doing and make that happen. Get FLDIGI and follow their instructions. If you are already using digital modes, and you know what COM ports your radio is using, then you may proceed.

So, you already sent out an email using the “internet mode” of this client. By the way, that is called “Telnet WL2K”. In your client, toward the top, you will see that in a drop-down box. This drop-down box is actually all of the different methods that you can use to communicate with a hub or relay station. They aren’t self-explanitory, but hey – you’re only interested in “Winmor WL2K” right now. So find that in the drop-down box, and select it.

Click “Open Session”.

You’ll notice immediately that something different happened. You get two pop-up boxes. In the left box, you will see what appears to be a waterfall meter and some crosshairs. Ignore that box. In the other box, you will see that looks like a large text field area. This is the box we will be working with.

See the “Setup” menu toward the top? Go ahead. You know what to do. And then, select “Radio Setup” from the drop menu. Hopefully, your radio is somewhere in the list. It should be – it’s a big ass list. Setup your COM ports and baud rates that you use with your other programs. Once everything is right, click “Update”. It will let you know if the settings are right or wrong.

Next, you will need to get a list of relay stations and hubs and such, to connect to. As long as you aren’t moving around and you live in one place, you should only need to do this once as well. Click on “Channel Selection” at the top, and a new box will pop up. Click on “Update Table via Internet”. This is where the cool stuff starts to happen.

When you did your client setup, you entered in your grid locator. RMS Express takes that information and computes propagation probability for you. So, the list of stations that you see are arranged in order from most likely to least likely to work. So, double-click on the first station. It is now the station that you will attempt to communicate with. And, your radio should have changed frequency as needed.

You may, or may not hear traffic. If you do, then you should wait to send/receive email. Now is a good time for you to close out those two boxes, compose an email, and post it to your outbox. Click on “Open Session” once more, and if everything is correct and you get no error popups, you may click “Start” located toward the top of the larger window (the one you were working with earlier).

Sit back, and watch the process. It’s kinda slow, but it’s interesting and reliable. There you have it – email without internet. I know, some pictures would have been nice, so, if there’s something you don’t understand, just post a comment on the link below, and I’ll help you out.

If you want to see the original article and get involved in the discussion on the forum click here.