Mark Weaver

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since Jun 18, 2017
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Biography
Hi, Right now I am living in upstate SC and been living all over the US throughout the years as a construction worker...I'm an Ex ARMY E-4 Veteran, I enjoy Handcrafting projects such as making Jewelry and DIY type Survival crafts, Gardening, Nature, Fishing, Camping, Music, Surfing the net, Old Cars & Trucks, and the thoughts of one day being totally self sufficient with a 'female partner' that is like minded!
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Recent posts by Mark Weaver

***** EDIT: I think I figured it out. ***** ✔ 💯 😁 Thanks!

Hi, Thanks so much for these many affiliate opportunities.
I recently needed to change my Paypal acct payment email,
Can you please let me know where I can update my payment email here at permies affiliate program?

Thanks, Mark
Hi Suzanne, Wow! talk about ruffing it huh. :D  I just happened to pop into permies today :) and found this to watch....I've also been thinking of you lately, I hope all is going well as can be for ya! My Vans been broke down for a while now.... been busy changing out fuel system parts trying to fix the issue of my Van not staying running(not getting fuel issue) Im now stumped on the 'fuel pressure regulator' change out(who the heck engineered that...lol) Wow  what a job, its so difficult to even get to the mounting bolts Im going to have the Van put in the shop to have fixed.... I just dont know how to do it, or have the knowledge or tools to even do that job. :( I did do many other things as I could trying to fix the issue..... BUT some things are best left to the pros I guess. ✔ :)

Anyways back to that vid.... Im in okay shape & pretty healthy, BUT damn there is not to many Americans fit or healthy enough to even do all that man did. (including even me) :D  Just WOW again!!! I enjoyed watching that vid and did learn many things! ✔ Thanks for posting the vid.....

May God Bless You Always,
Mark
1 year ago

Hi,
Please see image for all 25 files & topics you will receive.
These files will be sent securely to your payment email address.
You may do whatever you like with these files after purchase as
I have bought the resale/resell rights to pass on to you for purchasing.

************* ATTENTION ***************
'Please 'Purple Moosage' your payment email to me after payment for the fastest delivery.... Thank You!'

This Info CD '25 Gardening Topic Info CD' will be delivered securely 'WORLDWIDE to your payment email address.'  There will be No Refunds with this $1.50 Bargain Offer .. But I do guarantee that you will receive Your file download link delivered securely and safely to your payment email 'very shortly' after payment ... Reason being I am just a one man operation trying  to keep up! ;)  I do own and did purchase Resale Rights to this file.


Thank You for shopping!
Enjoy your day,
Mark

2 years ago

If you think people are born with a green thumb, THINK AGAIN!

The American Gardner was written in 1854 by William Cobbett. It is now in the public domain and has been converted into electronic format for your enjoyment. The American Gardener provides over 150 pages of helpful gardening how to information, and tips that will help you grow plants with ease without them dying like they did on me! Even if you're a professional gardener, you'll find many tips to help better your growing success!

Here's What You'll Find In The American Gardener:

* Choosing the right location on your property for growing plants. You'll find in depth information on slope of your land, and what spot is best for growing successfully.

* Preparing the soil properly to provide nutrition for healthy plants.

* Fencing techniques for your garden. I LOVE this section. The author provides humorous techniques for using hawthorn trees as fencing, to keep troublesome lads from stealing their fruits and vegetables! You do not need to spend hundreds for a chain link, wooden or brick fence. Use hawthorn trees and with a little love and time you'll have a fence that will make your neighbors green with envy!

* Designing, or laying out, your garden so that it's pleasing to the eye yet functional as well.

* You'll learn how to make hotbeds, so that you can start your vegetables earlier in the season and have edible produce as many as 15 days earlier than normal! This can be a moneymaker if you sell produce. Be the first in your neighborhood to have fresh green tomatoes and watermelons!

* Learn the benefits of operating a hobby greenhouse, and how it can be beneficially to your household.

* Learn about true seeds and the soundness of seed. You'll learn how to test seed before you plant them, to determine if you have good seed or bad. Some seed will not grow if it's bad, and by using a simple technique you can throw out the bad instead of laboring with planting them only to find no lovely sprouts growing where they were sowed.

* Learn proper methods for saving and preserving seed. I find this the most fun of gardening! I now save seed regularly and have a yard full of beautiful blooms from seeds I have saved and sown.

* Learn proper sowing methods to improve your seeds germination rate, and to ensure healthy plants. Proper spacing and depth can mean success or failure in the garden!

* American Gardener provides proper transplanting methods, to ensure your plants survival when moving from one area to another. This is the chapter that covers the information I was looking for, to ensure my Japanese Maples survival. I now have two Japanese Maples growing successfully in my yard, and what beauty they both bring!

* Cultivating your garden properly and methods for tilling, trenching and sowing to ensure your gardens success.

* Learn propagating methods so that you can grow many more plants form just one stock plant. Learn propagating from cuttings, by grafting, by using stock tress, by budding and by layering. All of these are easy and fun methods that you and your family are sure to enjoy!

* There is a nice section on growing grapes in minimum space while producing so many grapes that it'll make your mouth water!

* Learn how to successfully grow 81 different vegetables and herbs, 26 tasty fruits and nuts and the most popular flowers and shrubs with the most gorgeous blooms!

You are sure to love the information, guidance and tips provided in American Gardener!

This type of information will help you in so many ways.

All the information you'll need to get started is provided in the American Gardener, no matter what type of growing success you have had in the past you'll find tips and techniques to improve your growing success in this manual!

You too can grow successfully, by increasing your knowledge and putting these methods into practice today!

SAY NO to dying plants and SAY YES to success now!

Psssst! Order your copy for just NOT $37.00 Get your download for ONLY $2.99 and get started Now!
But hurry before I get into trouble with the author for this ridiculously LOW PRICE!! ;)

************* ATTENTION ***************
Please 'Purple Moosage' your payment email to me after payment for the fastest delivery.... Thank You!
This (.pdf)file E-book 'The American Gardner' will be delivered securely 'WORLDWIDE to your payment email address.'  There will be No Refunds with this $2.99 Bargain Offer .. But I do guarantee that you will receive Your ebook download link delivered securely and safely to your payment email 'very shortly' after payment ... Reason being I am just a one man operation trying to keep up! ;)  I do own and did purchase Resale Rights to this book.

Thank You very much. ;)
Take Care! ... and very much Enjoy your day!
Mark

2 years ago
This is not my article but thought it would fit nicely in this Forum. I've been living #Vanlife without a fridge or A/C for 5 going on my 6th yr now. I basically eat a diet of many different sandwiches, canned beans, taters, veggies, tuna, salmon, meats and noodles, lots of spices & herbs & hot sauce, lets also not forget the peanut butter. ツ I do eggs many different ways(eating a dozen up within a week to 10days at most) and Ive only broke open 5 rotted eggs in that whole 5+yrs. For drinks Ive been only drinking water, coffee(black), many different teas, lemon juice & water, along with some other pre-packaged juices. Ive also been starting to eat alot of wild edible weeds & plants(after research) as a salad. Anyways there is alot more that I could write on the subject of #Vanlife without a fridge, BUT it can be done... I am proof! ツ

Okay on with this great article -->> Even more -->>
Foods That Don't Require Heating or Refrigeration.

Canned Foods (limited to individual serving sizes or eating the entire contents of a larger can in one meal)
Canned Baked Beans
Canned Bean Dip
Canned Bread
Canned Fish: Oysters, Salmon, Sardines, Tuna, Tuna Salad etc.,
Canned Fruit
Canned Meats: Beef, Chicken, Chicken Salad, Deviled Ham, Spam, Turkey Spam, Vienna Sausages, etc.
Canned Milk (Dairy)
Canned Pastas
Canned Pie Fillings
Canned Soups
Gelatin Cups: Jello
Pudding Cups (Dairy)

Dry Foods
Cheese and Cracker Packs (Dairy)
Cheese and Peanut Butter Packs
Crackers
Dried Fruits (no utensils needed): Dried Apples, Dried Apricots, Dried Bananas, Dried Cranberries, Dried Dates, Dried Figs, Dried Kiwi, Dried Mangoes, Dried Peaches, Dried Persimmons, Dried Pineapples, Dried Strawberries, Prunes, Raisins, Wolf Berries (Goji Berries)
Dried Vegetables
Dry Breakfast Cereals: Can be eaten with or without milk
Energy Bars (no utensils needed)
Fruit Leather (no utensils needed)
Granola Bars (no utensils needed)
Jerky (no utensils needed)
Nuts (Raw or Roasted): Almonds, Brazil Nuts, Cashews, Coconut, Hazel Nuts, Macadamia Nuts, Peanuts, Pistachio Nuts, Walnuts,
Parched Corn
Pemmican
Seeds: Chia Seeds, Pumpkin Seeds, Sunflower Seeds,
Pork Rinds (no utensils needed)
Trail Mix (no utensils needed)
Vitamin and Mineral Supplements (no utensils needed)

Condiments
Almond Butter
Almond Paste
Bacon Bits
Cheese (Dairy): Velveeta in a jar
Condiment Packets (FREE: from restaurants. no utensils needed): Barbecue Sauce, Creamy Italian Dressing, Duck Sauce, French Dressing, Honey, Jam, Jelly, Ketchup, Mayonnaise, Mustard, Relish, Salsa, Soy Sauce, Tabasco Sauce, Taco Sauce, Worcester Sauce, etc.
Hazelnut Spread: Nutella
Honey
Marzipan
Oils: Olive, Sunflower
Peanut Butter
Spices
Spray Cheese (Dairy. no utensils needed): Easy Cheese

Drinks
Beer (Bottles or Cans. Cans and bottles with twist off caps need no utensils)
Cider
Drink Powders
Flavored Milk Boxes (Dairy)
Fruit Juice (Boxes, Cans, Packs. Individual serving sizes need no utensils)
Liquor
Vegetable Juice
Water (FREE: Filtered Tap Water)
Wine: In a box

Junk Foods (not something I usually eat, but it does apply)
Candies (no utensils needed)
Chips (no utensils needed)
Cookies (no utensils needed)
Pastries (no utensils needed)
Toaster Pastries (no utensils needed): Pop Tarts

Heres the link where i got the information.
http://survivalistboards.com/showthread.php?t=11463
2 years ago
This is not my article but thought it would fit nicely in this Forum. I've been living #Vanlife without a fridge or A/C for 5 going on my 6th yr now. I basically eat a diet of many different sandwiches, canned beans, taters, veggies, tuna, salmon, meats and noodles, lots of spices & herbs & hot sauce, lets also not forget the peanut butter. ツ I do eggs many different ways(eating a dozen up within a week to 10days at most) and Ive only broke open 5 rotted eggs in that whole 5+yrs. For drinks Ive been only drinking water, coffee(black), many different teas, lemon juice & water, along with some other pre-packaged juices. Ive also been starting to eat alot of wild edible weeds & plants(after research) as a salad. Anyways there is alot more that I could write on the subject of #Vanlife without a fridge, BUT it can be done... I am proof! ツ

Okay on with this great article -->>
Living without a Refrigerator – It Can Be Done!

One of the primary scenarios many preppers prepare for is the loss of the electrical grid. Without electricity life as we know it is not possible and one of the appliances we rely on heavily to keep our food good would simply not work anymore. I’m talking about the refrigerator, that appliance that keeps our food fresher longer so we can shop once a week and happily eat the food we have, knowing we won’t die of some terrible foodborne illness.

So what would you do if you had no refrigerator? Could you survive? Of course, you could! Human beings lived for millennia without refrigeration. The difference between them and us is that they knew how to:

   Store food they weren’t eating
   Not cook more than they needed at any given meal
   Preserve food so it keeps for the long-term (which is required in regions where winter visits once a year)

Many people are even choosing to live without refrigeration now, prior to any collapse of the grid or society, simply because they want to cut their dependence on the grid and/or lower their energy costs. However, if you are going to live without the use of a fridge, then you need to know what you are doing.  Different foods have different storage requirements and you will need to change the way you shop and the way you prepare meals if you are living without a fridge. First, let’s take a look at different foods and how to store them without refrigeration. Then we will cover some other basic tips.

Foods and How to Store Them

There are certain foods that need refrigeration and there are foods that we think need refrigeration. In fact, you might be surprised at what foods will keep well out of the fridge, and no, I’m not talking about that cold soda or beer. Here are some food-storage rules you need to know.

Fruit


fruitbowl living without a refrigerator Most fruit can store just fine on the counter. However, the shelf-life of fruit without refrigeration varies, depending on the type of fruit. Fruit with thicker skins, such as oranges and apples, are generally good for around a month. Pears will last up to 2 weeks. Bananas don’t last as long. Just a couple days to ripen and then you need to eat them up before they get too ripe.

Pineapples and mangoes should be eaten within 24 hours of ripening, which usually takes 3-4 days. The one type of fruit that definitely does not last long without refrigeration is berries, which should be consumed within 24 hours of purchase or harvest.

Vegetables


vegetables-variety living without a refrigerator Vegetables are easier than fruit to store without refrigeration. There are quite a few vegetables that can be stored for up to a week on the counter if placed standing with the cut end in water, including:

   Lettuce
   Celery
   Broccoli
   Kale, cauliflower, cabbage, or any of the brassica family
   Herbs

Here is a list of other vegetables and how long they will last without refrigeration:

   Potatoes (1-2 months)
   Onion (1-2 months)
   Sweet potatoes (1-2 months)
   Garlic (1 month)
   Tomatoes (up to 1 week if ripe, up to 2 weeks if green)
   Summer squash, such as zucchini (2 weeks)
   Winter squash, such as butternut and acorn (1 month)
   Peppers (1-2 weeks)
   Eggplant (1 week)
   Turnips and beets (3-4 weeks)
   Carrots (2 weeks)

The most important thing to remember is that all produce, including fruit and vegetables, should remain unwashed and must never have been refrigerated. Washing can cause produce to spoil more quickly because it makes it easier for bacteria to get to it. Previous refrigeration can cause condensation to form on the food, attracting mold and bacteria.

Eggs

Eggs are something that we tend to put in the fridge, but they don’t actually need refrigeration. Eggs can sit on the counter for a week and be just fine, provided they haven’t been previously refrigerated (for the same reason as produce) or washed. If you wash the eggs, you will remove the natural antibacterial coating on the eggs, which is called bloom. If there is a lot of dirt, then use a cleaning pad to cleanse the shell. If water is required, then use cool water and no soap.

There are also a number of preservation methods that you can use that will allow eggs to keep longer than a week. If you have a root cellar or basement, that is a good start. You can also coat the eggs in something non-toxic that will seal the pores and keep oxygen out. Traditionally, people have submersed them in a solution of liquid sodium silicate or have coated them in lard or shortening.

Dairy

This is where having no refrigeration starts to become challenging. Let’s begin with butter and cheese. Salted butter can actually keep unrefrigerated for up to 2 weeks, although if you have a cooler place, such as a cool basement or cellar, that would help extend the shelf-life. The same can be said for a number of different cheeses, particularly hard cheeses.

When it comes to milk, it just has to be refrigerated. If you can do without milk, that’s great. If you use it in small quantities for cooking, then buy it and use it the same day. If you need more milk, then the best thing is to use powdered milk or canned or other milk that is packaged for shelf-storage.

Meat

Meat is the other difficulty when it comes to no refrigeration. Fresh meat will not keep without it. Period. If you eat meat, then you must cook it the same day you buy it. For short periods of time (within 24 hours) you can keep it in a cooler.  You can also purchase canned meat or dried meat, which will store for long periods of time.

Condiments

The final thing we usually keep in the fridge is condiments, but we actually don’t need to. Condiments can keep just fine if stored without refrigeration. Jams, jellies, and maple syrup will keep between 2-4 weeks. Peanut butter does much better, with a shelf-life of months. When it comes to honey, it has an indefinite shelf-life, although it might crystalize.



Ketchup, relish, mustard, and anything pickled will last for a number of months without refrigeration. Surprisingly, even mayonnaise will last indefinitely, but only if no bacteria gets into the container. As long as you take care to use a clean spoon each time you use the mayonnaise or buy it in a squeeze bottle, you will be fine.

Now that you have a good idea of what foods you can store without refrigeration and for how long, there are a few other things you should know about living without a fridge. Here are some final tips to take away with you.
Leftovers

This might be the most difficult to deal with – no leftovers! Without a fridge, you won’t be storing leftovers for a few days so you can eat them later in the week. You won’t be making that mammoth batch of soup to eat for lunch all week. When living without refrigeration, you will need to cook smaller meals that will be eaten then and there. If you happen to have anything left over, you need to it within 24 hours.

Find Other Storage Methods

You aren’t limited just to counter storage if you don’t have refrigeration. There are a number of ways you can store food to help it keep cool without using a fridge. Here are some suggestions:

   Root cellar/basement: This was mentioned above and it provides a great place to store produce and preserves when you have no fridge.
   Evaporating cooler: Use a cistern or screened enclosure in which to store your food and then cover with damp cloths. The evaporation from the cloths will help keep it cool inside, but you can only do this if you live somewhere that does not experience high humidity.
   A Zeer pot: A Zeer pot is simply another form of evaporative cooling. Two terracotta pots, one smaller than the other, are used. Put the smaller pot inside the lager pot and fill the space between them with wet sand. Cover it with a damp cloth and re-dampen the cloth and the sand when required.
   Don’t harvest: If you grow your own food and it will keep just fine in the ground or on the plant, then leave it there until you are going to use it.

Shop Daily

Do what the Europeans do and shop for your meat and produce daily. This way, you will use what you buy in the same day and you won’t have much to store. It certainly keeps things simple.
Buy from the Farmer

Farmers-Market Living without a refrigerator  Purchase your produce, eggs, and meat (when possible) directly from the farmer, either at the farm or a farmer’s market. That way you can ensure the food has been not been previously washed or refrigerated and you know how it was grown/raised. This gives you more control over the food you buy.

At the end of the day, a refrigerator is a convenience, one that we have come to depend on so deeply that it feels like a need. However, a fridge is an energy guzzler that we can live without, if we are willing to change our shopping and eating habits and make some adjustments. Give it a try and you might find you like it.

article source  --  http://askaprepper.com/living-without-refrigerator-can-done/
2 years ago
Bought through paypal without an issue.
I was able to download it without any issues. only had to wait for a better connection to d'load.
Browsing through the cards pdf I only have one word...... 'Awesomeness!' ツ Thank You!!!
3 years ago
Thank You for the book Paul. Im fascinated with this lifestyle. The world 'definitely needs' more guys(teachers) like you!!
Im so glad I did come across you, this site, and all the cool stuff & people here in this AWESOME community!!!

☟ ツ ✌

3 years ago
Thanks very much for this Freebie Paul.  Appreciate now knowing this info.
Glad I checked my email. ツ
AND I also want to buy the package when money allows.
3 years ago

John F Dean wrote:Hi Mark,

Welcome to Permies.



Thanks John, been a member for a while. More a looker and learner & not participating much,
but was sayin' to myself how much I enjoy this great site, and that should change.

Like that Mark Twain quote btw! Hope your having a Blessed day.
3 years ago