Word is that Mossberg 500 pumps are the most rugged, reliable shotguns ever built. These may be good weapons for those in cities. Mossberg 500s are also some of the least expensive weapons—but before embarking on this path, be sure sufficient funds are available for both a gun and a pile of ammo. Also understand that this weapon may never be put to good use by the survivor. Five hundred dollars will purchase the gun and 1,000 rounds of 12-gauge ammunition; but in this day and age, $500 may not be much of a problem, even if it is money spent with some inefficiency.
Other strictly military-type shotguns such as a SPAS 12, a Beretta 1201 FP, and the Benelli Black Eagle, have mostly disappeared from U.S. markets. Some of these shotguns were quite good, but some, like the SPAS 12, were far too complicated to be of great value. Military shotguns available today are prohibitively expensive, probably precluding purchase of more important sniper rifles, .22 rifles, assault rifles, and ammunition, except in the case of very well-heeled folks.
What do our been there, done that folks pick for guns? A longer range, optically sighted rifle, a simple .22 rifle with silencer or other quiet capability, an assault rifle, and an absolute trailerload of ammunition and magazines are all equally important, they claim.
But keep in mind that no foreigners, even those who have served in the military, know guns and ammo like Americans.
We can say absolutely that possession of personal firearms will be vital for survival. Few, if any, city survivors will make it without guns and lots of ammunition. No one can provide any evidence to the contrary. Does this also mean that antigun Easterners inhabiting one-third of the United States and most of the big built-up areas in our country are in for tough times in the future?
Better in this case to worry about ourselves, allowing whatever foolishness is being sown to establish itself at harvest.
Chapter 12
Survival Nursing
Nursing in a survival context seldom receives much interest and attention. Pity, since this single activity can save or—as more frequently occurs—lose significant numbers of lives. Especially when undertaken by uninformed, unprepared survivors.
Nursing in any form is defined as the act of providing skilled, appropriate, long-term sheltering care leading to successful convalescence and recovery from accidents, sickness, or wounds. Nursing for city survivors is especially critical because initial care provided by some persons who are less than skilled and trained may be borderline at best. In an emergency, we may be sewed up by nurses, dentists, pharmacists, farmers, veterinarians, dental assistants, chiropractors, and even at times common private citizens.
That all of these people are extremely well-intentioned and correspondingly anxious to do the right thing is little consolation. In a survival situation, even medical doctors will be constrained by a lack of proper drugs, instruments, and facilities. Placing an untrained or borderline amateur in these circumstances is definitely not ideal, but will be necessary if any lives are to be saved.
City survivors are also faced with the fact that because of the large number of people they may encounter in cities, they will also come across some who require long-term nursing care. We should understand that because of the nature of our existence, we will be called on to nurse many friends, family members, and close acquaintances found around us in cities who have also received less than ideal or even adequate initial care.
Standards of cleanliness were still primitive by today’s standards, but during our own Civil War, it was received truth that patients quickly evacuated from central hospitals into private homes had the best chance of survival. Often it was not the shot-off legs or shattered ribs that killed patients, but rather horrible, raging, epidemic infections. Hospitals and central receiving areas for the wounded were notorious pest houses, which was intensified by the fact that no one in the medical profession knew what caused infections. In that regard alone, modern city survivors are at great advantage.
Patients allowed to remain even a few days at these central medical. areas were virtually 100-percent certain of acquiring an infectious disease for which there was little hope. Two lines on the graph crossed creating this horror: the native strength of wounded men lying in bed ebbed while infections spread and raged.
Some knowledgeable folks still maintain that even today there is great risk of infection in our modern hospitals. Perhaps this is an overstatement, but only because rigorous measures are taken to minimize infectious conditions in hospitals. To a certain extent these measures are also available to city survivors.
Along with modern miracle disinfectants for both the patient and the room, modern hospitals have crews that do little but scrub, scrub, and scrub all day long. Even within the past 10 or 12 years, remarkable new technologies have come on the scene that give disease-causing germs less chance to hide and prosper. These include disease abatement, construction techniques, new and remarkable construction materials, special paints, sealers, and finishes that really keep dirt, filth, and infection in check and, of course, disinfectants that—by Civil War standards—are nothing short of miraculous.
One of the keys to survival nursing is getting your friend or loved one out of any central medical treatment area into a nursing retreat as quickly as possible. Then it is vital that the retreat not become a hospital. That is, treat this one patient or, at most a small batch of two or three patients, and then quit. Most nurses recommend waiting 3 or 4 months after the retreat is cleaned and disinfected before starting with the next batch of patients! The overlap of patients quickly leads to great concentrations of uncontrollable disease and infection.
City survivors have some dramatic modern disinfectants available to them. For patients themselves, we have Betadine, gentle iodine and hydrogen peroxide, among others. These materials are generally used to clean and treat personal wounds, but other especially good disinfectant materials useful on floors, walls, and ceilings are available from veterinary or farm supply stores. These are Bioguard X-185 containing 30 percent cresylic acid, Roccal D, 1 Stroke Environ, and even raw formaldehyde.
Because disinfecting barns and pig stalls is much tougher than disinfecting most bedrooms or tents, these materials are high powered, highly concentrated, state of the art, and extremely effective. They are certainly as good as anything in local hospitals.
Flies and lice may be a problem for survivors left too long in central receiving areas or in dirty, filthy retreats used by numbers of different people. At Stalingrad lice were epidemic among German soldiers. Lice just show up and prosper in those sorts of conditions. Again, some effective materials are available over the counter from your friendly vet supply store. These will give you the upper hand over flies and lice. Look for treatments with high concentrations of lindane and pyrethrins. These materials may also be used to help sterilize bedding, clothes, draperies, rugs, and tent bottoms. As a practical matter, survival nursing quarters should be on stone, cement, or finished wood. Avoid rugs or other porous materials.