Showing posts with label Archer Garrett. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Archer Garrett. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Guest Post: Chapter 6 of Archer Garret's Newest Nine of the North (book 3 of the Western Front)


The Nine of the North (NotN), the third book in the Western Front series (Book 1:  the Western Front;  Book 2:  Kratocracy) and the fourth book in the series' universe, should be released in about a week.  Chapters 1-5 are available here.  Chapter 6 is available exclusively at TSLRF, and found below:


Chapter 6
 Texas State Capitol; Austin, Texas
The entire team sat in stunned silence as the final coded message was translated for them:
| Plane Down | 31o15’35.37”N | 87o44’03.41”W |
Reese leaned back in his chair and gazed around the room.  The governor’s aides and advisors all looked completely immobilized.  They had no answers; there was nothing they could do.
Nothing they can do.
This isn’t their specialty, but it is the specialty of someone in the room.  You, Reese.
Governor Baker’s booming voice interrupted Reese’s thoughts.
“Get me Morgan West on the phone, now!”
A young aide leaned across the conference table and dialed the old pilot.  The phone had barely begun to ring when the gruff voice echoed through the room.
“Morgan.”
“Morgan, this is Governor Baker.”
“Yes sir.”
“The plane’s been shot down.”
“I know.”
“Do you know the status of the pilot?”
“I was in communication with him immediately before ejection.  To the best of my knowledge, he was successful.”
“What’re the chances of survival from an ejection at that altitude?”
“About as good as any.  As long as his suit wasn’t damaged during the ejection, and all else went as it should, he should be fine.  His chances are good.”
Reese interjected, “His chances of surviving the crash are good, but once on the ground, he’s the most wanted man east of the Mississippi.  Washington will stop at nothing to find out who stole that plane.”
Morgan replied solemnly, “He’s right, governor.”
Baker massaged his temples with his hands as he asked, “Was there anything in that plane that would implicate Texas?”
“No sir,” Morgan replied.
“Nothing but Lobo,” Reese added.
A blanket of silence settled over the room.  The sense of inaction that surrounded Reese infuriated him.  He knew what had to be done.  He looked to each person in the room, but their eyes were closed, or their heads were averted down, or they mindlessly busied themselves with their notes.  Finally, he looked to the governor at the head of the table.  Baker stared back unblinkingly; he knew too.
“Scott, if they find him, it might be what Washington needs to justify a war.  We still don’t have public support of the other western states.  We’re too weak yet to take Washington on alone.”
“I know.”
“Then give the word.”
The governor stared down the table at his friend for several moments, before replying, “Reese, we can send someone else.  You’ve done so much already.”
This is what I do, Scott.”
Baker turned to the others and said, “Everybody, give Reese and I a few minutes.  Morgan, thanks for your help; keep your phone close by.”
“Yes sir.”
After the last of the group filtered out of the room, the governor arose from his chair and began to pace the room.  Reese took a sip from his lukewarm coffee and waited to be addressed.  Finally, Baker spoke.
“You got a plan?”
Reese shook his head as he replied, “Nope, but I can make one up as I go right now.”
“Let me hear it.”
Reese took several moments to gather his thoughts before beginning.
“Well, we certainly can’t show up in spurs and boots and scoop him up.  Can’t look the part of a rescue team, especially one from Texas.”
“Alright.”
“And we can’t drive across three states in Humvees either.  They’d see us coming from a hundred miles away.  And that’s assuming we could even make it there.  There’s no telling what we might encounter along the way.”
“We don’t have that much time.”
Reese nodded in agreement.
“Could you fly in?”
Reese thought for several moments before replying, “We’d need a chopper’s flexibility to extricate, but the crash site is too far way.  We’d be pushing well past the range of any of our birds.  We could fly the mission from a ship in the Gulf, but that’d be too dangerous.  If they found the U-2 at eighty thousand feet, they’d surely find a ship bobbing in the water.”
Reese arose from his seat as well and stood silently beside the table.  He rested his hands atop his head and closed his eyes.  He breathed deeply as he searched for an answer.  All the while, Baker continued to pace the room.
Suddenly, the governor stopped mid-stride and turned to Reese.
“We’ll just go by boat.”
“It’s not that easy, Scott.  We can’t just cruise across the Gulf and then up into the mouth of the Mobile Bay.  Movement is restricted all across the country, especially around this crash site.”
“What about my contacts in Pascagoula?  If they could set you up as the crew of a barge, you might slip through under the radar.  In the meantime, we can be assembling some forged documents for the team – make you look like a legitimate outfit.”
 A smile began to creep across Reese’s face as the governor spoke. 
“That could work, Scott.  The team that’s been training up here is as ready as anyone.  I’ll take the best men and leave for Pascagoula as soon as possible – if they’re willing to help.”
“I’ll make the call to my contacts; see what they can do.”
“You’re getting good, governor.  Maybe you should’ve been a spook.”
“I’m learning from the best, Mr. Byers.”
Reese smirked, but then furrowed his brow and asked, “Say, any thoughts on how we’ll get back?”

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Solar Cooking, Remington 870 vs Mossberg 500 and Other Stuff

Getting used to cooking on the Sun Oven is definitely a priority of mine. The weather here is very cooperative and not a lot was going on earlier today so I gave it another go. Cooked up some pinto beans with the usual spices and a bit of bacon. Used canned beans and normal bacon but you could easily do the same thing with canned dried pinto beans and canned bacon. Got the Sun Oven set up and it started heating up like crazy. In a couple minutes it was over 200 and in 20 minutes or so it was over 300. In 2 hours I figured the beans were probably done. They turned out really good.

The sun oven cooks sort of like a combination of a normal oven and a crock pot. The time is a bit closer to an oven because the temp is higher bit it retains moisture like a crock pot. The combination is pretty awesome actually. Getting it positioned so the sun is hitting as much of the inside as possible and slightly ahead of the sun (so it's going to be in the sun for awhile) takes a little bit of practice. Checking it every 30 minutes or so and adjusting about every other time seems to do the trick. I have heard of folks setting up an oven aimed to catch the mid day- afternoon heat then leaving for work to come home to a hot dinner. That seems like a pretty cool thing to be able to do. I am going to work on doing that  over the coming weeks. Cooking for free and building skills is pretty cool.

As we have been asking shotgun related questions and specifically talking Project 870 the other logical option the Mossberg 500 series has come up. Folks have mentioned them and it's time to discuss the Mossberg as well as some compare and contrast between the two. (Note I'm not going to talk the Mossberg 590 separately. They are really more of a nicer M500 variant than a new gun IMO. A fine gun but if we talked every variant of both guns this would be a 10k word post.)

Bottom line up front: Both are good guns so get whichever you prefer.

Remington 870 Positives:
-Probably the most common pump shotgun in circulation. Basically the same gun has been made since the 1950's. 
-Pretty much the standard shotgun for police and firearms professionals. This might be a marketing/ sales success thing, I don't know. In any case when the vast majority of serious users choose one option it is  worth paying attention to.
-Very adaptable with all manner of parts options including those by duty grade type makers.
-Excellent fit and smooth action.

Remington 870 Downsides:
Controls in less than ideal locations.
On the basic Express Model some issues can come up with the finish. (I will talk 870 variants another time)

Mossberg 500 Positves:
-Excellent controls with the safety and pump release (probablyy not the right technical term) in the right locations.
-Excellent value. Typically a Mossberg 500 will be $50-75 cheaper than a comparably set up Remington 870.

Mossberg 500 Downsides:
-Rougher fitting of parts.
-Limited availability of duty grade type accessories. Lots of folks make junk that can be bolted onto the Mossberg 500. Good stuff is harder to get than for an 870.

Conclusion: It is worth mentioning I did not discuss reliability or durability intentionally. That is because both of these guns are about as reliable and bomb proof as a gun can get. The damn things just last forever and don't break. They both have positives and negatives so folks have to think about what matters the most to them. Right now we only own the 870 series but that is more about parts/ accessories commonality than anything else. If a good deal on a Mossberg 500 came up I would snap it up. Hopefully this gives you some insight into how I look at these two shotguns. At the end of the day I believe either gun will serve you well.






Sunday, March 3, 2013

Admin Request to Close Out EDC Contest.

Zombie Guy #10 please contact me to get your copy of The Blighted by Archer Garrett. The rest of the winners info has been passed to the sponsors. I will get the wildcard together and out shortly. 

Again big thanks to the the advertisers who made this contest possible:
LPC Survival
LuckyGunner.com
Camping Survival
and Archer Garrett 

Monday, February 25, 2013

EDC Contest Winners

#1 CF #22 with 124 votes wins 3 Sport Berkey Water Bottles donated by LPC Survival ($69 value)
#2 Meister #20 with 74 votes wins 1 Blackhawk Holster donated by LuckyGunner.com ($50 value)
#3 Tricia #26 with 37 votes wins 1 Snare-Vival-Trap cough garote cough donated by Camping Survival ($17 value)
#4 Zombie Guy #10 with 32 votes wins 1 copy of The Blighted by Archer Garrett.

 The Wildcard goes to  Thomas #4. To be in high school and already on the right track in survivalism is pretty awesome. This guy is going places.

To the folks listed above please send me an email (from the same account your entry came from) with the address you want the prize sent to. If you fail to do so within 7 days the prize will be forfeited and I will pick an alternate winner.
 
Out of the prizes but rounding out the top 10 and gaining honorable mention are:
#5 Ray #33 with 20 votes he is tied evenly with Brian #6 who also has 20 votes
#6 Michael W #32 with 19 votes
#7 Brock #24 with 12 votes
#8 Garret T #25 with 11 votes
#9 Jacob #1 with 8 votes
#10 Matt #21 with 5 votes

I personally appreciated the participation of my fellow bloggers. In no particular order:
American Mercenary
TEOTWAWKI Blog
and Arma Borealis

A big thanks to the the advertisers who made this contest possible:
LPC Survival
LuckyGunner.com
Camping Survival
and Archer Garrett 
Please check out their sites. They support this blog and make these contests possible so please go to their sites and buy something. Tell them I sent you.

Friday, February 22, 2013

EDC Contest Roll Up

Hey Everybody, I wanted to put all the EDC contest entries together before we start the voting. So here they are. Before we get going here is a quick reminder of what our contestants are competing for:
1st Place: 3 Sport Berkey Water Bottles donated by LPC Survival ($69 value)
2nd Place: 1 Blackhawk Holster donated by LuckyGunner.com ($50 value)
3rd Place:  1 Snare-Vival-Trap cough garote cough donated by Camping Survival ($17 value)
4th Place: A copy of The Blighted by Archer Garrett.
Wildcard: This one goes to whoever I want to give it to for whatever reason I feel like. It will be a grab bag donated by yours truly. The exact makeup is TBD depending on what I have lying around  and may include books, gear, medical stuff or even a couple silver dimes. ($30+  value).
Check out the details and my example post here. 

Now without further rambling lets look at the entries:
 #1 Jacob
#2 Max in Colora
#3 Mike in Wisconsin
#4 Thomas
#5 J in Dallas
#6 Brian
#7 Dan
#8 James
#9 Kim
#10 Zombie Guy
#11 Alexander Wolfe of TEOTWAWKI Blog
#12 H
#13 Heather of Arma Borealis
#14 AM of American Mercenary (not in for prizes but I wanted to include it in the discussion)
#15 JW
#16 WPW
#17 Mike in Sweden
#18 C
#19 Mike
#20 Meister
#21Matt
#22 CF
#23 John
#24 Brock
#25 Garret T
#26 Tricia
#27 Levi on the Farm
#28 Jake
#29 Archer Garrett. You can check out his books on Amazon.
#30 Brian N
#31 Dave B
#32 Michael W
#33 Ray
#34 Chris the other half of Arma Borealis
#35 Jack

Please take a look at the posts as voting will (baring technical difficulties) start tomorrow.


*If there is a bad link someplace please let me know.

Thursday, January 24, 2013

Book Review: The Blighted by Archer Garrett


Our long time friend, advertiser and overall collaborative partner Archer Garrett wrote a new book The Blighted. After reading it the logical thing seemed to be talking about it. So here we go.

The basics are that the world is hit by a global Zombie event. It follows multiple groups of people across the world and in the American Gulf Coast area.

The Good: It was a fast and enjoyable read. The book was able to delicately balance staying interesting and being action packed with being fairly realistic about the characters skills and capabilities. I find stories (like this) about fairly normal folks more interesting that the super duper survivalist/ Sammy the Seal fantasy.


This book was a good example of how you can switch from character to character and keep things cohesive. It did not get choppy or unduly confusing at any point. Along these lines it has been great watching Archer develop and improve as a writer.

The Bad: Few significant survivalist/ preparedness lessons. Definitely a book to buy for entertainment not a manual wrapped in a fiction novel like some books. This is not really a bad thing, just something to be aware of.

The Ugly: Nothing to speak of.

Overall assessment: Solid read. I enjoyed this book and think you will also. For $3 it is a great value for your entertainment dollar.


Sunday, January 13, 2013

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Read Archer Garrett's Flasblack for Free!

Friends,

I'm going to make Flashback (http://www.amazon.com/dp/B008XK5FVS) available for free on Amazon from Monday 12/3 to Friday 12/7.  If you haven't read it, or have readers that might be interested in picking this up - it would be greatly appreciated if you would pass the word along. 

The book is short, but I've tried to cram a lot into it.  The story is Orwellian in nature in that a collectivist revolution has resulted in a tyrannical regime that has absolute power over all, except for a small, urban holdout that has managed to successfully repel the regime.  The story takes place over the course of one night.  The second half of the book is a discussion of morality, with a biblical argument against collectivism.  Even if you are not a believer, I think the argument, if from none other than a historical perspective, shows that mankind has struggled against this ideology for much longer than most realize.

Anyway - I think the message is important, so I'm trying to get it out there.

Regards,
Archer