Fire Safety

DEX Talk Notes

A couple weeks ago, I had the pleasure of speaking at the Dutch DEX-XL conference in The Netherlands. I’m trying to lower the barrier to doing talks and workshops by not making presentation “decks of slides” (for PowerPoint, etc.). I’m finding that, as we go through the talk, people have questions and instead of showing them how to answer them, when I have slides, I need to stick to the script and then do ad hoc stuff after. So, I’m trying to do more talks and workshops sans slides.

The challenge is that, if you’ve seen me present before, as the talk goes on, I get more and more excited about the cool topics and tend to speed up (I’m working on not doing that but it is so HARD!). This increase of presentation pace makes it difficult for some people to take notes.

Below are my notes on the content I covered in those workshops. They are not meant to be complete but, instead, to point people towards those tools, tactics, and techniques I demonstrated during the classes.

Using Command Line Tools to Gather OSINT from Online Documents (Monday – 1 hour)

Using the Spiderfoot and Recon-NG OSINT Tools (Tuesday – 1 hour)

  • Recon-ng – http://recon-ng.com (redirects to BitBucket.org site)
    • Showed global options and how to change user agent
    • –no-analytics – Shuts off the Google Analytics calls
    • Rough outline of demo
      • add domains example.com
      • use netcraft
      • run
      • show hosts
      • use recon/hosts-hosts/resolve
      • run
      • use recon/hosts-hosts/reverse-resolve
      • run
      • show hosts
      • use profiler
      • add profiles PROFILENAME~~~~
      • run
      • show profiles
      • use reporting/csv
      • set table profiles
      • run
    • Also demoed the bozocrack module with hashes I had made.
  • Spiderfoot – https://spiderfoot.net
    • Showed global options and how to change user agent
    • Ran “Investigate” Use Case with a domain
    • Ran some specific modules
    • Exported to CSV

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What I Did To Prep This Week – Week 73: December 1st 2019 – December 7th 2019

The view from the hill. It was a chilly early morning out hunting on our survival homestead for some of our tribe members, but a productive one that resulted in two bucks being harvested. Hello Pack. It’s been a windy, chilly, and muddy week here on our survival homestead this week. Most of our preps at the moment involve hunting and processing deer. We are going to have our freezers well stocked…

Source

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How preppers prepare for hurricanes: a comprehensive look

This article breaks down what you need to consider when preparing for a hurricane (and to some extent any weather emergency), from a prepper point of view.

You’re reading How preppers prepare for hurricanes: a comprehensive look, originally posted at Graywolf Survival – Emergency preparedness from a Counterintelligence Agent by Graywolf.

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21 Holiday Gift Ideas For The Prepper In Your Life

If you have a friend or family member who is a prepper, you might be struggling to come up with a good preparedness-related gift they don’t already have. After all, most preppers already have the typical prepping supplies such as flashlights, fire starters, and water filters. Instead, you want something they might not have purchased […]

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National Park Service seeks public input to increase access to national park lands

The National Park Service (NPS) today announced it is seeking the public’s assistance to develop a list of national park lands that would benefit from new or increased access routes. This effort advances the John D. Dingell Jr. Conservation, Management, and Recreation Act (S.47), which was signed into law by President Donald Trump in March 2019.

“Increasing the public’s awareness and access to the more than 85 million acres managed by the National Park Service is one of our top priorities,” said National Park Service Deputy Director David Vela. “We’re looking forward to working with the public, partners, and stakeholders to identify areas with no or restricted access to national park areas and collaborate with landowners to establish avenues for public enjoyment of these lands.”

Section 4105 of the Dingell Act instructs the NPS and other federal land management agencies to develop a priority list of lands with no or restricted public access that meet a set requirements and considerations. In the coming months, the Bureau of Land Management and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will also seek the public’s input to nominate lands within their jurisdictions under similar criteria.

NPS’s final priority list will be posted online by March 12, 2020, and updated biennially thereafter for 10 years.

Share Your Recommendations

Public comments will be accepted through January 4, 2020, via the NPS’s Planning, Environmental and Public Comments website at, https://parkplanning.nps.gov/ListofNPSLandwithRestrictedorNoPublicAccess/

* Nominated lands must meet the following requirements and considerations:

* Must be managed by the NPS.

* Must be at least 640 contiguous acres.

* Must have significantly restricted or no public access.

* Potential for public access and the likelihood of resolving the absence of, or restriction to public access, are among other criteria for consideration.

For example, if a sizable parcel of NPS land is completely surrounded by privately owned land with no or restricted public access, the NPS may consider adding this to the priority list and begin working with states, local governments, nonprofit organizations and/or property owners to acquire land or other means of access to the NPS land, ensuring its long-term protection.

Recommendations must include the following information:

* Location of the land or parcel.

* Total acreage of the land or parcel.

* Description or narrative about the land’s restricted or complete lack of access.

* Any additional information the NPS should consider when determining if the land should be on the NPS’s priority list.

For additional information and a full list of required criteria for consideration as specified by the Dingell Act, visit https://parkplanning.nps.gov/ListofNPSLandwithRestrictedorNoPublicAccess/

Jeff
HikingintheSmokys.com
RockyMountainHikingTrails.com
HikinginGlacier.com
TetonHikingTrails.com
Ramble On: A History of Hiking

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Save the Planet with 3 Earth-Friendly Holiday Gift Ideas!

This holiday season, why not spoil the loved ones on your gift list with sustainable, earth-friendly gifts that they can cherish now and for years to come.  You’ll feel great that you’re buying with a conscience, and they’ll be impressed that you were so thoughtful! 3 Sustainable Earth-Friendly Holiday Gifts I looked no further than …

The post Save the Planet with 3 Earth-Friendly Holiday Gift Ideas! appeared first on Hiking Lady.

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Growing Marshmallow for its Soothing and Healing Properties

A Guest Blog Post by ELLE MEAGER

Marshmallow is part of the Mallow (Malvaceae) family. The name
“Malvaceae” means “soft” and “to heal”, which gives you a pretty good clue
as to what its benefits are. Marshmallow’s Latin name, Althea officinalis, has
important meaning as well. “Althea” comes from “altho”, which means “to cure”.

This herb is an incredibly useful plant to grow in your garden, as it is an anti-inflammatory, antiseptic, and emollient, among other things. It is known as a survival food, due to its hardiness and availability when other crops have died.

How to Grow Marshmallow

Marshmallow is a perennial, so no need to re-sow every year. It
grows between 2 and 4 feet tall, with velvety soft leaves. They are deciduous
and may die down to ground level in winter, then reshoot in spring.

If you want to propagate some more free Marshmallow plants (and
we should all have quite a few in our gardens!), divide the roots up just when
it starts to wake up and re-shoot, in early spring. You can propagate from
cuttings also, in late spring and summer.

Marshmallow will grow in a wide range of climates (zones three to nine) in anything from sandy soil to very wet soil (as its name “marsh”mallow implies!). It’s salt tolerant for gardens near the sea and can handle a fair amount of drought.

How to Use Marshmallow

We’ll make Marshmallow tea and Marshmallow poultice. The main
benefit of Marshmallow, in my opinion, is its soothing action. It will soothe
anything! Skin, throats, intestines, urinary tract, any inflammation…

This soothing action comes from its mucilage content, which is 25-35% in the roots and 10-20% in the leaves. It also contains asparagine, which is a powerful natural pain-reliever.

Making Marshmallow Tea

You can make Marshmallow tea as a hot infusion or a cold
infusion. Drink this to soothe colds, to battle inflammation, to stimulate your
immune system, to wash sore eyes, and soothe skin allergy or insect bites. Rinsing
wounds with Marshmallow infusion has an antiseptic and healing effect.

For a hot infusion:

  1. Take
    2 teaspoons of dried herb or 4 teaspoons of finely cut fresh herb.
  2. Pour
    1 cup of boiling water over the top.
  3. Leave
    it to steep for up to 10 minutes.
  4. Slowly
    sip one to three cups for day.

For a cold infusion:

  1. Take 2 teaspoons of dried herb or 4 teaspoons of finely cut fresh herb.
  2. Pour 1 cup of cold water over the top.
  3. Leave it to steep overnight.
  4. Warm it slightly before drinking.
  5. Slowly sip one to three cups per day.

Making a Marshmallow Compress

A Marshmallow compress is one of the most soothing remedies I’ve
found for wounds and other skin conditions. It is exceptional at soothing
sunburn, bruises, irritation, skin rash, and drawing out boils or inflammation.

  1. Take
    1 cup of dried herb or 2 cups of fresh herb.
  2. Finely
    chop it or pulse it in a blender.
  3. Add
    a small amount of water, just enough to create a gel.
  4. Put
    it directly on the skin and bandage it up, or put the gel on some gauze and
    apply to the skin before bandaging.
  5. You
    can leave this for a few hours or overnight, after which you can re-apply new
    poultice if needed.

For extra drawing power (like for pimples, boils, etc.) add a
small amount of kaolin clay. For extra healing power for the skin, add a small
amount of zinc oxide powder (non-nano particles). For extra skin moisturising
properties, add a small amount of glycerin.

I always keep frozen cubes of Marshmallow poultice in the freezer, so I can pull one out when the kids have a cut, bruise, insect bite, scrapes… It’s extra soothing when it’s icy cold and very convenient when they’re ready to go in the freezer.

What Else Can We Do With Marshmallow?

Marshmallow is a useful survival food. Grow some and you’ll never
run out of food! Eat leaves and flowers raw in a salad. Chew the leaves raw, on
their own, for a good amount of vitamin A or to soothe a dry mouth. Add some
leaves to soups, pickles, or stews. Eat the young roots steamed or cooked.

And of course, make your own natural marshmallows from the roots!
These days, marshmallows are made with gelatine and sugar, but why not bring
back the original marshmallow and eat some sweets infused with goodness?

Elle Meager is passionate about turning every backyard into a self-sufficient edible garden and herbal medicine cabinet. She is the founder of Outdoor Happens (https://www.outdoorhappens.com)

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