| Pole Shift
                    Timeline 
              In 2008 the Zetas were asked, on a scale
                  of 1 to 10 with 10 being the Pole Shift, where we were.
                The Zetas described 2008 as being on a scale of 2-3, and
                periodically as the earthquakes picked up, this count increased.
                By the end of 2010 we had reached the start
                  of the 7 of 10, which was assigned to major plate
                movements. But these plate movement were then softened and the
                pace slowed by the Council of Worlds in order to give the
                establishment time to educate the public on what was in their
                future, ie make the announcement about Nibiru. As this failed to
                happen, the 8 of 10 was allowed to
                  overlap the 7 of 10 plate movements, and this is the
                status today. While these are completing, the Last
                  Weeks, the 9 of 10 which only last for 7.3 weeks, are
                ahead, and then the hour of the Pole Shift. 
 
  
 Where the Zetas are allowed to explain the sequence of events,
                they are not allowed
                to give the date of the Pole Shift, but as quake charts show,
                the S American roll is at it again. Quakes outline the S
                American plate at Antarctic, in the Atlantic, along the border
                with the Caribbean Plate, and especially along the spine of the
                Andes. The Caribbean Plate also has quakes on all sides. And the
                N American Plate is showing the stress of being pulled into a
                bow, with the distressed tip of Mexico covered in quakes as the
                movement West of the Caribbean Plate pulls the tip of Mexico to
                the West. The Philippine Plate likewise has returned to tilting.
                These are all ZetaTalk 7 of 10 plate movement predictions.
 What to Do? 
              How is the confused public to react? They have been hearing the
                rumors about exoplanets and have a nervous eye on the weather.
                They have an uneasy feeling that real grief might be around the
                corner, and then what? Especially for those new to the concept,
                it can all be overwhelming. The Pole
                  Shift ning provides tools up front to help the public go
                through the elemental 7 steps routine, to examine their current
                location. This routine can also be found in an October
                  11, 2015 newsletter and in an earlier September
                  19, 2010 newsletter. This can help you determine if you
                are in a good location or might need to travel before or during
                the Last Weeks. Of course, the sooner you are in a Safe Location
                and Self Sufficient, the better. There is no time to waste!
 
  
 My basic approach to helping the public plan for survival is to
                assume they have lost everything, are essentially naked and
                afraid. The good news is that this is entirely doable, and even
                fun! I am flooded with email from those new to the issue, in
                panic as they have just come to grips with the big picture.
                “What do I do?” they
                wail, not having read a word of the vast survival info on the
                ZetaTalk website, in a panic, beyond being able to even use the
                Search Engine provided on the site. In all fairness, it is a
                vast site. Periodically survival overviews are presented in this
                newsletter, the last time a year ago on August
                  30, 2015. This info was comprehensive, and as such will be
                included below. But in addition there is a September
                  7, 2015 YouTube lecture on how to survive even if you are
                essentially naked and afraid, and a September
                  22, 2013 survival tips overview.
 
 
  
 Anticipate needing to start a fire. Flashlights batteries will
                burn out, and matches are a finite supply, but a little dry
                kindling and an old BIC lighter flint will last. No BIC lighter?
                Halcon shows how easy it is to use friction. Get his handbook
                online.
 
 
  Survival communities need not be without electricity, even with
                the grid down. Windmills and water mills can be constructed from
                old car parts or lawn mowers. The essential ingredient is an
                alternator, which cars and many electric tools such as drills
                have. These issues are addressed in a September
                  22, 2013 newsletter and a March
                  2, 2015 YouTube discussion.  Biogas, or using methane
                gas as a replacement for natural gas is also discussed in an April 28, 2013 newsletter.
 
 
  
 Water will be polluted due to broken or overflowing sewer pipes
                and volcanic dust on surface water. Drinking and cooking water
                must be cleaned of heavy metals such as lead and mercury and
                parasites that would cause dysentery or cholera. Your supply of
                filters will run out, as will your supply of bleach. In any
                case, bleach and filters will not remove heavy metals.
                Distillation, long recommended by the Zetas, will remove heavy
                metals and the boiling process kills and removes parasites.
 
 
  
 Modern man expects to get his protein from meat, fish, eggs,
                milk, and perhaps vegies like soy. What if these sources are not
                available? What if the grocery store shelves are bare and travel
                on broken roadways is impossible? Many cultures eat bugs as a
                delicacy, as they are high in protein and fat. In fact, raising
                bugs and grubs and worms as food is cheaper than raising cattle
                or chickens, a more efficient use of feed. And remember, shrimp
                and lobster are in essence bugs.
 
 
  
 Wildlife will be hunted almost to extinction, but during the
                Revolutionary War squirrel was a staple. Remember the Hunger
                Games? Rats are eaten in many cultures. Add their meat to
                  the soup pot and eating rats will not even be noticed, as
                the Finegan Fine story relays.
 
                Finegan asks, “What do you do for
                      meat?” The manager puts her finger to her mouth, a shush
                      motion, and in a low voice replies. “You can see we've got
                      cats. We've got a population explosion.” The manager
                      glances at Finegan's face, prepared to drop the bomb and
                      wanting to see if he's ready for it. “I've got several
                      female cats that bring me their catch. It's the females
                      that hunt. Must be a rat population explosion somewhere,
                      as they rarely fail to deliver. Every morning, there they
                      are, dead rats, fresh meat, on my doorstep.” She glances
                      at Finegan's face again. “Well, it's protein! I cook it to
                      death, meat falls off the bone, mix it into the soup
                      that's supper every night. No one's died yet.” Just then
                      one of the female cats saunters up with a dead rat in its
                      mouth and drops it at the manager's feet. The manager
                      leans forward to praise and pet the cat. “Why thank you
                      Mitzy! That's a beautiful gift!”   
 Did you know that earthworms are 82% protein? And their
                essential oil is Omega3, equivalent to fish oil. Chop, rinse,
                and add to the soup pot. Raising them is easy, done in a vegies
                only compost pile. Remove the egg casts for the garden, as the
                egg casts will stop reproduction, preventing an overpopulation
                of worms. Red wigglers make the best worms for your earthworm
                production compost pile.
 
 
  
 What to do when the Vitamin bottle is empty and scurvy has
                started gums bleeding? Vitamins in Nature, an excellent study
                that shows no vitamin
                deficiency diseases should be anticipated if you simply eat what
                nature has provided – bugs and weeds. The details are found in a
                January 4, 2016
                YouTube or a January 10, 2016
                newsletter.
 
 
  
 You are surrounded by vitamins and minerals in the edible weeds
                that grow everywhere. Get a good handbook. Plantain and Purslane
                is high in Vitamin A, Sheep Sorrel and pine branch tips high in
                Vitamin C, and plants such as Prickly Pear, Dandelion, Thistle,
                Moss, Lichen, and Cattails are entirely edible. Mushrooms too
                are edible and high in B Vitamins, but get a good handbook.
                Eating a poisonous mushroom is no picnic and can be fatal and at
                minimum a miserable experience.
 
 
  
 Seaweed is eaten regularly in Japan, harvested from the beaches
                where it washes ashore. Where most algae is edible, be aware
                that some algae such as the Red
                  Tide is poisonous, as is an anaerobic
                  Cyanobacteria bacteria that can lurk in large green algae
                growths in stagnant water.
 
 
  
 Duckweed has more protein than Soy. Duckweed is found worldwide
                and is actually a tiny water plant, considered the smallest
                flowering plant. It can be eaten by humans as well as ducks, and
                feed fresh water fish such as Tilapia. An enterprising company
                has determined that dried Duckweed can be made into a protein
                powder called Lentein.
 
 
  
 One plant that deserves special mention is Kudzu, considered the
                scourge of the Southeast US where it climbs over houses and
                cars, flattening forests. A relative of the pea plant, Kudzu is
                entirely edible from the leaves to the tubers, and puts nitrogen
                back into the soil. The leaves can be fodder for cattle. As this
 chapter in the Finegan Fine story asserts, a survival community
                could survive nicely on
                  Kudzu alone.
 
                The kudzu has covered several
                      trees, which form spires, and has covered the remains of
                      some houses in an abandoned subdivision, the shape of the
                      rooftops barely discernible. They see an even more amazing
                      sight - the remains of a car recycling junkyard where cars
                      have been piled high after being crushed. Children and
                      adults are climbing down the vines, hand over hand and
                      putting their feet against the rusting crushed cars
                      underneath the vine cover. The piles of crushed cars,
                      topped with cars as living quarters, and the kudzu
                      cascading down the sides of the piles, all now covered
                      with creeping and hobbling residents, look a bit like an
                      anthill under an evacuation.   
 Most communities will plan to get into traditional gardening,
                buying seeds and equipment in preparation for that day. What
                might be forgotten is that seed may not be for sale in the
                future, when the shelves are empty, the Internet down, and
                shopping just not possible. Learning how to save seed is of
                prime importance. Many garden plants present their seed in a
                dried form if allowed to mature fully. Other plants need to
                ripen almost to a rot if to be used for seed (Tomato, Bell
                peppers, Melons, and Eggplant) or the seed pods may need to be
                bone dry (Beans, Raddish, Okra, Corn). Tomato seed has to have
                the slime removed by white mold or it will not germinate.
 
 Lettuce seed will fly away if not harvested regularly. Spinach
                plants are male and female and both must be present. Onions and
                Cabbage are biennial, so must winter over or be kept in a root
                cellar before the seed stalks will arrive. Related plants will
                cross pollinate so only plant one type of squash per year, for
                instance. Garlic must be sown as a clove as it has lost the
                ability to reproduce by seed. Same with Potato. Cut that seed
                Potato into pieces and plant. Strawberries propagate by runners,
                which produce separate plants at their ends. Both Potato and
                Tomato are members of the nightshade family, so do not eat the
                leaves or feed them to livestock. Get a good book and get
                educated!
 
 
  
 For those survival communities that do not have a ready source
                of protein, take note that certain plants are high in Lysine,
                the essential plant protein that allows vegetarians to be
                healthy. Buckwheat, Soy, Peas, Legumes, and Amaranth are highest
                in Lysine. In fact, Corn and Amaranth together provide the
 protein equivalent of red meat, as the Orphan
                  Mistress in this Finegan Fine story relays.
 
                The orphan mistress has graying
                      hair, barely pinned on top of her head in a bun. She looks
                      immensely weary, and walks as though she might not make
                      the next step. She takes a seat on the picnic table,
                      sighing as though relieved to be off her feet. Taking a
                      deep breath to gain her strength, she lifts her face to
                      smile at the visitors and waves them forward to join her.
                      She directs her charges. “Stir that fire and put on a pot.
                      We'll serve some tea.” She leans back, having caught her
                      breath, and continues to direct her young charges. “Honey,
                      use that other pot. It has a spout. That's it.” “I been at
                      this business for some years. Planted corn and amaranth,
                      being vegetarian and all. Don't need meat if you got
                      those. Made a mix for the local organic outlets. Amaranth
                      greens are a good salad too. Made my living at that. No
                      need to plow if you keep the weeds down regular. Just
                      re-seed.” The orphan mistress waves in the direction of
                      the wall of young children clustered behind her, each
                      clutching a cup of tea. “These are the best little weed
                      pickers I ever seen. You pull a weed up, the grubs and
                      beetles fall out, and the chickens clean them up. You go
                      down the rows and knock the bugs off the plants, and the
                      chickens foller along and clean them up. What's left is
                      our produce, bug free, and eggs. We got lots of eggs.”   
 No survival site would be complete without chickens. They only
                need a coop to protect them from predators, an opportunity to
                free range to hunt for bugs and worms, water, and sunlight for
                Vitamin D. In return they provide eggs and chicken meat. I kept
                chickens for a few years and can attest that one becomes very
                attached to them. A flock of hens will usually have one hen that
                is the brooder, and all the hens lay their eggs in her nest for
                a communal hatch operation. We fed them melon rinds and they
                consumed them all. Feed the egg shells back to the flock for the
                calcium. Got rotting road kill or entrails? Don’t bury that, let
                the flies lay eggs and put the mess in a plastic container. When
                the mess starts to writhe, full of maggots, spill it on the
                ground and let the hens feast. Roosters, by the way, are natural
                protectors and will attack people if not familiar. They are natural farm guards as are donkeys
                and geese.
 
 
  
 Goats are another easy addition for survival communities. They
                follow the herdsman around, unbidden, and eat anything,
                including poison ivy. Goat manure is easy to transport  as
                it is delivered in pellet form, not sloppy. Why keep dairy
                cattle when goat milk is superior!
 
 
  
 Stuck in the city so feel you can’t garden? Nonsense! Look at
                what Growing Power in Milwaukee did. They not only compost with
                earthworms, in essence creating soil, they market their produce!
                The CEO of Growing Power has become an in-demand consultant as a
                result. This works!
 
 
  
 Many cities have urban garden space, or allow roof top gardening
                or container gardening. If all you have is a patio or even just
                a sunny window, get into it!
 
 
  
 High tech gardening with hydroponics is possible too, which
                provides a garden free from any volcanic dust or raids by the
                wildlife. Water can be reused, and when the store bought
                hydroponic nutrient solution runs out, watering the earthworm
                compost beds will produce a brown nutrient solution runoff 
                equivalent  to the store bought version. I know, as we did
                this in the Troubled Times labs and leaf for leaf, blossom for
                blossom, the results were equivalent. High tech hydroponics
                assumes you have electricity for a pump and lights. But a simple
                manual system using gravity, lifting a pail a couple times a
                day, works also. Full spectrum lights are required if no
                sunlight is available, but what happens when all the light bulbs
                have burned out? Carbon arc
                  lamps, used today for film production in Hollywood, is a
                full spectrum light that turned the streets of London into day a
                century ago. Direct current is required, and for the carbon
                tips, even pencil leads can be used. Setup a windmill and have
                an earthworm compost pile and you are in the hydroponics
                business!
 
 
  
 Survivors will surely miss their daily shower, but the more
                urgent issue is what to do about a lack of soap and diapers.
                Soap can be made from water drained through wood ash, which is
                caustic, and animal fat. This is cooked to boil it down and then
                poured into molds.
 
 
  
 Moss makes a perfect diaper filler and works for feminine
                hygiene too. What about contraceptives? There is of course
                abstinence, or having oneself sterilized ahead of the Pole
                Shift, but does Mother Nature have a safe and natural
                contraceptive? She does indeed. The seeds from Queen Anne’s
                lace, a common weed growing throughout the world, works as a
                morning after pill. Known in antiquity, for instance among the
                Egyptians, for its effectiveness. Modern day tests among
                feminist have shown it to be 100% effective when seeds are
                munched the morning after, and when one desires a pregnancy the
 pregnancy is normal with no untoward effects from having used
                the contraceptive routine. Seeds are harvested from dry seed
                heads. Note that some blistering plants are a look-alike. Giant
                  Hogweed has a similar white flower but is huge.  Wild
                  Parsnip has a similar size but has a yellow flower.
 
 
  
 When the pharma meds run out, you should be well versed in
                herbal medicine. Get a book and plant your garden well ahead of
                time. I can personally vouch for a compost of Comfrey leaves
                building skin on a patch of raw flesh in just three days. This
                raw flesh had no skin on it for a two month period, until the
                compress was tried. Three days! Get a book and plant your herbs!
 
 
  
 Picking up the pieces to build a new shelter will give survivors
                lots of options. As long as one has hand
                  tools then creativity should know no bounds! Fill old
                tires with dirt for an insulated wall. Tents for temporary
                housing are great, and if not enough to go around, use a tarp.
                Downsizing your expectations of floor space and learn to live in
                a tiny house as this December 22, 2013
                newsletter suggests, or plan for a flood plain stilt home as
                detailed in this April 17, 2016
                newsletter.
 
 
  
 If the waters are rising around you, build a houseboat.
                Floatation devices can be constructed or one can use a sealed
                steel drum or a bunch of plastic bottles. Details and examples
                on how to build houseboats are found in a February
                  15, 2015 which features homemade wooden pontoons and plans
                and a November 16, 2014 newsletter
                showing a mangrove swamp houseboat using empty soda bottles for
                floatation.  A December
                  7, 2015 YouTube has extensive examples.  As the
                coastline changes during the rising seas anticipated after the
                Pole Shift, one can pull up anchor and move along the coastline.
                This is featured in the Finegan
                  Fine story, where Finegan is a trader running up and down
                the flooded riverways.
 
                The humidity and Spanish moss
                      hanging from the trees on the Georgia coastline is not
                      unusual, but the fact that the coastline is flooded is
                      unusual. Rooftops and treetops are sticking out of the
                      placid water, which is lapping gently on suburban lawns. A
                      houseboat is floating nearby, tied to a sturdy treetrunk
                      sticking out of the floodwaters. And the houseboat is
                      immensely cluttered. Bins of vegetables are stacked one on
                      top of the other and side by side. Engine and mechanical
                      parts are heaped in piles on the corners of the houseboat,
                      placed for balance. There are pegs everywhere a peg can be
                      placed, where loops of fishing line, wire, and rope are
                      hung. Boxes are stacked, smaller boxes on top of larger
                      ones. Some of the wooden boxes have pull-out drawers.
                      Large plastic containers are stacked here and there, but
                      only a few are labeled. Folded tarps are on top of one
                      pile, topped by fishing netting flung there to dry after a
                      night's catch. Poles have been placed on the four corners
                      of the houseboat and lines are strung from these poles to
                      the single story house in the center. On one, some fresh
                      fish, gutted and headless, are hung by the tail.   
 Tired of holes in your jeans? It will take time for all the
                clothing to wear out, but survivors should be thinking about
                replacement. Traditional fibers used for clothing and blankets
                are from linen, cotton, and wool. Cotton and wool are combed to
                straighten out the fibers prior to spinning into threads or
 yarn, but linen must be soaked to rot away all but the fibers.
                Construction specs for spinning wheels
                  and looms are available although these are also offered
                for sale on the Internet. Leather is another option, with
                instructions on how to cure and scrape skins available.
 
 
  
 Having the right mindset is as important for survival as having
                the right supplies, as this April
                  6, 2015 YouTube discussion relays. Sharing, not hoarding,
                should be the focus. Since paper money will likely be a thing of
                the past, the globe on the barter
                  economy, a good approach would be to develop skills and be
                prepared to contribute. In short, one will not be able to buy
                their way, in the Aftertime. Model
                  communities exist as examples.
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