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-   -   A Nation of Improvisers....Everday Life in Communist Cuba (http://goldismoney.info/forums/showthread.php?t=404518)

Twisted Avatar 09-03-2009 11:55 AM

A Nation of Improvisers....Everday Life in Communist Cuba
 
Letter Re: A Nation of Improvisers--More About Everyday Life in Communist Cuba

First our prayers are with your family in these dire times.

The first thing about surviving in Cuba was that we did not see it as "surviving", it was more like living, we did not know anything else, as the media in Cuba is tightly controlled.

I remember as a child we did not have glue so we made glue out of Styrofoam and gasoline, just mix them up in a glass container that you could close to preserve and that's it (if you go a little crazy on the gas it would be too liquid and take forever to dry). Canning was done basically with pressure cookers because there was nothing else, so all the knowledge of our grandparents was very handy and since you can't buy a new house we all live together, so it was very common to live in the same house with your parents and grandparents and sometimes your uncles and your cousins.

You learn not to throw away anything useful, screws, bolts, nuts, washers, you never know when you will need them and there is no hardware store available. Food scraps went either to the pigs or chickens or if you did not have any, you give to someone that has, that becomes a bartering tool you can say you will take care of the food and get some part in the profits when they are killed.

I know that a lot of people are amazed at how we kept old cars running, but trust me, it wasn't that big of a deal, a little bit of ingenuity goes a long way. I'll go later into more detail.


We were born with the system, so there was no getting ready like we are doing now, and believe me, no matter how ready you can get, if the S*** really hits the fan and it's TEOTWAWKI, you will run out of things, and even if it doesn't and we are stuck in the middle, then you need people because there is no way you can learn everything.

Your best bartering tool is your knowledge, if you have a trade, mechanic, electrician, construction, carpenter,... that is a life saver, the people that had a harder time were teachers, musicians, economists, etc.


They could not trade their work for nothing. For instance if you are good working with metals you will find someone to get the metals and that person will join with you and you can make parts for cars, if you are a welder you can also join in, remember that old cars were very simple, no hydraulic steering, no power nothing. It was basic carburetor, spark plugs, distribution and engine. An alternator is not that hard to fix, it basically a motor, the parts that wear down can be made again, maybe not the same quality as the originals but they will do. You can also adapt an alternator from another car (we had Russian cars coming in, including some WWII jeep-style Russian vehicles), they are mostly 12 VDC (some trucks are 24 VDC).

A good mechanic will make an adapter so you can use the transmission from a Russian built jeep and make it work with an old American car.


My trade was electronics (we use to call electronics to anything below that 24 volt and electrical anything above) so I will get in when they needed the electrical system of the car fixed, again it is very simple; remember no computers or anything like that in those cars. Here is a link of how a car alternator and a bicycle dynamo were used in the mountains to produce electricity, no means to store it so it was to use immediately, but when there is no power even a radio is an amazing thing. (See this YouTube segment: La Cuchufleta - Alternative Power Generating in Cuba.)


I also fixed radios and television, I used to buy old radios and television and use the parts to fix the other ones.


Later on when computer UPS [devices] became available, by available a mean people started to steal them from the government and sell them in the black market, then we can hook up a battery and get electricity when the power went off, which was very common. No deep cycle batteries, just whatever battery you could get.


Other people were real artisans; they would make shoes with leather and old tires, and let me tell you, they were super nice and expensive.

The hardest thing of all was to get food, because you need food to survive, you can live barefoot but not on an empty stomach, at least not for a long time.

When you were able to buy rice (the amount they give in rations, every family had a ration book, was minimal, so again black market) you would buy a good amount as much as you could afford because maybe next month the guy was in jail or it was impossible to get.


The rice you got was not stored properly so you always had to first put it on a table and go slowly through all the rice to search for small stones and foreign objects, then you put the rice in water and keep moving the rice with your hand and look for bugs, worms, they float and would come to the surface. I still remember as a child that grandma would call the children to "escoger el arroz" (that is what the cleaning process was called).


Milk was always boiled first, that way you could use the top which has more fat to make butter (you saved it till you had enough). If for some reason milk was spoiled and not drinkable you would make a dessert with it, I have to get you the recipe if you are interested.


After you ate the inside of oranges and grapefruits, you would use the rind and cook it in water with sugar and it was an excellent dessert.


To have some variety, you will get spaghetti, crush them and leave them in water, next day it was kind of a soft mix in the bottom, get rid of the excess water, add sugar and an egg and you could make pancakes.


Alcohol is consumed in Cuba in enormous quantities, I have no statistics, but it was relatively easy to make with a small homemade distillery (again quality is not a great concern), and I guess it's a good way to forget the problems, although it brings another problems.


People would fight for the simplest of reasons, and there is no 911, and you better not be the weakest link because your family is in for a rough time because no one will respect you. Criminals would typically give you respect if they know you and you respect them and they knew it was not going to be easy to take on you or your family. If not you would be the target of thieves all the time.


Those are my experiences living in a country in permanent crisis, you would have times when power was on for whole days, and times when power was on for only 8 hours a day, times when it was relatively easy to get meat, or bread and times when it was almost impossible. There is no planning, everyday will bring a new challenge and you have to adapt, and only your knowledge, wits and Faith are going to help you through.


Unless we go down into total collapse - War, in which case all bets are off and nothing will ever prepare us for that because it would be the law of the jungle, whoever is stronger will survive and then you better have a strong group of family/friends or you will have to join a group, because alone you are pretty much gone.


Read the accounts of Somalia and Serbia so you have an idea. I know more of Somalia because my father served for two years (in the 1970s) in the wars between Ethiopia and Somalia, Cuba sent troops there to fight on the Ethiopian side.


I'd also like to respond to a misinformed comment in the article "Developing Our Family's Survival Strategy, by FBP". Cubans cannot grow 70% of their own food as a country, let alone in the cities. Cubans eat a lot of rice, beans and potatoes, there is no place in a city to grow enough of that to supply a family, much less a whole city.


The population density in Havana City, Cuba is 7,908.5/sq mi,

By comparison:
Detroit, Michigan - 6378.1/sq mi
Los Angeles, California - 7876.8/sq mi

So can those cities provide more than 70% of their own food? - ILR


http://www.survivalblog.com/

Real Money Now 09-03-2009 01:58 PM

Re: A Nation of Improvisers....Everday Life in Communist Cuba
 
Cubans are smarter and healthier than Americans. Americans, lacking for nothing - even the so-called "poor" - have had few to no real challenges in life, so they have just floated along the path of least resistance.

mojo273 09-03-2009 02:12 PM

Re: A Nation of Improvisers....Everday Life in Communist Cuba
 
Good read.... Thanks TA

AOW 09-03-2009 02:59 PM

Re: A Nation of Improvisers....Everday Life in Communist Cuba
 
I build a haunted house each year and am in the process of building this year's version. I make my own props for the most part and my eye sees potential in every scrap piece of wood, metal, clothing, etc I come across laying around. I haven't figured out yet if any of my skills can come in handy if TSHTF, but they can't hurt, I'm sure.

blueice 09-03-2009 03:18 PM

Re: A Nation of Improvisers....Everday Life in Communist Cuba
 
Castroland, a living memorial for Communists..Let this shire endure forever...

BTW, the BCC just had raving reviews of their Cuba...

RJB 09-03-2009 03:27 PM

Re: A Nation of Improvisers....Everday Life in Communist Cuba
 
How do you make a dessert from spoiled milk?

Twisted Avatar 09-03-2009 03:29 PM

Re: A Nation of Improvisers....Everday Life in Communist Cuba
 
3 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by Real Money Now (Post 1902014)
Cubans are smarter and healthier than Americans. Americans, lacking for nothing - even the so-called "poor" - have had few to no real challenges in life, so they have just floated along the path of least resistance.



Which is why I am of the opinion that if a third world type breakdown of services should ever come to America I can see a 2/3's culling of the Population.

Yes ........... 200 million people plus going the way of the Do Do bird.

We are the only Nation Where the Poor,Hungry and homeless look like this:

Twisted Avatar 09-03-2009 03:31 PM

Re: A Nation of Improvisers....Everday Life in Communist Cuba
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by RJB (Post 1902180)
How do you make a dessert from spoiled milk?


I was wondering that too.

But I guess that is no worse than Blue Cheese

.41Dave 09-03-2009 05:43 PM

Re: A Nation of Improvisers....Everday Life in Communist Cuba
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by RJB (Post 1902180)
How do you make a dessert from spoiled milk?

The milk is probably not pasteurized. Raw milk, since it hasn't been pasteurized, still has all of the good bacteria that allow it to sour naturally, so it can actually be healthy for you. The bacteria in the milk multiplies and converts lactose sugar into lactic acid. This gives the milk a sour acidic taste. Think sour cream. It is safe to consume, as the presence of lacto bacilli and its acid environment kills off pathogens which cannot survive in such an environment.

Pasteurized milk, on the other hand, does not contain any beneficial bacteria as they were all killed off by the pasteurization process. When pasteurized milk spoils, it becomes rancid. It is inedible and dangerous to consume.

TheNocturnalEgyptian 09-03-2009 05:53 PM

Re: A Nation of Improvisers....Everday Life in Communist Cuba
 
Quote:

Styrofoam and gasoline
I'm pretty sure this is a recipe for Napalm.









Edit: I looked it up. This is more like "Fire Jelley". Real Napalm requires some third agent to keep the gasoline from oxidizing too quickly. This fire jelly still burns for a looooong time.


Jimfrancisco 09-03-2009 06:41 PM

Re: A Nation of Improvisers....Everday Life in Communist Cuba
 
Modern Cuba is doing better than we are in some ways, kinda dampens down Canuckfarmer's claim that "I FEED 1000 BILLION PEOPLE, WHAT WOULD YOU DO WITHOUT ME?" - well, we would do this :
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/8213617.stm

Quote:

Originally Posted by Twisted Avatar (Post 1901679)
Letter Re: A Nation of Improvisers--More About Everyday Life in Communist Cuba

First our prayers are with your family in these dire times.

The first thing about surviving in Cuba was that we did not see it as "surviving", it was more like living, we did not know anything else, as the media in Cuba is tightly controlled.

I remember as a child we did not have glue so we made glue out of Styrofoam and gasoline, just mix them up in a glass container that you could close to preserve and that's it (if you go a little crazy on the gas it would be too liquid and take forever to dry). Canning was done basically with pressure cookers because there was nothing else, so all the knowledge of our grandparents was very handy and since you can't buy a new house we all live together, so it was very common to live in the same house with your parents and grandparents and sometimes your uncles and your cousins.

You learn not to throw away anything useful, screws, bolts, nuts, washers, you never know when you will need them and there is no hardware store available. Food scraps went either to the pigs or chickens or if you did not have any, you give to someone that has, that becomes a bartering tool you can say you will take care of the food and get some part in the profits when they are killed.

I know that a lot of people are amazed at how we kept old cars running, but trust me, it wasn't that big of a deal, a little bit of ingenuity goes a long way. I'll go later into more detail.


We were born with the system, so there was no getting ready like we are doing now, and believe me, no matter how ready you can get, if the S*** really hits the fan and it's TEOTWAWKI, you will run out of things, and even if it doesn't and we are stuck in the middle, then you need people because there is no way you can learn everything.

Your best bartering tool is your knowledge, if you have a trade, mechanic, electrician, construction, carpenter,... that is a life saver, the people that had a harder time were teachers, musicians, economists, etc.


They could not trade their work for nothing. For instance if you are good working with metals you will find someone to get the metals and that person will join with you and you can make parts for cars, if you are a welder you can also join in, remember that old cars were very simple, no hydraulic steering, no power nothing. It was basic carburetor, spark plugs, distribution and engine. An alternator is not that hard to fix, it basically a motor, the parts that wear down can be made again, maybe not the same quality as the originals but they will do. You can also adapt an alternator from another car (we had Russian cars coming in, including some WWII jeep-style Russian vehicles), they are mostly 12 VDC (some trucks are 24 VDC).

A good mechanic will make an adapter so you can use the transmission from a Russian built jeep and make it work with an old American car.


My trade was electronics (we use to call electronics to anything below that 24 volt and electrical anything above) so I will get in when they needed the electrical system of the car fixed, again it is very simple; remember no computers or anything like that in those cars. Here is a link of how a car alternator and a bicycle dynamo were used in the mountains to produce electricity, no means to store it so it was to use immediately, but when there is no power even a radio is an amazing thing. (See this YouTube segment: La Cuchufleta - Alternative Power Generating in Cuba.)


I also fixed radios and television, I used to buy old radios and television and use the parts to fix the other ones.


Later on when computer UPS [devices] became available, by available a mean people started to steal them from the government and sell them in the black market, then we can hook up a battery and get electricity when the power went off, which was very common. No deep cycle batteries, just whatever battery you could get.


Other people were real artisans; they would make shoes with leather and old tires, and let me tell you, they were super nice and expensive.

The hardest thing of all was to get food, because you need food to survive, you can live barefoot but not on an empty stomach, at least not for a long time.

When you were able to buy rice (the amount they give in rations, every family had a ration book, was minimal, so again black market) you would buy a good amount as much as you could afford because maybe next month the guy was in jail or it was impossible to get.


The rice you got was not stored properly so you always had to first put it on a table and go slowly through all the rice to search for small stones and foreign objects, then you put the rice in water and keep moving the rice with your hand and look for bugs, worms, they float and would come to the surface. I still remember as a child that grandma would call the children to "escoger el arroz" (that is what the cleaning process was called).


Milk was always boiled first, that way you could use the top which has more fat to make butter (you saved it till you had enough). If for some reason milk was spoiled and not drinkable you would make a dessert with it, I have to get you the recipe if you are interested.


After you ate the inside of oranges and grapefruits, you would use the rind and cook it in water with sugar and it was an excellent dessert.


To have some variety, you will get spaghetti, crush them and leave them in water, next day it was kind of a soft mix in the bottom, get rid of the excess water, add sugar and an egg and you could make pancakes.


Alcohol is consumed in Cuba in enormous quantities, I have no statistics, but it was relatively easy to make with a small homemade distillery (again quality is not a great concern), and I guess it's a good way to forget the problems, although it brings another problems.


People would fight for the simplest of reasons, and there is no 911, and you better not be the weakest link because your family is in for a rough time because no one will respect you. Criminals would typically give you respect if they know you and you respect them and they knew it was not going to be easy to take on you or your family. If not you would be the target of thieves all the time.


Those are my experiences living in a country in permanent crisis, you would have times when power was on for whole days, and times when power was on for only 8 hours a day, times when it was relatively easy to get meat, or bread and times when it was almost impossible. There is no planning, everyday will bring a new challenge and you have to adapt, and only your knowledge, wits and Faith are going to help you through.


Unless we go down into total collapse - War, in which case all bets are off and nothing will ever prepare us for that because it would be the law of the jungle, whoever is stronger will survive and then you better have a strong group of family/friends or you will have to join a group, because alone you are pretty much gone.


Read the accounts of Somalia and Serbia so you have an idea. I know more of Somalia because my father served for two years (in the 1970s) in the wars between Ethiopia and Somalia, Cuba sent troops there to fight on the Ethiopian side.


I'd also like to respond to a misinformed comment in the article "Developing Our Family's Survival Strategy, by FBP". Cubans cannot grow 70% of their own food as a country, let alone in the cities. Cubans eat a lot of rice, beans and potatoes, there is no place in a city to grow enough of that to supply a family, much less a whole city.


The population density in Havana City, Cuba is 7,908.5/sq mi,

By comparison:
Detroit, Michigan - 6378.1/sq mi
Los Angeles, California - 7876.8/sq mi

So can those cities provide more than 70% of their own food? - ILR


http://www.survivalblog.com/


RJB 09-03-2009 06:44 PM

Re: A Nation of Improvisers....Everday Life in Communist Cuba
 
That's what I was thinking. I've made homemade yogart and kefir, but I had to buy the usually natural occurring germs.

Quote:

Originally Posted by .41Dave (Post 1902485)
The milk is probably not pasteurized. Raw milk, since it hasn't been pasteurized, still has all of the good bacteria that allow it to sour naturally, so it can actually be healthy for you. The bacteria in the milk multiplies and converts lactose sugar into lactic acid. This gives the milk a sour acidic taste. Think sour cream. It is safe to consume, as the presence of lacto bacilli and its acid environment kills off pathogens which cannot survive in such an environment.

Pasteurized milk, on the other hand, does not contain any beneficial bacteria as they were all killed off by the pasteurization process. When pasteurized milk spoils, it becomes rancid. It is inedible and dangerous to consume.


MrTiKi 09-03-2009 08:47 PM

Re: A Nation of Improvisers....Everday Life in Communist Cuba
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Real Money Now (Post 1902014)
Cubans are smarter and healthier than Americans. Americans, lacking for nothing - even the so-called "poor" - have had few to no real challenges in life, so they have just floated along the path of least resistance.

My parents are cuban and I have relatives still in cuba. Here is the problem some in cuba have been brainwashed into extreme socialism. I have relatives that have said if they ever obtain some wealth they would share it with the government. Now this is not all cubans of course. Cubans also have invented a super strong epoxy made out of sugar cane that won the noble prize. Also another problem with cuba , it's not full of cubans anymore it's just full of haitians.

gunDriller 09-03-2009 08:51 PM

Re: A Nation of Improvisers....Everday Life in Communist Cuba
 
yeah ! people knock the Cubans, but ... what could we do if we lived on an island with a naval blockade, severe economic sanctions by a neighbor with 1 million times our military force - right in the middle of hurricane territory ?

put up some big wind turbines ?

i think the Cubans have done admirably using the resources they have.

Unclad Lad 09-04-2009 02:28 AM

Re: A Nation of Improvisers....Everday Life in Communist Cuba
 
I can't wait until Cuba's borders are open and the people can travel freely. America will pay a great deal of money for these craftsmen to teach us how to MAKE THINGS again.

Canadian-guerilla 09-04-2009 11:37 AM

Re: A Nation of Improvisers....Everday Life in Communist Cuba
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by gunDriller (Post 1902868)
i think the Cubans have done admirably using the resources they have.


i think of all the old cars still rolling around Cuba
i'm sure there are some excellent backyard mechanics, making do with Ford/Chrysler parts in a GM

http://www.traveladventures.org/cont...cubacars04.jpg

Heimdhal 09-04-2009 12:46 PM

Re: A Nation of Improvisers....Everday Life in Communist Cuba
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by TheNocturnalEgyptian (Post 1902518)
I'm pretty sure this is a recipe for Napalm.









Edit: I looked it up. This is more like "Fire Jelley". Real Napalm requires some third agent to keep the gasoline from oxidizing too quickly. This fire jelly still burns for a looooong time.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pqLLCXCEji8


Powdered Tide laundry detergent.






Ya know, for when you have dirty cloths, great SHTF item..........


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