Egg Shells

Egg Shells

It’s a myth that ground eggshells prevent blossom end rot. Egg shells decompose too slowly to be effective as a calcium fertilizer but they are still a welcome addition to compost as organic matter.

If you want a calcium boost faster than slowly decomposing eggs shells, first crush them into a fine powder. I use the blender, you can also use a pestle and mortar.

Then squeeze a lemon onto the crushed egg shells. This makes calcium citrate. Mix it one part to ten parts of water then water it onto the soil near the base of the plant.

Foods That Last

Foods That Last

If grocery stores closed tomorrow, most households would run out of food within days. But yours doesn’t have to.

While many foods spoil quickly, some staples can last for years—even decades—when stored properly. These are the foods that resist time, bacteria, and decay.

Here are 31 long-lasting foods worth stockpiling.

31. White Rice
White rice can last for decades when stored correctly. Unlike brown rice, it contains no oils that go rancid. Store it in airtight containers or Mylar bags with oxygen absorbers, in a cool, dark place. Adding dried bay leaves can help deter pests. A large bag can provide weeks of food security.

30. Dry Pasta
Dry pasta is highly durable due to its low moisture content. Transfer it from cardboard packaging into airtight containers to protect it from humidity and pests. Stored properly, it can last 8–10 years or more.

29. Rolled Oats
Oats are extremely versatile and long-lasting. Steel-cut oats last even longer due to lower processing. Keep them sealed in airtight containers with oxygen absorbers. Properly stored, they can remain usable for decades.

28. Dried Corn
A traditional survival food, dried corn stores well due to its low moisture. Whole kernels last longest, while cornmeal has a shorter shelf life. Corn is highly versatile—boiled, ground, or baked.

27. Hardtack
A simple mix of flour and water baked until completely dry, hardtack can last for decades. It’s extremely tough but softens when soaked in liquid. Historically used by sailors and soldiers.

26. Dried Beans
Beans provide protein, fiber, and minerals. Their low moisture and fat content allow long storage. Keep them sealed in airtight containers. Even very old beans remain nutritious, though they may take longer to cook.

25. Dried Lentils
Lentils cook quickly and usually don’t require soaking. They store well for the same reasons as beans—low moisture and low fat. Ideal when fuel or time is limited.

24. Powdered Milk
With water removed, powdered milk resists spoilage. Non-fat dry milk can last up to 20 years when sealed properly. Store in small portions to maintain freshness after opening.

23. Canned Meat
Canned meat is ready-to-eat and shelf-stable. Typically lasts 2–5 years, but safety depends on the condition of the can. Discard any that are bulging, rusted, or damaged.

22. Ghee
Ghee is clarified butter with water and milk solids removed. This makes it far more stable than regular butter. Store sealed, away from heat and light.

21. Coconut Oil
Rich in saturated fats, coconut oil resists oxidation. Stored properly, it lasts 2–5 years or longer and has both culinary and non-food uses.

20. Raw Honey
Honey is naturally antibacterial due to its low moisture and high sugar content. It can last indefinitely. Crystallization is normal—just warm gently to restore texture.

19. White Sugar
Sugar doesn’t spoil because it contains no free water for microbes. Keep it dry and sealed. Even if it hardens, it remains usable.

18. Pure Maple Syrup
Unopened, it lasts for years due to its sugar concentration. After opening, refrigerate to prevent mold. If mold forms, it can often be removed safely.

17. Blackstrap Molasses
Dense and low in moisture, molasses stores well. It also provides minerals like iron and calcium.

16. Salt
Salt is a mineral and does not spoil. Keep it dry to prevent clumping. It’s also essential for preservation and electrolyte balance.

15. Bouillon Cubes
Highly concentrated and salt-rich, bouillon cubes last for years if kept dry and sealed.

14. Soy Sauce
Fermented and high in salt, soy sauce resists spoilage. Keep sealed and away from light. Refrigeration after opening helps preserve flavor.

13. Whole Peppercorns
Whole peppercorns retain flavor much longer than ground pepper. Store whole and grind as needed.

12. Dried Herbs
Dried herbs don’t spoil—they lose potency over time. Keep them sealed, cool, and dark for maximum longevity.

11. Distilled White Vinegar
Highly acidic, vinegar prevents microbial growth. It can last indefinitely when stored properly.

10. Apple Cider Vinegar (with “Mother”)
The “mother” indicates active cultures. Its acidity keeps it stable for years when sealed and stored in a cool, dark place.

9. Pure Vanilla Extract
High alcohol content prevents spoilage. Over time, the flavor can even improve.

8. Baking Soda
A mineral compound that doesn’t spoil. Keep it dry and sealed to maintain effectiveness.

7. Cornstarch
As long as it stays dry, cornstarch remains stable indefinitely.

6. Instant Coffee
Dehydrated coffee resists spoilage. Store in airtight containers to preserve flavor for years.

5. Dark Chocolate (70%+)
Low moisture and high cocoa content make dark chocolate more stable than milk chocolate. Can last 2–5 years if kept cool.

4. Green Tea
Tea doesn’t spoil but loses flavor over time. Store sealed, away from light, heat, and moisture.

3. Popcorn Kernels
Each kernel is naturally protected by a hard shell. Stored properly, they can last for many years and still pop.

2. Hard Candy
Mostly sugar, with almost no moisture. It won’t spoil, though it may become sticky if exposed to humidity.

1. Hard Liquor
High alcohol levels prevent microbial growth.

Unopened bottles can last indefinitely, though flavor may slowly change.

Garlic Oil

Garlic Oil

The medical establishment does not want you to know that a simple kitchen staple can decimate pancreatic cancer cells. Laboratory research shows that garlic oil induced apoptosis in over 80% of AsPC‑1 pancreatic cancer cells within 24 hours and inhibited growth of multiple pancreatic cancer lines by more than 70% within 48 hours.

PMID: 24289598
This is not a vague claim or wishful thinking; this is hard cellular biology demonstrating that compounds in garlic can actively trigger cancer cell death. Epidemiological data confirm the power of this natural agent, showing that diets rich in garlic and onions reduce pancreatic cancer risk by over 50%. The establishment sidelines these findings because they threaten a multi‑billion-dollar treatment-first industry, but the science is unassailable and the truth is now in your hands.

C. Everett Koop

C. Everett Koop

In January 1982, a deeply religious pediatric surgeon from Philadelphia was sworn in as the 13th Surgeon General of the United States.

He had an Amish-style beard, a commanding presence, and conservative credentials that stretched back decades. The religious right celebrated his appointment. Democrats were alarmed. Everyone was certain they knew exactly what kind of Surgeon General C. Everett Koop would be.

They were wrong about nearly everything.

Before Washington, Koop had spent 35 years as surgeon-in-chief at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. He pioneered life-saving techniques for newborns with severe birth defects. He established the nation’s first newborn surgical intensive care unit. He separated conjoined twins when few surgeons believed it was survivable. He was meticulous, demanding, and entirely committed to his patients.

Those qualities didn’t disappear when he put on the Surgeon General’s uniform. They just found a different operating table.

In June 1981, just months before Koop’s nomination, the CDC had reported five unusual cases — young men in Los Angeles dying from a rare pneumonia that attacked weakened immune systems. Within weeks, more cases appeared. A new and terrifying disease was moving through the population, and no one knew how, or why, or how fast.

The Reagan administration’s response was silence.

For his entire first term in office — four years — Koop was prevented from addressing the AIDS crisis. He was not placed on the AIDS task force. Reporters were discouraged from asking him about the epidemic. The nation’s top health officer was being stopped from doing his job, and he later said no one ever gave him a clear reason why.

Then, on February 5, 1986, President Reagan visited the Department of Health and Human Services. In the middle of a routine address, he mentioned almost casually that he was asking the Surgeon General to prepare a major report on AIDS.

Koop happened to be in the room. He took the hint.

He wrote the report himself — at a stand-up desk in the basement of his own home, working alone, late at night, with a few trusted advisors. He visited AIDS patients personally in Washington hospitals. He met with scientists, community organizations, Christian fundamentalists, hemophilia foundations, and gay rights groups. He approached it entirely as a medical question. He refused to approach it as a moral one.

When the report was finished, he knew the danger.

Reagan’s domestic policy advisers were expected to review it — and Koop was certain that any reference to condoms or sex education would be cut before it ever reached the public. So he printed numbered copies of the final draft, distributed them at the review meeting, and then collected every single copy back at the end of the meeting — explaining he was preventing leaks to the media.

It was not about leaks.

The strategy worked. The report went forward without revision.

On October 22, 1986, Koop released the Surgeon General’s Report on AIDS. The 36-page document was written in plain, direct language. It told Americans clearly how AIDS was — and was not — transmitted. It said they could not contract the disease through casual contact. It called for comprehensive sex education beginning in elementary school. It explicitly recommended condom use as a means of prevention.

His conservative supporters were stunned. They had expected a moral judgment on the communities most affected. Instead, they received science.

Koop was burned in effigy. Critics accused him of promoting immorality.

He did not back down.

He explained his position in words that have held up across every decade since: “I am the Surgeon General of the heterosexuals and the homosexuals, of the young and the old, of the moral or the immoral, the married and the unmarried. I don’t have the luxury of deciding which side I want to be on. So I can tell you how to keep yourself alive no matter what you are. That’s my job.”

In May 1988, he went further. He wrote an eight-page condensed version of the AIDS report — a pamphlet called Understanding AIDS — and arranged for it to be mailed to every single household in the United States. One hundred and seven million homes received it. It was the largest public health mailing in American history. The first time the federal government had ever provided explicit information about sexual health directly to the public.

The backlash was immediate and fierce. Religious groups called for his resignation. Politicians were furious. Critics said he had gone too far.

Koop noted that far more children were dying from the disease than from reading a pamphlet.

He did not back down.

He was equally unsparing on tobacco. His 1982 report had attributed 30% of all cancer deaths to smoking. His 1986 report declared that nicotine was as addictive as heroin or cocaine, and that secondhand smoke posed genuine risks to non-smokers — shifting the entire debate from personal choice to public safety. The Reagan White House eventually withdrew its support, under pressure from the tobacco industry.

Koop continued anyway.

He left office in 1989. His popularity had undergone a complete reversal. He had entered as the champion of the religious right. He left as a hero to public health advocates, civil liberties organizations, and the communities hit hardest by AIDS. The same people who had celebrated his appointment were relieved to see him go. The same people who had feared it were sorry to see him leave.

C. Everett Koop died on February 25, 2013, at the age of 96, at his home in Hanover, New Hampshire.

The Associated Press noted that he was “the only Surgeon General to become a household name.” The American Medical Association said that “because of what he did, and the way he did it, he had a dramatic impact on public health.”

He was not an ideologue. He was a surgeon.

He numbered his report copies so the White House couldn’t gut it.

He mailed it to 107 million homes so no one could claim they hadn’t been told.

He chose truth every time he had the option.

And in the decades since, the lives that choice saved cannot be counted.

Ambroise Pare

Ambroise Pare

The year is 1537.

The air at the French siege of Turin is a foul mixture of gunpowder, mud, and the coppery scent of blood.

A young barber-surgeon named Ambroise Paré moves through the chaos of the camp.

He is not a learned university physician. He is a tradesman.

His training came from an apprenticeship, sharpening razors and setting bones.

Now, he faces a new kind of horror.

The arquebus, a primitive firearm, is reshaping warfare. Its lead balls shatter bone and drive filthy cloth deep into flesh.

For centuries, medicine has had one brutal answer for such wounds.

The doctrine comes from the ancient Greeks. It states gunshot wounds are poisoned.

They must be burned clean.

The standard treatment is a cauldron of boiling oil.

Surgeons pour the scalding liquid directly into the open wound.

The scream is considered a sign the procedure is working.

The shock and agony kill as many men as the infection it is meant to prevent.

Paré has been dutifully carrying out this torture.

But on this day, the tide of wounded is too great.

The supply of oil runs out.

He stands over the next soldier, who awaits his turn with the cauldron. The man’s eyes are wide with terror.

Paré has nothing.

He is faced with a choice: do nothing and let the man die, or try something unthinkable.

He remembers an old folk remedy. A soothing salve for burns.

In desperation, he mixes what he has: the yolk of an egg, oil of roses, and turpentine.

He gently dresses the gunshot wound with this cool, unproven paste.

He does not cauterize. He does not burn.

That night, Paré cannot sleep.

He is convinced he has condemned the man to a slow, poisoned death. He expects to find the soldier’s corpse by morning.

At first light, he hurries back to the infirmary.

He finds the soldier alive.

Not just alive, but resting. The wound shows signs of calm.

There is less swelling. Less putrid smell.

The man who received the rose oil salve looks better than the men who endured the boiling oil.

Paré’s mind reels.

This observation, born of simple shortage, challenges everything he has been taught.

For the rest of the siege, he conducts a gruesome, unplanned experiment.

He treats some men with the old way. He treats others with his new gentle dressing.

The results are undeniable.

The men treated with the salve sleep through the night. Their wounds begin to heal.

They suffer less fever.

The men treated with boiling oil writhe in agony. Their wounds grow angry and inflamed.

Many do not survive.

Paré has just proven a 2,000-year-old medical truth is a lethal lie.

He writes, ’I resolved with myself never so cruelly to burn poor men wounded with gunshot.’

This is only the beginning of his rebellion.

He turns his mind to the other great horror of the battlefield: amputation.

The standard method is a butcher’s ballet. A saw cuts the limb.

Then, a red-hot iron is pressed into the bleeding stump to sear the arteries shut.

The smell of burning flesh is constant. The pain is unimaginable.

The blood loss is often fatal.

Paré imagines a different way.

He considers the tailor, who uses a needle and thread. He considers the shepherd, who ties off a cord.

He develops a simple, brilliant idea: the ligature.

Using a needle threaded with silk, he loops and ties off each individual artery before the limb is cut.

When the saw does its work, the vessels are already closed. There is no torrent of blood.

No need for the branding iron.

He invents new tools, like the ’bec de corbin’—a crow’s beak forceps—to gently extract bullets from deep wounds.

His innovations are not born in a quiet university hall. They are forged in the screaming chaos of war.

He serves four kings of France. He tends to the wounds of nobles and common soldiers alike.

And he does something just as revolutionary as his techniques.

He writes his books in French.

Not in Latin, the guarded language of the elite physicians.

He writes so the common barber-surgeon, the man in the field, can understand. He fills his texts with detailed illustrations of his instruments and methods.

He shares knowledge instead of hoarding it.

The establishment is furious. Physicians scorn him as a mere ’barber.’ They call his methods vulgar and dangerous.

But the results speak for themselves. Men live who were meant to die.

Paré’s legacy is not a single miracle cure. It is a new way of thinking.

He teaches the world to observe, to experiment, and to have the courage to discard ancient cruelty when a kinder, better way presents itself.

He stands at the bloody crossroads between medieval torture and modern mercy.

And he chose mercy.

Paré’s famous motto was ’Je le pansai, Dieu le guérit’—’I dressed him, God healed him.’ This humble phrase captured his revolutionary belief that the surgeon’s role was to aid nature’s healing, not to dominate it with violent interventions.

Sources: U.S. National Library of Medicine / The British Journal of Surgery / Science Museum, London

Photo: Wikimedia Commons

Six Soil Tests

Six Soil Tests

Before you buy a single bag of anything, grab a handful of soil from your garden and squeeze it.

If it crumbles apart immediately, you’ve got sand. If it holds its shape with a shiny surface, you’ve got clay. If it holds shape but breaks apart when you poke it, that’s loam — and loam is what you’re building toward.

That took five seconds. Here are three more tests that cost nothing.

The ribbon test:
Press a moist ball of soil between your thumb and finger into a flat ribbon. If it breaks before an inch — sandy. If it stretches past two inches without breaking — heavy clay. The longer the ribbon, the more clay you’re working with.

The worm count:
Flip one full shovelful of soil and count the earthworms. Ten or more means the biology is working. Under five means the soil needs organic matter — compost, leaf mulch, or cover crops. Worms tell you what a lab test can’t: whether anything is alive down there.

The jar test:
Fill a jar one-third with soil, add water, shake hard, and set it down. Sand drops to the bottom in a minute. Silt settles in a few hours. Clay stays cloudy for a full day. After 24 hours you can see the layers and roughly gauge your soil’s composition without sending anything to a lab.

Every one of these tests points the same direction: add compost. Sand needs it for moisture retention. Clay needs it for drainage. Low worm counts need it for biology. Compost is the answer to almost everything these tests reveal.

Four tests. No kit. Your hands and a jar.

Mulch vs No Mulch

Mulch vs No Mulch

Same soil. Same plants. Same seeds, same day. One bed got three inches of straw mulch in April. The other got nothing.

By July, they don’t look like the same garden.

The bare bed dried out in two days after every watering. Weeds filled the gaps between plants. The soil surface cracked in the heat. The lettuce bolted. The peppers stalled.

The mulched bed held moisture for four or five days between waterings. Pull back the straw in July and you’ll find earthworms at the surface — in the middle of summer. That tells you what’s happening underneath. The soil stays cooler, the roots stay comfortable, and the plants keep producing.

One input. Four shifts:
– Moisture — the mulched bed needs watering roughly half as often
– Weeds — straw blocks light from reaching weed seeds. Almost nothing germinates
– Temperature — soil under mulch runs noticeably cooler than bare ground next to it
– Yield — the plants in mulch outproduce the bare bed by a wide margin from the same starts

Which mulch to use:
– Straw — cheap, available, decomposes slowly. The standard for vegetable beds
– Wood chips — longer lasting, better for paths and perennial beds. Keep out of annual rows
– Shredded leaves — free every fall. Break down fast and feed the soil. Layer with straw for best results

Three inches, pulled back an inch from stems. Add more as it settles through the season.

One afternoon. The garden waters itself less and weeds itself less for the rest of summer.

Core Raised Garden Beds

Core Raised Garden Beds

Most raised beds lose water straight down through the soil. Roots chase it, the surface dries out, and by midsummer you are watering every single day just to keep up.

A core garden buries a sponge down the center of the bed. A trench eight to ten inches deep runs the full length, filled with four to five inches of straw or dried leaves. When you soak that core, it absorbs water the way a sponge absorbs from a bowl — then releases it laterally through the soil, reaching roots up to two feet on either side. Instead of water draining straight past the root zone, it sits in the middle of the bed and feeds outward all week.

The method originated in arid regions where rainfall was scarce and every drop had to count. Gardeners dug trenches, packed them with dried grass, and covered them with soil. The buried organic layer held enough moisture to grow food through dry stretches without daily irrigation. The same principle works in any raised bed — and unlike a wicking bed, there is no liner, no plumbing, and no reservoir to build. You dig a trench, fill it, cover it, charge it with water, and plant the same day.

How to build a core garden bed:
1. Lay cardboard on the grass inside your raised bed frame to smother weeds and attract earthworms as it decomposes. Add a few inches of soil over the cardboard to create a base layer

2. Dig a trench eight to ten inches deep running horizontally down the center of the bed. Keep the excavated soil nearby — you will use it to cover the core

3. Fill the trench with four to five inches of partially broken-down straw, dried leaves, or shredded grass clippings. Straw works best because hay carries grass seeds that will sprout in your bed. Do not overfill — too thick a core will not decompose by next season

4. Cover the core completely with quality topsoil or compost so no straw is exposed. The surface should look like any normal raised bed — the sponge is invisible underneath

5. Charge the core by flooding the bed with a deep, slow watering until the soil is saturated down to the straw layer. This is the step that activates the system — a dry core does nothing. After charging, plant immediately and mulch the surface.

The straw breaks down over one season, loosening soil structure and adding organic matter as it goes. Each spring, dig a new trench and lay a fresh core. The bed gets lighter, drains better, and holds more moisture every year — all from burying material most people rake to the curb.

A trench, some straw, and one deep watering — the bed holds moisture the way soil alone never could.