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@@kw25627 if you can find people like myself with good tactical training and lots of weapons, look to make them part of your group. I am always looking for a food/ canning experts along with a good surgeon, etc…
@@richfarfugnuven6308 I know no one who thinks like me. Everyone is completely oblivious and resolute to stay that way. I’m afraid they are going to learn the hard way.
99% of fencing is a psychological barrier. 6ft Fencing with outward facing lights is one of the best deterrents there is...much respect from Zimbabwe 🇿🇼
Something to note with Ring. Law enforcement can sign up with Amazon as a "partner" and freely access your "neighborhood" cameras without any warrants.
@@nicknatuzzi2652 The police having free access to your land anytime they feel like it? It violates the 4th amendment. They are suppose to have probable cause and obtain a warrant. The same is true of surveillance. But we know the Feds have been recording every Americans calls and internet since Obama.
We would appreciate it deeply if anyone could pray for us our 12 year old daughter Candice living with chronic congestive heart failure passed away may 30 peacefully in her sleep she is with the Lord we are all devastated we desperately need your prayers please pray for peace and comfort with God's love conquers all amen we lost our first daughter Angel at 15 years old in 2018 peacefully in her sleep she had Ms this is very tough we are grateful to God for two wonderful daughters and we will be altogether again praying for everyone everyday God bless you all.
HERE is Our Savior YaH The Heavenly FATHER HIMSELF was Who they Crucified for our sins, NOT jesus, and “HERE IS THE PROOF” From the Ancient Semitic Scroll: "Yad He Vav He" is what Moses wrote, when Moses asked YaH His Name (Exodus 3) Ancient Semitic Direct Translation Yad - "Behold The Hand" He - "Behold the Breath" Vav - "Behold The NAIL"
The one thing I would suggest, are range markers. Maybe just a stake with some colored tape at the end, but then you can tell how far out an object is quickly. Every 100 meters put just a single pole down, that way there is no 'guestimating range.' Instead it's "yeah they're next to the yellow pole, they're 300 meters out." or they're "halfway between the Yellow and Blue pole, so they're 250 meters out." So, even if they DO make it past your fence, you know how far away they are. You can also make one tall-ish enough to put some fabric, or maybe flags on them to see wind direction. Now you have range, wind direction, and an open field. Maybe also a tower, yeah I'd also build a tower. Or maybe just get a giant tree imported into your yard, and put a treehouse/stand in there, have the inside walls of the treehouse be lined with dirtbags, (like sandbags, but dirt.) binoculars, water, and food. Now when it really hits the fan you've got a HIGH position, over an open field, with range markers. If you wanted to, you could get solar running, put a nice radio up there, with a beefy antenna.
@@jerryrothenberger9071 Yes, "a giant tree" as in something-big-enough-to-support-an-observation-post. Those of us in the southwest immediately know he isn't talking about a skinny palm tree or a Palo Verde.
bird houses on tall pole as marker (different colored bird houses) and the tower could possibly be a hunter's tree stand. the problem with the latter is that it can be used against you if it is too far from the house. I had a neighbor use mine to look into my windows.
When using Talkies I would suggest toggling off the “bloop” send tone feature so that one can remain in quiet mode without emitting a tone every time you lift your finger off the send button, this will help to preserve whatever stealth one can, both for the sender AND recipient.
@Canadian Prepper, I noticed the top gate hinge is facing upward. I always put the top hinge pivot facing down so the gate can't be lifted off the hinges.
@@ronskancke1489 generally the top hinge is secured with a bolt. Face your top hinge pin down, loosen the gate hinge and slide it to where you need it. We started doing this years ago after we had cattle lift the gate off the hinges.
I have 10 acres. I have lived on it for 30 years. At first I would see hunters on my property during deer and turkey season. I had 3 kids then and was afraid one may get shot from a stray bullet or arrow. I put up the private property keep out signs. They did no good, and they were well posted. So I had signs made saying " PRIVATE PROPERTY, KEEP OUT VIOLATORS MAY BE MET WITH DEADLY FORCE " For the past 20 years, no one has come on my property. BTW. I live in the south and us country boys don't take no shit. Lol
I live on 11 acres and I have never had problems with anything besides wandering cattle living in an open range state. Had to put up fences and shoot them with a kid's BB gun. They don't like the sting. But I never worry about mobsters or hoarders. I don't see the concern. I'm not into conspiracies anymore.
@@PatrickThreewit It's not about "conspiracies". It's just about being prepared. It's fantastic if things don't devolve into a chaotic mess. It's perfect if society continues to function and carries on the way it's intended - but in the event it doesn't a small amount of preparedness could be the difference between you being a victim and/or statistic. I'm a disabled combat veteran from the US and let me be the first to tell you that I've visited plenty of places where their denizens thought exactly the way you do now, only to learn the hard way they were wrong about "not seeing the concern".
@@PatrickThreewit Just because you have never had a problem when the world was functional does NOT mean that you won't have problems if that changes. People don't wear seatbelts because they think they are going to be in a car accident that trip, they wear them as a safety net in case you happen to be part of that 0.001% that wrecks that day. The issue isn't that something seems likely, it's that IF it all goes wrong then you don't want to find yourself screwed because of poor planning, laziness, or complacency that "nothing bad is going to happen". Considering the history of humanity and the current direction things are going, it seems quite prudent to be prepared for a day that you are ENTIRELY on your own. Sure, it might all be a "waste" of time, but so is wearing your seatbelt almost every single time...but we don't argue against that. It just depends on if you want to be prepared for someone showing up to murder you and take all your stuff, or do you want to bet your life (and possibly all of those around you) that it will 100% NEVER happen to you. It might be easy to dismiss a few "conspiracies" as being extremely unlikely (say zombie apocalypse) but there are literally millions of scenarios in which you find yourself in a similar situation. WW3, zombie apocalypse, massive solar storm fries all electronics on Earth, natural event that causes chaos in your local area (or state or country), riots, civil war we could go on and on about situations in which THIS stuff could be the difference between being alive at the end of it, or you checking out on day 1 from being murdered (or day 3 from no water). Since all of these require the same basic setup and supplies then it seems far smarter, in my opinion, to just prepare yourself and be covered from ANY of them. If you are just focused on "conspiracies" then you are failing to acknowledge ALL of the other ways disaster can strike, and there are far far far more of those.
Would you shot someone that like enters your driveway or ranch entrance by mistake, or someone just wondering for unknow reasons on foot? You know like that guy that killed that teen girl becauae they had the wrong adress Just wonder if you will love to kill the bastards, you know, finally use that gun, or if you would call the cops, or keep an eye open and see what is going on, etc.
As a special forces soldier and tactician i am telling you the place is completely open : Doesn't matter if he have wire the entire fence with alert system if they come in numbers from all directions the family will be trapped cornered and outgunned, the marauders will come like a Wolfe pack testing or hitting all at once. They can ram fast the main gate and rush inside with a large vehicle that may also be an army vehicle or a construction vehicle smoke grenade recipe is easy to craft. If they try to get inside there gonna be a battle, bullets will fly all over the place also you will never know what weapons they may have, or they may spy on the ranch for days looking your movements an try to take you out one at a time, If society collapse even the Neighbors are the number one threat.
For anyone thinking about natural barriers using trees: The Osage Orange tree is a good option for this that I rarely hear mentioned. It is easy to "train" into a weaved barrier, grows fairly quickly, hardy once it gets going, and it has long spines/spikes on it's branches. This can create a very tight barrier of spikes to keep pretty much anything out (or in). The tree (also sometimes called a shrub) does grow some fruit (kind of grapefruit sized) that is inedible and can make a mess... so if looks are a primary concern then you might find the fruit all over the ground to be unsightly. If not, then there are no other plants I know of that can create a barrier as hard to get through as a tight Osage Orange tree line. Also of note is that once they start making fruit, it can spread fairly easily. Fast forward 15 years and you could find you need to put some effort into cleaning up the fruit or cutting the tree line back. Depending on the size of the area you are protecting, you can go all out or take the "easy" route. The tree can be topped and the branches weaved together over time to make it nearly impossible to get through, but this will take quite a lot of work if you have a huge plot of land you are protecting. Often times people just plant them close together and that is still enough to prevent any movement (remember, 2 inch spikes covering everything). If you wanted to go above and beyond though, weaving the branches into a wall of spikes will all but guarantee nothing makes it through, no matter how motivated it is. The wood itself is also extremely durable and has the flexibility to bend without breaking. This makes it good for use as a timber supply (it is the goto wood for things that sit outside for decades like railroad ties and fence posts because it doesn't rot and insects ignore it...even termites) and if this is up your ally, it is considered the best wood to use for making bows, which is how it got it's original name (Bow wood). Though it is pretty rare to be able to get long straight cuts out of it unless it grows naturally and with plenty of room... not exactly what we are looking for in a barrier though. It's wood is also so dense that it is the second best firewood as far as heat output. Only Eucalyptus is higher, and it is tied with Almond. It burns so hot that it is recommended to not use it in wood stoves, so keep that in mind. It is better to think of it more like coal as far as heat output goes. It is also so dense that it takes a lot more effort to harvest and is much harder on your tools than "regular" wood. Pros and cons to everything I guess.
@@kokonanana1 Very interesting, thanks. I know many animals avoid the fruit, but have never heard anything about horses. I will have to keep that in mind. Thanks again.
The fruit is edible by cattle and horses. It must collected though and cut up. Most animals will choke on it. Also, there is a way for humans to use as medicine. UA-cam has videos by herbalist. If anyone has these trees collect the fruits and put in a line where you want your fence to be.
Osage Orange is the species name but it is commonly called a hedge tree here in Missouri. There is no better wood to use for posts, especially large corner posts. I don’t know of anyone that uses it as firewood since it burns so hot that it would melt the side out of most wood stoves and then catch the house on fire.
The only thing missing are a windsock and 600m, 500m, 400m 300m range signs along your road to the house with a few used up steel targets visible from it.
@@titaniummaster1532 You can’t go overboard. Illuminating the area will be a welcome beacon to everyone. That would make more and more come to you and they will be in larger numbers and prepared. You’re saying stay away from my stuff which is really saying we got stuff.
@@virgilwalker683 I think a nuke war will make it worse, because so much of the supplies and soil will be tainted for such a long time, especially in places where there's minimal rainfall to push the fallout underground. There may be quite a lot of people who survive the fallout, and they'll be dangerously hungry. The ones with cancer might even be more dangerous, because they'll have much less to lose.
My favorite was a, "No Trespassing," sign with another next to it. "This is to alert you that you are well within the range of the weapons that I use to protect my home and family."
Here in Wrong Turn, WV our fences are to keep you in, not out. So in SHTF, y’all be sure to come give us a visit, ya hear? We’ll leave the light on for ya.
Born and raised in Hanging Rock holler in Salem, VA right across the line from you. 😊 Now I live in Alaska…which is kinda like Appalachia if everyone came down out of the hollers except we have grizzly bears and the mountains here ain’t right. The wind doesn’t blow. I know it’s hot there right now but I tell ya, when you can’t hear the crickets and the wind doesn’t blow…it’s not home.
Mama got 26 different recipes for uninvited guests. She got one fer General Tso’s Trespasser…. …one fer Bourbon Street Trespasser, …we got Sweet & Sour Trespasser, …Trespasser Cordon Bleu, And you ain’t lived until you’ve had her trespasser, ramps, and taters. Now mama, …she went and ordered one of them new InstaPots and an air fryer. You ain’t never seen a UPS truck drive away as fast as ours does!
@@salonofleaves My father used to live in Alaska. I thought about it myself in my 30s. I’m pushing 50 now and getting closer to a condo in Florida than a cabin in Alaska. But in my heart, I’m 25, and Alaska sounds real nice.
It's called a threshold. At a house, that threshold is above the front door. It marks the demarcation line that police are not allowed to cross without a warrant. A man's home is his castle and his castle is his home. Here in the video that long log at the top of the gate serves as the threshold because it is combined with the signage.
I can see it coming down the line, soon they’ll be handing out food to those in bread lines who can’t afford food. Would I eat it? No way. Because I don’t trust the government not to poison food and water. This is a huge reason why I try to stay ahead of that storm. From clothing to cloth, from flour to bread, from seed to dinner, I’ll do it on my own.
I can understand the issue with sharing your secrets, however, I really appreciate your willingness to do so. I'm learning alot of useful information from this video as I'm sure many within this community will. Nate, the intro is gold 🤣👌
People are more likely to hit a soft or unprotected target. If they know its protected they will be less likely. And dont give me the 2000 zombie situation. If you have 2000 zombies coming it wouldnt matter. And big brother already knows to the pea what you have.
@@Teknofobe Here's my fav quote over 5 decades: Condemnation without investigation is a bar to all knowlwdge" Herbert Shelton in his forward for Food Combining Made Easy.
@@maxhames499 nates part of " big brother".....all responses get tagged and I'm sure he's in on it. That being said , talking about peas, they also have tech way beyond our imagination that will make our pea shooters shit.
I would dig a trench Ard. The area and put logs in upright close together plus fencing, a lot of work but with fortify it? That's if you can find a digger? Just a thought. And that beam over the main gate. Hanging stuffed like scarecrows.
The Government bureaucracy coming! The Government bureaucracy coming! The Government bureaucracy coming! lol PPPHHHHFFFFFFFFFFFFFTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT!!! Paranoid much?
My great grandpa had a steel cable in his cattle guard that ran up the property to a big bell. Driving over the cable pulled it slightly and rang the bell near the house.
Better to spend $50,000 on an electronic system that can be easily hacked/co-opted by the government. [sarcasm] Are all preppers more interested in looking belligerent than getting the job done?
My favorite no trespassing sign said in large letters: "WARNING! SNIPERS!"; and in smaller print underneath the large print "If you are reading this, we already have you in out sights"
@@connielentz9191 The last time I saw one was at a gun show in Houston, Texas about 10 years ago...I'm sorry but I don't remember what company had that booth
These types of signs are not a good idea. Should you ever legitimately need to defend yourself, and are "successful" these types of signs can show premeditated intent in a court of law, even if you really were legitimately defending yourself and under threat. Posting a sign like this can take you from lawful self-defense to premeditated murder. "No trespassing, no soliciting, no exceptions" is actually a better alternative.
One thing I've noticed at least in my area with the help of Facebook crime pages is criminals tend to climb down hills before climbing up to steal stuff. I believe with their elevation looking down to scope out an area makes them feel more secure with what they're about to do. If they have to climb up they really don't know what's on the property so they tend to ignore the place.
The new Zealand Maori would build their villages traditionally on Pa (mountain tops) sites, so they could see any potential enemies coming toward the. Plus, it would tire out them before they even reach the top. They built the villages at the peak, while the descending slopes would be constructed in a step formation about the half the height of the average human. Climbing one of these steps a very exhausting feat. Let alone five of them. It made protecting the villages so much easier. As you could see 360 degrees in any direction.
If you want to know about perimiter security, come do a few episodes in South Africa... Protecting against farm attacks and house invasions are part of daily life for the average joe.
One time, I was about 16, and me and my entire family were going out to dinner, but at the last moment I had this epiphany if they all go out I have the house to myself, so I bailed on them in favor of a peaceful night at home. Make some popcorn watch some movies, but maybe 45 minutes after they all leave I hear a noise coming from the back bedroom. This room had a rear facing window onto an outside deck. Now because our house was haunted I initially thought it was a ghost or some paranormal activity but I grabbed my shotgun just the same, and walked down the hall to check it out. When I get to the bedroom I flick on the light, and there prying open the window was a person dressed totally in black with a black ski mask, the classic cat burglar look, they almost looked corny or theatrical even. When he saw the light turn on and subsequently me standing there with a shotgun pointed at his face he spooked, and ill never forget how he quickly scurried away, all hunched over, and crab like across the deck disappearing into the night. Cops came and of course did nothing. My feeling was it had to be an inside job because they had to know noone would be at home but since I changed my mind at the last minute I unwittingly foiled their plans. So glad I didn't have to blow their head off can you imagine the mess and the clean up ... haha 😀
@@beni_oji7536 that's interesting you say that I did have that very thought at the time, go outside and fire a round off but he was gone so fast I wound up just calling the cops instead.
We just started locking our doors (sometimes) and bringing the keys in out of the vehicles so it’s hard to imagine how tough it would be for our small town of about 2,000. Most of our theft crimes have been out of towners.
They started coming out to our farms about 3 or 4 yrs ago from Chicago and the small 3rd world areas around it. We had to start leaving someone around to watch. It's already here guys.
I hear you. We didn't lock our cabin nor take the keys out of the cars for 31 years... Now that we've moved to the condos (temporarily while we build) we are locking the cars and the condos at night. Our condos are in a rural area ..
Those thorns reminded me of why Scotland’s flower is the thistle… Marauders attacked some Scot’s from sea by night, and in the dark they ran towards the homes of the Scot’s but hit fields of thistles… The men cried out in pain, alerted Sentries and the Scot’s came out & (in my best Scot’s voice) “gave them a doing!” That’s the story anyhoo… probably a legend, but nonetheless a good one…
My uncle had a pad lock on the gate of his fence it did not lock the gate but was near where the lock is. He said that people see the lock and just assume the gate was locked. For years I saw that lock and just figured that it was locked.
I've done this lots of times with various things. I've also guessed lock passcodes at my workplaces because people often use predictable codes such as Current year, or their birth year 😂🔓
We had no security back in the 70's. When times got tough , we woke up one morning to a dead cow in the field. People came in and killed it during the night and left the front half of the cow, took the part they wanted. Sad, because we were a small family farm with just 50 cows. I think it is going to be worse than that soon.
They do that because they know you can't stop them. What if it were legal for you to shoot them on sight? Do you think they would be so brazen? Would you not stay up and try to guard your herd?
When times got tough....back in the 70's...what in the hell are you talking about. People were killing ur cows cause they were starving....justvsounds like theft not the end of times you hayseed.
Those who can't take these measures... remember....there's A LOT to be said about preparedness w/in your means, the element of surprise and creativity! Brains can beat bullies!
@@strtkempo agreed. We are not only looking at unwashed hordes, but we may be fighting professional foreign military! It’s definitely going to be an asymmetrical war!
@@strtkempo they also didn’t mind digging human sized ant colonies, creating an American military proof fortress underground And then catching poisonous animals and venomous snakes to use as cheap but effective fortifications
"Looks like meat's back on the menu, boys!" LOTR orc voice. That would have been a good laugh had they said that after the creep guy was dispatched. Good video, hopefully lots of people will benefit from watching this.
A great addition to defend your gate, A cattle guard with a deeper and wider channel with the ability to raise the guard to block the gate. And a suggestion for a sign: Attention Looters Sniper on Duty
A couple things to round out his setup. 1-Motion triggered flood lights are a huge deterrent and ruin night vision . 2-Hang a wind flag or sock at fence, with sign that says, " IF YOU CAN READ THIS YOU ARE IN RANGE". Anyone who shoots long range will understand the wind sock for wind calls. 3-Sign that says, "DANGER, LIVE FIRE RANGE IN USE." 4-Sign that shows German Shepherd on duty. 5-Pull up the cattle guard for moat obstacle. 6-Electrify the fence. Excellent video as always!
I appreciate the gate sensor, although most SHTF situations are going to be parameter penetration as opposed to using the drive. That being said, a good dog, or several, are the best alarm system for a farm.
I’ve found my English mastiffs to be the best alarm, deterrent and resolution. I prefer 3-4 mastiffs with a miniature dog like a doxie. You don’t really think you need to wind up the big dogs until you get the tiny yapper but the difference is nite and day. I’ve never found a group of ppl that want to face even one 200+ lb mastiff much less 3-4 of them. They really do defend and fight as a team with protecting their humans always their primary goal. They don’t eat as much as most ppl think because they aren’t as active as most other guard dogs. They are more of a don’t make me get up than just let me eat you now. Almost all of mine are more of a let me knock you down and stomp you to dust but they do have teeth and will bite. Not that all puppies don’t need lots of training but they do train the younger ones within the herd.
@@rockjockchick I’ve had them for 30+ yrs. They are way cool. Can be stubborn until you learn to lure them not drag them lol. Very furry and drool lol 🐕
best eyes on your farm is a dog. My Kangal is big, she has insanely good eyesight, she is explosively fast, and a bite force that tops all canines. then there’s the model 94 30.30 winchester. proven show stopper. Oh, the horse will run you off, too
There is a metal sign out there , stating " if you can read this .,.. your in range " I always got a kick out of that one , and the one I have on my bathroom door is " wash balls here "
The Green outside the Fence is Good for no Look at the Ranche. But you can get in with a Garden Sisslore. And you can’t be seen from Inside, when you laying in this, with a Gun. And when you go on the Fence, you Walk on an Open ground. A mat on your Fence is Good, to no Locking into. Normaly, you should have a clear Zone bevor your Fence. Greetings from Germany, and sorry for my Bad English.
Get bear Mase, when groups rather small or large come in your area you can stay well hidden and release it in the air quietly and make the crowd disperse without a single shot... Trust me, my security guy clears entire clubs with just 3 quick squirts aimed at the ground
I love how the guy tries to come off as a tough military type, then at 14:30 the most mellow pampered dog in the world shows up as if to say, "Don't be fooled. He's a total softie. I've got him totally wrapped."
Private property signs in the US are lawfully protected. Your rights are established much more than if they were never their. It is a contractual agreement that goes with signs. Contracts are law, courts operate on contracts.
One good trick is to use dogs. Trained dogs to bark when there is a stranger only is gold, in a situation like that. Dog bark can be heard from a pretty log distance, and if you are not use to hear your dogs bark it will instantly trigger your alert response.
Absolutely, dogs are a fantastic protection measure. You also have to train them to not eat any food except what you give them, because where I'm from, the dogs are killed with poisoned meat before the attack.
I live a Sanctuary state, I have to be more imaginative in my security. Fences and sighs are useless here. Cameras powered by solar, motion lights and sensors are a necessity. Dogs trained to be silent at all times. Love your lands. Great video. Stay safe and strong 💪. 🙏💪God family and country ❤
This defense system may work well for 1 or 2 intruders . What happens when 5 or 6 trucks show up carrying 20 men that are determined to take what you have ? Eventually the people in the urban areas will become desperate enough to search the country / rural lands for what they need to survive. Not sure gates and thorns are enough of a barrier to stop them. Hopefully you will have enough lead and a bug out gear in place as a back up plan. Mobility may become essential for survival. Hard decisions will have to be made. Good luck my Canadian Brothers!
Any group of people entering an area without up to date intelligence will always be at an operational, physical, and psychological disadvantage. A smart group will divide and probe before committing large groups of people with experience or vehicles with tools. Aun inexperienced group will wander aimlessly into our defensive area with no plans on what to do. The open area between the inner perimeter and the outer perimeter allows the use of many types of tricks and traps deigned to slow, injure, and stop activity between the two perimeters. When used well, people and vehicles can be deterred away long before they reach the inner perimeter. When not deterred to abandon their intrusion, intruding people and vehicles can de slowed, stopped, or grouped tougher which makes addressing, incapacitating, capturing, or eliminating them easy and effective. This defense can be conducted economically and efficiently with a combination of accurate long range weapons fire in combination with spring traps, wire traps, fire traps, chemical traps, natural gases, biological material, and animals. The tricks and traps can be rearranged to throw off re-entry of the same intruders and to keep people from figuring out weaknesses to exploit. The use of countersniping and counterintelligence will be crucial in maintaining your operational security and personnel security. This prevents someone someone outside your outer perimeter to conduct long term surveillance on your location to dissect for weaknesses. If you can capture an intruder to interrogate, capture their equipment for parts, or capture their resources for supply, you’ll know much more about whom and what you’re dealing with outside your outer perimeter. You’ll also get an idea of what it’s like outside your outer perimeter. That information will allow you to know better about how long you can stay at your location and where you may be able to go if you must vacate the area. Leaving your prepared location can put you at a severe disadvantage because your perimeter becomes much smaller, tighter, almost non-existent. You become the intruder entering unknown areas with little to no information and virtually no way to prepare for what may be there. Your disadvantage in traveling becomes more severe when you don’t know where you’re going, when you don't know if your destination is viable, and if you don't know how you can get there with no serious issues. When moving from one known safe place to another location of unknown status, you must be prepared to face opposition and be attacked all along your route. You just be prepared to alter course into unknown territory perhaps needing to abandon your transportation which will be holding much of your supplies. You must be prepared to be trapped, captured, separated, and worse.
These millions of people coming from cities...are they marching in rank to each individual farm? No. They are going to spread out. Gas will run out, cars stuck in traffic for miles, and if there was enough time and means of communication to gather an attacking force...theres enough time and means of communication to gather a defending force. Granted the farms immediately next to the city are screwed. But as you disperse it only evens out the number advantage. Not to mention they will be exposed to the elements , get sick, injured etc.
Bugging out to nowhere will never be an option, for anyone. Unless theyre suicidal i guess. If you leave a place that is defensible, has food and water supplies and your stockpile of medicine, youll be dead inside a year.
Keep stocking ammo and food. Miniature goats, chickens, and bunnies Make your circle stronger, and be selective. Have multiple bugout locations. Help the orphans, widows, sick, prisoners, and homeless. Save a little time for some fun and above all Thank God!!👐
Love these Nate! And the intro was epic! One thing which may be great to also cover are those “click baits” what I mean is; let’s say we’re already there……. Suddenly a mom and small child come stumbling onto your property crying for help; you let your guard down long enough to go get them etc and boom ambushed. I know it seems crazy …. But honestly it’s another valid point we have to keep in mind. Much love y’all…. Everyone keep praying and prepping. 💗✝️💗
I, myself own a 110 acra farm I've never had any problems here. the, main thing it's a big blessing that most of my neighbors are law enforcement neighbors. we, all watch each others place. / thank, you for you're video.
I've considered piping propane from a large propane tank to the back of obvious hides, behind large boulders,paths of approach, etc with control of flow and ignition remotely controlled. Woe be unto whoever takes shelter behind them.
This is great for civilian-man; I just saw a recent movie about the end of the world where two soldiers enter and complex similar to this and they question the residents about supplies while alluding to an approaching convoy that is "interested" in "using" this location ??? Can't stop military. I believe this occurred during the American Civil War where troops would just take over plantations for military use. This video covers important topics for interested viewers. Thumbs up.
honey locust is the way to go. they have thorns that will puncture a tractor tire. they also grow fast and make some of the best firewood known to man.
There were little to none, CCTV systems back in the day. Today, you can be damn far from home, and still be watching it via cameras through Internet... Of course, assuming you got both electricity and Internet connection, something you'd probably lose if things go waaay south. Anyway, it's true that the hardest part is not keeping the bad guys at bay, but trying to not get catched by surprised whether you are going out or coming back.
Right, and the treeline also provides a sniping point inwards. This is why you NEED thermal optics. If you have that, anyone trying to hide out there is toast.
@@WardenWolf Why be concerned about that. Most bad deeds are done at night. If someone through a Molotov cocktail through a window and it started a fire inside your home, what would you do? What would most people do. Snipers? A person can be 50--100 years from your residence and just shoot into your home. Sheetrock doesn't even stop rimfires. It may hit a stud and stop they are 16--24 inches apart and for sure a .308 can cause real havoc on you inside your home.
These were some good ideas! I have a friend who lives along the US southern border. They have a big property, as the family has been there many generations. He was doing a yearly roam around and found a big hole under the fence, but bigger than a coyote would dig. He put up a trail cam. He realized that these were illegals. Their property is probably the first water source after they cross. They reported it to the border patrol. But nothing really came of it. So they put some water a mile away from the fence, along with some cans of beans and tortillas So it's a thought to maybe leave water and apples, nuts, carrots, whatever you grow out at the main road. If all they need is food, they will get it and go on their way. So just another distraction. If they still come down the road to your property, then you will know for sure likely they are "bad ombres".
@@Kaiyats That's what people will eat, and it has a long shelf life sitting out in the very hot sun. Better than crackers or bread. People will take 1 or 2 bags of those and and the same amount of beans. Even the "desperados" have some civility to leave some for the next person. Hopefully that's the way things go in SHTF.
I'm at the Nogales border. Ranch is about 30 acres. Been here 12 years and you're right, Samantha. Leaving water and a bag of something stops most of the traffic. And yes, tortillas will keep. We've left beanie weenies with pull top cans and apples. BP is busy and can't stop all of it.
LOL-I ride my bicycle at least 6,000 miles a year and the amount of change on the ground or road or sidewalk is really impressive. I’m pretty sure people just throw it away and no one else picks it up. The truly sad thing is the number of syringes in evidence.
Yep... already getting my *things* taken care of. Some been done, as far back, as a few years ago. 😉 I see he is using what I call, the 4-D's "Distance, Distraction, Difficulty & Destruction."
I used to live in a brick house with fences and hedges and guard dogs. It was on a dead end road so nothing worked.If you or some family member can't stay home all the time...I just put my valuables in a storage facility.
Trees can be very useful around the house you can use fishing line with mouse traps with Light sticks that are hot glued on them once dawn them when somebody trips over A-line the mouse trap breaks the light stick and you can see where they're at as well as I have motion centered solar powerSpotlights around my property... Just a thought to share
Excellent Information. I like every one of his safety decisions. Thank him for sharing his information with us. He looked like he didn't want to give away to much of his work, but wanted to help others be secure.
Great ideas! We are on 35 acres with a 700' driveway. Our driveway alarm from Tractor Supply works well. I will eventually build the gate, and use the natural features to limit access.
I really like your explanation of fort Knox. At the shop I work at we have the entire yard fenced in and about 3/4 of that fence has arborvitaes running along it. After getting broken into 3 times in a year the cops actually told us the arbs, although nice for privacy, allow the bad guys a place to hide once inside and should be taken down.
Regarding the gate psychology, I have heard of someone blocking people from their homes in a cul-de-sac with a single road cone. People didn't want to drive around it to get to their driveway. Not effective for more serious situations but goes to show how people's brains work.
To be honest the difference between a mouse trap and a man trap is the amount of tannerite involved and one's boldness in their crafting skills. (Figuring ways to limit access to an area if all else goes wrong can be surprisingly low-tech.)
Having trees around your house might make your house more exposed.... But those trees provide shade and shelter reducing or even eliminating your summertime cooling bill
Not gonna lie, he's really thought out his deterrence and it's very impressive. I've had a few ideas, some that are similar to his but definitely not as fleshed out. The tree hedge row is a very good idea and the double fence, one around the property and one around the house is also really good. I assume the early warning system runs off a solar powered system which I'm really starting to debate getting a solar setup going but not sure how beneficial it'd be in my area. Thanks for the video, I've learned a lot.
His design has a major flaw, though: it provides cover for people on the outside looking in. Snipers can be positioned in the hedges on the outside and effectively keep you pinned in. Of course, if you have thermal optics, that problem goes away rather spectacularly.
@@WardenWolf Seeing as the tree line already blocks their view, they could just build another fence that blocks the view from the hedge. Adds a third fence while you are at it
Being that open has one flaw. Anyone with a decent scoped rifle could pick you off 1 by 1 from outside the fence before you could find them. Just my opinion.
Keep someone on overwatch in a hide who has observation past the perimeter. Man on the perimeter ought to keep a rifle handy as well and keep some level of situational awareness.
Would it be worth building a tall tower in the middle with windows on alternating sides as you go up? They'd never know which window you'd be peeking from and you could detect incoming people from far away
If someone was dryer to get inside your house, because they desperately needed something inside, the best attack would be driving a heavy truck 🚒 through the barbed wire fence behind the house. A ditch behind the barbed wire fence or crossed railroad ties might help...
FWIW: Buried vehicle sensors only work on vehicles. Odds are intruders will be traveling by foot. Unfortunately the best option are PIR and IR Beam sensors even if they are prone to false positives (deer & coyotes). You can reduce false positives with fencing.
My bet is that someone isn't going to walk 150 yards down a 2 track gravel drive surrounded by a 125 ft. tall red pine plantation to home invade or steal from us. For starters, they would have to carry all of their loot back to their truck-car parked on a two lane, fairly busy rural road. They'll drive in because they'll want to drive out. Not walk out. Our buried mag sensor will serve us just fine.
@@johnhall9432 I agree. We're in a similar situation. Way out of town on a long dirt road, only one way in & out, in the open prairie. I doubt anybody will be walking in on us. I bought one of those motion sensor driveway alarms, but my horses, the antelope, birds & even the grass & sagebrush on a really windy day alert me. It's basically useless because I just ignore it. I'm going to get one of those magnetic alarms ASAP
I noticed you put rocks on top of your fence posts. I do to. Sand stone on mine. There is something demoralizing about hearing a rifle shot and seeing a rock turn to dust just feet from your head.
@@USMC6976 Maybe - sometimes true. But most bad guys only prey on weaker targets. If they know you are vigilant, armed, and willing to fight they will most likely move off to another place.
Couple things come to mind. The berries could become an "attractive nuisance" once someone notices they are edible (alternatively they may be a benefit in that a hungry person will just harvest enough to get through that day and move on). The diamond harrow can simply be flipped over. Granted both are passive delaying installations but every defense has defects. That box of wire etc. should be on the inside of the fence and disguised with a well placed bush or something. If on the outside it will encourage pilferage, risking your resources while also delaying a potential invader. Try to think like a threat; if you wanted to get past your defenses, how would you do it? Never underestimate a potential enemy's intelligence otr resourcefulness.
Check out Arkopias youtube channel here to learn how to survive the collapse
ua-cam.com/channels/AvDhzIEfHcVMe11KeEtv6Q.html
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Nate I think you might need to buy land right beside dean ;) you guys make a great team :))
I just subscribed!
I totally agree buy land next to his farm and then I can come be farm labor and live on the land LOL.
Wow...that intro was EPIC !!
Grateful for shouting out. I’m GTFO BC and coming home to start my retirement homestead. Greenhouse and geothermal is on my agenda!
The first thing that comes to mind while watching is how blessed their families are to have men who are willing to defend them.
@@kw25627 if you can find people like myself with good tactical training and lots of weapons, look to make them part of your group. I am always looking for a food/ canning experts along with a good surgeon, etc…
@@richfarfugnuven6308 I know no one who thinks like me. Everyone is completely oblivious and resolute to stay that way. I’m afraid they are going to learn the hard way.
Its RACIST to want to protect your family!
And thank G-d they still are men. (and not a pregnant ken doll!)
@@twinkleblink3073 No kidding. I’ll take a manly man any day over a soy boy. I cannot understand women who are attracted to feminine men at all.
99% of fencing is a psychological barrier. 6ft Fencing with outward facing lights is one of the best deterrents there is...much respect from Zimbabwe 🇿🇼
Good advice
Respect back to you from Arizona 🇺🇸
The arch can be used to show others what happens to people that try to breach the perimeter without permission.
Lights only worth when there is a power source, or the lights are not shot out by something as simple as small caliber weapons.
RIP Rhodesia
Something to note with Ring. Law enforcement can sign up with Amazon as a "partner" and freely access your "neighborhood" cameras without any warrants.
Ridiculous. They just violate the 4th amendment over and over.
What’s wrong with that? I’d rather them being able to see crime than being all alone. That is just an extra layer of protection!
@@nicknatuzzi2652 The police having free access to your land anytime they feel like it? It violates the 4th amendment. They are suppose to have probable cause and obtain a warrant. The same is true of surveillance. But we know the Feds have been recording every Americans calls and internet since Obama.
Ring viewing is optional and not mandatory
Thank you for that information😮
We would appreciate it deeply if anyone could pray for us our 12 year old daughter Candice living with chronic congestive heart failure passed away may 30 peacefully in her sleep she is with the Lord we are all devastated we desperately need your prayers please pray for peace and comfort with God's love conquers all amen we lost our first daughter Angel at 15 years old in 2018 peacefully in her sleep she had Ms this is very tough we are grateful to God for two wonderful daughters and we will be altogether again praying for everyone everyday God bless you all.
✝️
Dont really do praying as I dont see the point. But sending you wishes.
You and your family are in my prayers. Can't imagine what your all going through. May God give you his comfort and Strength to carry you through.
May the peace and love of God comfort you in your time of loss
Peace, love and blessings to you
@@jamesknitworth5591 , both of the daughters are dead. Nobody is sick. Did you bother reading the post?
The acting, especially by the "creepy guy standing at the gate that looks like the Canadian Pepper guy," was pretty funny.
Very well done! CP, your gift of humor is definitely underutilized.
@@garycoloradosprings3947 - Absolutely! It certainly put a smile on my face. Love the guy!!!
What's he look like.
He's built and looks healthy.
@@kennethhoppe2259 and some women appreciate a fine specimen of man hood...😍 even in our 60's.
HERE is Our Savior
YaH The Heavenly FATHER HIMSELF was Who they Crucified for our sins, NOT jesus, and “HERE IS THE PROOF”
From the Ancient Semitic Scroll:
"Yad He Vav He" is what Moses wrote, when Moses asked YaH His Name (Exodus 3)
Ancient Semitic Direct Translation
Yad - "Behold The Hand"
He - "Behold the Breath"
Vav - "Behold The NAIL"
The one thing I would suggest, are range markers. Maybe just a stake with some colored tape at the end, but then you can tell how far out an object is quickly. Every 100 meters put just a single pole down, that way there is no 'guestimating range.' Instead it's "yeah they're next to the yellow pole, they're 300 meters out." or they're "halfway between the Yellow and Blue pole, so they're 250 meters out." So, even if they DO make it past your fence, you know how far away they are. You can also make one tall-ish enough to put some fabric, or maybe flags on them to see wind direction. Now you have range, wind direction, and an open field.
Maybe also a tower, yeah I'd also build a tower. Or maybe just get a giant tree imported into your yard, and put a treehouse/stand in there, have the inside walls of the treehouse be lined with dirtbags, (like sandbags, but dirt.) binoculars, water, and food. Now when it really hits the fan you've got a HIGH position, over an open field, with range markers. If you wanted to, you could get solar running, put a nice radio up there, with a beefy antenna.
A giant tree ? " And Santa I want a shinny red rocket ship" the rest is good tactical advice
@@jerryrothenberger9071
Yes, "a giant tree" as in something-big-enough-to-support-an-observation-post.
Those of us in the southwest immediately know he isn't talking about a skinny palm tree or a Palo Verde.
bird houses on tall pole as marker (different colored bird houses) and the tower could possibly be a hunter's tree stand. the problem with the latter is that it can be used against you if it is too far from the house. I had a neighbor use mine to look into my windows.
When using Talkies
I would suggest toggling off the “bloop” send tone feature so that one can remain in quiet mode without emitting a tone every time you lift your finger off the send button, this will help to preserve whatever stealth one can, both for the sender AND recipient.
Good point.
Also most frs have a ear bud socket [3.5mm] where you can use a ear bud and hear w/out using the speaker and being LOUD..
@@lukequigley121 good point!
It'll still make a buzz sound and I'll hear that
Been doing that for deer hunting for years
After “threat neutralized” the next words should be “let’s get his vehicle inside to see what the visitor just donated to our community”.
That's a Trojan Tundra, and you just drove it in bud.
No Trespassing, We SEE YOU ! Thanks for all your stuff .
if you have enough people to do that, large camps will draw attention....
watch the movie „Rover“
😅
Good call on using non-internet cameras.
So many people assume that "Internet" is some kind of natural resource that flows like water.
@Canadian Prepper, I noticed the top gate hinge is facing upward. I always put the top hinge pivot facing down so the gate can't be lifted off the hinges.
How do u think you will hang a gate if the hangers face each other?
@@ronskancke1489 generally the top hinge is secured with a bolt. Face your top hinge pin down, loosen the gate hinge and slide it to where you need it. We started doing this years ago after we had cattle lift the gate off the hinges.
Smart
Excellent point !!
The bottom is facing downward so the top can be upward without being lifted. Our cows never lifted the gates with opposing facing hinges.
Great video. My buddy has a sign that says “if you can read this, you’re in range” at the end of his driveway. Always caught my attention.
I have 10 acres. I have lived on it for 30 years. At first I would see hunters on my property during deer and turkey season. I had 3 kids then and was afraid one may get shot from a stray bullet or arrow. I put up the private property keep out signs. They did no good, and they were well posted. So I had signs made saying " PRIVATE PROPERTY, KEEP OUT VIOLATORS MAY BE MET WITH DEADLY FORCE " For the past 20 years, no one has come on my property. BTW. I live in the south and us country boys don't take no shit. Lol
I live on 11 acres and I have never had problems with anything besides wandering cattle living in an open range state. Had to put up fences and shoot them with a kid's BB gun. They don't like the sting. But I never worry about mobsters or hoarders. I don't see the concern. I'm not into conspiracies anymore.
@@PatrickThreewit It's not about "conspiracies". It's just about being prepared. It's fantastic if things don't devolve into a chaotic mess. It's perfect if society continues to function and carries on the way it's intended - but in the event it doesn't a small amount of preparedness could be the difference between you being a victim and/or statistic. I'm a disabled combat veteran from the US and let me be the first to tell you that I've visited plenty of places where their denizens thought exactly the way you do now, only to learn the hard way they were wrong about "not seeing the concern".
@@PatrickThreewit Just because you have never had a problem when the world was functional does NOT mean that you won't have problems if that changes. People don't wear seatbelts because they think they are going to be in a car accident that trip, they wear them as a safety net in case you happen to be part of that 0.001% that wrecks that day. The issue isn't that something seems likely, it's that IF it all goes wrong then you don't want to find yourself screwed because of poor planning, laziness, or complacency that "nothing bad is going to happen". Considering the history of humanity and the current direction things are going, it seems quite prudent to be prepared for a day that you are ENTIRELY on your own. Sure, it might all be a "waste" of time, but so is wearing your seatbelt almost every single time...but we don't argue against that.
It just depends on if you want to be prepared for someone showing up to murder you and take all your stuff, or do you want to bet your life (and possibly all of those around you) that it will 100% NEVER happen to you. It might be easy to dismiss a few "conspiracies" as being extremely unlikely (say zombie apocalypse) but there are literally millions of scenarios in which you find yourself in a similar situation. WW3, zombie apocalypse, massive solar storm fries all electronics on Earth, natural event that causes chaos in your local area (or state or country), riots, civil war we could go on and on about situations in which THIS stuff could be the difference between being alive at the end of it, or you checking out on day 1 from being murdered (or day 3 from no water). Since all of these require the same basic setup and supplies then it seems far smarter, in my opinion, to just prepare yourself and be covered from ANY of them. If you are just focused on "conspiracies" then you are failing to acknowledge ALL of the other ways disaster can strike, and there are far far far more of those.
Would you shot someone that like enters your driveway or ranch entrance by mistake, or someone just wondering for unknow reasons on foot?
You know like that guy that killed that teen girl becauae they had the wrong adress
Just wonder if you will love to kill the bastards, you know, finally use that gun, or if you would call the cops, or keep an eye open and see what is going on, etc.
Anyone else just get a huge lift when a new Canadian Prepper vid drops? Love it!!
No, I that suprised look when he pulled his hand off the hot pipe on the gate.
I'm addicted. Have to check every day for one
And then a drop when he says "the world is ending"
As a special forces soldier and tactician i am telling you the place is completely open :
Doesn't matter if he have wire the entire fence with alert system if they come in numbers from all directions the family will be trapped cornered and outgunned, the marauders will come like a Wolfe pack testing or hitting all at once.
They can ram fast the main gate and rush inside with a large vehicle that may also be an army vehicle or a construction vehicle smoke grenade recipe is easy to craft.
If they try to get inside there gonna be a battle, bullets will fly all over the place also you will never know what weapons they may have, or they may spy on the ranch for days looking your movements an try to take you out one at a time, If society collapse even the Neighbors are the number one threat.
So true! It’s over! All that’s left is the blaze of glory!
@@LKaramazov yep last stand
So what’s the solution?
@@patriotgirlprepper8883 moat and alligators
I'll bet you're fun at parties.
For anyone thinking about natural barriers using trees: The Osage Orange tree is a good option for this that I rarely hear mentioned. It is easy to "train" into a weaved barrier, grows fairly quickly, hardy once it gets going, and it has long spines/spikes on it's branches. This can create a very tight barrier of spikes to keep pretty much anything out (or in). The tree (also sometimes called a shrub) does grow some fruit (kind of grapefruit sized) that is inedible and can make a mess... so if looks are a primary concern then you might find the fruit all over the ground to be unsightly. If not, then there are no other plants I know of that can create a barrier as hard to get through as a tight Osage Orange tree line. Also of note is that once they start making fruit, it can spread fairly easily. Fast forward 15 years and you could find you need to put some effort into cleaning up the fruit or cutting the tree line back.
Depending on the size of the area you are protecting, you can go all out or take the "easy" route. The tree can be topped and the branches weaved together over time to make it nearly impossible to get through, but this will take quite a lot of work if you have a huge plot of land you are protecting. Often times people just plant them close together and that is still enough to prevent any movement (remember, 2 inch spikes covering everything). If you wanted to go above and beyond though, weaving the branches into a wall of spikes will all but guarantee nothing makes it through, no matter how motivated it is.
The wood itself is also extremely durable and has the flexibility to bend without breaking. This makes it good for use as a timber supply (it is the goto wood for things that sit outside for decades like railroad ties and fence posts because it doesn't rot and insects ignore it...even termites) and if this is up your ally, it is considered the best wood to use for making bows, which is how it got it's original name (Bow wood). Though it is pretty rare to be able to get long straight cuts out of it unless it grows naturally and with plenty of room... not exactly what we are looking for in a barrier though. It's wood is also so dense that it is the second best firewood as far as heat output. Only Eucalyptus is higher, and it is tied with Almond. It burns so hot that it is recommended to not use it in wood stoves, so keep that in mind. It is better to think of it more like coal as far as heat output goes. It is also so dense that it takes a lot more effort to harvest and is much harder on your tools than "regular" wood. Pros and cons to everything I guess.
Our horses used to love eating the Osage orange fruit.
@@kokonanana1 Very interesting, thanks. I know many animals avoid the fruit, but have never heard anything about horses. I will have to keep that in mind. Thanks again.
The fruit is edible by cattle and horses. It must collected though and cut up. Most animals will choke on it. Also, there is a way for humans to use as medicine. UA-cam has videos by herbalist.
If anyone has these trees collect the fruits and put in a line where you want your fence to be.
Osage Orange is the species name but it is commonly called a hedge tree here in Missouri. There is no better wood to use for posts, especially large corner posts. I don’t know of anyone that uses it as firewood since it burns so hot that it would melt the side out of most wood stoves and then catch the house on fire.
I knew everything except it's resistance to rot. Very interesting, and great suggestion
The only thing missing are a windsock and 600m, 500m, 400m 300m range signs along your road to the house with a few used up steel targets visible from it.
Nice, will do!
Yes!
And a few illumination flares…
This I like. Subtle yet effective
@@titaniummaster1532 You can’t go overboard. Illuminating the area will be a welcome beacon to everyone. That would make more and more come to you and they will be in larger numbers and prepared. You’re saying stay away from my stuff which is really saying we got stuff.
@@AreU4Real1 that makes sense
Military tactics come in real useful when it comes to home defense. Creating a bottleneck/lobby using psychology is a good strategy. Great episode
Yeah, if someone is going to attack, you want to direct them into a "fatal funnel".
@@jtp6428 yup . That's why in the battle of fallejua(sp?) the urban city environment going from door to door was so brutal and time consuming
Only useful when no EMP or Nuke war.
@@virgilwalker683
I think a nuke war will make it worse, because so much of the supplies and soil will be tainted for such a long time, especially in places where there's minimal rainfall to push the fallout underground.
There may be quite a lot of people who survive the fallout, and they'll be dangerously hungry. The ones with cancer might even be more dangerous, because they'll have much less to lose.
@@jtp6428 on a multi hectare property? That’s a lot of territory to engineer for defence
One of My favorite No Trespassing Signs I think of all time- "You are no longer Trespassing, You are now a Target" lol 👍🤠
My favorite was a, "No Trespassing," sign with another next to it. "This is to alert you that you are well within the range of the weapons that I use to protect my home and family."
Hahaha hahaha - agreed!
Here in Wrong Turn, WV our fences are to keep you in, not out. So in SHTF, y’all be sure to come give us a visit, ya hear? We’ll leave the light on for ya.
Born and raised in Hanging Rock holler in Salem, VA right across the line from you. 😊 Now I live in Alaska…which is kinda like Appalachia if everyone came down out of the hollers except we have grizzly bears and the mountains here ain’t right. The wind doesn’t blow. I know it’s hot there right now but I tell ya, when you can’t hear the crickets and the wind doesn’t blow…it’s not home.
Mama got 26 different recipes for uninvited guests.
She got one fer General Tso’s Trespasser….
…one fer Bourbon Street Trespasser,
…we got Sweet & Sour Trespasser,
…Trespasser Cordon Bleu,
And you ain’t lived until you’ve had her trespasser, ramps, and taters.
Now mama, …she went and ordered one of them new InstaPots and an air fryer. You ain’t never seen a UPS truck drive away as fast as ours does!
@@salonofleaves My father used to live in Alaska. I thought about it myself in my 30s. I’m pushing 50 now and getting closer to a condo in Florida than a cabin in Alaska. But in my heart, I’m 25, and Alaska sounds real nice.
@@JamieHitt How about Trespasser Tartare? Bet the dogs would love it.
The psychological aspect is so important. No defense will stand up to a determined, informed, and resourceful attack. Detering attack is invaluable.
It's called a threshold. At a house, that threshold is above the front door. It marks the demarcation line that police are not allowed to cross without a warrant. A man's home is his castle and his castle is his home. Here in the video that long log at the top of the gate serves as the threshold because it is combined with the signage.
Legal Precent and statue pls!
I did not know that? !!
Don’t even rely on the government, because you’ll be completely disappointed
"rely on the government"? ....best laugh I had this lifetime - not at you, but Them...
Aren’t we already?
I can see it coming down the line, soon they’ll be handing out food to those in bread lines who can’t afford food. Would I eat it? No way. Because I don’t trust the government not to poison food and water.
This is a huge reason why I try to stay ahead of that storm.
From clothing to cloth, from flour to bread, from seed to dinner, I’ll do it on my own.
We are our only first responders and security..
They're much more likely to hurt you than help you.
I can understand the issue with sharing your secrets, however, I really appreciate your willingness to do so. I'm learning alot of useful information from this video as I'm sure many within this community will.
Nate, the intro is gold 🤣👌
It's a true saying. "Knowledge is power." ✌️🙏
People are more likely to hit a soft or unprotected target. If they know its protected they will be less likely. And dont give me the 2000 zombie situation. If you have 2000 zombies coming it wouldnt matter. And big brother already knows to the pea what you have.
The intro was fantastic. That kind of intro is what keeps me coming back for more!
@@Teknofobe Here's my fav quote over 5 decades: Condemnation without investigation is a bar to all knowlwdge" Herbert Shelton in his forward for Food Combining Made Easy.
@@maxhames499 nates part of " big brother".....all responses get tagged and I'm sure he's in on it. That being said , talking about peas, they also have tech way beyond our imagination that will make our pea shooters shit.
65,000 acres in new Mexico. Been in the family sense 1855. A lot of bodies been buried out there. None in the last 75 yrs.
Blessed are they that mourn for they shall be comforted praise God praying for everyone everyday God bless you all
Remember:
The closest threat isnt purgers, rioters and bandits; it is government bureaucracy who want you defenseless and reliant on them.
MERRICA!!!!!!!🏴☠
I would dig a trench Ard. The area and put logs in upright close together plus fencing, a lot of work but with fortify it? That's if you can find a digger? Just a thought. And that beam over the main gate. Hanging stuffed like scarecrows.
The Government bureaucracy coming! The Government bureaucracy coming! The Government bureaucracy coming! lol PPPHHHHFFFFFFFFFFFFFTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT!!! Paranoid much?
@@billpii6314You will be the first one put in The Gulag. It's already started and you're obviously a boot kisser. 🥾
@@billpii6314 your wife has a boyfriend 😅
I absolutely died when the little girl said “threat neutralized”🤣
Absolutely golden
My great grandpa had a steel cable in his cattle guard that ran up the property to a big bell. Driving over the cable pulled it slightly and rang the bell near the house.
Better to spend $50,000 on an electronic system that can be easily hacked/co-opted by the government. [sarcasm]
Are all preppers more interested in looking belligerent than getting the job done?
@@jwrosenbury Not all of us.
Now that's smart!
My favorite no trespassing sign said in large letters: "WARNING! SNIPERS!"; and in smaller print underneath the large print "If you are reading this, we already have you in out sights"
Where can I get that sign? C Lentz.
@@connielentz9191 The last time I saw one was at a gun show in Houston, Texas about 10 years ago...I'm sorry but I don't remember what company had that booth
Mine says WARNING NO TRESSPASSING, under it says YOU ARE IN RANGE. Another one says please carry id so we can notify relatives.
These types of signs are not a good idea. Should you ever legitimately need to defend yourself, and are "successful" these types of signs can show premeditated intent in a court of law, even if you really were legitimately defending yourself and under threat. Posting a sign like this can take you from lawful self-defense to premeditated murder.
"No trespassing, no soliciting, no exceptions" is actually a better alternative.
Thanks for the advice
Situational awareness and tactical thought processes will keep you alive in most situations
One thing I've noticed at least in my area with the help of Facebook crime pages is criminals tend to climb down hills before climbing up to steal stuff. I believe with their elevation looking down to scope out an area makes them feel more secure with what they're about to do. If they have to climb up they really don't know what's on the property so they tend to ignore the place.
The new Zealand Maori would build their villages traditionally on Pa (mountain tops) sites, so they could see any potential enemies coming toward the. Plus, it would tire out them before they even reach the top. They built the villages at the peak, while the descending slopes would be constructed in a step formation about the half the height of the average human. Climbing one of these steps a very exhausting feat. Let alone five of them. It made protecting the villages so much easier. As you could see 360 degrees in any direction.
Peoples Natural tendency is to go downhill, to the right, and follow lines of drift.
+2 for combat advantage!
If you want to know about perimiter security, come do a few episodes in South Africa... Protecting against farm attacks and house invasions are part of daily life for the average joe.
One time, I was about 16, and me and my entire family were going out to dinner, but at the last moment I had this epiphany if they all go out I have the house to myself, so I bailed on them in favor of a peaceful night at home. Make some popcorn watch some movies, but maybe 45 minutes after they all leave I hear a noise coming from the back bedroom. This room had a rear facing window onto an outside deck. Now because our house was haunted I initially thought it was a ghost or some paranormal activity but I grabbed my shotgun just the same, and walked down the hall to check it out. When I get to the bedroom I flick on the light, and there prying open the window was a person dressed totally in black with a black ski mask, the classic cat burglar look, they almost looked corny or theatrical even. When he saw the light turn on and subsequently me standing there with a shotgun pointed at his face he spooked, and ill never forget how he quickly scurried away, all hunched over, and crab like across the deck disappearing into the night. Cops came and of course did nothing. My feeling was it had to be an inside job because they had to know noone would be at home but since I changed my mind at the last minute I unwittingly foiled their plans. So glad I didn't have to blow their head off can you imagine the mess and the clean up ... haha 😀
@@beni_oji7536 that's interesting you say that I did have that very thought at the time, go outside and fire a round off but he was gone so fast I wound up just calling the cops instead.
@@sniffableandirresistble oh yeah invite the real thieves over to poke around 😂. Or maybe this was before they became an organization of road pirates
LMAO classic useless detectives.
Pays to listen to those lill thoughts sometimes
And another ghost sneaking around in the shadows 😅😂
the best sign I've seen was "trespassers will be shot survivors will be shot again" lol
You'll get your ass handed to you in Court though , should you ever have to follow through .
Shows intent .
I seen my favourite on ruet 66 in texas. Nothing here worth dieing for 😂
We just started locking our doors (sometimes) and bringing the keys in out of the vehicles so it’s hard to imagine how tough it would be for our small town of about 2,000. Most of our theft crimes have been out of towners.
They started coming out to our farms about 3 or 4 yrs ago from Chicago and the small 3rd world areas around it. We had to start leaving someone around to watch. It's already here guys.
I hear you. We didn't lock our cabin nor take the keys out of the cars for 31 years... Now that we've moved to the condos (temporarily while we build) we are locking the cars and the condos at night. Our condos are in a rural area ..
Its soooo weird to lock the doors. I now lock the car as well. We have people now poking around properties I've heard and seen vids.
I really don't feel sorry about those who do stupid things and get shot
@@debbieolin8153 if they read that and live by you...stupid will think twice.
Fences, gates, towers, lights, guards, and lookouts. The earlier you detect a possible threat the faster you can determine how to deal with it.
Bear traps... Bamboo whips.. Punji Sticks traps...trigger traps.. snake pits.. alligators... piranhas.. dogs... around the perimeter...
Dog.
@@cmtbizinc No traps until full collapse: you can be put in jail in a city for “traps”
@C NB and super soakers filled with holy water. Good for vampires as well as witches.
@@redfishtex738 As well as DEMOCRATS!
Those thorns reminded me of why Scotland’s flower is the thistle… Marauders attacked some Scot’s from sea by night, and in the dark they ran towards the homes of the Scot’s but hit fields of thistles… The men cried out in pain, alerted Sentries and the Scot’s came out & (in my best Scot’s voice) “gave them a doing!”
That’s the story anyhoo… probably a legend, but nonetheless a good one…
Grandma's family lineage in Scotland had a thistle on their family crest shield. I inherited my stubbornness. 😂
My uncle had a pad lock on the gate of his fence it did not lock the gate but was near where the lock is. He said that people see the lock and just assume the gate was locked. For years I saw that lock and just figured that it was locked.
I've done this lots of times with various things.
I've also guessed lock passcodes at my workplaces because people often use predictable codes such as Current year, or their birth year 😂🔓
That’s a fact I use it all the time
My dad called that dummy locking. It keeps the dummies out.
@@paladin556 well now that the information is more public, I'm guessing more marauders will bypass your thinking & get INSIDE! Rethink your security!
We had no security back in the 70's. When times got tough , we woke up one morning to a dead cow in the field. People came in and killed it during the night and left the front half of the cow, took the part they wanted. Sad, because we were a small family farm with just 50 cows. I think it is going to be worse than that soon.
I’ve heard stories of this from my husbands co worker who’s family owns a ranch here locally. Pretty scary stuff
3 years in a row we had cows get shot at night from the road on the opening night of deer season. I've always assumed it was retards from nyc.
They do that because they know you can't stop them. What if it were legal for you to shoot them on sight? Do you think they would be so brazen? Would you not stay up and try to guard your herd?
@A R ya I'd stuff security down their throats till they chocked on it, lol. Hell ain't that what neighbors do 🤔🤪🤣
When times got tough....back in the 70's...what in the hell are you talking about. People were killing ur cows cause they were starving....justvsounds like theft not the end of times you hayseed.
Lol. I’ve been saying for decades. If you want security. Make your stuff more of a hassle to steal than your neighbors.
Those who can't take these measures... remember....there's A LOT to be said about preparedness w/in your means, the element of surprise and creativity! Brains can beat bullies!
Real talk.
Take a page from the Vietcong. They were completely poor and limited resources but they made excellent traps, and warning systems.
@@strtkempo agreed. We are not only looking at unwashed hordes, but we may be fighting professional foreign military!
It’s definitely going to be an asymmetrical war!
@@strtkempo they also didn’t mind digging human sized ant colonies, creating an American military proof fortress underground
And then catching poisonous animals and venomous snakes to use as cheap but effective fortifications
@@strtkempo the tunnel rats of our army didn’t stand a chance
If you have a protected area, there are Three (3) things that have to be established. Detection, Assessment, and Response.
That beam would be the equivalent of the message board for anyone up to no good. The crows gotta eat too
If you see large spruce trees on a prairie, you know a home is there cause someone planted them for wind protection
"Looks like meat's back on the menu, boys!" LOTR orc voice. That would have been a good laugh had they said that after the creep guy was dispatched. Good video, hopefully lots of people will benefit from watching this.
15:30 Another good sign: "IF YOU CAN READ THIS, WE ALREADY KNOW YOU ARE HERE"
A great addition to defend your gate, A cattle guard with a deeper and wider channel with the ability to raise the guard to block the gate.
And a suggestion for a sign: Attention Looters
Sniper on Duty
A couple things to round out his setup.
1-Motion triggered flood lights are a huge deterrent and ruin night vision .
2-Hang a wind flag or sock at fence, with sign that says, " IF YOU CAN READ THIS YOU ARE IN RANGE". Anyone who shoots long range will understand the wind sock for wind calls.
3-Sign that says, "DANGER, LIVE FIRE RANGE IN USE."
4-Sign that shows German Shepherd on duty.
5-Pull up the cattle guard for moat obstacle.
6-Electrify the fence.
Excellent video as always!
I appreciate the gate sensor, although most SHTF situations are going to be parameter penetration as opposed to using the drive. That being said, a good dog, or several, are the best alarm system for a farm.
Several well-trained dogs actually
I’ve found my English mastiffs to be the best alarm, deterrent and resolution. I prefer 3-4 mastiffs with a miniature dog like a doxie. You don’t really think you need to wind up the big dogs until you get the tiny yapper but the difference is nite and day. I’ve never found a group of ppl that want to face even one 200+ lb mastiff much less 3-4 of them. They really do defend and fight as a team with protecting their humans always their primary goal. They don’t eat as much as most ppl think because they aren’t as active as most other guard dogs. They are more of a don’t make me get up than just let me eat you now. Almost all of mine are more of a let me knock you down and stomp you to dust but they do have teeth and will bite. Not that all puppies don’t need lots of training but they do train the younger ones within the herd.
@@denisekoltys3019 met an english mastiff once.
@@rockjockchick I’ve had them for 30+ yrs. They are way cool. Can be stubborn until you learn to lure them not drag them lol. Very furry and drool lol 🐕
best eyes on your farm is a dog. My Kangal is big, she has insanely good eyesight, she is explosively fast, and a bite force that tops all canines. then there’s the model 94 30.30 winchester. proven show stopper. Oh, the horse will run you off, too
Nate’s neutralized ! Great opening ❤️
There is a metal sign out there , stating " if you can read this .,.. your in range " I always got a kick out of that one , and the one I have on my bathroom door is " wash balls here "
The Green outside the Fence is Good for no Look at the Ranche.
But you can get in with a Garden Sisslore.
And you can’t be seen from Inside, when you laying in this, with a Gun.
And when you go on the Fence, you Walk on an Open ground. A mat on your Fence is Good, to no Locking into.
Normaly, you should have a clear Zone bevor your Fence.
Greetings from Germany, and sorry for my Bad English.
Get bear Mase, when groups rather small or large come in your area you can stay well hidden and release it in the air quietly and make the crowd disperse without a single shot... Trust me, my security guy clears entire clubs with just 3 quick squirts aimed at the ground
Hornet spray.
Great idea. TY. Just got wrist rockets.
@@AJohnSmith
Useless against humans.
@@joyful_tanya What is a wrist rocket? TY
@@queserasera1674 it's a slingshot with a wrist stabilizer. That's what we called them in the '70s.
Nate, throwing your weapons over the gate before you discovered that you couldn't get over it yourself was a bad move.
1:25 When the fresh meat comes to you.
Warning: Canadian at the gates! Set the Poutine Trap and watch him fall straight in!
😂🤣 activate the timbits tiger pit!
😂😂
I love how the guy tries to come off as a tough military type, then at 14:30 the most mellow pampered dog in the world shows up as if to say, "Don't be fooled. He's a total softie. I've got him totally wrapped."
Private property signs in the US are lawfully protected. Your rights are established much more than if they were never their. It is a contractual agreement that goes with signs. Contracts are law, courts operate on contracts.
One good trick is to use dogs. Trained dogs to bark when there is a stranger only is gold, in a situation like that. Dog bark can be heard from a pretty log distance, and if you are not use to hear your dogs bark it will instantly trigger your alert response.
Absolutely, dogs are a fantastic protection measure. You also have to train them to not eat any food except what you give them, because where I'm from, the dogs are killed with poisoned meat before the attack.
I live a Sanctuary state, I have to be more imaginative in my security. Fences and sighs are useless here. Cameras powered by solar, motion lights and sensors are a necessity. Dogs trained to be silent at all times. Love your lands. Great video. Stay safe and strong 💪. 🙏💪God family and country ❤
Let me guess a sanctuary for people not even supposed to be there but not a sanctuary for your Godgiven Rights!
Sounds like you and John have it figured out pretty well 💪💪
@@freedomfighter1861 👏👍🙏💪100 % right. Good luck 👍
@@gogogo1064 always learning 👏👍🙏💪 good luck to you and yours
My dogs don't stay silent.heey definitely are alarms!
This defense system may work well for 1 or 2 intruders . What happens when 5 or 6 trucks show up carrying 20 men that are determined to take what you have ? Eventually the people in the urban areas will become desperate enough to search the country / rural lands for what they need to survive. Not sure gates and thorns are enough of a barrier to stop them. Hopefully you will have enough lead and a bug out gear in place as a back up plan. Mobility may become essential for survival. Hard decisions will have to be made. Good luck my Canadian Brothers!
Any group of people entering an area without up to date intelligence will always be at an operational, physical, and psychological disadvantage. A smart group will divide and probe before committing large groups of people with experience or vehicles with tools. Aun inexperienced group will wander aimlessly into our defensive area with no plans on what to do.
The open area between the inner perimeter and the outer perimeter allows the use of many types of tricks and traps deigned to slow, injure, and stop activity between the two perimeters. When used well, people and vehicles can be deterred away long before they reach the inner perimeter. When not deterred to abandon their intrusion, intruding people and vehicles can de slowed, stopped, or grouped tougher which makes addressing, incapacitating, capturing, or eliminating them easy and effective. This defense can be conducted economically and efficiently with a combination of accurate long range weapons fire in combination with spring traps, wire traps, fire traps, chemical traps, natural gases, biological material, and animals. The tricks and traps can be rearranged to throw off re-entry of the same intruders and to keep people from figuring out weaknesses to exploit.
The use of countersniping and counterintelligence will be crucial in maintaining your operational security and personnel security. This prevents someone someone outside your outer perimeter to conduct long term surveillance on your location to dissect for weaknesses.
If you can capture an intruder to interrogate, capture their equipment for parts, or capture their resources for supply, you’ll know much more about whom and what you’re dealing with outside your outer perimeter. You’ll also get an idea of what it’s like outside your outer perimeter. That information will allow you to know better about how long you can stay at your location and where you may be able to go if you must vacate the area.
Leaving your prepared location can put you at a severe disadvantage because your perimeter becomes much smaller, tighter, almost non-existent. You become the intruder entering unknown areas with little to no information and virtually no way to prepare for what may be there. Your disadvantage in traveling becomes more severe when you don’t know where you’re going, when you don't know if your destination is viable, and if you don't know how you can get there with no serious issues. When moving from one known safe place to another location of unknown status, you must be prepared to face opposition and be attacked all along your route. You just be prepared to alter course into unknown territory perhaps needing to abandon your transportation which will be holding much of your supplies. You must be prepared to be trapped, captured, separated, and worse.
These millions of people coming from cities...are they marching in rank to each individual farm? No. They are going to spread out. Gas will run out, cars stuck in traffic for miles, and if there was enough time and means of communication to gather an attacking force...theres enough time and means of communication to gather a defending force.
Granted the farms immediately next to the city are screwed. But as you disperse it only evens out the number advantage. Not to mention they will be exposed to the elements , get sick, injured etc.
@@spencervance8484 The "Far Out": crowd will be the first to suffer when the fuel trucks stop delivering..
Bugging out to nowhere will never be an option, for anyone. Unless theyre suicidal i guess. If you leave a place that is defensible, has food and water supplies and your stockpile of medicine, youll be dead inside a year.
Keep stocking ammo and food. Miniature goats, chickens, and bunnies Make your circle stronger, and be selective. Have multiple bugout locations. Help the orphans, widows, sick, prisoners, and homeless. Save a little time for some fun and above all Thank God!!👐
This is should be the essence of this video period.
Wow we get it someone watches this utoube channel but it’s kinda gross swinging from the guys nuts so much don’t ya think.
I’m all for helping people, but prisoners??? Wth
@Lalo Gallegos it's a Jesus Christ thing...I understand it is not for everyone.
@@Tutiwashername It's a Jesus Christ thing. I understand it is not for everyone.
Love these Nate! And the intro was epic! One thing which may be great to also cover are those “click baits” what I mean is; let’s say we’re already there……. Suddenly a mom and small child come stumbling onto your property crying for help; you let your guard down long enough to go get them etc and boom ambushed. I know it seems crazy …. But honestly it’s another valid point we have to keep in mind. Much love y’all…. Everyone keep praying and prepping. 💗✝️💗
check your local laws, booby trapping your property is more then likely illegal until shtf
Just remember that if you loose power or Wi-Fi, a lot of these high tech gadgets don’t work…
They more than likely have at least one method of back up power to ensure their security measures are always active
I worry about emp attacks these won’t work in those
Ring is totally worthless without an active internet connection as well.
A nice road and a fancy gate suggest a nice house beyond, even if it can't be seen from the gate...
All of which would burn very nicely in the fall!
I, myself own a 110 acra farm I've never had any problems here. the, main thing it's a big blessing that most of my neighbors are law enforcement neighbors. we, all watch each others place. / thank, you for you're video.
I've considered piping propane from a large propane tank to the back of obvious hides, behind large boulders,paths of approach, etc with control of flow and ignition remotely controlled. Woe be unto whoever takes shelter behind them.
That shot at the end of the first minute: definitely thug life.
🤣👍😁
well...he is half black...or arab
This is great for civilian-man; I just saw a recent movie about the end of the world where two soldiers enter and complex similar to this and they question the residents about supplies while alluding to an approaching convoy that is "interested" in "using" this location ??? Can't stop military. I believe this occurred during the American Civil War where troops would just take over plantations for military use. This video covers important topics for interested viewers. Thumbs up.
In the midwest, MANY farms are bordered by Osage Orange/Hedgeapple trees. They have thorns up to 4" + and are very "angry trees"
Saw these in NW AR. Vicious stuff. Can make marmalade from the oranges, if you dare.😅
The wood burns very hot. High grade firewood…
@nexus169 and is now highly susceptible to fire blight in the Southern US.
honey locust is the way to go. they have thorns that will puncture a tractor tire. they also grow fast and make some of the best firewood known to man.
Up in Maine old properties have hawthorn trees at the perimeter. Brutal to try to get through.
Remember that in Rhodesia, fenced in farm yards proved to be as much of a liability as a protection. Ambushes at the gates, no easy escape,...
Good point, it's a trade off. Always wanted an escape tunnel.
Be a very proud Rhodesian, you guys were the bestest, staunchest military in history !!!, also Im a great x5 nephew of Cecil Rhodes :)
There were little to none, CCTV systems back in the day. Today, you can be damn far from home, and still be watching it via cameras through Internet... Of course, assuming you got both electricity and Internet connection, something you'd probably lose if things go waaay south. Anyway, it's true that the hardest part is not keeping the bad guys at bay, but trying to not get catched by surprised whether you are going out or coming back.
Right, and the treeline also provides a sniping point inwards. This is why you NEED thermal optics. If you have that, anyone trying to hide out there is toast.
@@WardenWolf Why be concerned about that. Most bad deeds are done at night. If someone through a Molotov cocktail through a window and it started a fire inside your home, what would you do? What would most people do. Snipers? A person can be 50--100 years from your residence and just shoot into your home. Sheetrock doesn't even stop rimfires. It may hit a stud and stop they are 16--24 inches apart and for sure a .308 can cause real havoc on you inside your home.
The. Crossbar is for hanging trespassers as a deterrent to trespassers
These were some good ideas! I have a friend who lives along the US southern border. They have a big property, as the family has been there many generations. He was doing a yearly roam around and found a big hole under the fence, but bigger than a coyote would dig. He put up a trail cam. He realized that these were illegals. Their property is probably the first water source after they cross. They reported it to the border patrol. But nothing really came of it. So they put some water a mile away from the fence, along with some cans of beans and tortillas So it's a thought to maybe leave water and apples, nuts, carrots, whatever you grow out at the main road. If all they need is food, they will get it and go on their way. So just another distraction. If they still come down the road to your property, then you will know for sure likely they are "bad ombres".
Tortillas 🤣🤣
@@Kaiyats That's what people will eat, and it has a long shelf life sitting out in the very hot sun. Better than crackers or bread. People will take 1 or 2 bags of those and and the same amount of beans. Even the "desperados" have some civility to leave some for the next person. Hopefully that's the way things go in SHTF.
@@samathastevens5831 and wildlife are not known to carry can openers so it won’t get picked up by them.
@@SniperLogic pull top cans.
I'm at the Nogales border. Ranch is about 30 acres. Been here 12 years and you're right, Samantha. Leaving water and a bag of something stops most of the traffic. And yes, tortillas will keep. We've left beanie weenies with pull top cans and apples. BP is busy and can't stop all of it.
“Threat nuetralized” love it! Looks like the caliber was Blackout!
LOL-I ride my bicycle at least 6,000 miles a year and the amount of change on the ground or road or sidewalk is really impressive. I’m pretty sure people just throw it away and no one else picks it up. The truly sad thing is the number of syringes in evidence.
Yep... already getting my *things* taken care of.
Some been done, as far back, as a few years ago. 😉 I see he is using what I call, the 4-D's
"Distance, Distraction, Difficulty & Destruction."
The clearing between the hard spot and the security perimeter is called the “drop zone”.
I used to live in a brick house with fences and hedges and guard dogs. It was on a dead end road so nothing worked.If you or some family member can't stay home all the time...I just put my valuables in a storage facility.
Trees can be very useful around the house you can use fishing line with mouse traps with Light sticks that are hot glued on them once dawn them when somebody trips over A-line the mouse trap breaks the light stick and you can see where they're at as well as I have motion centered solar powerSpotlights around my property... Just a thought to share
Excellent Information. I like every one of his safety decisions. Thank him for sharing his information with us. He looked like he didn't want to give away to much of his work, but wanted to help others be secure.
If you're going to do a security system then install a CCTV system. Those Ring cameras send data to people who shouldn't have access to it.
This video was just in time; I am about to get to work on my perimeter security and these hints were very helpful. Thanks guys!
Today I'm working on defending my garden against tiny raptors. 🤣
Great ideas! We are on 35 acres with a 700' driveway. Our driveway alarm from Tractor Supply works well. I will eventually build the gate, and use the natural features to limit access.
Also, hanging a "battle axe" of sorts above the gate, maybe one cut out of 1/2 inch steel plate, will definitely be an eye opener.
I really like your explanation of fort Knox.
At the shop I work at we have the entire yard fenced in and about 3/4 of that fence has arborvitaes running along it. After getting broken into 3 times in a year the cops actually told us the arbs, although nice for privacy, allow the bad guys a place to hide once inside and should be taken down.
Regarding the gate psychology, I have heard of someone blocking people from their homes in a cul-de-sac with a single road cone. People didn't want to drive around it to get to their driveway. Not effective for more serious situations but goes to show how people's brains work.
To be honest the difference between a mouse trap and a man trap is the amount of tannerite involved and one's boldness in their crafting skills. (Figuring ways to limit access to an area if all else goes wrong can be surprisingly low-tech.)
Very interesting video about the psychology behind different measures. I'd never really thought about that.
Having trees around your house might make your house more exposed.... But those trees provide shade and shelter reducing or even eliminating your summertime cooling bill
Not gonna lie, he's really thought out his deterrence and it's very impressive. I've had a few ideas, some that are similar to his but definitely not as fleshed out. The tree hedge row is a very good idea and the double fence, one around the property and one around the house is also really good. I assume the early warning system runs off a solar powered system which I'm really starting to debate getting a solar setup going but not sure how beneficial it'd be in my area. Thanks for the video, I've learned a lot.
His design has a major flaw, though: it provides cover for people on the outside looking in. Snipers can be positioned in the hedges on the outside and effectively keep you pinned in. Of course, if you have thermal optics, that problem goes away rather spectacularly.
@@WardenWolf Seeing as the tree line already blocks their view, they could just build another fence that blocks the view from the hedge. Adds a third fence while you are at it
Being that open has one flaw. Anyone with a decent scoped rifle could pick you off 1 by 1 from outside the fence before you could find them. Just my opinion.
Keep someone on overwatch in a hide who has observation past the perimeter. Man on the perimeter ought to keep a rifle handy as well and keep some level of situational awareness.
Would it be worth building a tall tower in the middle with windows on alternating sides as you go up? They'd never know which window you'd be peeking from and you could detect incoming people from far away
If someone was dryer to get inside your house, because they desperately needed something inside, the best attack would be driving a heavy truck 🚒 through the barbed wire fence behind the house. A ditch behind the barbed wire fence or crossed railroad ties might help...
FWIW: Buried vehicle sensors only work on vehicles. Odds are intruders will be traveling by foot. Unfortunately the best option are PIR and IR Beam sensors even if they are prone to false positives (deer & coyotes). You can reduce false positives with fencing.
My bet is that someone isn't going to walk 150 yards down a 2 track gravel drive surrounded by a 125 ft. tall red pine plantation to home invade or steal from us. For starters, they would have to carry all of their loot back to their truck-car parked on a two lane, fairly busy rural road. They'll drive in because they'll want to drive out. Not walk out. Our buried mag sensor will serve us just fine.
@@johnhall9432 I agree. We're in a similar situation. Way out of town on a long dirt road, only one way in & out, in the open prairie. I doubt anybody will be walking in on us. I bought one of those motion sensor driveway alarms, but my horses, the antelope, birds & even the grass & sagebrush on a really windy day alert me. It's basically useless because I just ignore it. I'm going to get one of those magnetic alarms ASAP
IR will light up under NODs. Best believe the people coming to kill you and take your shit will have NODs and thermal.
@@johnhall9432 anyone with even a basic amount of training isn't driving it.
@@johnhall9432 lol... I would. A lot harder to sneak up with a vehicle bud.
"It kinda looks like that Canadian Prepper guy" too funny laughing my azz off, too funny 🤣
A friend of mine had signs that said : “ Trespassers WILL be violated “ 😂
I noticed you put rocks on top of your fence posts. I do to. Sand stone on mine. There is something demoralizing about hearing a rifle shot and seeing a rock turn to dust just feet from your head.
Wasted ammo.
Not wasted. A gun fight avoided is a win.
@@DMAneoth Not avoided, just delayed.
@@USMC6976
Maybe - sometimes true. But most bad guys only prey on weaker targets. If they know you are vigilant, armed, and willing to fight they will most likely move off to another place.
@@DMAneoth The operative word in your comment is "sometimes". It will always be the exceptions you need to defend against, though.
Love the Arkopia channel. Learned alot in building my greenhouse when the time comes. Hopefully this year.
Couple things come to mind.
The berries could become an "attractive nuisance" once someone notices they are edible (alternatively they may be a benefit in that a hungry person will just harvest enough to get through that day and move on).
The diamond harrow can simply be flipped over. Granted both are passive delaying installations but every defense has defects.
That box of wire etc. should be on the inside of the fence and disguised with a well placed bush or something. If on the outside it will encourage pilferage, risking your resources while also delaying a potential invader.
Try to think like a threat; if you wanted to get past your defenses, how would you do it? Never underestimate a potential enemy's intelligence otr resourcefulness.
What about the psychological deterrence of an intruder wondering what other "surprises" might he encounter? But what if it is a group?