Today,I would like to offer you thechance to secure thephysicalcopy, of a limited-edition bookthat'sdesigned to help yousurvivein a world without electricity:
No Grid Survival Projects
Inside you will find the complete instructions for adding the ingenious DIY projects you need to still have: food, water, power, medicines, and other necessities in a
GRID DOWN situation, such as a local blackout or after an EMP' strike.
Nothing is left out. You will know exactly what materials you need, where to get them on the cheap and how long each of the over 70+projects take to build.
Also, as one of the few people selected to receive one of the first 200 copies printed, you will also get two exclusive bonuses in digital format, start-to-finish videos of each project being built, as well as access to an online community where you can receive expert help, should you ever need it.
But you probably won't.
Everything inside
No Grid Survival Projects is made to be simple to understand and easy to implement, even if you've never built a project in your life.
Click on this link to discover the 70+ projects waiting for you inside NO Grid Survival Projects.
outhwest. These rocks are at the surface here because of uplift along the Shackleton Fault Zone where it meets the South Scotia Ridge. This complex is very similar in age and rock types to those of coastal California, including Catalina Island and the Big Sur coast. Elephant Island is the type locality for phosphate mineral spheniscidite. Flora and fauna Chinstrap penguins and Antarctic fur seals at Point Wild, Elephant Island The barren island supports no native terrestrial flora or fauna, although seasonal colonies of chinstrap, gentoo and macaroni penguins congregate in their thousands to mate and breed during warmer periods. Other seabirds found on the island include the Antarctic shag and tern, brown skua, Cape petrel, giant petrel, kelp gull, snowy sheathbill and Wilson's storm-petrel. Antarctic fur seals, leopard seals and southern elephant seals are also found around the island seasonally; the latter two species often prey on the many inexperienced penguins learning to enter and exit the water. A lack of safe anchorage has prevented any permanent human influence, despite the island being conveniently located to suppo