The Country Wisdom Thread

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Re: The Country Wisdom Thread

Postby Cocre8ion » Tue Nov 29, 2011 3:58 pm

KnightoftheRoc wrote:just heard this one yesterday, cannot verify it from personal experience. I DO trust the person who told me (he's the one who told me about the tobacco trick), and he says he witnessed it first hand. Anyway, Jellyfish Stings- douse with vinegar immediately, and the pain is washed away with the vinegar. I'm not much for spending time on the shore, and honestly, I would have NEVER thought of this one on my own, but it's a pretty cool trick, and cheap to prep for.



Personal experience vinegar does work if you have it in abundance.There is an easier way to ' wash away' the pain of Jellyfish and Man of War stings. Not for the squeamish but effective. If you can not reach the sting yourself have your partner pee on it. Same result.
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Re: The Country Wisdom Thread

Postby Crazy Wolf » Thu Dec 01, 2011 8:32 am

Cocre8ion wrote:
KnightoftheRoc wrote:just heard this one yesterday, cannot verify it from personal experience. I DO trust the person who told me (he's the one who told me about the tobacco trick), and he says he witnessed it first hand. Anyway, Jellyfish Stings- douse with vinegar immediately, and the pain is washed away with the vinegar. I'm not much for spending time on the shore, and honestly, I would have NEVER thought of this one on my own, but it's a pretty cool trick, and cheap to prep for.



Personal experience vinegar does work if you have it in abundance.There is an easier way to ' wash away' the pain of Jellyfish and Man of War stings. Not for the squeamish but effective. If you can not reach the sting yourself have your partner pee on it. Same result.

Research hasn't supported any claim for urine being better than any comparable fluid. Basically, the advantage that it has is that you can sorta "power wash" the affected area.
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Re: The Country Wisdom Thread

Postby KnightoftheRoc » Sat Dec 03, 2011 3:46 pm

Crazy Wolf wrote:
Cocre8ion wrote:
KnightoftheRoc wrote:just heard this one yesterday, cannot verify it from personal experience. I DO trust the person who told me (he's the one who told me about the tobacco trick), and he says he witnessed it first hand. Anyway, Jellyfish Stings- douse with vinegar immediately, and the pain is washed away with the vinegar. I'm not much for spending time on the shore, and honestly, I would have NEVER thought of this one on my own, but it's a pretty cool trick, and cheap to prep for.



Personal experience vinegar does work if you have it in abundance.There is an easier way to ' wash away' the pain of Jellyfish and Man of War stings. Not for the squeamish but effective. If you can not reach the sting yourself have your partner pee on it. Same result.

Research hasn't supported any claim for urine being better than any comparable fluid. Basically, the advantage that it has is that you can sorta "power wash" the affected area.

AND, urine is about as EDC as it gets...vinegar, you'd need to pack beforehand. However, I'd rather pack the vinegar and lug it around than have to be EITHER party in the urinating on a sting scenario, and I'm not even counting the legal complications that could arise.
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Re: The Country Wisdom Thread

Postby ShovelBoy » Sun Dec 04, 2011 5:31 pm

Got ribbed for my 'alternative therapies' response but here goes...

I read that a healthy alkaline diet will help repair teeth, and said as much earlier. For the past 4-5 weeks I've had no money, subsisting on:

- Home-grown sprouts [mung beans/chickpeas/brown lentils/moth beans/fenugreek seeds/millet/peanuts/coriander seeds/red rice]
- The occasional apple/dried tamarind
- The odd handful of almonds
- Pine needle tea [thankyou ZS!]
- Odd cuppa, odd herbal tea
- A ginger root
- A jar of organic molasses
- Half a bottle of organic unrefined sesame oil, half a bottle of unrefined palm oil
- Chilli peppers/cinnamon/ground turmeric
- 2 plantains
- 2 coconuts
- A sweet potato.

In a day, for breakfast I'd eat an apple/few tamarinds or a cup of blended peanut sprouts w/ dash of cinnamon; at night a massive plate of beansprouts. One night I lay writhing in bed because I ate about 4 servings worth [not to be repeated.] Now I eat about 1.5 - 2 servings worth. Yesterday I broke from my sprout fast and had some homemade soup with rice-flour bread [found a cupful lurking in the back of my cupboard.]

Results?... Seems pretty good. Still a lazy bastard, but hey. I've been doing the odd bit of boxing in the back-garden w/ my punchbag and am putting on muscle, getting rather lean [even when I'm only eating 600~ kcal a day.] Which kinda corroborates my theory that you need nutrients to build muscle. Protein figures in there, but the minerals is what it's about. I used to bodybuild, and ate protein like a fiend. I was one of the 'no muscle mass without mass protein crowd'. Now I'm wiser... A silverback who eats leaves all day will punch a body-builder into the abyss. But that's not why I'm writing this.

I asserted earlier that an alkaline diet will help repair teeth. Well, that's what I've been on for the past month upwards. This test subject started the study with a cavity in a wisdom tooth which reeked to high hell [man was it evil.] The taste/smell has completely gone, but that's not all. I feel the cavity quite a bit with with my tongue [to gauge its severity/depost saliva into it for remineralisation/repair], and it's actually reduced in size from what it was. Early days, but ho for beansprouts. It hasn't completely healed, and at this rate it'll take another four or five months, imo at least. But I'm happy with how it's going :)

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Re: The Country Wisdom Thread

Postby ShortFieldBreak » Tue Dec 06, 2011 12:46 pm

I just got caught up on the last couple pages and would like to point out that Darwin's theory of evolution is just a theory, yet plenty of people quote it as truth. Just sayin'....

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Re: The Country Wisdom Thread

Postby elricfate » Tue Dec 06, 2011 12:54 pm

ShortFieldBreak wrote:I just got caught up on the last couple pages and would like to point out that Darwin's theory of evolution is just a theory, yet plenty of people quote it as truth. Just sayin'....

-SFB


Understand the difference between a SCIENTIFIC THEORY and a THEORY.

God help me there better be a manned mission to Kepler-22b soon.
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Re: The Country Wisdom Thread

Postby Czechnology » Tue Dec 06, 2011 12:56 pm

ShortFieldBreak wrote:I just got caught up on the last couple pages and would like to point out that Darwin's theory of evolution is just a theory, yet plenty of people quote it as truth. Just sayin'....

-SFB


The formal scientific definition of theory is quite different from the everyday meaning of the word. It refers to a comprehensive explanation of some aspect of nature that is supported by a vast body of evidence. Many scientific theories are so well established that no new evidence is likely to alter them substantially. For example, no new evidence will demonstrate that the Earth does not orbit around the sun (heliocentric theory), or that living things are not made of cells (cell theory), that matter is not composed of atoms, or that the surface of the Earth is not divided into solid plates that have moved over geological timescales (the theory of plate tectonics). One of the most useful properties of scientific theories is that they can be used to make predictions about natural events or phenomena that have not yet been observed.[10]


Words often have multiple definitions.


ETA: please don't let this semantic grammatical discussion turn into anything religious and break forum rules.
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Re: The Country Wisdom Thread

Postby Czechnology » Tue Dec 06, 2011 1:01 pm

KnightoftheRoc wrote:
Crazy Wolf wrote:
Cocre8ion wrote:
KnightoftheRoc wrote:just heard this one yesterday, cannot verify it from personal experience. I DO trust the person who told me (he's the one who told me about the tobacco trick), and he says he witnessed it first hand. Anyway, Jellyfish Stings- douse with vinegar immediately, and the pain is washed away with the vinegar. I'm not much for spending time on the shore, and honestly, I would have NEVER thought of this one on my own, but it's a pretty cool trick, and cheap to prep for.



Personal experience vinegar does work if you have it in abundance.There is an easier way to ' wash away' the pain of Jellyfish and Man of War stings. Not for the squeamish but effective. If you can not reach the sting yourself have your partner pee on it. Same result.

Research hasn't supported any claim for urine being better than any comparable fluid. Basically, the advantage that it has is that you can sorta "power wash" the affected area.

AND, urine is about as EDC as it gets...vinegar, you'd need to pack beforehand. However, I'd rather pack the vinegar and lug it around than have to be EITHER party in the urinating on a sting scenario, and I'm not even counting the legal complications that could arise.



Powdered Meat Tenderizer is what I used to pack in my surf/beach/fish bag.
Nothing is ever what it seems, but everything is exactly what it is.

Vicarious_Lee wrote:If Nutnfacny were an 8-ounce chicken fried steak, he'd come with 72 ounces of batter around it that you have to slash through to get to it.
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Re: The Country Wisdom Thread

Postby WY_Not » Tue Dec 06, 2011 1:05 pm

The following book, while controversial and debated, is an interesting read on the subject of evoluion...

Darwin's Black Box: The Biochemical Challenge to Evolution (1996, first edition; 2006, second edition) by Michael J. Behe
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Re: The Country Wisdom Thread

Postby Biggin » Tue Dec 06, 2011 1:12 pm

ShovelBoy wrote:I feel the cavity quite a bit with with my tongue [to gauge its severity/depost saliva into it for remineralisation/repair], and it's actually reduced in size from what it was. Early days, but ho for beansprouts. It hasn't completely healed, and at this rate it'll take another four or five months, imo at least. But I'm happy with how it's going :)

SB


I just want to point out that this, too, is wrong. Cavities in teeth do not heal or close up on their own. This is another one of those biological impossibilities. Unless you are a shark, whatever happens to your adult teeth is permanent. If you continue along this path, you are just setting yourself up for a physically and monetarily painful root canal or extraction.

Dental caries, also known as tooth decay or a cavity, is an irreversible infection usually bacterial in origin that causes demineralization of the hard tissues (enamel, dentin and cementum) and destruction of the organic matter of the tooth, usually by production of acid by hydrolysis of the food debris accumulated on the tooth surface .[1]


Key word there is "irreversible." While modifying your diet can slow the rate of decay and prevent other cavities from forming, there is absolutely no way to reverse the process. It is, as I said, a biological impossibility.


Citation: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dental_caries

Citation: My father has been practicing dentistry/maxillofacial surgery for over 30 years.
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Re: The Country Wisdom Thread

Postby Huntinbull » Tue Dec 06, 2011 2:42 pm

jethroUSMC wrote:
KnightoftheRoc wrote:just heard this one yesterday, cannot verify it from personal experience. I DO trust the person who told me (he's the one who told me about the tobacco trick), and he says he witnessed it first hand. Anyway, Jellyfish Stings- douse with vinegar immediately, and the pain is washed away with the vinegar. I'm not much for spending time on the shore, and honestly, I would have NEVER thought of this one on my own, but it's a pretty cool trick, and cheap to prep for.


Baking soda works, and you won't smell all funky.


Urine takes the sting out of a jellyfish sting as well.
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Re: The Country Wisdom Thread

Postby Fire » Wed Dec 07, 2011 2:41 am

- If you are going for a walk or a hike, take a good walking stick- it makes the walk go smoother, helps as your "third foot" on the rough spots, and is great for dissuading wild dogs or snakes....


-Never leave the house without a knife, a light, and a lighter (my Maxim)

- A man is expected to wear a watch, a belt, and to carry a pocket knife and comb (my father's Maxim)

- Remember, if there is a need, you can always hit a man with a shovel - Its easier than wrasilling with him. (My Grandfather's Maxim)
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Re: The Country Wisdom Thread

Postby shriefie » Fri Dec 09, 2011 10:26 pm

That part about the electrocution for venomous snakebite is absolutely true, I've seen it with a copperhead bite.

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Re: The Country Wisdom Thread

Postby Doctorr Fabulous » Fri Dec 09, 2011 10:37 pm

shriefie wrote:That part about the electrocution for venomous snakebite is absolutely true, I've seen it with a copperhead bite.

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=========================================================================
Postgrad Med 1987 Oct;82(5):32
Another warning about electric shock for snakebite.
Russell FE
Publication Type: Letter
=================================================

Postgrad Med 1987 Aug;82(2):42
Don't use electric shock for snakebite.
Ryan AJ
Publication Types:
Letter
=================================================

Ann Emerg Med 1988 Mar;17(3):254-256
Electric shock does not save snakebitten rats.
Howe NR, Meisenheimer JL Jr
Department of Dermatology, Medical University of South Carolina,
Charleston 29425.

A team of missionary doctors from Ecuador recently described striking
success
in the treatment of venomous snakebites with a series of brief,
high-voltage,
low-current electric shocks applied to the bit site. We designed a
randomized, controlled, blinded test of their methods in laboratory rats. Venom of the
Common Lancehead, Bothrops atrox, was injected subcutaneously into rats in a
series of increasing doses. Half of each dose group then was shocked
with a device used by the Ecuadoran group. Envenomated animals developed
hemorrhagic ulcers at the injection sites, the size of which was strongly related to
venom dose. Electric shock did not influence the development of morbidity or the
eventual ulcer size in sublethally envenomated animals, nor did shocks
reduce mortality in lethally envenomated animals. We conclude that shocks are
without effect on snakebitten rats, and we discuss implications of our findings
for the treatment of snakebitten human beings.
=================================================

Toxicon 1987;25(12):1347-1349
Electric shocks are ineffective in treatment of lethal effects of
rattlesnake envenomation in mice.

Johnson EK, Kardong KV, Mackessy SP
Department of Physiological Sciences, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater
74078.

Electrical shocks, even crudely delivered from 'stun guns' and gasoline
engine spark plugs, have been reported to be effective in the treatment of snake
bite. We thus applied similar electric shocks to mice artificially
injected with reconstituted rattlesnake venom at various LD50 multiples. Those
envenomated mice treated with electric shock survived no better than the
controls. We thus found no evidence that electric shocks crudely administered
had any life saving effect in mice.
=================================================

Ann Emerg Med 1991 Jun;20(6):659-661
Failure of electric shock treatment for rattlesnake envenomation.

Dart RC, Gustafson RA
Section of Emergency Medicine, University of Arizona Health Sciences
Center, Tucson.

The use of high-voltage electric shock therapy for the treatment of snake
venom poisoning has recently gained popularity in the United States. We
present a case that documents the dangerous, ineffective application of
electric shock to the face of a patient envenomated by a Great Basin
rattlesnake (Crotalus viridis lutosus). The successful use of antivenin in
this critically ill, antivenin-allergic patient is described.

ALSO: http://www.backpacker.com/community/ask_buck/195

It's believed that the impeded venom actions may have resulted from muscle spasms related to the electric shocks, rather than electricity transmogrifying the venom. To those who have witnessed it firsthand, I would ask what snake, where was the bite, and was the patient taken to the hospital afterward? I ask, because the military has looked at these devices for over twenty years, and has never found that there is enough evidence to issue such a device to a STP/MSH (which would be the case if it worked, but was bloody expensive) much less to the Corpsman and medics that are with the units operating in areas with adders, rattlesnakes, copperheads, cotton-mouths, and other creepy-killy things. They issue all kinds of crazy stuff that is rarely used, if it works just in case it has to be used. (Extreme cold weather thermometers in a desert environment? MOPP gear where there is zero chance of chem warfare?)

ETA: Extreme cold weather thermometers are for artic conditions, not cold desert nights. Just because I am anal like that.
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Re: The Country Wisdom Thread

Postby Czechnology » Fri Dec 09, 2011 11:00 pm

It's already been said, but I think we should take into account that venomous snakes often, when defending themselves against much larger opponents they could never actually eat, will give what is known as a "Dry" bite. They will not inject much, if any venom, as they NEED that venom to eat. Not just kill their prey, but many snakes have venom that begins to digest their prey from the inside, easing the process of eating something 3x the size of your head.

Now, obviously electric shock will "cure" 100% of dry bites, which can occur in human/snake interactions anywhere from 5% of the time to 80% of the time, depending on the species and age of the snake. Younger snakes, more vulnerable than adults, will go full bore MUCH more often, which has led to the preconception that baby snakes are more venomous than their adults, when in reality the adults just don't inject venom that often.
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Re: The Country Wisdom Thread

Postby DarkAxel » Fri Dec 09, 2011 11:09 pm

A few more bits of country wisdom I recall:

Wrap a wart in Duct Tape, and it will fall off.

If a bird flies into your house, your luck will soon change (for better or worse)

If you find three dead birds in one day, someone close to you will die.

Before you seek revenge, dig two graves. One for your enemy, and one for yourself.

Never turn down a gift given with a glad heart.
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Re: The Country Wisdom Thread

Postby Doctorr Fabulous » Fri Dec 09, 2011 11:10 pm

Czechnology wrote:It's already been said, but I think we should take into account that venomous snakes often, when defending themselves against much larger opponents they could never actually eat, will give what is known as a "Dry" bite. They will not inject much, if any venom, as they NEED that venom to eat. Not just kill their prey, but many snakes have venom that begins to digest their prey from the inside, easing the process of eating something 3x the size of your head.

Now, obviously electric shock will "cure" 100% of dry bites, which can occur in human/snake interactions anywhere from 5% of the time to 80% of the time, depending on the species and age of the snake. Younger snakes, more vulnerable than adults, will go full bore MUCH more often, which has led to the preconception that baby snakes are more venomous than their adults, when in reality the adults just don't inject venom that often.


Treat every snake(and bite) as if it were loaded.
Never point at a snake with anythign you do not want to lose.
Keep you limbs away from the snake unless you intend to expire.
Keep in mind that you have an hour (or less) once bitten before you expire.

General rules to live by. As Czechnology said, even dry bites can carry disease, as can bites from non-venomous snakes.
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Re: The Country Wisdom Thread

Postby Czechnology » Sat Dec 10, 2011 5:32 pm

Doc Torr wrote:even dry bites can carry disease, as can bites from non-venomous snakes.


Absolutely, I just wanted to address this seemingly spreading idea that electricity cures snakebites. You should definitely treat snakebites as deadly, but be aware they often aren't at all, and as a result "cures" are often just something to make you feel like you're doing something until it becomes apparent that you have not been significantly envemonated (thus "curing" you).

Shocking someone with a car battery has a 100% chance of damaging tissue, and isn't going to do your heart any favors.
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Re: The Country Wisdom Thread

Postby azrael99 » Mon Jan 02, 2012 8:59 am

this is my personal remedy to the flue. if you feel you just got it.

-get a bottle of Jagermeister Image
-get a glass, (normal size) pour in and fill at least the third of the glass.
-drink it
-go take the warmest shower\bath you can get, stay in it for at least 15min must be hot, must sweat a lot.
-go to bed, sleep at least 6-8h (will not be that hard, you gonna sleep like a baby)
-wake up feeling like new.
-????????
-profit


why did i chooses jagermeister ? Jägermeister is a type of liqueur called Kräuterlikör (herbal liqueur). It is similar to other central European liqueurs, such as Gammel Dansk from Denmark, Unicum from Hungary, Becherovka from the Czech Republic and Pelinkovac from Croatia. In contrast to those beverages, Jägermeister has a sweeter taste.
Jägermeister’s ingredients include 56 herbs, fruits, roots and spices including citrus peel, licorice, anise, poppy seeds, saffron, ginger, juniper berries and ginseng

most of those herb have medicinal virtue and in case of a flue, will help you fight the virus, and help with your sore throat .
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The Country Wisdom Thread

Postby wee drop o' bush » Mon Jan 02, 2012 9:15 am

I must try that next time! My Stepmum is Bulgarian and she swears by an alcoholic herbal balsam thats a traditional flu remedy.
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Re: The Country Wisdom Thread

Postby azrael99 » Mon Jan 02, 2012 9:19 am

that stuff will cure the worse flu, for as long as it followed by a warm bath and warm bed with a lot of sleeping.

you should look at the size of the glass i take to cure mine (and because i just LOVE that stuff) a full glass of scotch size filled with that stuff
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The Country Wisdom Thread

Postby wee drop o' bush » Mon Jan 02, 2012 9:46 am

azrael99 wrote:that stuff will cure the worse flu, for as long as it followed by a warm bath and warm bed with a lot of sleeping.

you should look at the size of the glass i take to cure mine (and because i just LOVE that stuff) a full glass of scotch size filled with that stuff

I strongly suspect this was its intended usage instead of being dropped into a glass or RedBull and downed ;)
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Re: The Country Wisdom Thread

Postby TravisM.1 » Mon Jan 02, 2012 3:51 pm

azrael99 wrote:Image


I'm a Jim Beam guy myself, but yeah, nothing cures a cold or the flu like a good drunk and plenty of rest.
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Re: The Country Wisdom Thread

Postby azrael99 » Mon Jan 02, 2012 3:55 pm

hat not the alcohol itself that help fight the flu but the mix of medicinal herb. the alcohol just help reduce the pain and help you fall asleep.
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