The Lost Ways
Saving Our Forefathers’ Skills. By Claude Davis
In his search for answers he was able to uncover the following things:
1) There is no one in this earth who knows all our forefathers’ forgotten secrets. There are specific experts on different fields.
2) There are no mainstream survival experts that anyone can run to.
3) There are skills that our great-grandparents had that we must learn.
He reached out to several experts and was able to compile all the necessary information you need to survive in The Lost Ways.
To make this an authentic but actionable reality for the reader, Claude drew from numerous sources and experts for whom this is not a mere theory:
- Erik Bainbridge, a Native American who took part in the reconstruction of the Kule Loklo village in California, shows how to construct a subterranean roundhouse, which can fill many functions: storm shelter, camouflaged bunker, or a root cellar that can store a year’s worth supply of food and water.
- Patrick Shelley, a professional woodsman and trapper, will teach you how to make robust traps for various wildlife, thus ensuring you never find yourself in the precarious position of not having enough food on the table.
- Shannon Azares will teach you how to apply the knowledge of XVII century sailors to your water supply, in order to make it safe to drink for months and even years. This is critical for one’s preservation of health, and avoidance of dangerous diseases you could get from spoiled water.
- Mike Searson is an expert on firearms and Old West history. He will show you how to do more with less, making your ammo effectively never run out.
- Susan Morrow, an ex-science teacher and chemist, will teach you how to substitute modern, industrially manufactured medicine, with poultices. Our forefathers made great use out of them, and you will be surprised at their similarities with modern medical supplies. It goes without saying that even if you think you have enough stockpile of medicine for any future situation they all have an expiration date.
- Lex Rooker gathered the knowledge of Native American scouts and early pioneers to create superfoods, merely from basic ingredients easily found in any major store. This food is designed to last for a very long time, has a compact form, lightweight, and high in all major nutrient groups: proteins, carbohydrates, and vitamins.
And many others…