"root cellar"
6 episodes tagged with this keyword
-
Mark Koernke discussed constitutional rights, preparedness, and food security across three hours. He addressed technical streaming issues, analyzed a legal challenge to the National Firearms Act based on the removal of its tax component, and extensively covered food production strategies including gardening, seed preservation, heritage crops, and traditional farming methods without commercial fertilizers. He criticized government overreach, globalist control of food systems, and promoted self-sufficiency through livestock management and sprouting.
-
Mark Koernke discussed preparedness, supply chain issues, and political developments on October 6, 2025. He covered food storage solutions including root cellars and pumpkin preservation, reloading equipment availability on Facebook Marketplace, and winter boot deals at CenterFireSystems.com. The show featured commentary on the Sig Sauer P320 police firearm controversy, Canadian gun confiscation efforts involving CZ Arms ownership, and allegations of fraud and embezzlement involving Michigan state officials. Koernke emphasized the importance of ammunition and food reserves as defensive measures and warned about illegal alien tracking capabilities through social security numbers and cell phone technology.
-
Mark Koernke discussed weapons systems, ammunition availability, food storage and production, and preparedness strategies during this Weapons Wednesday broadcast. He covered rifle design philosophy (AR vs. AK platforms), ammunition scarcity trends (particularly .30-06, 7.62x51 NATO, and .308), and emphasized minimalist weapon configurations for close-quarters combat. The show featured extensive discussion of food production including soil mineralization, fermentation techniques (sauerkraut, kimchi), root cellar storage, and freeze-dried foods. Koernke also addressed fire-starting methods, match quality degradation, and DIY ammunition reloading techniques including cast bullet plating and powder coating. Multiple callers contributed information on soil minerals, health supplementation, and alternative fire-starter methods.
-
Mark Koernke and BK discussed food storage and preparedness strategies, focusing on pumpkin preservation, inventory management using a free spreadsheet tool, and bulk purchasing options at warehouse clubs like Costco. They covered drying techniques for pumpkins and other foods, emphasized the importance of tracking nutritional content and quantities, and provided specific pricing data on rice, popcorn, and other staples. The show also included a caller from Northern Idaho sharing gardening and seed-saving experiences, followed by discussion of international military developments in Turkey, Iran, Venezuela, and the Middle East, including arms proliferation and geopolitical tensions. The final segment covered ammunition and tactical equipment pricing and availability.
-
Mark Koernke discussed federal stimulus spending and construction projects in Michigan, noting that Obama recovery money was being used to unnecessarily tear up recently completed roads while employing foreign workers rather than Americans, with the signage placed where few would see it. He covered basic combat driving techniques for intersection safety and vehicle evasion. Koernke promoted amateur radio nets (Liberty Net and Possum Net) for weekend operations and provided frequency information. He extensively discussed historical and current Middle East conflicts, including the 1981 Israeli bombing of Iraq's nuclear facility, drawing parallels to current Iran rhetoric and questioning why the original bombed facility was never shown in media coverage. He criticized border security failures and foreign aid spending, then spent considerable time explaining how listeners could afford to build a basement bomb shelter or root cellar using inexpensive cement blocks accumulated gradually over three years.
-
Mark Koernke discussed the Federal Reserve's reported loss of $9 trillion, drawing parallels to how cashiers would be fired for missing money and highlighting the hypocrisy of government tracking small transactions while losing trillions. He emphasized food preservation and storage solutions, including root cellars and foraging for wild berries like juneberries and elderberries. Koernke promoted preparedness, self-sufficiency, and the upcoming Dayton Hamfest as an opportunity to acquire radio equipment, batteries, and technology for local communication networks and micro stations. He called for Americans to take personal responsibility for their local economies and communities rather than relying on corrupt government institutions.