(Part 2) Top products from r/vagabond

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We found 21 product mentions on r/vagabond. We ranked the 114 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 21-40. You can also go back to the previous section.

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Top comments that mention products on r/vagabond:

u/SunsetRoute1970 · 2 pointsr/vagabond

r/vandwellers.

The problem with carrying a firearm is that if you don't have the mentally tough attitude to use it, it's a greater danger to you than to an adversary.

I'm a life member of every gun rights organization I could find--NRA, GOA, JPFO, SAF, etc. I love firearms. But I don't think they are any security panacea. The person who wants to use a firearm as a deterrent against bad guys is far better off with a well-trained dog. I'm not saying you shouldn't own a firearm, but if you do buy one, you want to obtain very thorough training in how and when to use it.

Bad guys, speaking generally, are huge risk takers. Unless he perceives that you intend to kill him, he is going to be calculating his chances of getting close enough to you to try to disarm you. But he's not going to disarm a German Shepherd or some other breed commonly used as a guard dog. Dogs can sense your fear and the evil intentions of others, through body language, or body odor or something. I had a German Shepherd who was the sweetest dog. He loved everybody. But if he "alerted" on somebody, I was immediately convinced that whomever he alerted upon was up to no good.

You can't just assume a dog will protect you. They must be trained to do so. And once they're trained, you are responsible to control them, to care for them and to protect them. It's almost like having a child.

For a woman, having a trained personal protection dog is a huge defense asset. Most bad guys will avoid any place or any vehicle that contains a dog. (Nobody wants to get bit. Or shot. Or stabbed.)

The book in the link below was written by a former Air Force Security dog handler. It's an excellent book, and it tells step-by-step how to train a personal protection dog, up to every level, except to where the handler can order a dog to attack independently. He doesn't teach that, because once a dog has been trained to attack upon command it must spend the rest of its life in a secure kennel, and cannot be allowed to run free in a yard. The danger, to innocent passers-by, and to the dog, and to the owner, is too great to allow an attack dog to run free. But short of an "attack dog," a personal protection dog can live a normal dog's life.

Order the paperback. It's a lot cheaper.

https://www.amazon.com/How-Train-Watchdog-Bruce-Sessions/dp/0830657533

What you want in a canine companion is a well-behaved, well-trained, affectionate dog who can also protect you from adversaries. But keep in mind, you cannot leave a dog alone in a vehicle very long, and never with the windows rolled up completely. Training a dog is largely a matter of behaving in an unemotional, controlled way yourself. If the dog isn't performing correctly, it's not his or her fault. It's YOUR fault. Dogs want to please you. So you must be endlessly patient and well-disciplined yourself in order to get the desired behavior from your dog. You must be absolutely consistent with your dog. You can't scold him for getting on the couch one time and allow it another time. If he can't get on the couch, it must be absolute. Commands must be given exactly the same way every time. "Sit" always means sit. "Stay" always means stay. And "Guard" always means "Scare the holy fuck out of this rapey bastard."

But the absolutely best defense tactic is to not be there in the first place. Don't go into situations where you might be attacked to start with.

u/visionque · 3 pointsr/vagabond

Physical exercise is a mood elevator. Get into the best shape of your life by running, swimming, Tai Chi, Yoga, hiking and backpacking, surfing or dancing. Drink a lot more water, like a gallon a day. Some times chemicals in our environment and food affect use more than we realize. Water will flush this out and bring balance. Eat more fruit and vegetables. Try to reduce processed foods and meats in your diet until you become stable. Your thoughts are creating problems for you so take up meditation to learn to control that.

You need a support group. Larger organizations will have more programs, smaller groups may be easier to relate to.

Do not give up on yourself. Get up early and watch the sun rise. It will be different every day. Watch the sunset. Thank the universe for one more day. In some native cultures, sunrise and sunset are said to be the crack between the worlds of flesh and spirit. Communication is said to be more productive at these times. I have no proof of this. I only know I feel better when I do it.

u/Encinitas0667 · 1 pointr/vagabond

X3. You will pay a big tax penalty if you pull money out of your 401k. It's tempting, I know, but you'll be screwing yourself if you do this.

You need to sock as much money as you can into retirement accounts and investments while you're young. Don't work "under the table" jobs, either. You need those Social Security taxes to be paid so when you hit age 64 you can draw Social Security. I know it seems like retirement is a million years away, but it's not. Social Security will send you an accounting of your benefits every year after about age 55. You want to check and make sure your employer is paying it correctly. I know somebody whose employer deducted all that shit from his check for years, but didn't pay the government. Then the employer and his whole family hauled ass to Costa Rica and burned all their employees for all their income tax money.

A good rule of thumb is "Invest one hour's pay out of every paycheck, every week." If you're getting paid $15 an hour, that would be $60 a month invested. At 7%, over fifty years (from ages 16 to 66) you would wind up with $332,069 at retirement.

Here, calculate it yourself. https://financialmentor.com/calculator/compound-interest-calculator

There's a very good book about this, called "The Wealthy Barber."

https://www.amazon.com/Wealthy-Barber-Updated-3rd-Commonsense/dp/0761513116/ref=sr_1_2?crid=TW4KWKC7ZEH1&keywords=the+wealthy+barber+book&qid=1555218139&s=gateway&sprefix=book+The+Wealthy+Barber%2Caps%2C199&sr=8-2

u/presology · 1 pointr/vagabond

Those are great things. Im dropping out of a masters program and im returning to me foraging hobbies.

You might like this book.

u/Silent_J · 1 pointr/vagabond

There's a book about the Hippie Trail called "Magic Bus" that is a good read if you are interested in the subject. The author follows parts of the old trail, but even he skips the most dangerous parts. Reading the book is definitely safer than trying to travel through Afghanistan.

u/YouLuckyAsshole · 3 pointsr/vagabond

Bro. I am totally interested. How do I get this book?

Edit: Nevermind. Found it on Amazon. In paperback, too!!

The Hitchhiker Man https://www.amazon.com/dp/064856732X/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_zD7PDb4H124H1

u/fingers · 4 pointsr/vagabond

Could be a long post but here it goes:

My dad has been voluntarily homeless for more than 10 years (His words: My wife told me to fuck off and I've been doing that ever since.) He has been this way since he was 57 years old. He learned it from his father...who retired and then traveled until he died when he was 72.

My father started with a fifth wheel camper...my grandfather's camper and truck he inherited upon my grandfather's death. He used this book: https://www.amazon.com/Guide-Free-Campgrounds-Don-Wrights/dp/0937877522

This was pre smart phones ... but he had a GPS.

Then he got tired of the fifth wheel and got a pop up slide in camper. He maintained a seasonal route where he made friends. Some really good friends...friends who have since settled down and now have a door yard for him to sleep in and an outlet for him to plug into.

He collected social security disability and now he collects social security and a pension.

His route is (was...he's now on dialysis and in one place) Slab City Salton Sea/Holtville CA from November until March. Then he'd move east to South Carolina to stay at Don's for a month. Then he'd move up to Virginia to stay on Bob's sister's farm. Then May he'd come to Connecticut then up to NY or Maine until September. Then he'd move back down to VA then to SC and then across to Cali. Some times he'd go to Yellowstone. He has the golden pass. Staying at National Parks was easy for him.

Now, I'm 43 and I've traveled over 70k miles these last 7 summers. I bought a copy of that book and got a homeless guy to come with me the first time. I paid his way for the security. I'm female and needed someone to keep an eye on things. We traveled by car and we tented, slept in ditches, in squats, etc.

Second year my now ex wife and I did the car and tent thing.

Third year my dad and I traveled in the dolphin. Some walmart parking, some boondogging. Some parks.

Fourth through seventh I've traveled with my new wife. We used www.freecampsites.net but the first two summers we traveled mainly to places I've already been. It took time to learn things and ways and how much time it took to get to places.

u/thisisme106 · 2 pointsr/vagabond

Check out the book “The Anarchists Guide to Travel,” it has a ton of useful advice for preparing and what you should bring.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/099912028X/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_BiSbBbDJM3NW6

u/KaBar2 · 1 pointr/vagabond

Before I ever lived in Walla Walla, I used to go through Pasco on the High Line, and I often thought about whether or not Hanford was a threat to life and health, being as contaminated with radiation as it is.

https://www.amazon.com/American-Ground-Zero-Secret-Nuclear/dp/0679754326/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1499429527&sr=1-1&keywords=American+Ground+Zero

u/Psychafunkapus · 1 pointr/vagabond

Great read if you want to permanently give yourself the same feeling when in the woods that ‘Jaws’ gives you when swimming in the ocean...

Stalked by a Mountain Lion: Fear, Fact, And The Uncertain Future Of Cougars In America https://www.amazon.com/dp/0762743158/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_DVg1CbEWZNR93

u/shoasa95 · 3 pointsr/vagabond

Don't really vagabond, but I do travel (backpacking, through cities) with my nook glowlight. Keep it in this case, along with my electronic cords and such. 1 month battery life, has a light on it. If you get the glowlight plus, it's water and dust proof.