Lesson of the Bismarck

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Reading about what happened in the past is both interesting and informative – in the “don’t do that” and “here’s why” sense. Put another way, learning from what happened in the past can be applied to our future.

So as to , you know, not repeat history.

Not necessarily the same history. It’s the underlying lesson that matters.

Back in 1941, the German battleship Bismarck and her consort, the heavy cruiser Prinz Eugen, were headed out into the North Atlantic to do some commerce raiding. They ended up battling the British battlecruiser Hood and the battleship Prince of Wales, with the Germans destroying the Hood and heavily damaging the Prince of Wales in the engagement.

But the Bismark was also damaged. Fatally, as it turned out, in that one of the heavy shells that struck her caused a fuel oil leak and made it impossible to access some of the fuel oil stored in a bunker located in the forward area of the ship. And – here comes the lesson – the commander of the battle group, Admiral Gunther Lutjens, had for some reason failed to fully top off the Bismarck with fuel oil prior to the sortie. Thus, the Bismarck was forced to conserve fuel – in order to not run out of fuel on her dash back to German-controlled safe harbor in occupied French ports. She was forced to reduce speed. Which allowed her pursuers – basically the entire British Royal Navy – to close the gap enough that one of the British vessels, the aircraft carrier Ark Royal, was able to send out a flight of torpedo bombers that just barely managed to reach Bismarck. One of these scored a lucky – and fatal – hit on Bismarck’s stern, damaging her rudder such that the ship could only turn in a wide circle. “Ship  unmaneuverable,” Admiral Lutjens reported to the Fuhrer. “We will fight to the last shell.”

This lesson left an impression on me – and it has kept me from getting into a jam not in principle unlike the one that confronted Bismarck all those years go.

It is apparently going to snow – again – here in SW Virginia and remain really (as in pig-bitin’) cold for at least a week. It is not unlikely the power is going to go out – again – as it did just the other day, after we got hit with both snow and ice, plus severe cold. I have a generator, which allows me to keep the lights – and the computer – on so that I can two-finger type articles like this one and keep EPautos’ wheels turning. But keeping the heat on is another matter and even more important.

That entails keeping the fire going and to do that it is necessary to have wood to burn. More finely, to have access to the wood – which does no good if it’s buried outside in the snow and cold. So I did what Admiral Lutjens didn’t do. I stocked up on wood. More finely, I just now brought in enough wood to have on hand to keep the fire going for at least three days, which ought to be enough to make it through to better weather and – this is at least equally important – give me the time to deal with any unforeseen problems that may arise over the next several days.

Admiral Lutjens assumed he’d be able to top-off Bismarck’s fuel oil bunkers while at sea. It is precisely such assumptions that sometimes result in things like what happened to Bismarck.

I try to avoid relying on assumptions – because of the consequences that often ensue. It is better to assume nothing – and prepare for everything. Because you never know what’s going to happen. But you can do things to prepare for what might.

. . .

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40 COMMENTS

  1. Hey Eric, good luck with the coming cold weather, hope the power stays on. Just wondering what happened with that Honda EV from the other day where you couldn’t clear the windscreen – was the driver able to collect it and make it down to a charger?

  2. “Reading about what happened in the past is both interesting and informative”

    IF you read history written by actual White men who did the required research and NOT “history” written by jews, most of whom pretend to be Whites to help them dupe us.

    Examples:
    – jews write history saying Y2K was a big problem “luckily” averted. Whites who know say that Y2K was a jew criminal hoax.

    – jews write history saying president Franklin Delano Roosevelt didn’t commit war crimes against Japan and didn’t know in advance about the Japanese approaching Hawaii.

    Whites who know write that FDR committed many war crimes against Japan and other countries before the USA officially declared war, and FDR deliberately instigated the Japanese to retaliate so as to give FDR, a jew, a supposed reason with which to dupe the U.S. population from being against entering the war to being in favor of entering the war.

    – jews say CO2 is an emission akin to “pollution” bad for the atmosphere, bad for the climate, and that the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere must be reduced. Whites who know say that CO2 is only .04 percent of the atmosphere, is plant food, is no kind of “pollution,” it would be better to have more CO2 in the atmosphere, and the jews are lying yet again.

    I could write a book of examples.

    And still, nearly everybody I meet, and most commenters here, talk about issues AS IF they know the truth about things when their only sources are jew sources — tv, radio, movies, textbooks, newspapers, magazines, youtube (jewtube), facebook (jewbook), X/twitter (Musk is a crypto-jew), wikipedia (owned and operated and censored by jews), on and on.

  3. Better to have your preps ready (and plenty of them) and then not need them. Such as the Y2K fiasco. Those preps came in handy years later. You can never go wrong with having extra fire wood, food, and other necessities ahead of the usual hordes that will predictably strip the grocery store shelves bare at the last minute. I have my pipes in the inner walls if my house which buys time if the power goes out as it will take longer for them to freeze. As it stands, it is supposed to be an ungodly 40 degrees on Monday. I hope we do not get rain (or freezing rain). I would rather have -30 below. It looks like every one else is getting our snow and cold so stay warm down there Eric.

  4. Whoa.. ep,

    The Kraut ship was heading for St. Nazaire..Mouth of the Loire River ….didn’t make it but the Brits kept shitting their pants about sister ship Tirpitz In Norwegian waters…
    the brits played commando raid in Mar 42 and smashed an old “4 stacker” destroyer HMS Campbeltown blowing out the only dry dock capable of “hosting” such a large vessel …..

    That place had a beaucoup array of solid concrete!!

    Wynwood Miami graffiti artists could turn those U Boats pens into Asskick “bistros…dry docks…ummmm. Al fresco dining…
    not so much..

  5. Off topic — here’s an AP photo from Jimmah Carter’s ceremony yesterday, showing five current, former and future pretzeldents.

    https://ibb.co/mcyfG7s

    George W Bush (third from left in second row) is almost unrecognizable to me.

    ‘Biden’ looks both sad and resentful, like he’s ready to kick over one of the flower arrangements.

    Obama’s spouse Big Mike Robinson, the former Oregon State linebacker, is conspicuously absent.

    Meanwhile, a superannuated old demon with a misshapen two-fingered paw in the lower left corner laffs his ass off.

    ‘It’s just the normal noises in here.’

  6. The “2024 hottest year ever” back in the news this morning on the local channel. Their website so far doesn’t include this story I’m thinking because they allow comments and they don’t want any truth telling via the commenters.

    The newsreader (they certainly are not reporters) presented the story with such a solemn tone. No alternate to the narrative presented, no fact checking / questioning of the story line blaming it on burning fossil fuels. The add this year over last year, 2024 passed some degree rise threshold oh no!

    The morons here eat it up, last election the voters failed to approve an initiative to remove the carbon tax scam which has driven up our gasoline prices that supposedly everyone was grousing about. The anti ads were just over the top. Forests will burn out of control, and the next ad grandma worried her grandkids will suffer from the air pollution from the nasty fossil fuels.

        • Eric – I don’t believe it was ever laziness and incompetence, at least at the top. The difference today is that the ideologues are at the reporter level like never before. The top brass practiced real censorship that would make Zuckerborg and Musk blush. How else could you explain people like FDR, LBJ, Nixon, Carter, Bush1, Clinton, Bush 43, etc getting elected and reelected?

  7. When we find the Bismarck, we gotta cut her down – Johnny Horton, Sink the Bismarck

    It’s a march too.

    Have to chop up some vegetables and boil up some vegetable soup, beef soup bone, pearled barley, what you do when it is cold.

    Being alive doesn’t have to be a constant battle.

    • Winter can be downright tasty last week 15 bean soup with ham via hambones. Boiled the hambones first for a nice broth & fall off the bone ham chunks. So easy even a lazy 70 something is willing to do it.

      • Been to Lake Crescent on the Olympic Peninsula?

        Douglas fir trees there are something else.

        Great Northern beans in the ham bone soup is what is boiling.

        Fish for rainbow trout from the ocean swimming up the Bogachiel River.

        Have to fish upstream from the Native American fishing rights.

        All natives are equal, but some natives are more equal.

        Wallace Falls is like a 500 foot drop.

        • Big d,

          Did a division audit in Renton WA….way back when….anyhow per my “SOP”…..
          Land Friday….score the wheels …check out the kool aspects of the local “Big blue marble” locale…prior to business…….

          In this instance …..it’s an automotive yarn…honest Injin…
          Saturday, ring around the Mt. Rainer NP..
          Sunday, check out Olympic NP….particularly Hurricane Ridge at 7,300? elevation…..

          Get to the summit Asskick view of
          Straits of Juan de Fuca and Vancouver Is.
          Get back in car….gas tank on E!….
          Fuk it ,Run It!

          Put the ICE in neutral and slalomed down approx.
          23 miles into Port Angeles…..
          then filled the tank across the st. from the NP…

          Hey kids can I claim a “carbon credit” for using….Gravity???

          Welcome to Earth…..

        • Nicest halibut I ever caught, hands down, was out of Port Angeles WA. Even better than Homer, the halibut capitol of the universe.

          We went out on a charter at the beginning of covid. The Captain insisted everyone on the boat remain masked at all times, because, it was, “THE LAW” in Washington at the time. No one obeyed.

          As Captain he could have never left port, or shot us all on the open ocean. Once he saw no one GAF about the sniffles, he choose the money over his misguided ideology. One of the best day trips I’ve ever been on.

      • That was a buddy’s evac plan if Mt Rainier hacked up a mudflow heading for his valley town. Hell with the car gridlocked roads, pack his Commander on the back of the Harley and the two of them head north on the paved walking trail just behind his house.

  8. When we built our house in 2014, I made sure to have a wood burning fireplace built in a central location. I try to keep a bunch of wood piled up out back. I’d like to build a well in the back for water, but not electric. It would have to be an old fashioned hand pump just for emergencies.

    Lucky for us, we hardly ever lose electricity here, even during the severe storms.

    But life is fragile and I don’t think it’s possible to plan for every possible scenario. That’s where human ingenuity and know-how come into play in emergency situations. Being able to keep a level head and solving problems as they arise.

    • AT my Uncle’s farm back in mid 60s there was a hand pump for water located out back. One day i went out to get water and found a copperhead snake sticking out its tongue at me. I hopped up on the stones and yelled snake. Aunt Kenna came out with a shovel, sneaked up the snake and chopped its head off, and we threw its body over the barbed wire fence across the drive. 3 years later that snake was still there.

    • Philo Beddoe: “I’d like to build a well in the back for water, but not electric.”

      If you have a conventional well drilled with a 6″ casing there are buckets that you can use to fetch water. They have a flap in the bottom that opens as they enter the water and close as you pull the bucket up. We bought one in the ’70s. In our case, we already had the well as our home water source. But in a real emergency could pull up the submersible pump and use the bucket.

      Drilling a well like that is an expensive propisition. But in a real showdown/shutdown, could be worth it, and perhaps even a revenue producer.

      We heated exclusively with a wood furnace. I had a brand new axe and a two-man timber saw stashed in case the chain saws could not, or would not, run.

      Paranoia can be expensive. We never used any of that. But we put many an hour on our gen set as North Alabama is notorious for power failures due to ice storms. It is only paranoia if you don’t ever have the problem. If the problem occurs, then it is The Wisdom of Solomon.

  9. I have a generator for power outages that hooks up to the fuse panel and runs everything except heat and the 240v stove. For heat, I have a kerosene heater as my fireplace is just an insert and not good for heating the house.

  10. It is good to have backups to your backups, plan ABCD,,,. Here in CA. many people lose their electric power for many reasons. I built my own backup system using a portable Lithium Iron Phosphate battery bank, a Reliance 10 circuit manual transfer switch, and a small 2000 watt Gas generator. It works well as a UPS for my critical loads, and can power my gas furnace and also my old washing machine if needed by jockeying the loads. I can get gasoline from my or my neighbors cars if need be with my potable electric gas pump. Maguiver out.

    • Probably you meant ‘portable’ not ‘potable.’

      Should be a warning label on your gas pump — ‘not for human consumption.’ 🙂

  11. You mentioned having issues running the generator, did you get that resolved?

    I don’t know the watts rating of yours, but the typical 3500 watt unit like mine you have to be selective what’s going to get powered and the first is the fridge then the freezer.

    Note these are one at a time and NOTHING else hooked up – to start the compressor in these requires a big inrush of current or they will not start. Damage to the compressor starter can happen as a coworker found out while trying to run too much while the fridge kept cycling and not starting. Once running plug in a light or two is fine, for me it’s the blower fan on the gas fireplace which allows a toasty day!

    Since I have a gas furnace I may make a connection mod so I can run it off the generator. Draft motor and main blower motor don’t take much to start and run.

    Ready Killowatt can explain further I’m sure.

    • PS both my gas hot water heater and gas fireplace are old school pilot light piezo electric controller no outside power required- I will never give those up & will go out of state for a new water heater if WA keeps up with appliance ban nonsense.

    • ‘gas furnace … draft motor and main blower motor don’t take much to start and run.’ — Sparkey

      Mine pulls about 1,000W inrush current when the blower motor starts, but then settles out at 400W steady state.

      Bought a DJI 1,024 watt-hour battery power station, which should run it for 2-1/2 hours. Not continuously — I’d just crank up the furnace every 3-4 hours, to milk out half a day of heat when the power’s off.

      Haven’t needed to use it yet, in this snowless La Niña winter.

  12. Hasn’t gotten above the 20’s here for the past week or so and is really cold across much of the country as others have noted here. Sure could use some global warming about now, or maybe pipe in some of Al Gore’s boiling ocean water. We have gas heat which requires a small amount of electricity to run the controls and circ. pump; I have an inverter hooked up to a couple 12v deep cycle batteries that are on a battery maintainer to keep them up to snuff. I tested it last year and it was good for a couple days before I switched it back. Also keep both cars gas tanks full and could always run a cord into the house from there while idling the car for an extended outage. Hope I never have to but good luck to all the fools that converted to heat pumps to save the planet.

  13. The Bismarck would have made port except for a skillful and lucky torpedo strike on her steering gear/rudder. That torpedo was delivered by a Fairey Swordfish, a fixed gear biplane little improved from those used in WW1. A biplane is slow, high lift/heavy payload, and steady, a very good platform for accurately lobbing a torpedo into the water from low altitude.

    The Soviets had the world’s biggest biplane, the Antonov AN2 colt, in service on short unimproved runways well into Afghanistan. It was just the ticket for getting heavy loads into remote areas in wartime conditions.

    Another lesson, old technology can get the job done.

    Stay warm!

    • No kidding Ernie,

      The Soviet An2 is Wild!….

      The thing has a stall speed of about 25mph……??
      That’s outright Badass, according to my Spirit Airlines sources…

      The Ultimate Prepper aircraft….Vintage Bi plane with substantial payload, specifically developed for STOL in rough field conditions…..

      Functionally it can actually “fly backward”..in headwinds and land no harder than a parachute drop, in the process….

      Keep your F35 horse%*@…..I’ll settle for a “relic”..

  14. Lotsa’ wage slaves are gonna’ be leaning about the limitations of electricity real soon.

    Germany is learning about the perils of weaking their energy infrastructure by going all in on “green” energy.

    FAFO.

    Thank god for that wood stove!!

  15. It’s 30′ and snowing in my neck of Dixie. Probably had 2-3″ overnight. Unfortunately, I don’t have a wood burner or a generator/transfer switch. Gas fireplace is enough to heat the small house but that is dependent on gas being supplied.

  16. One of the greatest innovations of the United States (and the western hemisphere overall) was the acknowledgment that the calvary isn’t coming and there’s no going back. Jefferson understood this, which is why he envisioned a society structured loosely around the homestead. You and your family would own land in order to be self-reliant. Practically speaking that meant you were responsible for managing your property as you saw fit. If your plantation was a wreck, that’s your fault. If you let undergrowth get too out of hand and fire consumed your crops, well, who was supposed to keep track of it?

    Of course if your neighbor wasn’t keeping up on trimming the brush and that fire spread across the property line, there would be the need for redress.

    The people who remained in Europe didn’t own anything. All land was property of the kings and lords (and still is). They made a bargain with the manor house, labor for shelter. Eventually the US fell into a similar trap, under the guise of “greater good,” but also because infrastructure projects like town gas lines require high capitalization and therefore are more likely to be monopolistic in nature. But town gas is much more efficient than burning wood or coal so the tradeoff might be worth it. You become more dependent.

    • Of course if your neighbor wasn’t keeping up on trimming the brush and that fire spread across the property line, there would be the need for redress.

      What happens when the “neighbor” is the state of Commiefornia?

      Asking for a friend

      • The concept of public land wasn’t really under consideration until the Louisiana Purchase. The states may have had territory but other than the District of Columbia the federal government didn’t own land.

        I won’t even mention the idea of US territories.

        The idea of a public commons originated in the Massachusetts colony, a proto-socialist idea wrapped up in religious belief. It ultimately failed to achieve their goals.

        • “Massachusetts colony, a proto-socialist idea wrapped up in religious belief. It ultimately failed to achieve their goals.”

          Still the same . . . Still failing

          LOL!

  17. “Ship unmaneuverable,” Admiral Lutjens reported to the Fuhrer. “We will fight to the last shell.” — quoted by eric

    Sounds like ‘president’ F. Joe Biden, desperately dumping out pallets of hundred dollar bills to NGOs and Israel and the Ukies, before his princely carriage turns into a ridiculous pumpkin pulled by mice.

    One would not be surprised if a sunsetting, angry ‘Biden’ spitefully sets the White House on fire the night before the inauguration. Or Hunter, in a crack pipe accident.

    Stand tall and keep warm, Eric. Ignore the deteriorating, out-of-control freak show in the imperial capitol.

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