(1) Set of house keys (taped to lid with duct tape)
(1) Transit Card with $10 fare
(1) Streamlight Nano
(1) "Leatherman Micra" 9-in-1 Multitool Clone
(1) Backup Battery (charged) for Droid X
(1) DIY cut down ballpoint pen
(1) OTC Med Pack
(10) Advil
(2) Benadryl
(2) Sudafed
(1) Zyrtec
(4) Imodium
(1) Mini BIC Lighter (secured)
(2) Bandages
(1) Triple Antibiotic
(2) Sheets of Paper
$22 (1 x $20, 2 x $1)
Family Photo
I was so impressed with the light output of the Streamlight Nano, I got one for each member of my family.
First Aid kit. Could give you the list but it's boring. Basically dressings. Can miss this out if necessary as dressings can be improvised.
Fish hooks.
Fishing line.
Razor blades - preferably single sided but the duct tape will sort that.
Wire saw.
Fire is not an issue as I'll always have some means of lighting cigarettes on me.
A lot of sterile gauze - this will work just fine with the duct tape for dressings.
Normal saline.
Prescription stuff - or street stuff if it is clean enough: 500mg heroin, 250mg methamphetamine hydrochloride (or a bunch of Quaaludes if I must). 5g oxytetracycline. A lot of bleach. Or a few thousand calcium hypochlorite tablets.
With the bleach you can make war gases with an acid and a bit of work. And it'll sterilise most things. Tablets of calcium hypochlorite will do the trick here. Or about 50 other ways with a basic knowledge of chemistry.
A couple of grams of barium peroxide and some magnesium metal would be useful. And a few kilograms of some light hydrocarbon - hexane - cetane would be nice.
A few metres of extruded razor wire would be useful - but in a disaster broken glass can be substituted.
As much spring steel wire as can fit in the tin. Very useful for snares and other handy stuff.
I ditched the two knives and substituted a Micra. Also plan to get a baby Bic instead of the full size lighter. Then I'll have tons more room to add a gas mask and other fun stuff.
Actually I plan to first add a razor blade, mono or braded fishing line (ditch the twine), hooks, water purification tablets and hydrocodone (how in the world did I forget the hydrocodone?). If there's room after that, then perhaps some sterile gauze and super glue, but space tightens really fast in an Altoid tin.
Speaking of gas, Don, over here in the states last week an elderly woman died and several others were sickened after an employee mixed cleaning components in a bathroom - ammonia and bleach, presumably. Edit: just saw an update that showed the working theory is a carbon dioxide gas leak. Filled a wall cavity then spilled into the women's bathroom, causing suffocation.
its a top notch pain killer. so much so that after the war between the states in the u.s there were more heroin addicts than there are today.
but trying to explain to someone (LEO) that you are carrying it as an emergency pain killer is bound to be met with EXTREME skepticism, and get you busted.
also, it is unlikely that you are purchasing pharmaceutical grade Rorer 714's, as no reputable manufacturer continues to make quaaludes. the worst of them will end you up in hospital, which i have seen first hand.
Diacetylmorphine (heroin) was first synthesized in 1874 by C. R. Alder Wright, an English chemist working at St. Mary's Hospital Medical School in London. Bayer pharmaceutical rediscovered it twenty years later and marketed the drug as "Heroin".Considering the war was over thirty years earlier, they were morphine addicted.
You make heroin by acetylating morphine - it is more soluble than morphine so can be administered using a smaller injection - it's official name is diacetylmorphine, often shortened to diamorphine. Because the US had huge problems with opiate abuse, they banned the medical use of natural opiates in the 1920's (AFAIR). So as a result, US pain meds are made from synthetic opiates instead - at a very much greater cost. Oxycodone costs several times as much as pharmaceutical grade heroin.
Heroin is actually a brand name, the German pharmaceutical firm Bayer invented it in 1898 and marketed it as the non-addictive replacement for morphine. They lost the trademark in 1918 along with Aspirin which was another of their trademarks. Fentanyl is much more powerful but is harder to get consistent dosages as the amounts involved are in the class of "too small to see". We use the patches extensively in terminal care - but from (quite likely fallible) memory they don't have a long shelf-life so aren't ideal for an emergency kit. They also have the drawback of taking 6 hours to work so you need heroin for 6 hours anyway. And cost 10x as much.
They were extensively manufactured by the better quality Indian pharma outfits in the 1980's. I don't know if they still do. The Prime Minister of the country I lived in at the time (Zambia - a guy called Sikota Wina) was busted in South Africa with a train-load of the things that he'd bought with the proceeds from looting the national pension fund.
i believe you are correct. that said, the 80s were 30 years ago and the overdoses and abuse admits we see in our e.r. in boston, that say quaaludes were involved, seem to originate in sketchy home labs south of the u.s. border.
their quality control is, shall we say, less than adequate.
my comment was a poor attempt at humor around the idea that MORPHINE was out, HEROIN was ok. either one will get you talking to a judge pretty fast in the u.s. today. we use fentanyl a bunch in critical care but i have been doing this long enough to remember when it just sort of sat around in paitients rooms and in med rooms without anyone paying too much attention, but then, there used to be premixed syringes of valium on the unlocked code carts too.