Launch pricing on the Buried Ways Field Guides — instant PDF download, yours to keep, backed by a 7-day guarantee.

From the Buried Ways channel · @buriedways

WHAT THEY BURIED — DUG UP AND WRITTEN DOWN

The Aztecs grew seven harvests a year on lake mud, with no fertilizer bag. The Inca kept potatoes edible for a decade, with no fridge. The Maya pulled clean water through a bed of sand for a thousand years. I spent months in the agronomy journals, the excavation reports, and the old building codes digging these methods back out of the ground. Then I wrote them down as three plain field guides for your own garden, pantry, and off-grid.

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Buried Ways

The Library

Take the whole shelf and save the most — or pick a single guide.

Best Value

The Complete Buried Ways Vault

All three Field Guides across both lanes: soil and pantry on the food side, water on the off-grid side, plus two bonuses that tie them into one self-sufficiency reference. The whole buried library in a single download, for less than the cost of two guides bought on their own.

  • Volume 1 — Soil That Feeds Itself
  • Volume 2 — A Year in the Pantry
  • Volume 3 — Water Without the Grid

Plus bonuses: Bonus: The Printable Field Cheat Sheets — one laminate-ready page per method, for the garden and the workbench · Bonus: The Buried Civilizations Sourcebook — every method traced to its civilization, its date, and the document that buried it

Volume 1 — Soil That Feeds Itself$49
Volume 2 — A Year in the Pantry$69
Volume 3 — Water Without the Grid$89
+ Bonus: The Printable Field Cheat Sheets — one laminate-ready page per method, for the garden and the workbenchincluded
+ Bonus: The Buried Civilizations Sourcebook — every method traced to its civilization, its date, and the document that buried itincluded
Buy all three separately $207 + bonusesYour price $49.99
Buy all three separately$207$49.99Save $157 (76%)Notify me at launch →Secure checkout · Gumroad handles payment & deliveryInstant download · 7-day guarantee
Prefer just one topic? Pick a single guide
Soil That Feeds Itself
Volume 1

Soil That Feeds Itself

Aztec lake-mud, Egyptian Nile silt, and the Three Sisters — fertility with no bag

The fertilizer aisle is a subscription you were taught to need. The Aztecs and Egyptians fed whole cities for centuries without it, because they understood the one thing the bag makes you forget: what actually rebuilds soil. This guide rebuilds that understanding for a backyard bed.

  • How Aztec chinampa lake-mud turned a lake into seven harvests a year — and the backyard version of that fertility layer
  • The Egyptian Nile-silt basin cycle, and why a working bed wants flooding-and-rest, not a constant feed
  • The Maya milpa and the Three Sisters nitrogen relationship industrial farming stripped out — and how to put it back in
  • Mesopotamian fallow rotation: the schedule that kept fields alive for a thousand years
  • What 'feed the soil, not the plant' actually means at the level of one raised bed
$49$19.99SAVE 59%You save $29Launch price
Notify me at launch →Instant PDF · yours to keepAdd the other two for $30.00 more → all three + bonuses
A Year in the Pantry
Volume 2
Most Popular

A Year in the Pantry

Inca chuño, Egyptian sealed granaries, and Roman jars — store food for years with no power

Most preppers think long-term storage needs a freezer or a vacuum sealer. The Inca kept potatoes edible for a decade with a mountain night and a stomp. The Egyptians kept grain pest-free for three thousand years with one sealed jar and one cheap mineral. Here's how, honestly.

  • Inca chuño freeze-drying: the no-fridge method that made potatoes last ten years
  • The Egyptian sealed-granary system and the $1 mineral powder that kept the bugs out
  • Roman amphora dry-storage and salt-brine vegetables straight from Cato and Columella
  • Ventilated qollqa storehouse design — why airflow, not sealing, kept some food sound
  • The food-safety chapter: where these methods are genuinely safe, and where you must verify before you rely on them
$69$29.99SAVE 57%You save $39Launch price
Notify me at launch →Instant PDF · yours to keepAdd the other two for $20.00 more → all three + bonuses
Water Without the Grid
Volume 3

Water Without the Grid

Mayan sand filtration, Egyptian charcoal vessels, and copper storage — clean water when the pump stops

Most blackout-worriers stockpile bottled water because they think filtration is a power-on technology. The Maya at Tikal pulled microbes out of reservoir water with a bed of sand for over a thousand years. This is the off-grid drinking-water guide — with the safety kept honest.

  • The Maya zeolite-and-quartz sand bed at Tikal: the layered filter that ran for a millennium
  • Egyptian and Greek sand-charcoal-cloth filters and what each layer actually removes
  • Copper and silver storage vessels — the oligodynamic effect the ancients used without naming it
  • How gravity-fed and cistern water moved through a home with no pump
  • The water-safety chapter: what filtration does and does not make safe, and the verify-before-you-drink rule that is not optional
$89$39.99SAVE 55%You save $49Launch price
Notify me at launch →Instant PDF · yours to keepAdd the other two for $10.00 more → all three + bonuses

What’s inside

Every chapter traces one buried method to the civilization that used it, explains why it actually worked, and shows you the backyard version — with the honest limits stated in the same chapter. Here's exactly what's on the contents page of each guide.

Volume 1

Soil That Feeds Itself

  • The Aztec chinampa lake-mud method — and the backyard wicking-bed version that feeds the soil from below with no bagged feed
  • The Egyptian Nile flood-and-rest cycle, and why a working bed wants flooding and rest, not a constant drip of fertilizer
  • The Maya milpa and the Three Sisters: the bean that pulls its own nitrogen out of thin air, and how to put that relationship back in
  • The Mesopotamian rest-half / crop-half rotation that kept fields alive for a thousand years — and the salt that killed the greedy ones
  • Amazonian terra preta: the charcoal trick that built black earth which outlasted an empire
  • What 'feed the soil, not the plant' actually means at the level of one raised bed, with a worked cost example

34 pages · instant PDF

Volume 2

A Year in the Pantry

  • Inca chuño: the freeze-dryer made of mountain air that kept potatoes edible for years with no fridge
  • The Egyptian sealed granary and the one fistful of cheap mineral powder that kept grain bug-free for three thousand years
  • Roman amphora dry-storage and salt-brine recipes read straight out of Cato's and Columella's own words
  • The ventilated qollqa storehouse, where airflow — not a tight seal — kept half a million stores of food sound
  • The one chapter that can actually kill you: the food-safety floor on botulism and spoilage, written straight
  • The root cellar — the temperate cousin you can build — plus water activity, the single idea under every method

36 pages · instant PDF

Volume 3

Water Without the Grid

  • The Maya zeolite-and-quartz sand bed at Tikal: the layered filter that cleaned reservoir water for over a thousand years
  • Egyptian and Greek cloth-charcoal-sand filters, and the honest accounting of what each layer actually removes
  • The schmutzdecke and slow-sand filtration — the living skin on top of the sand, with real numbers from the modern biosand filter
  • Copper and silver storage vessels: the oligodynamic effect the ancients used to kill what they couldn't see, with a real study behind it
  • Gravity-fed cisterns and the Roman and Persian systems that moved clean water through whole cities with no pump
  • The non-negotiable water-safety chapter: what filtration does and does not make safe, plus the SODIS sun step the WHO endorses

33 pages · instant PDF

Then the modern system decided you should pay a bill for all of it

For thousands of years, ordinary people grew more food on worse land than we manage now. They stored a year of food with no freezer and pulled clean water with a bed of sand. None of it needed a monthly bill.

Then Big Ag learned to sell you seed and fertilizer every spring. The utilities learned to meter your water. The building codes quietly zoned out the underground cold pit. The old methods didn't fail. They got inconvenient to a system that wanted you buying inputs forever — so they were left to rot in journals nobody outside a university reads.

Why these guides exist

On the channel I get one shot at a method per week, packaged for the click. People kept asking the same thing in the comments: where do I get the step-by-step so I can actually build this?

So I wrote it down. Each Field Guide takes one buried method, traces where it came from, explains exactly why it worked, and lays out how a person with a yard, a pantry, or an off-grid setup rebuilds a version of it today — in the soil, in the jar, in the filter. No fluff, no guru talk, no upsell on bagged inputs you don't need.

What you actually get

Plain-language field guides you can read on a phone in the garden or print and stain with dirt. Each one covers the history, the mechanism, the materials, the build, the honest limits, and the safety check. The Complete Vault stacks all three guides — soil that feeds itself, a year in the pantry, and water without the grid — plus two bonuses: the printable cheat sheets and the buried-civilization sourcebook.

These are researched guides — the synthesis of the old knowledge, not a promise that your garden, pantry, or off-grid rig will perform like an empire's. The methods are ancient and real. What you build with them is on your land, your climate, and your hands.

An honest comparison

Three ways to get this — and what each really costs you

Scattered homestead forums

Time it takesWeeks of threads to piece one method together — and half the replies contradict each other
How reliableHit and miss: good answers buried under guesses, with no source behind most of it
What it costsFree — paid for in your evenings and the trials that didn't work

Trial and error over seasons

Time it takesYears — you learn one growing season, one harvest, one winter at a time
How reliableIt works eventually, but every wrong guess costs you a crop, a batch, or a season
What it costsFree up front — paid in lost harvests and the years it takes to get there

These guides

Time it takesAn afternoon to read the method, then build at your own pace
How reliableResearched, sourced, in plain English
What it costs$49.99 for the Vault — yours to keep

For the founding readers

Launch pricing on the Buried Ways Field Guides — instant PDF download, yours to keep, backed by a 7-day guarantee.

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Honest proof

No reviews yet — and we won’t invent any.

Buried Ways publishes a new buried ancient method every week to the homesteaders, gardeners, preppers, and off-gridders who follow the channel. These three guides — soil fertility, long-term food storage, and off-grid water — are the written, step-by-step version those viewers kept asking for in the comments.

These guides are newly published, so there are no verified reader reviews yet. Real, verified reviews from readers will appear here as they come in — nothing invented, nothing seeded. Want to judge the depth and voice first? Watch the channel — it's the truest sample of how these guides are written.
7dayguarantee

A straight 7-day guarantee — no form, no runaround.

Every guide downloads the moment you buy, so it's yours to keep. If something's genuinely wrong — a file that won't open, or a guide that isn't what this page described — email me within 7 days and I'll fix it or refund you, no form to fill out. What I can't do is take back a guide you've already read and decided wasn't for you; that's the trade for instant access. So I've written this page to tell you exactly what's inside before you spend anything.

Instant PDF downloadSecure checkout via Gumroad7-day guarantee

Straight talk

This isn't for everyone — and that's the point

  • If you want a secret loophole that makes your garden feed the block by Friday, close this tab — these are slow methods that ran on patience, and I won't pretend otherwise.
  • If you've already got soil that feeds itself, a full root cellar, and water off the grid, you've done the work — you don't need me to hand it back to you.
  • If you want a parts list to buy and a switch to flip, this isn't that — every method here is built from dirt, sand, clay, and time, not a bagged input or a kit.
  • If you need a licensed agronomist or engineer to sign off on your exact build, hire one — I'm a researcher who hands you the old method and tells you plainly where to go verify it.

Questions

The things readers ask first

Are these physical books or digital?+

Digital PDF guides you download the moment you order — read them on a phone in the garden, a tablet on the workbench, or print and stain them with dirt. No shipping, no waiting. The Complete Vault arrives as one download with everything inside.

Do the methods actually work, or is this just the channel's clickbait in a PDF?+

The packaging on the channel is punchy on purpose — the methods inside are real and documented. Each guide traces its method to the civilization that used it, the archaeology or agronomy that confirms it, and the mechanism that made it work. What I can't promise is a result on your specific land. Soil, climate, and your own build all decide that. These are researched guides to a real old method, not a guarantee of an outcome.

Are you a licensed expert — an agronomist, an engineer, a building professional?+

No, and I won't pretend to be. I'm a self-sufficiency researcher. My value is the months of digging — through the journals, the excavation reports, and the old codes — synthesized into something you can read and use. For anything that touches structure, fire, drinking water, or local code, the guides tell you plainly to verify with a qualified professional before you rely on it.

Is any of this safe to actually do?+

The food-storage and water guides include honest safety chapters, because spoilage, botulism, and bad water are real. The rule across every guide is the same: I'll show you how the old world did it and where the genuine limits are — you verify before you rely on it. I clickbait the title, never the safety.

Should I buy single volumes or the Vault?+

If you only care about one lane — say, just the pantry, or just off-grid water — a single volume is the honest pick. If you want the whole picture across food and off-grid, the Complete Vault is far better value: all three guides plus two bonuses for less than buying the three on their own.

Can I see the writing before I pay?+

The channel is the sample. Every guide is written in the same voice you already know from the videos, just expanded into the full step-by-step with the sources attached. This page lists exactly what's inside each one, and every method is traced to its civilization, its date, and the document behind it — so you know what you're getting before you spend anything.

What if I live in an apartment with no land?+

Some of it scales down — soil fertility, pantry storage, and small sand-filter principles work on a balcony or in a closet. The chinampa fertility layer and the larger cistern builds genuinely need land or a structure you control. The guides are upfront about which methods need space and which don't, so you're not buying something you can't use.