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A little secret: wilderness survival is pretty simple. Challenging, deadly, intense, abnormal, chaotic or whatever adjective you deem appropriate is par for the course but your plan of attack to mitigate those nasty adjectives should be based on very basic and simple concepts instead of on expensive gear or attending celebrity weekend courses. I know that this idea could and probably will be met with objection from the gear peddlers and some other wilderness instructors, but oh well, I’d trade a little trolling for clarity to an issue that might be the difference between you seeing your loved ones again and ending up a footnote in the next overplayed and regurgitated survival book. What you need to ask yourself is can you make a fire, can you disinfect water and can you relax? While these are skills to learn for sure and are best learned from a qualified and experienced outdoor professional, they are relatively easy compared to ordering coffee at StarMucks or writing code for a blog.
Any type of survival, be it in the wild and wooley wilderness or in the crazy and cacophonous city (sorry about the poor alliteration) comes down to giving your body what it needs to function, which coincidentally and conveniently you have done every day of your life, assuming you are not a zombie.
The Survival Equation:
Water + Rest (sleep, relaxation) + A well Regulated Body Temperature =
40 days/ nights of life
All that a survival situation represents is a change in the way those needs are met, plain and simple. The human body needs rest, water and a stable internal temperature, plus or minus five degrees or so. If you can focus on those 3 fairly simple needs you can give yourself at least a month of survival time, which will not be fun but will give you a good chance of being found or to find help yourself should there be no one looking for you.
*Side note: This advice is based on the fact that someone is looking for you, and if someone is looking you have good odds of being found within 3 days as the average professional Search and Rescue time is 72 hours. So leave a note of where you’re going and when you’ll be back. Side note over*
Obviously for every way life can make you miserable there are ways of complicating that simplistic statement- an angry grizzly bear, nuclear fall out, white out blizzard, or fill in the blank with your most creative scenario antagonist. But what you need to ask yourself, all crazy what if’s aside, is what is the immediate threat to your life?
A flow chart could be helpful here I suppose:
Again, survival is just a change in the way you meet the same daily needs you have met for as long as you’ve been breathing except for feeding yourself which is a long conversation but know that you have at least a month’s worth of energy in your body without the input of food.
Here’s what you need to know to survive most crappy situations in life:
1. How to find and disinfect (not just purify) water
2. How to build a shelter to keep yourself warm, dry and safe from the elements
3. How to ignite, establish and use a fire to keep warm, disinfect water, and chase away the boogie man using a few simple fire lightning techniques
To summarize, this blog post is intended to demystify survival. It isn’t a good business plan to say so as a wilderness instructor, but it is not my intention to make a fortune holding this secret, my goal is to help you survive. You don’t need to spend a fortune on celebrity endorsed gear, you don’t need to own the best knife on god’s green Earth and you don’t need to spend a lifetime learning these skills. All you need is some basic training and understanding of what survival actually is, not what TV portrays it as. If I get enough grief I’ll write more, otherwise good luck out there and remember to stay warm, hydrated and rested.