Showing posts with label bear grylls. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bear grylls. Show all posts

Wednesday, 8 September 2010

A Bushcrafter's Guide To Getting A Good Source Of Potable Water

If you love doing the extreme or by chance is trapped in a forest, you must know how to survive, among them is knowing how to avoid dehydration. The simple answer to this is by obtaining safe water to drink.

An average person may survive for 3 to 5 days without fluid intake. This of course depends on the climate and the how much energy they exert to survive.

A lot of those who do not survive in the wild are reported to have died of dehydration. It is very difficult if you do not know where to look for, how to get, or how to clean water so you can drink.

Fluid Loss

Bushcraft survival primarily depends on food intake, fluid intake, and fluid conservation. If you can't find water to drink most likely you cannot find food to eat. We come down to the third essential point which is fluid conservation.

You must remember that the more fluid you expend means the more fluid you must drink. Here are some methods how our body loses fluid:
  • Perspiring - Perspiration is a natural ways to cool our body. If you are trying to survive in an environment with temperatures rising to around 35 degrees Celsius, you may lose around 2 liters of water even if you sit down under the shade of a big tree. Try to minimize your activity to conserve your body fluids. Energy should be spent on getting help or basic survival needs.
  • Urinating- It is normal to urinate but if you are trying to survive in the wild, it will help if you can hold it longer to prevent fluid loss. Worst comes to worst, you can apply urine to the skin to help the body cool down. Never drink it though if you do not know how to distill it.
  • Vomiting and Crying- Both of these are natural tendencies but may also lead to fluid loss if you cannot control. Try to stay calm and avoid vomiting or crying since these will not help you at all to conserve body fluids.

Methods of Getting Water

Now that you know how to conserve body fluids, you must know how to look for and get some water to drink.

Remember if you only have a liter of water from your bushcraft kit; try to take only a few sips in between long intervals.

Here are some methods to establish good water supply while surviving in the wild:

  • Creek beds - you can soak a piece of cloth in the damp sand or mud and wring out the water. You can also try to cut the roots of trees that you can find in the creek bed to source water.
  • Rocky formation - the natural terrain may have water pooled in a rocky formation or sipping through its cracks.
  • Salt Lakes - if it rains, the top 3 mm of the lake will be fresh water. You can siphon this using grass straw so you can have something to drink.
  • Animal Trails  - think of animal instinct. Animals will be moving from one source of water to another to survive. Use their trails so you can also find water supply.
  • Tree Roots - Before the heat of the day, roots of trees hold water. You can cut them in short lengths and drain them of the fluid.
  • Dew - the collection from trees may be tedious but survival is survival

Whatever you do in the wild, make sure that you are drinking clean water. Bad water will cause internal infection and may not help in your aim to survive. Try to boil the water if you can. Remember that clear water is not always clean water.

SpringFields army surplus store can cater for all your bush craft and camping equipment needs

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Benedict_Yossarian

Wednesday, 12 May 2010

Bear Grylls Gives Himself A Guano Enema

Adventurer Bear Grylls is back for another season of Born Survivor, and he's starting it off in grand fashion by giving himself a "guano enema" while in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.Well done Bear!

Monday, 8 February 2010

Could You Really Survive In The Wild?

In the last couple of years it's become a popular concept. Going out alone to survive in the wilderness using only your wits and the tools you have with you. It seems that as we get more labour saving devices and our lives become easier, the idea of going back to nature and fending for ourselves becomes more appealing. Possibly we just romanticise the idea because of shows we watch or maybe there is a natural born hunter in all of us trying to get out.

There are a variety of TV programmes that glorify the idea of bush craft featuring bushcraft specialists like Bear Grylls and Ray Mears. These shows are intended to entertain and to a small degree educate. However these men are specialists and have had extensive training, whether it is military or other. Is surviving in the wilderness actually possible for any extended period of time?

In the channel 4 program alone in the wild, Ed Wardle a Scottish outdoor adventurer was dropped into the Canadian wilderness with the intention of showing he could survive there for 3 months. Ed was left in the Yukon armed with only a camera, a rifle and a fishing rod to aid his survival. Prior to the show Ed has made a variety of documentaries in some of the world's most hostile environments including the North Pole and the peak of Mount Everest. He also received training from medical and survival experts. However it was important to note that he was not a survival expert himself.

Ed lasted 50 days in the wilderness before issuing a distress call and being flown out. His condition had deteriorated greatly and he was suffering from severe weight loss and his mental state had also become questionable.

Despite this 50 days is a great achievement but it highlights the point that man just simply isn't made to survive alone. If you're armed with an archery bow and have a great knowledge of survival bushcraft then you will be more capable than most at getting by in the wilderness.

However, living in the wild is certainly not going to be a permanent thing, but if you ever find yourself alone in the wild having good bushcraft skills will definitely help you survive for a while.

Sam Qam has studied survival bushcraft and is a crack shot with an archery bow.