Outdoor Survival Guide/Shelter

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Helpful Hints

Shelter will keep you out of the elements and help prevent hypothermia. It will provide shade in the heat. It also has an important positive psychological effect.

  • Bring a cheap, lightweight tent with you whenever you go hiking, even if you don't plan on staying the night. Consider a "tube tent," for example...such a tube can be constructed by gluing (with waterproof glue) the long edge of a thin tarp or plastic drop cloth to the matching edge, creating a tube of-sorts. To use, simply string the string from one end of the tube through the other end, and tie the ends between two trees. If you are injured in the wilderness, such a shelter can be easy to erect quickly. When injured (particularly in cold weather) proper shelter can be essential for your survival.
  • A lean-to can be made by lashing a stick between two trees, then leaning more sticks on it to form a triangular structure. It can be improved by insulating it with evergreen boughs, branches and leaves, or snow. Alternatively just lay sticks against a log and fill with an cover with insulation. Remember add as much insulation as possible.
  • Get your body off the ground. Build an insulating pad between your body and the earth using sticks, pine boughs, leaves, etc. You should have twice as much insulation below you as above you.
  • Make the inside of your shelter as small as you can in cold conditions with lots of insulation. This will help to trap and conserve warmth.
  • Building a fire reflector — a wall of sticks (not dry ones!), rocks, etc. — will improve a lean-to by reflecting the fire's warmth back into the open side of the lean-to.
  • Bring one or two metallic rescue blankets wherever you go. They are useful for building shelters, reflectors, and water collectors, and you can even cook with them.
  • In snowy conditions, build a quinzhee.
  • One shelter that has worked very well in the past, is a lean-to shelter, it is fairly easy to construct, and is very effective.

Shelter for Survival

In the average consideration of survival it often seems shelter is overlooked, or at least taken for granted and misplaced on the scale of priorities.

It is always good to remember the "rule of threes":
"A person can survive for three minutes without air,
three hours without shelter,
three days without water,
three weeks without food."
(three months without xxxx -hope, love, focus...)

While obviously not absolute, these guidelines are reasonable and appropriately stress the need for shelter. Protection from the elements comes second only to breathing.

Stop and think about the conditions under which three hours of exposure is a generous life-expectancy. This should immediately clarify that when shelter is most needed it may be most difficult to find or create.

Levels of shelter:
Clothing and basic tools
Minimal short-term protection
Long-term protection

Clothing:

Dress in Layers!

The first level of shelter you have is the clothes on your back. Simply put, you have to be able to "walk home" in the clothing you either have on, or have at hand. Take a hard look at the difference between what you want to wear and what you should have for all possible conditions you might encounter.

Waypoints where additional resources are available (camp, basecamp, your car) can certainly be the initial target of any self-extraction. Such caches then cover situations of different scope — what's on your person will get you back to camp, what's at camp will get you to your car, etc.

The concept of walking home may sound out of place, but there is a distinction between being lost and/or injured, and simply being in a difficult spot for an indefinite period of time. As a rule, if you are lost or injured do not wander - get yourself found.

A minimal set of equipment should be incorporated into your wardrobe. Without the ability to make fire and cut things - right now! - you're not even trying to be prepared and will be hard-pressed to spend anything but a mild summer night outdoors safely.

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