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SAR Ops Page :: SAR survival gear
by
Michael A. Neiger (a.k.a. LandNavMan)
Senior SAR Team Leader
Michigan Backcountry Search and Rescue
Marquette :: Michigan
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Page contents
Why carry survival gear?
Why carry survival gear on your person,
not in your ruck?
Essential on-person survival gear
Stout knife
SERE-type
compass
Whistle
Windproof,
waterproof matches
Fire-starting tinder
Magnesium fire-starter
Signal mirror
LED micro light
Survival gear vendors
Lost-person protocol
Nature
never overlooks a mistake,
or makes the smallest allowance for ignorance.
Thomas H. Huxley (1825-1895),
A Liberal Education, 1868
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I would encourage anyone participating in a wilderness
trip, expedition, or SAR op who is not accustomed to carrying their
essential survival items on their person (in their inner pants pockets)as
opposed to in their rucksack or a removable butt pack or garmentto
seriously consider doing this.
If you become separated from the group, and we are
not able to locate you, it is very likely you will be on your own until
help arrives, which could be days in Michigan, perhaps weeks in the
wilds of Canada. Why has this happened in the past...how could this
happen to you in the future...the reasons are myriad:
- We often travel through remote,
rugged, thickly-forested wilderness. Our route typically includes
extended periods of off-the-beaten-path travel, often through remote
areas that are seldom traversed by others. Such areas can be very
challenging, even confusing, to the best of woodsmen and woodswomen.
- No trail to catch up to group
on. If someone gets separated from the groupwhich happens
from time to time on our tripsthey may not be able to simply
follow a visible trail to catch up to the group. Likewise, they will
most likely not be able to simply walk back to our insertion point,
or walk forward to our extraction point.
- No tread or tracks to follow.
There may not be any semblance of a tread, or even faint tracks,
to follow. Rocks, water, debris, or thick, tangled ground cover may
eliminate any chance of catching up via ground or aerial spoor (footprints,
walking stick marks, disturbed vegetation, etc.).
- GPS units can't always be
depended upon to get you out. More often than not, our progress
through the bush will be largely dependent on our point-person's land-nav
proficiency combined with his or her ability to correctly use quads,
satellite photos, a compass, and ranger pacing beads. While very useful,
GPS units are fragile, electronic devices that are not always reliable
tools deep in the bush, especially under thick single or double canopy,
in canyons, during heavy weather, or in severe arctic-grade cold.
- Limited sight and sound distance.
When thick ground cover and a complete canopy are present, we will
be working hard to keep the person immediately behind us and the person
immediately in front of us in sight. Consequently, it will be very
difficult to recognize when someone has dropped out of the group,
particularly in limited-sight areas. This is especially true when
the number of trippers exceeds three.
Early
and provident fear
is the mother of safety.
Edmund Burke (1729-1797),
Speech, 1792
Good question.
While hopefully you won't get separated from the group,
and hopefully you will have your rucksack if you do, it is not uncommon
to move about the bush sans rucks, whether it be to scout out a point
of interest, recon a potentially difficult route, go for a short walk,
replenish water stores, use the restroom after dark, hang food after
dark, etc.
On past trips, expeditions, and SAR ops, numerous trippers
have left the group for one reason or another and become disoriented.
Despite their best efforts, they were unable to relocate the group or
our bivouac site on their own.
Fortunately, they had not ranged too far and the faint
sound of their distant whistle allowed us to bring them in.
In the school of the woods
there is no graduation day.
Horace Kephart, 1917
If you are considering assembling an on-person, basic-essentials
survival kit, I would strongly recommend you consider including the
following items: knife, SERE compass, whistle, matches, firestarters,
magnesium firestarter, signal mirror, and LED micro-light.
Each item should be attached to an 18-inch-long loop
of fine (1.5mm) cordage to prevent accidental loss.
Having separate loss-prevention lanyards on each item
will allow you to disperse the items among your pants pockets, securing
each against loss by looping the lanyard loop through a sewn-in loop
of 0.5-inch-wide grosgrain ribbon, button hole, zipper pull, belt loop,
or safety pin. Hidden, sewn-in-the-pocket lanyard loops are the best
option since exterior lanyard attachments expose the lanyards to snagging
and the user to entrapment.
The long, looped lanyards are also handy when you need
to use one of these items in time of need: you can use them or keep
them handy without the risk of loosing them by hanging them around your
neck.
If possible, your knife should be a sturdy, high-quality,
fixed-blade, bowie-type sheath knife. If you don't want to carry such
a knife, consider a beefy folder with a lock-blade. Whatever type of
knife you opt to carry, secure it against loss with a lanyard or snap-closure
sheath.
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LandNavMan's favorite bowie knife for long-range
travel through remote areas: The Ontario
Knife Company's Spec Plus® SP10
- Marine Raider Bowie. This 15-inch military bowie chops and
splits wet or ice-encrusted wood better than most tradition blades,
due in large part to its big-bellied, tip-weighted, 0.25-inch-thick
blade.
Training advisory: Of all of its uses,
the most critical one will be getting at the dry heartwood of waterlogged
or ice-encrusted, wrist- to arm-sized wood when you have difficulty
getting a fire going during, or immediately after, extended periods
of foul weather. This is a skill you should honeespecially during
foul weather, not just on sunny days when everything is dry and ready
to combustuntil it becomes second nature.
A stout knife is also eminently useful in quickly fashioning
a windproof and waterproof shelter from limbs, bark, evergreen boughs,
lush vegetation, and other forest debris.
Top
of page
Your backup compass should be a small compass, not
your primary baseplate compass used for hour-after-hour land nav. As
such it can be a very small compass, possibly one that is built into
some whistles. Secure against loss with a looped lanyard.
The
small, lightweight Finish compass pictured is a Suunto
brand Clipper Luminous Micro Compass. It has a luminous, 10-degree-ratcheting,
rotating bezel with a directional pointer. The four, cardinal compass
points on the compass card are also luminous. This liquid-filled, jeweled-bearing
compass, which comes with a Velcro wrist strap, can be clipped directly
onto regular-width watchbands. However, it is not large enough for technical
navigation, and you must check to make sure magnetic parts in your watch
do not become a hidden source of compass deviation.
While hard to find, Survival, Evasion, Resistance and
Escape (SERE)-type NATO compasses are another very lightweight option.
Most of these micro-size compasses are intended to be sewn into one's
clothing for the maximum in concealment and loss prevention.
One
of the best SERE, last-resort compasses is the world-renowned Francis
Barker Model 1605 Nato Survival Compass. This very hard-to-find unit
is standard issue in British SAS survival kits.
Smaller than a dimeit measures only 0.2 inches
in thickness and 0.6 inches in diameterthis glass-faced, brass-bodied,
NATO survival compass employs a dry sapphire jeweled needle bearing
and weighs a scant 0.1 ounces. For daytime use, the compass card, whose
octagram shape marks the four cardinal points as well as the four intercardinal
points, denotes north with a red dot.
For those who like to move under the cover of darknesslike
NightBlazertwo, glow-in-the-dark, mil-spec tritium dots mark north
while one tritium dot marks south. Unlike some button-style compasses,
this unit is designed to be sewn into your clothing, the ultimate in
loss-prevention. It can also be attached to a lanyard.
Manufactured by Pyser-SGI
Limited, the Francis Barker Model 1605 Nato Survival Compass is
available from Triple Aught
Design Gear, Inc., 1-888-432-7227; Best
Glide Aviation Survival Equipment, 1-888-834-9971; and Silverman's
Ltd., the London, England-based vendor of military equipment that
has supplied the British squaddie for more than six decades.
Another
SERE compass option is the Silva 40 Escape & Evasion Compass. This
Silva-brand compass is liquid filled
compass and has a luminous compass card marked with the four cardinal
compass points as well as the four primary intercardinal points.
It measures 0.08 inches in thickness and 0.35 inches
in diameter. A hole in a protruding tab allows it to be sewn into your
clothing or attached to a lanyard.
Two British sources for the Silva 40 Escape & Evasion
Compass are The
Patrol Store and The
Outdoorsman Limited.
The
BCB Explorer Button Compass is another SERE compass option. This BCB
International-brand compass is a small, oil filled, pressurized
unit that is popular among the U.S. Armed Forces as well as British
Special Forces and UK SAS.
At 0.14 ounces in weight and 0.75 inches in diameter,
this button compass is also well-suited for mounting on walking sticks.
The BCB Explorer Button Compass is available from Best
Glide Aviation Survival Equipment at 1-888-834-9971.
Pea-less
whistles are the best. Avoid metal and ball-type whistles as the metal
ones can stick to your lips in deep cold and ball-type ones can jam
with sand or snow. Secure against loss with a looped lanyard.
The whistle pictured is a Fox 40 Rescue Howler (imprinted
as the Fox 40 Micro) from Adventure
Medical Kits. This ultra-light, slim, pea-less, triple-frequency
whistle puts out 122 decibels, exceeding U.S. Coast Guard specs.
Most
windproof and waterproof matches are safety matchesnot strike-anywhere
matchesso you must keep them in their original box, which is equipped
with a special striker strip. To prevent wear and tear on the matchbox
(no. 1 in photo), store the matchbox in a small plastic bag (use a baby
bottle liner and tape it shut with duct tape) in an empty dental floss
container (no 2 in photo ). To prevent accidental opening and loss,
use duct tape to seal the container as well as attach a looped lanyard.
Carry a butane lighter and other matches in your rucksack for lighting
your stove and candles in the bush.
Notice: Add additional matches to the
matchbox, staggering the heads, and then add the necessary bits of packing
material (use some of the fire tinder listed below) to the box so the
matches cannot shift or move about in the box. If you fail to do this,
you may find nothing but several wood sticks and some fine powder (ground
up match heads) in the box when you need them most after months or years
of carrying them around in the bush.
Also, these matches are more water-repellent than waterproof:
If you get them wet and fail to dry them out, the match heads will turn
to mush. If the box and striker stay wet, the striker, and the matches,
may become useless since the "safety" matches are impossible
to light without the special striker on the box. This is one more reason
to carry the combination flint striker and magnesium fire starter"metal
match"listed below. Keep this in mind when you ford your
next river or swim a lake narrows.
Carry
several waterproof, spark-ignitablenot just flame ignitablefire
starters (no. 2 in photo) in a small plastic bag (use a baby bottle
liner and tape it shut with duct tape) in an empty dental floss container
(no. 1 in photo). To prevent accidental opening and loss, use duct tape
to seal the container as well as attach a looped lanyard. Carry additional
fire starting tinder in your rucksack for use in the bush.
One of the best fire starters to carry (no. 2 in photo)
are Coghlan's-brand Emergency
Tinder (item no. 8649). Why? These waterproof, nearly-indestructible,
flexible bits of tinder do not require a flame (read: match) to ignite.
All you have to do is generate a spark from a flint and steel, like
the flint and steel unit on the magnesium fire starter below. They will
ignite even when wet by simply pulling them apart with your fingers
to expose the dry inner portion. They burn from 5 to 7 minutes. Check
these out, or something similar, as matches and lighters have there
limits, and most fire starters will not ignite with a spark, only a
strong flame.
Magnesium
fire startersor metal matches as they are sometimes calledusually
consist of a flint striker (a ferrocerium rod) embedded in the block
of magnesium. These are standard issue in military survival kits, and
for good reason. Secure against loss with a looped lanyard.
Item no. 1 in the photo is a short section of a hacksaw
blade. Since neither the flint nor the magnesium fire starter can be
used very effectively without a knife, or at least a metal object with
a somewhat sharp edge, I recommend you attach a 3-inch-long piece of
a hacksaw blade, or a GI P38 can opener, to the lanyard on your magnesium
fire starter in case you ever loose your knife. Field-expedient magnesium
scrapers and flint strikers include sharp shards of glass or fractured
pieces of hard rock, like granite.
Item no. 2 in the photo is an ultralight magnesium
fire starter designed and sold by Rick
F. Tscherne, a US Army Ranger who developed the "The Spec-Ops
Survival Necklace."
Item no. 3 in the photo is a widely-available mil-spec
magnesium fire starter that I cut in half lengthwise to save weight.
Warning: the risk of an accidental fire from cutting
magnesium is real, according to my discussions about same with Ranger
Tscherne. One errant spark and you have an instant, 5400-degree-F fire!
If you are going to attempt this, do not do this indoors under any circumstances.
I took mine outside, clamped it to a board, and all went well.
Item no. 4 in the photo is a widely-available, unaltered,
mil-spec magnesium fire starter. One of the best brands of these fire
starters is manufactured by Doan
Machinery & Equipment Co., Inc., which supplies the U.S. military
as well as armed forces across the globe. While I have not had any problems
with Coghlan-brand magnesium fire starters to date, they have been known
to loose their flint striker rod due to an adhesive failure. Doan-brand
units are imprinted with the Doan name and part number, and sold by
a number of companies, including Brigade
Quartermasters.
Training advisory: These units require
a high degree of proficiency to use effectively, so work on mastering
this skill before you need it. If you are unable to start a fire
with one, please ask someone on the trip, expedition, or SAR op for
assistance.
A
small, 2- by 3-inch plate glass (very durable and highly reflective)
or high-quality plastic mirror should do the job. If your mirror does
not come with a protective cover for both sides, fabricate one so both
the clear glass side and the coated side are not heavily scratched by
sand, etc., after dozens of trips. Secure against loss with a looped
lanyard.
Mirror no. 1 in the photo is a mil-spec (Type 1/MA23),
2-by-3-inch, Lexan-polycarbonate StarFlash Mirror manufactured by Ultimate
Survival Technologies, which was founded by Rick Stewart, a longtime
Survival, Evasion, Resistance, and Escape (SERE) instructor with the
U.S. Air Force. This floating mirror is standard issue in Air Force
survival kits.
Mirror no. 2 in the photo is a mil-spec (Type 1), 2-by-3-inch,
plate glass, Mark 3 signal mirror manufactured by S.I. Howard Glass.
Extremely durable, it has been standard issue for the U.S. military.
Training advisory: These units require
a high degree of proficiency to use effectively, so work on mastering
this skill 1,
2, 3,
4,
5
before you need it. Properly used in combination with the sun's rays,
signal mirrors are extremely effective signaling devices. Under normal
atmospheric conditions, the reflection from a signal mirror is visible
from over 70 miles. If you are unsure how to use a signal mirror, please
ask someone on the trip, expedition, or SAR op for assistance.
For
a rudimentary, close-in, survival light, carry a small LED light. Secure
against loss with a looped lanyard. The LED light shown is a Princeton
Tec-brand Pulsar Light.
If, on the off chance, you become separated from the
group on a trip, expedition, or SAR opeither while underway or
near the bivouac siteand you can not determine with a very high
degree of certainty where the group is, just sit down and wait for someone
to come back and pick you up.
While you are waiting, get out your whistle and blow
it with very long blasts every 30 seconds. You should also get out your
cook pot and beat on it, or pound on a hollow log. This will help searchers
find you.
If you stray very far off the group's back trail, you
will likely be on your own as you will be out of sight of the group's
back trail, and very quickly out of hearing distance. Whistles are only
good for very short distances, especially in rugged, mountainous terrain;
areas with heavy, sound-muffling canopy; and windy, rainy, snowy, or
other heavy weather.
If you are awaiting professional rescuers, move to
an area visible from the air and do the following:
Set out some
type of signal panel
Build and maintain a very smoky
fire during daylight hours
Build and maintain a brightly-burning
fire during nighttime hours
No matter what your predicament, always protect
yourself from hypothermiathe number one killer of wilderness
trippersby improvising a wind- and waterproof shelter, maintaining
a fire, staying warm and dry, and drinking hot liquids.
The man [woman] who goes afoot,
prepared to camp anywhere
and in any weather,
is the most independent fellow on earth.
Horace Kephart, Camping &
Woodcraft, 1917
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In God's wilderness lies
the hope of the world,
the great, fresh, unblighted, unredeemed wilderness.
John Muir (1838-1914), Alaska Wilderness, 1890
If
you've been able to read this Web page...
thank a Teacher;
If you've been able to read this Web page in English...
thank a Veteran.
Author
unknown
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Learn
about upcoming trips and expeditions of
the Michigan Bush Rats
Joe
Clewley, Joe R. Clewley, Joe Robert Clewley, Joseph Clewley, Joseph R.
Clewley, Joseph Robert Clewley
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