Survival Kits


From: gaelwolf@gws.win.net (Norman J. MacLeod)

Jim -

In the process of getting our Scouts into a more adventure-based programme, we have required them to build a personal survival kit. While there are some required items, there are others that are the individual's option. While we don't expect the same level of contents that you will find in a military pilot's ejection seat kit, we do have a fairly comprehensive set-up that works quite well. We are training the Scouts to use the kits (as well as how to survive without even this minimal level of equipment), and how to modify the kit according to the time of year, terrain, distance from the nearest well-travelled road. and type of actiivty.

The kit itself is designed to be a lightweight addition to a daypack for a day's hike, though we also expect them to have it with them on backpacking trips. Several of the items follow along with what you will find in the S.A.S. Survival Handbook (a pretty decent guide, all in all).

The loose bits of the kit that might otherwise get mis-placed are tightly packed into a small rectangular cooking container that has an inner plastic container. The top to this aluminum "box" has a spring-clip top.

A signal whistle, utility knife (Swiss Army or Leatherman type), water purification tablets, and a sealed packet of water-proof matches are carried in pockets in the clothing the Scout or Leader is wearing. These, along with a water container (also being carried on the person), are the bare minimum that someone should have in the event of a survival situation. (If the person doesn't want to be carrying a canteen on a belt, then he or she will need to have a couple of packaged condoms in a pocket, since a condom will hold upwards of a litre of water.) The main reason for pocketing them instead of carrying them in the pack is that there are occasions when you are forced to lose a pack, such as when falling into a fast-moving river, bailing out of a canoe and losing all of the bags, or going through the ice on a lake.

The next set of items go into the aluminum box mentioned above. It's a small thing - about large enough for a decent-sized brew-up, so it has to be packed carefully in order to maximise the space. What we expect to find inside - as a minimum - are:

There are a few other items, some more essential than others, that we train our Scouts to include as part of their survival kits in the daypack or backpack. These freqnetly tend to be multi-use articles that can be used as part of the main kit on a backpacking or canoeing trip:

Most search and rescue (SAR) operations find a lost or stranded person within a couple of days at most - if the search is going to be successful. The food items of the above are targeted to this short amount of time. They will also help you stay in a base camp area for the couple of days you will need to build an effective shelter and other amenities for a longer-term survival situation. This way, you can wait to do hunting/gathering activities until you have a decent place to bring the catch home to.

The survival training we conduct tends to go beyond what badges such as the BSA's Wilderness Survival or the UK's Backwoodsman require. While these badges provide a good basic level of survival skill, everyone, from Scouts to Leaders to parents gains a higher "comfort level" if we are all trained to a standard where we can not only survive in a situation driven by bad weather, injury, or becoming lost, but to be able to do so in at least realtive comfort.

Norman


Last edited: February 22, 2004
The NetWoods Virtual Campsite, Steve Tobin, Campmaster