Posts Tagged ‘survival gear’

The Most Crucial Survival Gear

Sunday, December 6th, 2009

Emergency situations can happen anywhere, at any time. Some parts of the world are afflicted with bad weather and prone to natural disasters. But it doesn’t require a dangerous situation for an emergency to occur. Bad luck, bad timing and bad preparation are all it takes. Having survival gear on hand at all times keeps people safe.

The types of emergencies that people should prepare for can include things like having no electricity for days because of a power outage. It can mean being prepared if there is a flood or a hurricane. Emergencies might also involve tornadoes, forest fires and sudden blizzards on a highway. But the fact remains that emergencies might also involve a house fire, a tire going flat while four-by-four driving in the mountains, or becoming lost on a camping trip. There are fifteen pieces of survival gear that will help a person in almost any emergency situation.

You never planned to get lost, the first time it happened. But that should have taught you to always have a map on hand of where you’re going, and make sure people know where you intend to be, at what time. If you don’t check in, they’ll know when to start to worry and where to look. A GPS receiver would help to have on hand, but you should also have a compass in your survival gear with your map. Keep a flashlight on hand. If you end up staying out after the sun sets, you’ll need light to keep from falling and hurting yourself. Emergency food rations will become important too, as time passes between your emergency and the last time you had a full meal.

Extra clothing should be among the things we put in our survival gear or emergency kit. Wearing layers is helpful in cold situations and clothing can be used for other things as necessary. Rain gear can help us build a shelter if we don’t need it to break the wind or keep us dry. Sunglasses, a sixth item for our pack, can protect our eyes from the reflecting sun and help us to keep going. Any item in a survival pack can be used to do something other than it was intended. Always keep that in mind when packing.

You might hurt yourself more than you realize when you start to get desperate. Fear sets in and people start making mistakes. Thorns on shrubs we pass could scrape or prick the skin. Be sure you pack a first aid kit in your survival gear, complete with bandages, antiseptic creams and ways of helping cover burns and cuts. What about your multi-purpose tool? It might be a little knife with a corkscrew and a pair of pliers on it but it’s a tool, and you might find yourself in desperate need of one later. You’ll also need the tools to make a fire. Pack a lighter, water proof matches or a ferrous rod that will spark easily onto some sort of fuel like tinder or grass.

You’re lost. And you’re getting thirsty. You find some water and you want to drink it. Don’t. In your survival gear, you packed at least one method of disinfecting water and making it safe to drink. There are chemical disinfectants you can add to suspect water to make it drinkable. Another item you can pack is a whistle. The sharp shrill noise will be heard over long distances and if you fell and hurt yourself, the whistle may bring your rescuers to you, instead of you hoping to make it to them.

An emergency survival shelter doesn’t have to be a big tent that takes up a lot of room. A simple tarp or space blanket can be made into a shelter using branches and logs, rocks to hold the corners down, or even pressed against a snow shelter for extra dryness and insulation. Add to the list of necessary items twenty five feet or more of cording. This can be parachute cord or simple rope but it’s a must-have for survival gear. The fourteenth item to add to an emergency kit is insect repellant of some kind. No one wants to be lost forever and eventually there will be a return to civilization. If its possible, avoid mosquitoes and ticks that might be infected with parasites or other diseases, by packing bug spray.

Regardless of whatever else goes into an emergency kit, the most important piece of survival gear we can bring is ourselves. Our will to live, and to survive, is the most important tool we have at hand in cases of emergency. We have to remember that rescue could be just around the corner and that we must not give up five minutes before the miracle. All of the above items are valuable but our will is the most valuable of all.

Survival Gear – A Quick Glance

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

A disaster can strike at any time. You may not predict it or be prepared. You may be rich and powerful or young and strong but a disaster will treat you as any other living being on this planet. For an example a hurricane may strike without warning just like it did in New Orleans where hurricane Katrina wrecked havoc without much prior warning. Many casualties were reported and many survived the disaster because they were fit enough to withstand it. Survival gear and training was not the norm in the past. But after many such disasters and emergency situations that have occurred around the world during the past couple of years survival gear and emergency training has now become a hot topic among the citizens of our nation.

For any person his or her family comes first. They will do anything to protect their families from harm. Therefore many people around the country have now considered survival training as a must for their families well being. An essential part of surviving an emergency situation or disaster is to have an up to date survival gear kit. Everything depends on how prepared you and your family will be at a time of danger. First of all each member needs to know what the emergency plan is all about. Where the survival gear is, how to use it, where to meet up and many other aspects of surviving a disaster relies on the knowledge and preparedness of each member.

The survival gear kit will consist of important equipment that will have to be carried by the user. Drinking water, rationed food, clothes, Medical supplies, tools, outdoor camping kits and many others are included in a survival gear kit. Most survival gear could be bought in stores but there are easier ways to get a hold of them. Online shopping is the easiest and most effective way of finding the right survival gear for you. Each person will vary in their essential needs but for most it is more or less the same. Some online businesses offer you custom selection of what you need and at the same time provides you with information and expert input on how select your emergency survival gear.

It is also important to point out the risk in online shopping because of the increasing number of frauds and con artists. But if you proceed with caution and are not easily fooled you will always be safe. So what are you waiting for? Do not postpone your survival. Be prepared and be ready with proper survival gear at your disposal.

Starting A Survival Garden

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

When food shortages occur, people who have planned ahead with edible survival garden using survival seeds will really benefit.  People regularly landscape around their houses with gorgeous flowers, to benefit the birds and butterflieswhy not benefit you personally as well?  

Blueberries are simple to plant around a home and with good care it will produce blueberries for muffins, drying, nibbling, ice cream toppings and plenty of other goodies!  Cherry trees can be ornamental and productive and if you don’t have space for trees there also are bush cherries available!  In the right zones, tangerines, lime, lemon and orange trees offer fruit and shade.  Coffee plants can be kept in boxes on the corner of decks, and cranberries, currants and a number of other berries can be run along fence lines.  

Ginkgo is a long cultivated nut tree with a peculiar point in a masculine and feminine tree is needed to provide nuts.  They grow up to thirty feet high in full sun, and the males may be kept on your street or front garden with the female back further so you can harvest the nuts without competition!  

Do you have got a sitting area you’d like to make use of?  There’s not a better area to use for your survival garden than growing herbs!  Planters can host chocolate mint, lemon mint as well as the commoner spearmint and peppermint – keep them separated as they can be intru|invasive.Rosemary,thyme, lavender, and lemon grass are all productive plants also.  You can, with a little research, create a tea garden to slurp sweet tea on summer afternoons, or a potpourri/craft garden if that’s an interest for you.  Best of all is a kitchen garden – garlic, basil, savory and a wide range of other plants can be grown in most areas.  You get a year’s worth of landscaping and food.  Plants like rosemary can handle quite a bit of trimming once established and fresh herbs are much better than the processed ones!  

Intrepid gardeners may try less common plants such as josta berry, jujubes and apricots.  If you like nuts, almonds are another chance for those with additional space.  Have a shady area you need to use?  Get a log implanted with shiitake mushrooms, which can last many years.  This is a good way, if you like mushrooms, to grow your own and use the space that isn’t entirely in the sun.  

Strawberries are a manifest choice for little effort.   A flower box with pansies can generate lavender pansy preserves as well as decorating.  Rhubarb is another probability, with rhubarb pie being a fave of many of us.  

This is just as practical for those in cooler climates as in the coastal sections.  Smaller trees and shrubs can provide considerable food for a small family as well as dressing up your yard with flowers and perfume – after all flowers are needed for fruit!  

Some use vines to cover areas and among the vines that may be used is grapes.  Gourds and other vines may also be ‘trained’ up a trellis.  

A natural offshoot as you start your survival garden with eatable food is composting – compost bins don’t have to be unsightly!  While many use pallets – which can be ‘dressed up’ with flowers or ‘hidden’ behind bushes – an older trash can works rather well also.  An old metal one which will leak is great – put some holes in it and dress it up with a coat of paint.  You won’t have to pay to have grass and other things hauled off – compost it, turn it into something useful for your survival garden!  

The University of Nevada designed, installed and maintained a strip in the city of Reno.  One area was designed to attract insects ( which pollinates the landscaping ), but there had been also a salsa garden, salad/herb garden, perennials, ‘Three Sisters garden’, tomatoes and ground cherries.  This is a excellent use of garden space!  

There are plenty of websites and books available on these topics like survival food storage; it is not tricky or costly to produce edible survival garden!  To learn more about other essential survival gear, go to http://essentialsurvivalgearcatalog.com.

Survival Food Storage Secrets

Monday, September 14th, 2009

One.  The first survival food storage secret is to learn to garden and use whatever space you have available.  From a back yard area, raised beds, container gardens on a deck or small herb pots in the kitchen window, folks can grow more than they suspect with a little creativity and effort.  Use eatable landscaping for plants that are ornamental as well as that provide food.Need a few shade trees?  Why not use fruit or nut trees – they’re going to supply shade as well as food.  

Two.  Learn to’put up’ food – canning, food dehydrating and other methods are increasingly easy with modern gadgetry designed to save food.  It requires a minimal effort – but on a kitchen counter you can dry enough herbs for a year ; you can make real powdered and flaked pepper, garlic and onion.  

Three.  Next survival food storage  secret is if you freeze food, be sure you have got a means to keep it going in a crisis.  If the electricity goes off you do not need to lose a year’s supply of food!  Have a generator and fuel, get a propane fridge, have some method of keeping that food cold.  Putting food aside is only part of insuring your food supply – storing it safely is the other issue.  

Four.  Be discreet.  Don’t brag about your food supply and don’t spread the word you have six months of food in your basement.  If you do, and there is a crisis, you may be overrun with folk who know you have plenty stocked away.  Are you then prepared to protect your food supply?  

Five.Storage can be a problem?  Use areas most don’t think about.  The pantry is good for many things but if you’re putting up many jars of spaghetti sauce, preserves, soups and other sauces you’re going to need room.  Have a protected corner of the basement up off the ground ( enough that a wet floor won’t damage the food ).  

Six.Here is another survival food storage tip.  Together with your food supply have a method to prepare food including water, griddle and gas/wood/charcoal, etc .  If a storm| typhoon knocks an area down for 2-3 weeks be in a position to rely on your own resources for those 2-3 weeks.  Have available not only prerequisite items but some luxury items as well .  These might include a little candy, or cookies or something that just makes things a touch more like home.  

Seven.  Remember storing private hygiene items – you can make a ‘composting toilet’ from free plans onlinehaving this available with sawdust or chips, toilet roll and other survival gear can seriously increase the comfort in an emergency.  

Eight.  Don’t depend on the government helping – or on people being friendly.  A catastrophic situation such as New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina showed the government cannot handle it – folks have got to be able to rely on themselves.  Prepare and have plans in place for tornado, fire, emergency evacuation and sheltering in place ( being restricted to home ).  Remember a train derailment or other issues can change things in a hurry!  Practice that evacuation.  You have 10 minutes- what do you grab?  Hesitating can be deadlyhaving a plan can imply survival.  

Nine.  Be able to cook from scratch, make bread and do other abilities to get through if you had to.  If you’ve got the food stocked up it doesn’t do any good if you can’t|are unable to use it.  If you depend on mixes make your own mixes in Ziploc bags that seal firmly – label with a marker right on the bag with how much liquid, egg and oil to add.  In a pinch, that bag can be the bowl – simply put wet ingredients in and mix, then tip into a baking pan.  Experiment with your grill to make things before you have got to.  

Ten.  Being able to hunt and fish can imply having a continuing food supply.  Having fishing gear and hunting supplies can suggest the difference between eating or not.  In the depression some spoke of having a small dog that would go through culverts and flush out rabbits while the large dog at the other end dispatched the rabbit as it ran out.  Sporting?  Maybe notbut if it comes to eating or not, how ethical will you be after not eating for four days?  

Get prepared now.  Work on getting things growing, on learning the skills you have to in order to survive.  When the public food supply is interrupted it will be too late.

Find more essential survival gear at http://essentialsurvivalgearcatalog.com