Personal Survival Kits
by James Mandeville
Free advice: Learn how to survive with a personal
survival kit
As requested, I have decided to post again my free information on
making a survival kit. If you found this article useful/interesting,
or have any suggestions for improving it, I would like to hear from
you.
The
Personal Survival Kit (sometimes referred to as a Survival Tin
because originally everything was carried in an old tobacco tin) is
designed to aid survival when caught up in a potentially life-threatening
survival situation when water, food and shelter are limited. The basic
idea is to carry with you at all times essential survival items that
are impossible to find, or difficult to replicate or manufacture in
a survival situation to help you to survive when all else is lost.
The items carried assist with the main survival needs of fire, shelter,
navigation, food procurement and water treatment. The kit may also
include basic first aid items, sugar in the form of boiled sweets
and salt.
The Military Survival Kit (see photo, left) is the UK Ministry
of Defence's version of the Combat Survival Tin used by soldiers
in World War II. There are a few additions in the new military survival
kit but the items carried remain fundamentally the same as in the
World War II version.
The new military survival kit has been redesigned to aid in escape
and evasion. Alongside the Aircrew Survival Pack carried in
all warplanes, this kit was used extensively in the 1st Gulf War by
UK servicemen, including Royal Air Force pilots and Special Air Service
soldiers.
The concept of carrying survival aids packed in a small container
has been around long before the two World Wars. Mountain guides in
many countries would carry essential survival equipment in their pockets
as a matter of course. Indigenous peoples carry essential survival
items with them as a matter of necessity every day of the week and
probably always have done.
Bringing the survival kit up to date, main survival
items:
People are venturing into remoter places seeking exciting recreation,
thus we hear of more extreme survival stories affecting civilians.
Carrying a survival kit is a matter of common sense in any remote
location.
Most civilians (and many serving military personnel) have surprisingly
little knowledge of survival techniques. Viewers of Discovery Channel
will notice how often the victims of disaster venture out ill
prepared into harsh terrain or take risks that put them in a survival
situation. In ninety per cent of these stories, carrying a personal
survival kit could have made a world of difference to the disaster
victims. However, it is not only the luckless adventurer who can be
caught up in a survival situation. Today, exotic foreign travel, the
effects of climate change and the threat of war and terrorism, etc.,
could place the everyday civilian in an extreme survival situation
in an instant. If one is caught in an extreme survival scenario, the
survival kit suddenly becomes a valued possession. Packed inside the
survival kit is the means to light fires, trap animals, make shelter,
purify water, signal for help and apply some rudimentary first aid.
That's the concept – all of this, in a small container that can be
carried on the person.
The question being, is a small tin carried in one's pocket the best
way of carrying vital personal survival equipment? The survival tin
should be regarded as a supplement to other survival equipment carried
in one's main pack. However, it should also be comprehensive enough
to stand on its own if everything else is lost. It is also important
to decide what you really need to carry in a survival kit and it is
equally important to be familiar with the items you do carry and be
proficient in every aspect of their use.
Considerations:
When
you sit down and think about making your own personal survival, the
first question that usually springs to mind is what to put in a survival
kit? After compiling a list of necessary items, the next problem is
finding a suitable container. Bearing in mind that every part of the
survival kit should have a use, maybe the old tobacco tin is not the
best solution. Ideally, the container itself should be multi-purpose
(use it for cooking in, drinking from, as a signalling mirror, etc.).
Not knowing ultimately where you will use your survival kit makes
putting one together somewhat difficult. You could gather many little
items suitable for survival on land and end up being cast afloat in
the middle of an ocean! If you know you are venturing into a risky
area (jungle, desert, etc.), you can plan accordingly and construct
or purchase your survival kit to be as useful as possible in the terrain
you are visiting.
The commercial alternative:
Buying
a commercial survival kit is fraught with potential dangers, the greatest
risk being the quality of the contents. If you shop around you will
find cheap kits on offer. Imagine you are lost in the jungle and need
a knife; the inferior knife in your survival kit breaks the first
time you try to use it and the tiny phial of water purifying tables
is not designed for use in areas where water-borne parasites are resistant
to chlorine and iodine. Suddenly, the cheap solution was not the best.
Some
commercial survival kits are okay, some are rubbish, knowing one from
the other is not always easy, as the trick is to put a few quality
items in the tin to make it look good and bulk it out with inferior
goods. Be wary of a Survival Tin sealed in plastic, always open it
and inspect the contents. Do not open it up the first time you need
it for real because you could be in for an unpleasant surprise. Reseal
it with ducting tape or use it to practice with and buy another one
to carry with you.

BCB make a range of reliable survival kits
If you make your own survival kit:
The container:
The first design consideration should be the container itself and
how you intend to carry it on your person. As I mentioned above, the
survival kit historically was an old tobacco tin and this concept
has stuck, so many survival tins on the market use a similar tin.
The concept of keeping a survival kit in one's pocket is also a questionable
idea. This can also be dictated by climate. If you are wearing heavy
outer garments with plenty of deep pockets, fine. If you are wearing
shorts and a T-shirt, anything heavy in the pockets of your shorts
soon becomes annoying and is easily lost in certain situations – or
left behind because it is a nuisance to carry.
The best design concept is to have a container carried in a pouch
or bag, which may also be fastened securely on a belt, hung around
one's neck or placed in a pocket. The mode of carrying may then be
applied to suit the situation you find yourself in. For these reasons,
you need a highly durable carrying pouch made of strong waterproof
material classified for military and expedition use. Alternatively,
consider a leather carrying pouch for bush craft enthusiasts,
hikers
and hunters. If you choose to make your own survival kit and are going
into seriously adverse terrain, or are on active service in the military,
use a waterproof bag like the
Blackhawk escape and evasion drop bag (photo, left).
The
second myth is that the survival kit has to be very small and there
seems to be a crazed need to make the container as small as possible
and the contents as miniature as they can possibly be. I have needed
a survival kit for real and I can tell you that miniature is not good!
When you are cold, frightened, tired and hungry, your hands shake;
you are clumsy and it is easy to give up on using the miniature contents
within the first few desperate hours. Find a container that is strong,
light and durable, will hold what you need, one you can used as a
cup for drinking and to heat small quantities of food and water. Finding
a suitable container is a challenge, I recommend the Mini Mess Tin
supplied by BCB (photo above). This mess tin has a waterproof seal
to keep the contents dry and at the time of writing, there was nothing
on the market to beat it if you want a small survival tin. Carry it
inside a pouch of some type and pack items around it that do not need
to be waterproof.
Other considerations:
Is your survival kit going to be general purpose (useful in most locations)?
Is it going to be specific (for use in a specific geographic area)?
Do you plan to carry your personal survival kit with you at all times?
Having a survival kit on a flight is impossible now on most airlines
because it contains sharp items (unless it travels cargo). All of
these factors need careful consideration. Having collected all the
contents, make sure you can both pack and repack them easily in the
container. If you fumble with anything or constantly drop any of the
small items, try to replace them with other products. Test your design
in your own backyard by trying to use the contents in a howling gale
and lashing rain, in a snowstorm, etc. Get it right first in a non-threatening
situation.
A personal survival kit is designed to support one person; each
person in a group should carry one!
What to put in it?
Before making your list, here are some basic considerations:
- Do I need a general-purpose personal survival kit or is my need
specialised?
- Is my need specific to a geographical area?
- Is my need specific to special activity, i.e. mountaineering,
trail riding, etc?
- What are the basics I need to carry?
- Will my kit include basic first aid (first help) supplies or
will these be carried separately?
- Will my personal survival kit contain anything edible or perishable?
- How am I going to carry the kit on my person?
- What's my budget?
A general-purpose survival kit:
By definition, this survival kit is designed to help you in almost
any situation that may occur if you have the survival skills and knowledge
to back it up. An example of such a use may be if you are in the military,
are a private pilot flying regularly over wilderness, an extreme sports
enthusiast venturing into a remote area or just want to be prepared
for anything, anytime.
Your personal survival kit may contain these items, many of which
should also be duplicated in your main pack:
- A folding lock knife, several razor blades or scalpel blades.
- Two compasses. (Keep them apart from each other with magnetic
screening material.)
- Means of attracting attention.
- Means of purifying and carrying water.
- Means of lighting fire.
- Miniature LED torches.
- Means of catching wildlife for food.
- A survival bag or survival blanket (probably will not fit into
the tin but should be in the carrying pouch).
- Sewing kit.
- Commando wire saw and a hacksaw blade.
- Multi-tool.
- Magnifying glass.
- Food grade water bags.
- Nylon cord and Duct Tape (probably will not fit in
the tin but should be in the carrying pouch). A good tip is to make
a couple of bracelets woven from Paracord (Photo, right). Untie
them when you need them. Each bracelet will contain 3 metres of
cord. You can also make a belt that gives you a longer length of
cord.
- Waterproof notepad and pencil. (probably will not fit in the
tin but should be in the carrying pouch)
- A Shemagh or bandanna (probably will not fit in the tin but
should be in the carrying pouch).
- Rudimentary first aid supplies (best carried in the carrying
pouch for ready use, not sealed in the tin.) Pre-packed re-hydration
mix and/or salt and sugar should be carried in your survival tin.
Salt, especially, is essential to survival and is difficult to source
in nature.
- Insect repellent.
- Personal hygiene items.
- £50 ($100; €75 or other international currency) in small denomination
notes sealed in a plastic bag.
To suit special terrain or geographical area:
An example of such use may be if you are likely to be in desert, jungle,
veldt, extreme cold, extreme heat, very wet, at sea, etc. Add items
you may need and leave out items you are certain you will not need
- give each item careful consideration.
For example, if you do not need to carry insect repellent, a re-hydration
mix or a Shemagh, replace these items with other useful things. If
you are going into extreme cold do not pack a metal whistle, use plastic,
as a metal whistle can freeze to the lips. Disposable gas lighters
are unreliable in sub-zero temperatures so back this up with some
lifeboat matches. If you are making a personal survival kit for use
at sea, pack a couple of mini flares, forget the animal snares, make
sure everything that can possibly float does float and is unaffected
by seawater. Adjust your list accordingly.
Further considerations:
Always make sure you are familiar with the use of each piece of equipment
(Can you use a signalling mirror effectively? Do you know how to stitch
a wound using a suture and needle? Do you know how to catch animals
for food and locate water? Can you use a compass?). Pack the survival
kit in an organised way, making sure the items you may need first
are handy. Think about what happens when you unpack your survival
kit – how do you manage the many small items without losing them?
Commercially produced, vacuum packed survival kits are notoriously
difficult to repack once opened. Carrying some international currency
can be useful for the day you find your way back to civilization or
for buying food and help from locals who may not otherwise be too
willing to help you. Useful items include salt, sugar (boiled sweets)
and a few days supply of multi-vitamins.
Carrying the bare minimum:
- A windproof cigarette lighter and a few lifeboat matches.
- Several Wetfire fire starting blocks.
- A signalling mirror.
- A whistle.
- Miniature LED torch.
- Strips of foil packed water purifying tablets.
- Some strong food grade plastic bags for collecting, purifying
and carrying water.
- Compass with lanyard fitted.
- Gerber Ultralight L.S.T. knife or similar.
- Assorted waterproof sticking plasters; choose a type with antiseptic
impregnated into the padding.
- Three sewing needles, pre-threaded with strong thread.
- Survival bag or blanket.
- The longest length of strong cord you can fit into the tin or
Paracord bracelets.
- A few fish hooks, swivels and sinkers; length of fishing line.
- Boiled sweets and salt.
All of the above items will fit into a container the size of the
proverbial tobacco tin, the survival bag being the bulkiest item,
fasten it to the tin with several thick rubber bands (useful); carry
it separately if you need to make your kit smaller still.
Folding lock knives
Considerations:
- Blade must lock securely into position. One-handed opening and
folding with thumb stud or thumb hole, is good (but now illegal
in many EU countries, although should not be a problem carrying
one in a sealed tin clearly marked as a survival kit).
- Should be strong and light. Blade should withstand being hammered
into wood using a heavy piece of timber.
- Broadest possible blade. Good cutting edge, easy to sharpen
and rustproof.
- Composite/unbreakable plastic or aluminium handle. Sure grip
in wet conditions.
- Handle should have a hole to allow the knife to be threaded
on a lanyard and hung around the neck.
Author recommends:
Gerber L.S.T. Knife.
This knife is my favourite survival kit knife:

Consider also: Gerber Ultralight L.S.T. Knife.
Specification and supplier:
Blade material: 400 series stainless steel. Handle material: Fibreglass-reinforced
nylon. Carry system: Stainless steel clip (removable) Lock mechanism:
Lock back. Closed length:9.2 cm. Open length: 16 cm. Length of blade:
6.7 cm. Weight: 34 g.
Manufacturer: Gerber, GerberGear, 14200 SW 72nd Avenue, Portland,
OR 97224, USA
Author's second choice:
Buck Rush:

Specification and supplier:
Weight: 68 g. Handle material: Anodized aluminium. Carry system: Stainless
steel clip (removable). Colour: gun metal grey. Blade steel: 154CM.
Length closed: 9.5 cm. Blade length: 6.4 cm. Blade shape: Drop point
Manufacturer: Buck Knives, 660 S. Lochsa Street, Post Falls, ID 83854-5200,
USA.
Compasses
Considerations:
Beware of what you are buying when it comes to miniature compasses,
many on the market are little better than toys, so always buy a top
brand compass, never cut costs on this item.
-
The
compass in a personal survival kit should be of high quality and
treated as a second compass. If you are making a general purpose
personal survival kit, it is best to have a global compass (one
with a needle balanced for use in both hemispheres). The Silva Voyager
9020 compass is ideal. To make the compass smaller, cut it down
to around 6.5 x 5 cm. Shown in the photo is a cut-down compass with
new lanyard holes and the inset shows the original compass.
- "Escape and Evasion" type compasses are only accurate to +/-
5 degrees and they are made to work in
one
hemisphere but if space is of the essence, an E&E compass is a good
one to choose. The Silva "SERE" Compass 40H luminous is the best
miniature compass to pack in your survival kit and is available
in models for both the northern and southern hemispheres; pack one
of each and make sure you know which is which!
Both the luminous and non-luminous versions of this compass have
a lanyard loop (this compass is also sold without a lanyard loop,
so once more, take care what you are buying). All Silva E&E versions
are robust and oil damped.
- Silva also makes a version of the 40 model that fits on a wristwatch
strap. If you use this version, do not fit it on a strap next to
an electric watch, as this will make the compass highly inaccurate.
- Always pack two compasses in your survival kit or one larger
and one miniature compass is a good decision. They take up no room
at all and you need to have a spare. Keep them apart so they do
not affect each other.
- Do not pack a compass in a tin box that can become magnetised.
Keep it away from items such as a survival knife, multi-tool, radio
equipment, etc., for the same reason. If packed in a magnetised
tin, or kept near a magnetised item, you could permanently damage
your compass - another reason for using a small aluminium mess tin
as the container. Magnetic screening of items such as knives and
Multi-tools is a problem and needs careful consideration when you
design your personal survival kit.
Author recommends:
Silva Voyager 9020 Global Compass:
(This compass is the Author's favourite survival compass. Pack one
with a Silva 40H E&E compass as a back up - see below. Cut it down
if necessary to fit your container, as described above.)

Specification and supplier:
Tough construction: Impact-resistant yellow plastic base with lanyard
loop; oil filled; sapphire jewel needle bearing for friction free
movement; luminous; red arrow points north; size: 9.5
x 5 cm (can be cut down to 5.5 x 5 cm but then you lose scales); weight:
30 - 40 g; declination adjustment and magnifier.
Manufacturer: Silva, Silva Sweden AB, Box 998, 191 29 Sollentuna,
Sweden.
SILVA "SERE" model 40H:
Luminous E&E compass, the Silva "SERE" model (photo below left); the
40NLH is a non-luminous compass (photo below, right).
Note: The 40H compass is a cheap and reliable miniature compass.
If you buy one over the internet, make sure you buy for the correct
hemisphere and the compass housing has a lanyard loop fitted, some
do not have this fitting.

Specification and supplier:
Tough construction: Impact-resistant plastic loop for lanyard but
with a tiny hole. Oil filled, luminous, red arrow points north and
size is 8 mm and weighs 2.5 g.
Manufacturer: Silva, Silva Sweden AB, Box 998, 191 29 Sollentuna,
Sweden.
Francis Barker Model 1605 NATO Survival Compass:
(Good compass, more expensive than the Silva, but easier to lose.
Use glue like Araldite to fix to a cord. This compass is balanced
only for use in the northern hemisphere.)

Specification and supplier:
Brass cylinder, glass front, corrosion-proof; not oil filled; jewelled
sapphire bearing; luminous tritium - two points for north, one
for south, no other markings (boost it by holding next to a white
light Photon LED for a few moments and the tritium becomes highly
luminous for a long time); 16 mm in diameter x 5 mm thick. Disadvantages
- no loop hole for a lanyard and easy to lose. Weight: 3 g.
Manufacturer: Pyser-SGI Ltd., Fircroft Way, Edenbridge, Kent TN8 6HA,
United Kingdom
Means of attracting attention
Considerations:
- For a general purpose survival kit, you should include a signalling
mirror and a whistle as the minimum. A whistle is the best all-round
means of attracting attention (mirror may be best in E&E situation).
- Use a survival blanket that has a silver reflective surface.
It can be picked up in a searchlight beam, be detected by radar
and sparkles in sunlight.
- Carry a small roll of fluorescent red or orange tape. It can
be used as a ground marker to signal instructions to air rescue
and it can be hung from trees and spotted a long way off. Useful
to let rescuers know where you are if you are sheltering in a cave,
in a snow hole or behind a rock.
- A single LED torch can be seen at night from a surprising distance
both by land and by air.
- Here is a tip from an Army friend of mine. Instead of carrying
a relatively bulky signalling mirror, use instead a business card
CD disk that takes up hardly any space in a survival kit. Use the
hole in the middle as a sighting hole. Stick a label on one side
with your personal details written on it and burn your personal
details onto the disk. My friend is on active service and he has
all his personal details burned on the disk and has included messages
to his loved ones in case he is killed. If someone finds your body
even years later, the messages may mean a lot to family and friends.
A disk also makes excellent arrow flights, incidentally, if you
split an arrow and fix sections cut from the disk to it.
- Remember an effective signal in all terrestrial situations is
to light a fire and make it smoke. (Dark smoke against a light sky
and light smoke against a grey sky.)
- Mini flares should be carried as part of the marine survival
kit and may be carried singly and the launcher modified for terrestrial
use if you absolutely know what you are doing.
Author recommends:
StarFlash Mirror:
(The flash can be seen for 161 kilometres.)
The
StarFlash® signal mirror enables you to aim the flash as far as the
eye can see with pinpoint accuracy. It floats, is lighter than glass
and is virtually indestructible. Also useful for shaving, to apply
camo cream, for inserting contact lenses, as a silent communications
tool or for looking around corners or into tight spaces in an urban
warfare scenario. Use it for emergency signalling, to send a pinpoint
flash to a rescue plane, helicopter, vehicle, or distant search party.
Do not dazzle the pilot once you have been spotted; aim the mirror
at the tail of the aircraft.
Specification and supplier:
Mirror Material: 100% Lexan polycarbonate mirrored surface; vacuum
deposition metallization; targeting star: retroreflective encapsulated
bead fabric. Size: 5.1 X 7.6 cm, weight: 20 g or, 7.6 x 12.7
cm; weight: 57 g.
Manufacturer: Ultimate Survival Technologies, 14428 167TH Avenue SE,
Monroe, WA 98272-2915, USA
JetScream Whistle:
(The
JetScream™ whistle creates a piercing shriek audible over most other
natural and man-made noises. Due to its pea-less design, it even works
when wet.)
Specification and supplier:
Length: 5.8 cm Weight: 8.5 g. Colour: Black.
Manufacturer: Ultimate Survival Technologies, 14428 167TH Avenue SE,
Monroe, WA 98272-2915, USA
The Pains Wessex® Miniflare 3:
(The launcher can be cut down and attached to a branch with a makeshift
firing cord for use in a personal survival kit but do not attempt
to do this, or to carry flares out of their container, unless you
really know what you are doing.)
The
Pains Wessex® Miniflare 3 is a personal aerial flare pack containing
eight red flare cartridges and a "penjector" firing mechanism enclosed
in a tough, water resistant, plastic pouch. The penjector is fitted
with a stainless steel spring and striker pin and features a unique
bayonet fitting with a simple twist-on action for loading the flare
cartridge. The Pains Wessex® Miniflare 3 is designed primarily for
yachts, dinghies, personal watercraft and windsurfers but has many
applications as a general-purpose distress signal for canoeing, hill
walking, climbing, skiing and other outdoor pursuits.
Specification and supplier:
Flare deployment height: Over 60 metres when fired vertically;
flare burning time: 6 seconds; flare light output: 3000 candela; dimensions:
150 x 63 x 18 mm; weight: 296 g and explosive content: 38 g with 5
g per cartridge).
Manufacturer:
Pains Wessex, Chemring Marine Ltd., Silver Point , Airport Service
Road, Hilsea, Portsmouth, PO3 5PB, United Kingdom
Purifying Water
Author recommends:
Micropur MP1 water purifying tablets:
(MP1 tablets are the only EPA, the Environmental Protection Agency
(USA), registered purifying tablets on the market that are effective
against Cryptosporidium and Giardia, as well as bacteria and viruses.)
This is the only risk-free tablet-based treatment currently on the
market at the time of writing that is convenient to carry in a personal
survival kit.

MP1 water purifying tablets kill bacteria and viruses in 15 minutes,
cysts in 30 minutes (4 hours in cold or dirty water). Add one tablet
to a litre (quart) of water. The tablet releases chlorine dioxide
(same as in water treatment plants). Each tablet is individually sealed
in foil but has to be opened with scissors or a knife. Water taste
is quite good, not as superb as the makers claim but better than chlorine
or iodine-based treatments and much safer to use. Does not require
any neutraliser for taste adjustment. Can be difficult to find local
suppliers but Katadyn will help if you have problems.
Specification and supplier:
Pack contains 30 individually foil packed tablets. Weight: 57 g.
Manufacturer:
Katadyn Products Inc., Birkenweg 4, 8304 Wallisellen, Switzerland.
Making Fire
Considerations:
- There are many ways to make fire in a survival situation but
the concept behind the personal survival kit is that you can easily
light a fire immediately and have the means to light fires in the
long-term.
- To light a fire easily, you need tinder material in your personal
survival kit and a means of igniting it. I personally prefer to
carry light, disposable cigarette lighters rather than a heavy and
bulky storm proof gas lighter. Nothing wasted, the empty disposable
lighters can be recycled to make useful items such as fish hooks
from the metal parts, floats from the plastic body; you are only
limited by your own ingenuity.
- Finding tinder material is nearly always possible but there
are times when it is difficult. Carry WetFire™ tinder blocks (illustrated
below) in your personal survival kit to start a fire fast, in rain
or high winds.
- For longer-term fire making (after the first shock of being
in a survival situation has worn off and you are settling into your
new environment), fire making usually becomes an evening ritual.
I prefer to carry a Swedish FireSteel®, illustrated below. If you
can take the extra bulk in your survival kit, choose the Army model,
do not bother to pack the striker plate that comes with it, the
FireSteel works best with a knife anyway.
- Some people like to pack wind proof matches; I cannot see any
advantage in carrying a source of ignition that can only be used
once.
Author recommends:
Swedish FireSteel®:
(Survival Tip: Gives a bright spark – can also be used as emergency
signal.)

Originally developed for the Swedish Department of Defence. Its 3,000°C
spark makes fire building easy in any weather, at any altitude. Used
by a number of armies around the world, Swedish FireSteel’s dependability
has already made it a favourite of survival experts, hunters, fishermen
and campers. Works with any tinder material, (char cloth speeds up
ignition) but for rapid results use with WetFire™ blocks.
Specification and supplier:
Durability: lasts for from 3,000 to 12,000 strikes (Scout/Army model);
Practicality: Works equally well when wet and produces a 3,000°C spark.
Manufacturer: Light My Fire AB, Västkustvägen 7, 211 24 Malmö, Sweden
Silva Helios storm proof lighter:
(Useful if you are going to climb Everest or visit Denmark in August.)

If you have to carry a water proof storm lighter that also floats,
then this is the one to choose. Withstands wind speeds of up to 25
m/s. Filled with butane gas; window on the side of the lighter shows
how much fuel is left. Adjustable flame and piezo ignition that can
be used over 30.000 times. I admit I own one, but would not personally
use it in a personal survival kit unless it was being configured for
a special use. In my view, more at home in one's general equipment.
Manufacturer, Silva:
Silva Sweden AB, Box 998, 191 29 Sollentuna
WetFire™ Tinder:
(Ultimate Survival Technologies WetFire™ Tinder is the best fire-starting
tinder material available anywhere in the world.)

Any military personnel can find themselves anywhere, in any kind of
weather. They require something that will light a fire in a rainstorm
if needed, yet extinguish instantly to avoid detection, leaving no
residue, no odour and no smoke. Even if your survival needs are not
so exacting, you may need to start a fire in any climatic conditions
and fast.
WetFire™ Tinder burns at over 1,300°C yet cools almost instantly when
snuffed out. A small pile of shavings is enough to start a small fire.
The perfect accompaniment to the Swedish FireSteel, WetFire can help
you get a blaze going even in a downpour. In fact, the cubes actually
burn longer when wet!
Specification and Supplier:
Weight (per cube): 57 g. White; 8 individually foil wrapped cubes
per package; non-toxic, leak proof and smokeless.
Manufacturer:
Ultimate Survival Technologies, 14428 167TH Avenue SE, Monroe, WA
98272-2915, USA
Other items worthy of close attention
Below is a list of the best equipment and where to locate it:
LED
torches: I always recommend packing three Photon I or Photon
II MicroLight® LED torches in a personal survival kit. The Photon
I is less bright than the Photon II but is totally water resistant,
however, to use it you have to keep pressure on the switch and this
becomes tiring in prolonged use. The Photon II has an on/off switch,
which means you cannot use it under water but it performs well in
adverse weather conditions. The new Photon III MicroLight is water
resistant but has an annoying range of microprocessor-controlled functions
that make it too complicated for use in a survival situation. Depending
on the configuration of your kit, choose two white lights and one
orange. The white lights have a life of 12-14 hours and the orange
light a life of 120 hours. If you are in the military and building
a personal survival kit to be used in possible E&E situations, replace
one of the white lights with green for night vision use. The green
light has a life of 12-14 hours.
Specification (Photon II): One 5 mm LED; on/off switch and
squeeze on/off; lanyard attachment; weight 5.5 g; size: 3 x 2 cm and
visible for over a mile. Replaceable cells: uses two Duracell DL2016B
3V lithium coin batteries that are easily replaced but needs a screwdriver
or sharp pointed knife blade (pack some spares).
Availability: Most outdoors shops and sports shops, many suppliers
listed on the internet.
Manufactured by L.R.I. (Photon), 93890 Pope Rd., Blachly, OR
97512, USA
Survival (Space) Blanket:
A
survival blanket or survival bag, sometimes called a "Space Blanket"
because the technology was developed for NASA astronauts, is useful
as a survival aid in many ways. I have tried several types and there
is nothing to choose between them in real terms. Some claim to be
"breathable" but if the idea is to keep in body heat, "breathable"
is a good way to lose it!
The blanket will reflect body heat, protects from sun, rain and snow,
can be a makeshift poncho, is useful for a makeshift shelter and is
reflective both to light and to radar. Buy a blanket that is silvered
on both sides or orange on one side and silver on the other and specified
to reflect 80-90% of body heat. There are many makes and many suppliers.
These blankets are cheap and available from almost any sports or outdoors
shop and can be found easily on the internet. Most are one-use; reusable
blankets are bulkier. In the average sized personal survival kit,
a survival blanket will take up 50 per cent of the container, so it
is best packed in the carrying pouch, not in the container itself.
A word of warning:
These
blankets work by reflecting body heat, so if the body is cold the
blanket cannot heat up the body. They have no thermal insulation properties
so if you wrap up in one and lie down on snow the "blanket" will adapt
to the ground temperature and the cold will pass to your body. They
are meant only to reflect the heat of the body that is already there.
You must use insulation from ground cold and get into a shelter of
some sort to protect yourself from cold air and ground temperatures.
Once protected in this way, the space blanket will help to conserve
your body heat. Cover your nose and mouth with a handkerchief or similar
to reduce heat loss by respiration.
Multi-tool:
A miniature multi-tool is invaluable in a personal survival kit. I
like the MiniBuck 350 best and always have one in my personal survival
kit but the Leatherman juice is a close second favourite. Be aware
that most multi-tools can throw out a strong magnetic field so keep
them away from your compass:
MiniBuck 350:
The
MiniBuck weighs only 39 g and is just 6.5 cm long when closed. Yet
it comes complete with 10 implements, including needle nose pliers
as the primary tool and scissors (that actually cut) as a folding
component. The MiniBuck includes a drop-point knife blade, tweezers,
a nail file/cleaner, a lanyard ring, metric and inch scales, a small
Phillips screwdriver and a bottle opener/cap lifter that also serves
as a
small slotted screwdriver. Symbols on the handle help the user to
locate each implement (you need terrific eyesight to read them), while
a nail-notch system allows easy access to the tools when needed. Each
tool snaps into place. Backed by Buck's lifetime guarantee. They can
be difficult to find and are not even listed on Buck's website but
most Buck suppliers can order one for you - worth having.
Buck Knives P.O. Box 1267, El Cajon, CA 92022
Leatherman Juice S2:
The
Leatherman Juice S2 is bigger than the MiniBuck being 10.5 cm long
when closed and weighs 125 g. It has: Needle nose pliers, a straight
knife, wire cutters, hard-wire cutters, extra-small screwdriver, small
screwdriver, medium to large screwdriver, Phillips screwdriver, lanyard
attachment, can/bottle opener and scissors. Made of stainless steel,
with anodized aluminium scales and is available in different colours.
Available in most sports, outdoor and tool shops.
Manufacturer:
Leatherman Tool Group, Inc., P.O. Box 20595, Portland, Oregon, USA.
Commando Wire Saw:
There
are several commando wire saws on the market, illustrated is my choice
made by BCB.
Can be used for escape and evasion, will cut wood, nails, plastic
and bone. Can be made into a bow saw.
Things to watch out for are:
- A wire saw must have a breaking strain of around 50 kilos.
- It should be made from stainless steel.
- Study the way any handles are fixed to the blade, this is weakest
point.
- Choose a saw with handles made from nylon tape, rather than
steel rings as ring are painful on the fingers with prolonged use.
- Take care not to pack the saw in close proximity to your compasses
if it gives off a magnetic field.
Recommended Manufacturer:
BCB International Ltd, Clydesmuir road, Cardiff, CF24 2QS, U.K.
If you found this on survival article helpful, or have any suggestions
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The above article is Copyright ©2011 James Mandeville.
You may not use it without my permission.
James Mandeville August 2011
Free
survival expert advice:
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