Shelter breaks down rather conveniently into three areas: what you wear, what you erect around you, and how you heat it.
CLOTHES MAKE THE MAN
Survival Rule One Of Clothing: Cotton Kills.
We all wear it, from head to toe, underwear to outerwear, and for our modern, climate-controlled world, it’s spiffy. Venture out where it’s wet or cold and the love affair with cotton may become a tragedy – for you. Yes, it’s washable, durable, and readily available. But it doesn’t wick moisture, it absorbs it. Like a sponge. And then drains it very slowly. When it’s cold, that moisture robs you of heat a dozen times faster than cold dry air. If the temperature becomes low enough, the water in the cotton fibers freezes, providing you with a hard armored shell, and in a truly life and death environment, besides making you walk like the Tin Man in a rainstorm and robbing your energy, than icy wet cotton exoskeleton will probably also be the last blanket you every sleep under, never to wake up again.
Before modern material science allowed chemists to concoct
wonder garment materials at will and by design, man had to rely on nature. The
proto-examples he selected were, from inner to outer, silk, wool, and leather.
Silk makes an excellent skin layer, because it’s strong,
comfortable, and pulls moisture on your skin, like sweat and condensation, away
from it, but releases it as well as at wicks its. Silk breathes, and moves
wherever you do with ease. The only three drawbacks to silk at all are expense,
scarcity, and lack of durability. Nonetheless, it’s still used today, found at
all the spiffier backpacking and hiking stores, and every synthetic fiber base
layer is trying to improve on silk. The modern go-to fiber is polypropolene and
more recent formulations.
Next, an insulation layer was ideally composed of wool. Wool
traps air. Air movement is what conducts heat out from your body. What makes
wool great, besides coming off of sheep and other animals by the bucketload,
was the fact that it still worked when wet. Currently, it’s heavy, expensive,
and scratchy, but it’s still used for sweaters, socks, gloves, shirts, pants,
and outercoats by nearly every military force of the planet, because it’s
durable, available, and effective. Nowadays the best artificial wool is
polyfleece.
Your outer layer needs to shed or repel outside moisture –
rain and snow – while hopefully letting your own moisture out without letting
the outside moisture in. If only one is an option, keeping water out was the
preferred choice. So properly tanned and dressed leather filled that task. Later, vulcanized rubber coatings on canvas
served. Currently, the wonder fabric is Gore-tex and later similar functioning
materials, which let perspiration out, while keeping precipitation outside.Bundle yourself head to toe and inside to outside in this combination, and you won’t go far wrong. Don’t forget covering your head, hands, ears, face, and feet.
BE IT EVER SO HUMBLE
Once suitably clad, really severe conditions require the
sense to come in out of the weather, because you’re burning energy faster than
you can eat to replace it.
Caves, and their later relatives, building, work great for
this. Vehicles may serve, but they lack insulation, making them cold-weather
iceboxes, lack ventilation, making them easy to suffocate inside, and they’re
hard to heat, forcing you to resort to leaving them frequently to ventilate,
which then robs the heat, and the cycle starts all over again. They are much
easier for rescue parties to spot though, so whenever possible, if you can’t
stay in them, stay as close next to them as you can manage. Any survival book
will show any number of options, from igloos and snow caves to brush lean-tos
to log cabins. When snow won’t co-operate and trees are scarce, a small tent
will suffice.
Add a decent sleeping bag system, with usually two bags
layered, along with a bivy bag, and you’ve recreated the body layer system
above, sufficient to allow you to asleep comfortably in arctic cold 20 or 30
degress F below zero. This also takes a vehicle from an icebox to a habitation.
For bags, bird-feather down works great until it gets wet, then it’s worse than
cotton. Modern hollow-core fiber substitutes are a bit heavier, but work even
when wet. And in a nasty situation, they’re going to get wet. The bivy bag is
basically a waterproof tub with a water-repellent top shell, usually Gore-tex,
to minimize any water on your sleeping system, while allowing body perspiration
and breathing condensation to escape outside, allowing you to sleep warm and
dry, which is always my first choice.
TO BUILD A FIRE
Google and read the short story by that name by Jack London.
It compellingly and succinctly explains why fire is vital. And it’s a great
read.
The number of ways to make fire are nearly legion. The key
elements, as any fire safety class taught you, are air, heat, and fuel.
Matches, in quantity, and stored dry, work well. So do
ordinary butane lighters. You should have both.
Then we get to other methods. A small magnifying glass will
work on sunny days. Flint and steel, or a metal match and magnesium block for
making shavings will work at 3AM in the Arctic. So will a dozen modern
variations.
Then there are the bow drill methods, which still require a
sturdy knife and cooperative underbrush, or else carrying the requisite parts.
Personaly, I’d rather carry the original 5 items: matches, lighter, glass,
metal match, magnesium. Because they work quicker and take up less space.
Following the ubiquitous threes, your fire will need tinder,
kindling, and actual fuel. Tinder tabs and military ration heating trioxane tabs
work very well. A great homemade substitute is to fill a small metal bowl with
petroleum jelly (Vaseline) and heat it on an electric hot plate etc. until it
turns to liquid. Then take anything, hot dog tongs, clothespins, bamboo
skewers, toothpicks, etc., and dunk 100% cotton balls (NOT the synthetic kind)
into the liquid petroleum jelly, soaking each one thoroughly. The set each blob
on a sheet of aluminum foil and let it cool and harden. Once harder, and cool
enough to handle, cut 4”x4” or so aluminum squares out of the foil. One each
square place a jellied cotton ball. Fold the aluminum foil over in half with
the ball inside, then fold up the edges on the three open sides until you have
a sealed square about 2”x2”. Folding and sealing will flatten these packets
somewhat, which is fine, as long as they stay sealed. Now, in a pinch, you have
however many of these you’ve created, ready to use as emergency tinder/candles.
If you cut an “X” into one of the flat sides when you’re ready to use it, and
tease out a few cotton threads, you have a tinder packet/candle with a wick
which you can now light, either to make light, or to start the other tinder and
kindling you’ve collected for your fire. I’ve had them burn for up to an hour,
which isn’t bad for something 1/3rd the size of a tealight.
Which reminds me, tealights and stubby candles are also
great items to include in you fire-making ensemble.You can also provide tinder by taking sawdust, soaking it in something flammable, and packing it in an impermeable plastic or metal container.
All of these give you a way to light a fire, providing you’ve
gathered some kindling (think pencil-thick sticks) and then finger- and
arm-thick wood or other suitable longer-burning fuel. And since we mentioned
pencil-thick sticks, another tinder tip is to carry a schoolkid’s pencil
sharpener in your fire making kit. Feeding a small stick into one, and spinning
out a stream of paper-thin shavings creates great tinder on the spot. As a side
benefit, you can also use it to sharpen a pencil!
Provide yourself with the means to stay warm, sleep warm, and get warm, and your life expectancy just went from hours to days.
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