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1 | Hinzugefügt von evadeandsurvive | 06/09/2009 11:29:16
Survival Essentials 10 Always have a way to treat water to make it safe to drink. You can only carry so much water. As the jingle goes, water weighs "a pint a pound the world around". A gallon of water weighs eight pounds and when you are active that is about the amount you will need every day. So on an extended outing, planned or not, you are going to need a local source of water. No water is to be trusted. Even a clear cold mountain stream could harbor a host of disease carrying organisms including giardia. There are a number of inexpensive water treatment filters that easily fit in your pack. You can also use chemical means to treat water or boil it. If you plan to stay in one area for an extended time, consider using the solar disinfection method to make large volumes of water safe to drink. Essential Survival Gear 11-15 Here ► at EvadeAndSurvive.com When traveling in the wilderness there are fifteen essential items that must always be brought with you. These ◄ 15 essentials are your survival insurance against a wide variety of situations http://www.EvadeAndsurvive.com/Evade Staying warm and dry, well fed, well hydrated, and in good health will go far in your effort to survive in any environment. With all of your physical needs taken care of your morale will be high and you will be in an excellent position to navigate your way out or make contact with rescuer. Survival Essentials 11 Always bring a whistle. This tiny device is light and inexpensive. With little effort you can blow on a survival whistle for extended periods, even if you are injured or exhausted. If you have constructed a survival shelter, it may be difficult for would be rescuers to see you, but the sound of a shrill whistle can direct them to your location. http://www.EvadeAndsurvive.com/Evade Survival Essentials 12 Always bring an emergency shelter. A 5ft by 7ft waterproof tarp or space blanket can be used to construct a serviceable emergency shelter. The shelter should provide protection against rain, cold, heat, sun or snow. A space blanket or tarp can form the basis of protection to which you can add whatever local materials are available. Sticks, leaves, branches, and other plant materials can be used to extend the insulation of your shelter and help you survive in hot or cold climates. Build a debris hut and you can survive in nearly any environment. Survival Essentials 13 Always bring at least 25 feet of cord. 50 feet of cord is better. Good parachute cord can be obtained at your local Army Navy surplus store. 550 Para cord can be used in a variety of useful purposes including construction of an emergency shelter, climbing, tying objects together, splinting broken bones, building a raft, snaring small game, even constructing a bridge across a small stream. I also recommend bringing several feet of thin wire and several yards of all purpose duct tape. Duct tape is an excellent means of making field repairs to ripped clothing and is useful in a myriad of ways. Wire can be be used to make a variety of repairs, prongs and hooks for fish and frog spearing, or the snaring of small game. Survival Essentials 14 Always bring insect repellent (in the right season). Insect pests can not only make your life miserable, they can be survival risks. Insects transmit innumerable diseases and are a major destroyer of human life throughout the world. Flies, ticks, mosquitoes, and a host of other insect species would love nothing more than to dine on you and leave behind their calling cards of sickness. Survival Essentials 15 Always bring the survivor attitude. With your survival skills and survival gear you know how to handle virtually any situation that comes up. From being lost in the wilderness, injured, or meeting up with unexpected weather, a survivor is always prepared. The will to survive is paramount to your ability to survive. They go hand in hand, so much so that through the force of your will you can often surmount even the most difficult of circumstances. So whether you are lost in the wilderness or simply enjoying yourself in the great outdoors, the 15 essentials for survival will allow you to exist in relative comfort - and may just allow you to survive. Essential Survival Gear 1-4 Here ◄ at EvadeAndSurvive.com
2 | Hinzugefügt von evadeandsurvive | 31/08/2009 4:05:18
With waist-high weeds in your yard, forget herbicides, or pulling the weeds by hand, how about sowing your wild goat. Goats are a super Survival tool. Goats Evade Dieseas and can survive off most any plant, weed tree etc. Goats are easy to raise, need little attention and can most often fend for themselves when it comes to their own survival. With a little water in their bucket, the goat can mow, chop and fertalize for hours on end. As a pack animal, goats are great, they lead, follow and can carry a good deal of Survival Gear. Goats can warn of danger at night and can even defend their owners. Read More at www.EvadeAndSurvive.com Technically, goats don't graze; they browse. They'll eat brush, leaves, twigs, and other such food first, only turning to grass when there's nothing else left. Goats also don't munch each plant down to a nub and move on. They'll pick off the flower heads so the plant can't go to seed, and eat the leaves so it can't photosynthesize. But they'll leave the stalk, which holds the soil in place, preventing erosion. With only a bare stem left, the plant has to work overtime just to stay alive, giving native or more desirable plants a chance to grow. Goats also poop a lot, and as they roam, their tough hooves stomp the pellets into the soil, fertilizing and helping to soften Colorado's hard clay. They also irrigate, a pint at a time, with nitrogen-tinged urine that helps balance the minerals in the soil. And, notably, they'll eat just about anything, including plants that are poisonous to other animals. Goats are the ultimate bio controll. Instead of chemicals Goats are a practice that has grown alongside organic farming, but it has yet to really explode into the mainstream. "A lot of it is force of habit," says Chad Brunette, senior horticulturalist at the Denver Botanic Gardens, who believes the goats are also a useful public relations tool. "Most people who have a huge weed problem would just spray Roundup. People are too busy to think sometimes." Brunette, who spent several years working with organic farmers, says his favorite biocontrol was a mobile chicken coop in Michigan. "This one old guy had a chicken coop on wheels that he would cart around to his fruit trees, and anywhere there were insects he would park that coop. He saved money on seed for the birds and the fruit trees suffered less damage." A push in the right direction. Goats will eat poison hemlock, Canadian thistle, musk thistle, and spurge. It was tough to imagine the pasture being restored to prairie grass, but a goat herd it's possible. Some goats even climbed into the tree to munch. Meanwhile, others busied themselves on a big patches of thistle, as still more went to work on a tangle of shrubbery. An electric charge in simple strand fence can be used to thwart would-be escapees. Where to Buy Goats? GoatTipping.com helps you buy and sell goats within a reasonable distance of your home. See more at http://www.EvadeAndSurvive.com
3 | Hinzugefügt von evadeandsurvive | 31/08/2009 3:39:43
The main ingredient in water filters is charcoal. You can either buy activated charcoal, or make your own. Never make it from food, like toast—that's carcinogenic. Never use charcoal briquettes—they are made from petroleum, and thus are poison (for cooking too). 'They' say that hardwood makes the best charcoal. Make a small fire from cut branches of dead hard wool, like a small camp fire being extremely careful not to burn anythuhg but your wood. The 2-3 inch branches are best. Let burn untill the wood breaks apart into clowing chunks of coals. Then stop the fire with your poluted water or what ever. Try hard to keep the charcol clean as it will dry into nuce chunks. Once cool and dry pound down the chunks into a nice powder. Take your plastic bottle and cut in half. Stuff cotton as in the picture into the end of the mouthpiece of the plastic bottle. Pour 3 inches of your chopped ground charcol and pack tightly, then fill 1-2 inches of cotton from gauze or cotton balls. The bottom portion of the plastic bottle should have 3-4 poked holes in it, as this is where the dirty water flows. Now fit the bottom end into the top as the pic shows. Once tightly packed you have the perfect water filter. If possible, please boil the water for several mins and let cool before filtering. The boiling kills the micro organisms and the filtering with charcol graps their dead boddies along woth other inorganic elements and impurities. Let drain slow and repeat for clean drinking water. You could put the charcoal into a coffee filter or something. I would boil the water, and then put it through the charcoal to get any microbes that can survive boiling. Charcoal works—it attracts all sorts of toxins / microbials. Boil the water to kill germs . Filter the boiled water to remove any contaminants . You can eat charcoal dry or you can mix it with water and drink a little here and there—all the time—not just when on vacation. If you're ever exposed to toxins / microbials, consume charcoal several times a day. Our ancestors used it until they discovered drugs (with all their destructive side effects). ♪♫ It shouldn't be much to ask to have clean water pouring from your faucets. However, not many of us know what exactly is in the water we drink. We know that it's processed somewhere at our local water treatment plant, but what about the impurities that can collect in the water during the trip from the treatment plant to our homes? What if bacteria or other impurities get in the water and then you ingest them by drinking the water you assume is safe? You can do something about your water purity and you don't have to spend a fortune doing it. There are many ways you can make a homemade water filter and you can use some objects you probably already have around the house. Coffee Filters When you prepare coffee in the morning, you fill the coffee maker up with water, you put the coffee in a filter and then you turn it on. Why do you use a filter? Well, for one, you use a filter so that you don't get a coffee cup full of coffee grounds but you also use it to get rid of impurities and other such substances that may be in the water or the coffee itself. You can fit a coffee filter over a pitcher, or even your kitchen faucet and you can pour the water through it into the pitcher, and then stick it in your refrigerator. When you're ready to drink, you have cold, fresh, clean water that you purified yourself using a homemade water filter. The trick is to look around your house for anything that might help you remove the impurities from your water. Store bought water filters are great but why waste your money if you can make a homemade water filter? By using a little innovation and a lot of imagination, you can find a homemade water filter so that you can have fresh, clean drinking water and you can save your money that you would have wasted on a store bought filter. Just remember, that store bought filters are meant to last a long time, whereas a homemade water filter probably won't last more than one or two times. So, you could save money making a homemade water filter but if you're looking for quality and a brand name you can trust, your best bet is to spring for the store bought. See more at http://www.EvadeAndSurvive.com
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