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Imagine it is in the middle of winter of some
year between 1794 and 1814, the exact year doesn’t really matter. You’ve walked all day, become turned around,
bewildered even, in a giant frozen swamp, on the edge of the American Old
Northwest Frontier. It’s bitterly cold,
and the Sun is going down. It will be
dark soon, and it’s going to get colder, much colder. Can you do better than the ‘Lost Traveller’
did? He survived to tell the tale, would
you?
We
already discussed what he did wrong when he realized he had left the trail, but
did he get anything right?
Why
yes! Yes, he did, he didn’t panic. That’s HUGE!
When he realized it was almost dark and that he had become bewildered,
he didn’t lose his heads, he didn’t let fear take over and become lost. Instead, he found shelter and prepared to
wait out the night.
What he did right...
He
and the Little Dutchman found shelter next to an
uprooted hemlock tree that was lying perpendicular to the wind1. The trunk and the root-ball would function as
a windbreak, preventing wind chill, and keeping the leeward, generally snow
free.
Next, they built a bough bed of hemlock boughs from the fallen tree, by piling branches on the ground, next to the trunk, to insulate themselves from cold, heat-stealing ground.
But
by the time they had finished clearing the ground and building their bed, it
was growing dark and getting increasingly cold.
They needed more than a windbreak and a ground bed to keep from freezing
to death during the night, with the temperatures continuing to drop; they
needed a fire. But, sadly, neither of
them had remembered to slip a tinder box into their pockets. They had almost given up hope, when fortunately,
the ‘Lost Traveller’ remembered that he had accidentally charred his
handkerchief the night before, rolling it up tight and stuffing it into one of
his pockets to smother it, and that he had a large jack knife and a gun flint
in another pocket. This is another example
of not panicking and of improvising, adapting, and overcoming in a survival
situation, and of putting the ‘O’, for ‘organize’, in S.T.O.P. into practice.
Now
that they had the means of making a spark, they turned to preparing for a fire,
by clearing the snow, building a fire base and gathering tinder, kindling and
fuel wood. You always want to have
plenty of tinder, kindling and fuel wood before you light your fire, because
you don’t want your newborn fire to expire from a lack of fuel, while you a
searching for more, but a pile as high as your head is a pretty good start.
Now that they had a pile tinder, kindling and fuel; the ‘Lost Traveller’ had to get the charred handkerchief to catch a spark, so that he could light the kindling pile. Luckily, he was able to spark a fire.
The
tale of the ‘Lost Traveller’ doesn’t mention the type of fire that he built. Because he lacked an ax or saw, he probably built
a Long or Hunter’s Fire, which is fire lay of two parallel logs with a fire
built between them. In an emergency this
fire is easily built by laying whole logs parallel to each other, but to keep it
going overnight, you will need to place a third log on top of them.
You will always need more wood than you think you will, especially in the winter when temperatures are low, and a pile as high as your head will burn up fast. I’ve always heard, and always taught, that you should get three times as much as you think you will need and then get a little bit more, just in case, to keep your fire burning all night long. Also, it becomes difficult to safely find wood once the Sun goes down.
In the morning, the sun rose, and our traveler was able to determine
north, south, east and west and navigate back to the banks of the Genesee
river, the village of Hartford, and safety.
For more on the ‘Lost
Travellers’ tale of survival read “Lost in the Great Tonewanta Swamp, 1796!
Part One©, HERE.
I
hope that you continue to enjoy The Woodsman’s Journal Online and look for me
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That
is all for now, and as always, until next time, Happy Trails!
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