Sunday, July 28, 2019

Why Permethrin?...Mosquitos, Ticks and Flies…Oh My! ©



Sawyer® Permethrin Insect Repellent 12 oz. pump-bottle, picture by the author

  
So, you are going out into the wilderness, or maybe you are going out into your own backyard.  In either case, there are bugs out there, lots of them!  And they bite!  Some carry diseases too. 


A Lonestar tick biting the author’s leg, picture by the author


So, what are you going to do? 

What you are going to do is treat your clothes with Sawyer® Permethrin Insect Repellent.  Why you ask, well, here is why.

Full disclosure, I am friends with the chemist who invented, patented and marketed permethrin, before selling it to Sawyer.  In addition, I have used this brand of permethrin for four years, I have never had any sensitivity or other issues with it and it has done a great job of keeping the bugs off me.  I am very pleased with and enthusiastically recommend it.
  
Close up of the Sawyer® Permethrin Insect Repellent 12 oz. pump-bottle, picture by the author


Permethrin is the synthetic version of pyrethrin which occurs naturally in chrysanthemum flowers (Chrysanthemum cinerariifolium and Chrysanthemum coccineum), it is a powerful, contact insecticide; it is not an insect repellent.  This is an important distinction since, unlike topical insect repellents that are applied to your skin; permethrin is not sprayed on your skin, it is sprayed on your clothing, tents, sleeping bags and other fabrics. 

Permethrin is effective against mosquitos, biting flies, ticks, fleas, chiggers, lice and more than 55 other types of insects.  When a mosquito or tick lands or crawls onto a fabric that has been treated with permethrin, it absorbs a dose of insecticide that will either kill it, or repel it.

Naturally, occurring pyrethrin breaks down quickly, in sunlight.  However, as Sawyer’s synthetic permethrin establishes a strong bond with most fabrics, it will be effective for six weeks or six washings, whichever comes first.  According to Sawyer, the U.S. Army performed studies and found that 20 to 30 percent of the permethrin was removed after the first laundering. Each laundering after that, removed about 3 to 5 percent of the permethrin treatment, through ten launderings.

If you have to wash your treated clothes, Sawyer recommends hand washing and air drying, because the agitation of the washing machine reduces the effectiveness of permethrin, by knocking loose the permethrin molecules from the fabric.  If you use a conventional washer and dryer, use a gentle wash setting and dryer cycle: loss in the dryer is less in comparison to the loss in the washer.  Also, do not dry clean treated garments, as dry cleaning will remove the permethrin from the fabric.  Store treated garments in dark plastic bags, between uses, as this will help to preserve the permethrin treatment.

Additionally, per Sawyer, sweating and exposure to water does not reduce the effectiveness of permethrin, and it resist degradation from the Sun and heat.

Unlike DEET, which may harm some fabrics and definitely will harm plastics, permethrin is an odorless, non-greasy, non-staining spray, which will not damage your clothes and equipment, and will not harm plastics.  According to Sawyer, permethrin is safe to use on synthetics, waterproof membrane fabrics, silk and if you use the pump spray version of Sawyer® Permethrin Insect Repellent, it will not harm flame retardant clothes.  In addition, based on an email answer I received from Sawyer, if you need to apply a silicone, heavy-duty water repellent spray and permethrin to a garment, such as a wide brimmed hat, apply the waterproofing first and then spray on the permethrin, since permethrin needs to be exposed to be effective. 


First aid instructions from the side of the Sawyer® Permethrin Insect Repellent 12 oz. pump-bottle, picture by the author


Some people have asked if Sawyer® Permethrin Insect Repellent is safe to use.  Per Sawyer, in mammals, the skin poorly absorbs permethrin and if it is absorbed, the body rapidly metabolizes it.  Additionally, it has a low level of toxicity in mammals and animal studies have shown no skin irritation or sensitivity following direct application, except in cats.  Also, Sawyer’s web site noted a controlled study of 200 subjects; permethrin did not cause skin sensitivity or irritation.  However, do not expose cats to wet permethrin as it effects their central nervous system.  Once the permethrin on the clothes has dried, it is safe to have around cats.  Additionally, permethrin is harmful to aquatic creatures, so do not spray permethrin near aquariums or cats! 


Permethrin useful tips, picture by the author


Permethrin useful tips, picture by the author


Instructions from the side of the Sawyer® Permethrin Insect Repellent 12 oz. pump-bottle, picture by the author


According to Sawyer, one 12 ounce pump-bottle of Sawyer® Permethrin Insect Repellent will treat two complete sets of clothing, consisting of one shirt, one pair of socks and one pair of pants.

To treat your clothes follow the instructions on the packaging, however in general the following applications rules apply.

·      While outdoors, in an area protected from the wind, spray.
Ø Hold the pump-bottle about six to eight inches away from the fabric to be treated.
Ø Spray each side of the clothing for about 30 seconds with a slow sweeping motion, just enough to moisten the fabric.
·      Allow the garments to dry for two hours or four hours if it is humid.

And that’s, that!  You are now protected from all of those nasty, crawly bugs.  Apply a little DEET or your favorite topical insect repellent to any exposed skin and you are good to go.

 For the complete video on “Why Permethrin?” see HERE or HERE.

I hope that you continue to enjoy The Woodsman’s Journal Online and my videos at BandanaMan Productions and don’t forget to follow me on both The Woodsman’s Journal Online and subscribe to BandanaMan Productions on YouTube, and if you have questions, as always, feel free to leave a comment on either site.


Sources

Sawyer, “Permethrin Insect Repellent For Clothing Gear And Tents”, [Sawyer Products, Inc., 2019] https://sawyer.com/products/permethrin-insect-repellent-treatment/, accessed 7/18/19

Wikipedia Contributors, “Pyrethrum”, [Wikipedia, The free Encyclopedia, June 10, 2019], https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyrethrum, accessed 7/18/19

Wikipedia Contributors, “Pyrethrin”, [Wikipedia, The free Encyclopedia, June 2, 2019], https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyrethrin, accessed 7/25/19



Saturday, July 27, 2019

Why Permethrin?...Mosquitos, Ticks and Flies…Oh My!



So, you are going out into the wilderness, or maybe you are going out into your own backyard.  In either case, there are bugs out there, lots of them!  And they bite!  Some carry diseases too.  So, what are you going to do?  What you are going to do is treat your clothes with Sawyer® Permethrin Insect Repellent. 

For more on permethrin, visit the Woodsman's Journal Online. 

I hope that you continue to enjoy The Woodsman’s Journal Online and my videos at BandanaMan Productions and don’t forget to follow me on both The Woodsman’s Journal Online and subscribe to BandanaMan Productions on YouTube, and if you have questions, as always, feel free to leave a comment on either site.

Sunday, July 21, 2019

How to Find Your Way Without A Compass, Part Two, The Watch As A Compass©



Watches, Picture by the author

  
Okay, you forgot to bring a compass with you, you are “misplaced” and you need to orient yourself.  You are using the steps of the Survival Drill to decide if you should stay put or if you should try to walk out (for more on the Survival Drill, see “Survival Drill”, Updated and ExplainedHERE), but first you need to reorient yourself.  You are took an inventory of things in your pack and pockets that could help you, and you realized that you don’t have a compass, but you do have a watch.

No problem, everybody knows, the Sun rises in the east and sets in the west, right?  And, you are wearing a watch and with a watch, you can use the Sun to find north and south, right?  And of course, you know how to use a watch and the Sun to find the direction of north and south, right?  Right?

Well in case you don’t know, here are the answers. 


An excerpt from “The American Architect And Building News”, p. 75


The method of finding the points of the compass with a watch and the Sun was called “orientation by the sun with a watch”1 during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.  “Misplaced” modern adventurers can use either traditional analog watches or today’s modern digital watches, to find the approximate direction, of the points of a compass. 


From Survival: Land, Sea, Jungle, Arctic, p. 42, Fig. 17, picture by the author


There are two methods for finding the north-south line with a watch, one that is used for north of the Tropic of Cancer, in the northern hemisphere, where you will find the general direction of south, and one for use south of the Tropic of Capricorn, that is used to find the general direction of north.

With both methods, it is important that your watch shows Standard Time and not Daylight Saving Time, or the result will be in error by as much as 16 degrees2.  Daylight Saving time is used by many countries in the northern hemisphere, starts in March to April, and ends during September to November; while in the southern hemisphere it starts during September to November and ends during March to April.  If your watch is set for Daylight Savings Time, set it back an hour, so that your watch shows Standard Time.


An excerpt from “Truth”, p. 656


Something else that is important to know, is what I call the “the six in the morning to the six at night rule”.  This rule was noted, but not named, by both the editor of “Truth” and by John Phin, the author of the “How A Watch May Be Used As A Compass”.  This rule states that for all hours between 6 o’clock in the morning and 6 o’clock in the evening, you divide in half the smaller angle between “12” and the hour hand, the angle that is less than 180o.  From 6 o’clock in the evening until sundown, and from sunrise until 6 o’clock in the morning, you bisect the larger angle between “12” and the hour hand, the angle that is greater than 180o. 

If you think about it, in the northern hemisphere, the direction of south sweeps clockwise around the watch dial from around “8” or “9” at sunrise, noon is at “12” and continues to “3” or “4” at sunset.  The opposite is true in the southern hemisphere, with the direction of north sweeping clockwise around the dial and at sunrise, north is opposite “8” or “9”, while at noon the “12” points to north and at sunset north is opposite “3” or “4”.  This important rule is, unfortunately, is missing from most modern books on survival, that teach about using a watch to find the compass points.


Adapted from Survival: Land, Sea, Jungle, Arctic, p. 42, Fig. 17, picture by the author


In the northern hemisphere, north of the Tropic of Cancer, to find the north-south line using a traditional or analog watch, point the hour hand at the sun, while holding the watch in your hand, face up and level.  To make it easier to line up the hour hand with the sun, or if it is cloudy and overcast, hold a twig or a matchstick on the edge of the watch, where the hour hand is pointing, so that it cast a shadow.  Alternatively, for greater accuracy in determining the compass points, drive a stick into the ground, standing straight up, and lay your watch on the ground with the shadow of the stick falling along the hour hand and through the center of the watch.  While holding the watch and the twig level, turn in place so that the shadow is cast along the hour hand through the center of the watch.  Remembering “the six in the morning to the six at night rule”, divide the angle between the “12” and the hour hand in half, drawing an imaginary line from the center of the watch through this halfway point, will give the general direction of south.

Remembering the “the six in the morning to the six at night rule”, if it is four o’clock in the afternoon, and you take half of the smallest angle from “12” and the Sun at “4” the line pointing south will run through “2”.  If it is eight o’clock in the morning, and the “8” is pointing at the Sun, then south is half the smallest angle between “8” and “12”, or “10”.  At noon, since north of the Tropic of Cancer the sun is always south of you, then if the hour hand is pointing at “12”, that is the approximate direction of south.

Using the “the six in the morning to the six at night rule”, if it is 7 o’clock in the evening, in the northern hemisphere, then half of the larger angle from the “7” to the “12”, will be between “4” and “3”, and that will point towards south.  If it is “5” in the morning then half of the larger angle from the “5” to the “12” will be between “8” and “9” and that will point towards south.  At 6 o’clock in the morning south will be opposite “9” and at 6 o’clock in the evening, the “3” will point the direction to south.


This picture was taken on May 26 at 12:48, Daylight Savings time, by the author.


North of the Tropic of Cancer, to use a digital watch to find south, first place an upright stick in the ground to create a shadow.  Then draw a picture of a traditional clock face on the ground, with the stick on the edge of the watch picture, where the hour hand is, so that a shadow is cast through the center of the picture.  Using “the six in the morning to the six at night rule”, divide the angle between “12” and the hour hand in half, and drawing an imaginary line from the center of the picture through the halfway point, this will give you the general direction of south.


Adapted from Survival: Land, Sea, Jungle, Arctic, p. 42, Fig. 17, picture by the author



An excerpt from “How A Watch May Be Used As A Compass”, The Seven Follies of Science, by John Phin, p. 134-135



In the southern hemisphere, south of the Tropic of Capricorn, to find the compass points using a traditional or analog watch, point the number “12” at the sun, while holding the watch in your hand, face up and level.  To make it easier to line up the “12” with the sun, or if it is cloudy and overcast, hold a twig or a matchstick on the edge of the watch at the “12”, so that it cast a shadow.  Or, for greater accuracy in finding the compass points, drive a stick into the ground so that it is standing straight up; lay your watch on the ground so that the shadow of the stick falls along the “12” and through the center of the watch.  While holding the watch and the twig level, turn in place so that the shadow is cast from the “12” through the center of the watch.  Using “the six in the morning to the six at night rule”, divide the angle between the “12” and the hour hand in half, an imaginary line drawn from the center of the watch through this halfway point, gives the approximate direction of north.

Again, using “the six in the morning to the six at night rule”, if it is four o’clock in the afternoon, and you take half of the smallest angle from “12” and the Sun, to “4” the line pointing north will run through “2”.  If it is eight o’clock in the morning, and the “12” is pointing at the Sun, then north is half of the smallest angle between “8” and “12”, or at “10”.  At noon, since south of the Tropic of Capricorn the sun is always north of you, then if both the hour hand and the “12” is pointing at the Sun, then that is the approximate direction of north.

Remembering the “the six in the morning to the six at night rule”, if it is 7 o’clock in the evening, in the southern hemisphere, then half of the largest angle from the “7” to the “12”, will be between “4” and “3”, and that will point towards north.  If it is “5” in the morning then half of the largest angle from the “5” to the “12” will be between “8” and “9” and that will north.  At 6 o’clock in the morning, north will be opposite the “9” and at 6 o’clock in the evening; the “3” will point the direction to north.

South of the Tropic of Capricorn, to use a digital watch to find north, first place an upright stick in the ground to create a shadow.  Then draw a picture of a traditional clock face on the ground, with the stick on the edge of the watch picture, where the “12” is, so that a shadow is cast from the “12” through the center of the picture.  Remembering “the six in the morning to the six at night rule”, divide the angle between “12” and the hour hand in half, and drawing an imaginary line from the center of the picture through the halfway point, will give you the general direction of north.


An excerpt from “Truth”, p. 656


It is important to remember, however, that you can only determine the general direction of north, south, east and west with a watch and the Sun.  As I pointed out in “How to Find Your Way Without a Compass, Part One”, HERE: except on two very special days of the year, you will only be able to find, “A rough approximation to the direction…within about 20 deg.”3.  This should good enough, however, for you to reorient yourself. 

What this all means to the “misplaced” wilderness adventurer is, if you use a watch and the Sun to determine your direction of travel, you will have an error in your heading.  As the “1 in 60” rule of thumb shows, a 1° error in your line of travel over one mile is not much (you will only be off track by about 88 feet or almost 30 yards), however over ten miles, it is much more.  With an error of 20° in your line of travel, you will be off track by a third of mile for every mile you travel.  Over a larger distances, with only a watch and the Sun to orient yourself, you might end up more lost than you were when you started and for this reason, you should always carry at least one, but better yet, two compasses with you when you are in the wilderness.  For more on why having two compasses is important see “Getting Lost And What To Do About It”, Circa 1915” HERE.

For those of you, who would like to understand the science and the history of this method of using a watch as a compass, please see the Appendix below.

For more on “How to Find Your Way Without a Compass, Part Three, Using The Shadow-Tip Method”, check back in following weeks.

I hope that you continue to enjoy The Woodsman’s Journal Online and my videos at BandanaMan Productions. Don’t forget to follow me on The Woodsman’s Journal Online and subscribe to BandanaMan Productions on YouTube, and if you have questions, as always, feel free to leave a comment on either site.


Appendix

One of the questions that I had, when I was researching how to use your watch as a compass was, what is the science behind this method?  Since I had this question, I thought that some of my readers might also be curious, so here is what I found.

On page 656, of “Truth”, written in October 2, 1890, contributor T. A. T. Hallowes explained the science of using a watch as a compass:

An excerpt from “Truth”, p. 656


John Phin, in The Seven Follies of Science, 1906, further explained how the watch as a compass works.


An excerpt from “How A Watch May Be Used As A Compass”, The Seven Follies of Science, by John Phin, p. 134-135


There is good science behind this method, and a watch works as a compass “because of the mathematical relationship between the orbit of the sun and the circle of degrees described by the watch dial4.  The Sun, from 6:00 am when it is in the east, to 6:00 pm when it is in the west, passes through an arc of 180o, which means that it moves 15o an hour over 12 hours.  During this same time, the hour hand on your watch moves 360o or twice as fast as the Sun, and this is why the distance between the “12” and the hour hand is halved.

 
An excerpt from Plane Safety And Survival, p. 75

The other thing that I was curious about since I am a reenactor and an “experimental historian” was, when was using your watch as a compass first written about.  The earliest reference to this method of finding the general direction of north and south, that I could find was reprinted in “Truth” on page 656 and is an excerpt from The Text-book of Military Topography, which was originally published in 1884.  One of the interesting things in this excerpt from Col. W. Richards’s book was his statement that, “This simple expedient is useful on horseback, and it enables one to hold a map with its sides nearly north and south without dismounting.4  The reason that I found this interesting, is that in the Art of Travel, 1872, by Francis Galton, he noted on  on page 287 that “…compasses cannot be used on horseback without stopping…”5.  Compasses during the mid to late 19th century were air filled and from personal experience with using air filled compasses, it would have been very difficult to settle the needle, while riding on a horse; using a “watch as a compass” to orient your map, would have been a clever “wrinkle” or trick.


An excerpt from “Truth”, p. 656


Additionally, a note for reenactors and experimental historians: watches were expensive luxury items during the end of the 18th century and were not commonly carried, except by the wealthy, until the early years of the 19th century.  Therefore, for reenactors of the late 19th century onwards, this would be a period correct skill.  However, for modern reenactors of late 18th and early 19th centuries, who are interested in direction finding and time telling, look for the upcoming article “How To Tell Direction and Time Like Robert Rogers And His Rangers”, coming soon.


Notes

1  Editor, “Truth”, No 718, Vol 28, [Bolt-court, Fleet Street, London, Oct 2, 1890] p 656

2  Risk, Paul, H., Outdoor Safety And Survival, p. 285

3  Editor, “Truth”, No 718, Vol 28, [Bolt-court, Fleet Street, London, Oct 2, 1890] p 656
The degree of inaccuracy appears to be, as much as, 20 degrees, with the authors of Survival: Land Sea, Jungle Arctic, 1944, noting “…you can use a watch to tell true north or south with an error of less than 8 degrees.”  Bradford Angier echoed this in 1971, when he wrote “A watch used as a makeshift compass … can be relied upon to be true within eight degrees”, in How to Stay Alive in the Woods.

4  Ibid., p. 285

5   Francis Galton, Art of Travel, 1872, p. 287


Sources

Airlines War Training Institute, Survival: Land, Sea, Jungle, Arctic, [The Infantry Journal, Washington, D.C., 1944] p. 41-42

Anderson, Eric G., M.D., Plane Safety And Survival, [Aero Publishers, Inc, Fallbrook, CA, 1978] p. 51-63, 75

Angier, Bradford, How to Stay Alive in the Woods, [Orginally published as Living Off The Country: How to Stay Alive in the Woods, Collier Books, New York, NY, 1971] p. 182

Department of the Airforce, Outdoor Survival Skills: How to Survive on Land, Sea and Ice!, [Info Books, Toronto, Canada, 1980] p. 2-86

Craighead, Frank, Jr., Phd, and Craighead, John J., Phd., How to Survive on Land and Sea, [United States Naval Institute, Annapolis, MD, 1956] p. 11

Editor, “The American Architect And Building News”, Vol. XXX, No. 775, [Ticknor & Co Publishers, Boston, MA November 1, 1890] p. 75 https://books.google.com/books?id=HYdMAAAAYAAJ&pg=RA1-PA75&dq=finding+south+with+a+watch&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiyt5-xjZTjAhUjwFkKHen8Aio4hgMQ6AEIPDAE#v=onepage&q=finding%20south%20with%20a%20watch&f=false, accessed 7/1/19


Galton, Francis, Art of Travel, 1872, [Stackpole Books, Harrisburg, PA, 1971], p. 287

Louis, The Blacksmith and Wheelwright,Vol. XXXVIII, No. [M. T. Richardson Company, New York, NY, July 1898] p. 124

Phin, John, “How A Watch May Be Used As A Compass”, The Seven Follies of Science, [D. Van Nostrand Company, New York, NY 1906] p. 134-135

Risk, Paul, H., Outdoor Safety And Survival, [John Wiley & Sons, New York, NY, 1983] p 284-285

Stevens, E.E., “The Handy Compass”, Labor Digest: A National Magazine for the Advocacy of Industrial Peace, Vol 3, [Minneapolis, MN, December 1910] p. 10-11

Thorsen, Steffen, “Daylight Saving Time – DST – Summer Time”, [timeanddate.com, 2019] https://www.timeanddate.com/time/dst/, accessed 7/1/2019

“Where Do the Sun and Stars Rise?” [Stanford Solar Center, 2005] http://solar-center.stanford.edu/AO/sunrise.html, accessed 9/8/18

Wikipedia Contributors, “1 in 60 rule”, [Wikipedia, The free Encyclopedia, December 21, 2017] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1_in_60_rule, accessed 7/10/19



Sunday, July 14, 2019

How to Find Your Way Without A Compass, Part One, Orientation By The Sun©


 
The author orienting himself by the Sun, on a very hot day, picture by the author
  
Your car crashed in the desert, or the bush plane you were in went down, you’re all alone and you don’t have a compass.  You know there are ways to use the Sun to find north and south, but you don’t remember how.  No problem you think, everybody knows, the Sun rises in the east and sets in the west, right?  Right?

You, as the “misplaced” wilderness adventurer, can use your knowledge of how the Sun travels through the heavens to find your “orientation by the sun”1, but the first thing to know is that the Sun doesn’t always “…rise in the east and set in the west…”2.  In fact, on only two days of the year, does the Sun rise exactly in the east and set exactly in the west: these two days are March 21st, the Spring Equinox, and September 23rd, the Fall Equinox.  On every other day of the year, the Sun rises either south or north of true east and sets either north or south of true west.


Adapted from Survival: Land, Sea, Jungle, Arctic, p. 41, Fig. 16, by the author


On both the Fall and Spring Equinox, the Sun rises due east, directly over the equator, travels over Indonesia, Ecuador, northern Brazil, The Democratic Republic of the Congo, Kenya and other countries, and then sets due west. 

Every day after the Spring Equinox, the Sun will rise and set further and further to the north of true east and west, until the Summer Solstice, on June 21st, when it reaches its most northerly point, at 23 degrees, 27 minutes, north latitude or as that line of latitude is called, Tropic of Cancer.  On the Summer Solstice the Sun rises, almost, at east-by-northeast and sets, close to, west-by-northwest3. 

Every day after the Summer Solstice, the Sun will rise and set further to the south, until on the Fall Equinox, September 23rd, the Sun will again rise in the east and set in the west, over the equator. 

In the days after the Fall Equinox, the Sun will continue to rise farther and farther to the south until on the 21st of December, the Winter Solstice, the Sun will rise and set at 23 degrees, 27 minutes south latitude, the Tropic of Capricorn.  On the Winter Solstice, the sun rises and sets at its furthest point to the south, rising almost, at east-by-southeast and setting near, west-by southwest4.

After the Winter Solstice, the Sun will begin to rise more and more to the north, until the Spring Equinox, when it rises and sets again, due east and west over the equator.

Knowing at what compass point the Sun rises and sets in it’s yearly journey, will help the “misplaced” wilderness adventure to orient themselves.  If you were “misplaced” late in May and the Sun is rising, you know that the direction of the rising Sun will be more east-by-northeast than east, and therefore you can adjust your mental compass.  Besides the rising and setting of the Sun, there are some other facts about the Sun’s journey that can help you determine the general compass points.


From Outdoor Survival Skills, p. 2-87. Author’s note, 23.4 degrees is the same as 23 degrees, 24 minutes.


If you are north of the Tropic of Cancer (23 degrees, 27 minutes, north, latitude), which runs through Egypt, Saudi Arabia, India southern China, Mexico, northern Cuba and the Bahamas, the Sun will travel through the south of the sky during both the summer and winter.  North of the Tropic of Cancer, from the Fall Equinox to the Spring Equinox, the noon sun will be low enough in the sky for you to tell easily, which direction is south.  On the Summer Solstice, if you are near the Tropic of Cancer, the noon Sun will be nearly overhead. 

If you are south of the Tropic of Capricorn (23 degrees, 27 minutes, south, latitude), which runs through Chile, southern Brazil, South Africa and Australia, the Sun will travel through the north part of the sky during both the winter and the summer.  South of the Tropic of Capricorn, from the Spring Equinox until the Fall Equinox, the sun will be low enough in the northern sky to tell which direction north is.  On the Winter Solstice, if you are near the Tropic of Capricorn, the noon Sun will be almost overhead. 

In the tropics, which lie between the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn, the Sun travels north of the equator from the Spring Equinox to the Fall Equinox and south of the equator from the Fall Equinox until the Spring Equinox. 

I hope that this will help you understand where the Sun is in its daily and yearly journey through the sky, because the rising and the setting of the Sun, it’s travels, not to mention its zenith at noon, can help you determine your direction.  It is important to remember, however, that you can only determine the general direction of north, south, east and west with the Sun.  What this all means to the “misplaced” wilderness adventurer is, except on two very special days of the year, you will only be able to find, “A rough approximation to the direction of the true meridian [the north-south line, Author’s note] for finding one’s way by the aid of a map…within about 20 deg.”5: This should be good enough for you to reorient yourself, in a general way.  Nevertheless, if you plan to use the Sun to determine your direction of travel, no matter how carefully you take into consideration, where and when, the Sun rises and sets, you will have an error in heading.  For the “misplaced” wilderness adventurer attempting to walk out, the “1 in 60” rule of thumb applies.  This rule states that for every 1° error in heading over one mile, you will be off track by about 88 feet or almost 30 yards, and for an error in heading of 20° for every mile traveled, you will be off track by a third of a mile, which is 1,760 feet or 587 yards6.  A pro-tip for travelling in the wilderness, when you don’t have a compass, is to note where the Sun strikes your face when are looking in the direction that you want to travel, for example, right ear, left ear, just above your right eye, right-side back of the head, etc.  Make sure as you travel, that the Sun is still striking you in the same spot and use this to help you maintain the same heading, if you must travel a winding trail.  Bear in mind that the Sun moves throughout the day, hour-by-hour, so re-orient yourself frequently.  Over the long trek, when you have only the Sun to orient yourself, you might find yourself more lost than found and this is why you should always carry at least one, but better yet, two compasses with you when you are in the wilderness.  For more on the importance of having two compasses with you when you travel in the wilderness see “Getting Lost And What To Do About It”, Circa 1915” HERE.

Always bring a compass; even better bring two, when you go into the wilderness. Picture by the author


For more on finding your “orientation by the sun” and how to find the points of the compass with either a traditional or digital watch, check back next week for “How to Find Your Way Without a Compass, Part Two, The Watch As A Compass”.

I hope that you continue to enjoy The Woodsman’s Journal Online and my videos at BandanaMan Productions and don’t forget to follow me on both The Woodsman’s Journal Online and subscribe to BandanaMan Productions on YouTube, and if you have questions, as always, feel free to leave a comment on either site.


Notes

1  Stevens, E.E., “The Handy Compass”, Labor Digest: A National Magazine for the Advocacy of Industrial Peace, p. 11

2  Airlines War Training Institute, Survival: Land, Sea, Jungle, Arctic, [The Infantry Journal, Washington, D.C., 1944] p. 41-42

3  East-by-northeast is 22.5 degrees north of east and west-by-northwest is 22.5 degrees north of west, both are within one degree of the Tropic of Cancer. 

4  East-by-southeast and west-by southwest are both south of the east-west line by 22.5 degrees and are close to the Tropic of Capricorn.

5  Editor, “Truth”, No 718, Vol 28, [Bolt-court, Fleet Street, London, Oct 2, 1890] p 656

6  Wikipedia Contributors, “1 in 60 rule”, “the 1 in 60 rule is a rule of thumb which states that if a pilot has travelled sixty miles then an error in track of one mile is approximately a 1° error in heading” 



Sources

Airlines War Training Institute, Survival: Land, Sea, Jungle, Arctic, [The Infantry Journal, Washington, D.C., 1944] p. 41-42

Anderson, Eric G., M.D., Plane Safety And Survival, [Aero Publishers, Inc, Fallbrook, CA, 1978] p. 51-63

Department of the Airforce, Outdoor Survival Skills: How to Survive on Land, Sea and Ice!, [Info Books, Toronto, Canada, 1980] p. 2-86

Craighead, Frank, Jr., Phd, and Craighead, John J., Phd., How to Survive on Land and Sea, [United States Naval Institute, Annapolis, MD, 1956] p. 11

Editor, “The American Architect And Building News”, Vol. XXX, No. 775, [Ticknor & Co Publishers, Boston, MA November 1, 1890] p. 75 https://books.google.com/books?id=HYdMAAAAYAAJ&pg=RA1-PA75&dq=finding+south+with+a+watch&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiyt5-xjZTjAhUjwFkKHen8Aio4hgMQ6AEIPDAE#v=onepage&q=finding%20south%20with%20a%20watch&f=false, accessed 7/1/19

  
Louis, The Blacksmith and Wheelwright,Vol. XXXVIII, No. [M. T. Richardson Company, New York, NY, July 1898] p. 124

Phin, John, “How A Watch May Be Used As A Compass”, The Seven Follies of Science, [D. Van Nostrand Company, New York, NY 1906] p. 134-135

Risk, Paul, H., Outdoor Safety And Survival, [John Wiley & Sons, New York, NY, 1983] p 284-285

Stevens, E.E., “The Handy Compass”, Labor Digest: A National Magazine for the Advocacy of Industrial Peace, Vol 3, [Minneapolis, MN, December 1910] p. 10-11

“Where Do the Sun and Stars Rise?” [Stanford Solar Center, 2005] http://solar-center.stanford.edu/AO/sunrise.html, accessed 9/8/18

 Wikipedia Contributors, “1 in 60 rule”, [Wikipedia, The free Encyclopedia, December 21, 2017], https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1_in_60_rule, accessed 7/10/19