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Sunday, September 8, 2019

Les Stroud, Survival and Outdoor Skills ©



The cover of Scouting, September-October 2019

  
Most of you probably don’t get Scouting magazine, so you won’t have read “Skills for Your Situation”, by Les Stroud.  In this article he talks about survival and he breaks outdoors skills into four types; survival skills, emergency preparedness skills, primitive skills and bushcraft skills.  His thoughts on survival and in particular the weekend recreational survivor are spot on and I had never thought to break up outdoor skills into different types: so I thought that I would share his article with you and expand on it, a bit.  Hopefully his thoughts, as well as mine, will help you identify which skills to learn and practice in case you need to survive an emergency in the wilderness.

First things first though; what I have written in this article is in no way a criticism and in no way detracts from Les Stroud’s thoughts or opinions.  I fact, I have always been and I still am a great admirer of his work and his thoughts on survival and on the teaching of survival skills: in many ways he has been and continues to be a role model for me and he has greatly influenced my writing for The Woodsman’s Journal Online.  In short, I am a huge fan of the Survivorman!

One of my greatest fears was realized after I began the genre of survival shows on TV.  Some started to look at survival as more like a fun hobby… Les Stroud

Les Stroud’s thoughts on survival and learning and practicing survival skills, as he explained in “Skills for Your Situation”, are that the “…true goal of survival is to get home alive and well”.  He continued by saying, they “…are not recreational skills” and that “…practicing and learning survival skills recreationally is a terrific way to get a handle on the methods”, however, “…you must keep an overarching serious and even somber attitude about the purpose” of studying and practicing survival skills.  According to Mr. Stroud, “Survival is not fun.  It is difficult, scary, humbling, painful and, in a word, ugly”.  I agree with Les Stroud, that it is important to remember why we learn these skills, and to remember what surviving an extreme situation or disaster in the wilderness is truly like: hopefully you will only ever have to practice your skills and never have to put your skills into practice.

Knowing how to get a fire going anywhere, anytime, is just about the most important all around survival skill you can master Les Stroud

Survival Skills

Survival skills, as Les Stroud noted are “…methods you can employ to simply survive an extreme situation or disaster in the bush” and are skills that deal with immediate and short-term problems. 

Les Stroud, wrote that “…survival is, by its very nature, meant to be short-term” and in “Outside” online, Devon O’Neill noted that statistically most “misplaced” persons are found within 72 hours of being reported missing.  He also wrote that, 85% “misplaced” persons are found within the first 12 hours and 97% within the first 24 hours of being reported missing.  So the survival skills that you have learned and practiced only have to keep you alive for 72 hours or three short days: days which in a survival situation will feel like weeks. 


Rule of Threes, graphic by the author


One very good way at looking at an individual skill and seeing if it belongs with “Survival Skills” is to use the “Rule of Threes”.  The “Rule of Threes” is a planning tool, which helps you prioritize which actions, and therefore skills, are the most critical to your immediate and short-term survival.  The “Rule of Threes” states that you cannot survive for more than 3 minutes without air or with severe bleeding.  You cannot survive for more than 3 hours without a fire or a shelter from the environment.  You cannot survive for more than 3 days without water or sleep.  But you can survive for 3 weeks without food.  The “Rule of Threes” assumes that the rules above them have already been met, so if you are in the desert without any water and you are bleeding severely, according to the three-minute rule, the most important action to take at that moment is to stop the bleeding. 


So, looking at the “Rule of Threes”, the most important immediate and short-term skills would be first aid skills, followed by shelter and fire building, then skills on how to find and purify water and finally hunting, fishing, trapping and other food gathering skills.  Other important short-term survival skills that fall into the “Rule of Threes” somewhere between three hours and three days are signaling, using a compass to orient yourself and how to find directions without a compass.  Skills that don’t help us with these very immediate and short-term survival goals are not “Survival Skills”

One very important survival skill, that is not considered in the “Rule of Threes” is learning to recognize and prevent panic and understanding the psychology of being lost.  It is critical that you do not give into panic and woodshock, that you practice S.T.O.P. and do not give in to the “Seven Deadly Enemies of Survival”: for more on these subjects and on “Rule of Threes” read “The Ace of Spades: Survival Basics”, HERE, and “Getting Lost And What To Do About It”, Circa 1915”, HERE. 


Emergency preparedness skills are used in more urban circumstances, such as dealing with a hurricane or blackout… Les Stroud

Emergency Preparedness Skills

Typically, emergency preparedness skills help you prepare for and deal with emergencies and situations that are close to home or, by extension, close to the vehicle that you are travelling in.  Les Stroud wrote that knowing how to conserve food and water in an urban disaster could save your life.


Window box, 1920s, from “Before the refrigerator got its hum”, The Smithsonian Institute


I live in the northeast of the United States, near the Great Lakes, where it is cold and snowy for a large part of the year; in the past, during power outages, I have had to make and use window ice box to keep cold things cold, while I worked to keep the house warm.  Other important emergency preparedness skills for my area of the world are, knowing how to drive in the snow, safely, and how to conserve heat in your car or how to make a “warm-room” in your house when there is no power.  And while you could argue that knowing how to stay alive in a snowbound car is a survival skill, unless you are travelling on a remote road (and really why are you travelling on a remote road during a snow storm anyways; what were you thinking?) your stay in the stranded car will probably be short.

An emergency preparedness skill that will help you survive an extreme situation or emergency in the wilderness is learning how to prepare first aid and survival kits: remember, both first aid and survival kits can range from pocket-sized to day-pack-sized and can be created for different emergencies, situations and uses.

Primitive skills…They are not necessarily survival skills; they are thriving skills… Les Stroud

Primitive Skills

Another name for primitive skills would be aboriginal skills, and they are the skills that native peoples, from any given area, once used as a part everyday life.  Skills that can fall into this category are basketry, making pottery from clay, preparing and tanning hides, building advanced shelters and cooking over an open fire.  Many of these skills could be used to help you survive an emergency in the wilderness, however most of them are difficult to learn, are time and energy consuming and might take more than one per person to accomplish.


Larry Dean Olsen’s book Outdoor Survival Skills is a great book on primitive skills, photo by the author


Primitive skills require expert knowledge of native or aboriginal skills; they solve medium to long-term problems, take time, energy and sometimes more than one person to accomplish successfully: all things that you might be lacking in an emergency or survival situation in the wilderness.

Les Stroud believes, and I agree with him, that snowshoe making is a primitive skill that has survival applications.  Let’s say that you have had an emergency in the winter wilderness and you have decided to walk out instead of waiting for rescuers: walking in deep snow can be very exhausting and exhaustion in a survival situation is a killer, particularly in the winter.  Knowing how to make expedient or primitive snowshoes, in that situation, can mean the difference between successfully walking out and freezing to death in the wilderness.

Other primitive skills that might be useful in a survival situation are fire-starting, without modern tools, and basic flint knapping.  Basic flint knapping is simply fracturing rocks to make sharp edged or other basic tools, unlike advanced flint knapping which is the crafting of advanced stone tools and projectile points.

Bushcraft skills…These skills are mostly unnecessary in a survival situation…” Les Stroud

Bushcraft Skills

Bushcraft skills, which could just as well be called pioneer skills, require expert knowledge of the pioneer way of life and they solve medium to long-term problems, take time, energy, expert knowledge and sometimes more than one person to accomplish successfully: again these are all things that you might be lacking in an emergency or survival situation in the wilderness.  Some of these skills might be able to be adapted to a survival situation, but for the most part these skills are designed to make long-term life in the wilderness more comfortable.  Bushcraft skills include log-cabin building, bridge building, primitive furniture making and other domestic skills; they involve learning the use and care of axes, knives and rope, and how to use lashings and knots.

I hope that this will help you decide which skills will be most useful in helping you to survive that “…difficult, scary, humbling, painful and, in a word, ugly…” thing that is survival in an emergency or disaster in the wilderness.

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.  I announce new articles on Facebook at Eric Reynolds, on Instagram at bandanamanaproductions, and on VK at Eric Reynolds, so watch for me.

Sources


O’Neill, Devon “How Backcountry Search and Rescue Works”, [Outside, March 4, 2016], https://www.outsideonline.com/2059616/how-backcountry-search-and-rescue-works, accessed 10/09/2018

Stroud, Les, “Skills for Your Situation”, Scouting, September-October 2019, Vol. 107, No. 4, [Boy Scouts of America, Irving, TX], p. 44-45


Window box, 1920s, from “Before the refrigerator got its hum”, [The Smithsonian Institute, National Museum of American History, Trade, Literature and Special Collections; Behring Center] https://americanhistory.si.edu/object-project/refrigerators/ice-tongs, accessed 9/7/19


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