Sunday, September 27, 2020

Test Your Survival Knowledge, Part Two ©

 

 

“Test your survival knowledge with a simple exam”, by Melinda Allan, from The Register-Guard, February 18, 1987, Eugene, Oregon, page 5D, the article can be found HERE

 

To read “Test Your Survival Knowledge, Part One” go HERE, and to read “Test Your Survival Knowledge, Part Three” go HERE – Author’s note


So, last week we talked about the answers to questions one and two of Melinda Allan’s “Test your survival knowledge with a simple exam”.  This week we will be discussing the answers to

questions three and four.

 

Question three from “Test your survival knowledge with a simple exam”, by Melinda Allan, The Register-Guard, February 18, 1987, Eugene, Oregon, page 5D

Photograph by the author.

Answer three from “Test your survival knowledge with a simple exam”, by Melinda Allan, The Register-Guard, February 18, 1987, Eugene, Oregon, page 5D

 

This is one of the questions that my kids got wrong, when they took the test.  And before we get started on all the different ways to get a fire started, let me say I agree with the author when she said “But remember your matches.  It’s a lot easier.  Personally, I never go out into the woods without at least one lighter and some strike anywhere matches with an emery board in a waterproof match-case in my pocket or in my pack1. 

 

However, having said that, it is true that you MIGHT be able to start a fire with any of these methods, but banging the right rocks and rubbing the right sticks together is difficult and using batteries from a car or plane or shooting a smoldering rag from a gun are dangerous, but you MIGHT be able to do it.

 

Maybe you should just throw an extra BIC® lighter into your pocket, it is easier!

 

Photograph by the author.

 

Having said that here is what Bradford Angier, the author of Living off the Country: How to Stay Alive in the Woods, had this to say, about expedient methods of starting fires.

 

An excerpt from Bradford Angier’s Living off the Country: How to Stay Alive in the Woods, page 90-91.

 

Also, Larry Dean Olsen, who wrote the classic Outdoor Survival Skills, wrote this about using flint and steel.

 

Excerpts from Larry Dean Olsen’s Outdoor Survival Skills, pages 41-43

 

And Paul H. Risk, who wrote Outdoor Safety and Survival, described using dry-cell batteries to start a fire.

 

Excerpts from Paul H. Risk’s Outdoor Survival Skills, pages 48-49


And lastly a word of caution from Paul H. Risk, on these improvised methods of lighting a fire.






Excerpts from Paul H. Risk’s Outdoor Survival Skills, pages 47-50, discussing some of the dangers of using wet-cell batteries and gunpowder to start fires.

 

Yes, it would definitely be easier, a lot faster and safer to just throw an extra BIC® lighter into your pocket!

 

Now, onto question four and its answer.


Question four from “Test your survival knowledge with a simple exam”, by Melinda Allan, The Register-Guard, February 18, 1987, Eugene, Oregon, page 5D


Answer four from “Test your survival knowledge with a simple exam”, by Melinda Allan, The Register-Guard, February 18, 1987, Eugene, Oregon, page 5D



 

It is generally accepted that the word Adirondack is from a Mohawk word, atirú:taks, and means “they eat trees” or “those who eat trees” and it was used by the Mohawks to refer to the Algonquins, who used to hunt extensively in the Adirondack region.  The Mohawks and the rest of the Iroquois, who called themselves “those who build cabins”, waged war on the Algonquins for centuries and this derogatory term was used to belittle them2.  However, and in the case of starvation, which during the winter months in the Northwest or the Adirondacks is a distinct possibility, eating bark is a survival option of last resort.

 

Bradford Angier wrote this about eating the inner bark of trees or, as I like to call it “The Adirondack Diet Plan”.

 

An excerpt from Bradford Angier’s Living off the Country: How to Stay Alive in the Woods, page 16-17.

 

And Larry Dean Olsen had this to say about gathering barks and greens if you are forced to participate in the Adirondack Diet Plan.

 

Excerpts from Larry Dean Olsen’s Outdoor Survival Skills, pages 75

 

While I make and enjoy pine-needle tea from time to time, when I am out in the woods, for most people it is probably an acquired taste.  I have never tried eating the inner layer of bark, never having been misplaced for more than a couple of hours.  As an aside, remember that according to The Rule of Threes, you can live for about three weeks without food and most people are found within three days, so maybe eating bark and being a member of The Adirondack Diet Plan isn’t something that you are likely going to have to worry about.

 

Personally I believer that many of the skills that Melinda Allan wrote about in “Test your survival knowledge with a simple exam”, would more accurately be called primitive skills and bushcraft skills, not survival skills (for a definition of the difference read “Les Stroud, Survival and Outdoor Skills ©”, HERE).  That doesn’t make them any less useful, and it never hurts to know how to do things, but remember on average “misplaced” persons are found within 72 hours, so you need to learn basic survival skills that will keep body and soul together for that long, before you learn bushcraft and primitive skills. 

  

I hope that you enjoyed this installment of, “Test your survival knowledge with a simple exam”, tune in next week for part three and the answers to questions five and six.

 

I hope that you continue to enjoy The Woodsman’s Journal Online and look for me on YouTube at Bandanaman Productions for other related videos, HERE.  Don’t forget to follow me on both The Woodsman’s Journal Online, HERE, and subscribe to BandanaMan Productions on YouTube.  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.

 

That is all for now, and as always, until next time, Happy Trails!

 

 

Notes

 

1 I usually have two BIC® full sized lighters with me whenever I go out into the woods, one in my pocket and one in my pack.  They aren’t very heavy, weighing 0.89 ounces (25.4 grams) and according to BIC’s website they are good for up to 3,000 lights.  The reason why I keep one in my pocket and one in my pack, is it is good to have a spare in case something happens to one of them and because in a survival situation you might find yourself without your pack, but hopefully, unless this is “Naked and Afraid” you should always have your pants!  I also keep a BIC® mini sized lighter in my survival kit, which is kept in my vest pocket or in my life jacket pocket, and in the woods I always wear either my vest or my life jacket, depending on my mode of transportation. 

 

From, What Things Weigh: Getting To The Weight Of The Matter; “Weight Of BIC Lighter” and www.shopbic.com; “Ask Us Anything.  As Long As It’s About BIC® Lighters”

 

2 From J. Dyneley Prince, “Some Forgotten Indian Place-Names In The Adirondacks” and Stephen B. Sulavik, M.D., “Adirondack Of Indians And Mountains, 1535-1838”

 

Sources

 

Angier, Bradford; Living off the Country: How to Stay Alive in the Woods, [The Stackpole Company, Harrisburg, PA, 1959], p. 17, 23 & 91

 

Olsen, Larry Dean; Outdoor Survival Skills, [Pocket Books, New York, NY, 1976], p. 75

 

Prince, J. Dyneley; “Some Forgotten Indian Place-Names In The Adirondacks”, The Journal of American Folklore, Vol. 13, No. 49, Apr. - Jun., 1900, pp. 123-128, https://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/533802.pdf, accessed September 14, 2020

 

Risk, Paul H.; Outdoor Safety And Survival, [John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York, NY, 1983], p. 47-50

 

Sulavik, M.D., Stephen B.; “Adirondack Of Indians And Mountains, 1535-1838”, [Copyright © 2005 Purple Mountain Press], http://www.catskill.net/purple/sulavik.htm, accessed September 14, 2020

 

What Things Weigh: Getting To The Weight Of The Matter; “Weight Of BIC Lighter”, [© 2020 What Things Weigh], https://whatthingsweigh.com/weight-of-bic-lighter/, accessed September 18, 2020

 

www.shopbic.com; “Ask Us Anything.  As Long As It’s About BIC® Lighters”, [©2020 BIC USA INC.] https://www.shopbic.com/lighters/faqs#:~:text=HOW%20MANY%20LIGHTS%20CAN%20YOU,Up%20to%203%2C000, accessed September 18, 2020

 

 

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