Posts Tagged ‘some’

Some fellow bar-prepper stole my seat at the law library. Should I resort to self-help to make him give it up?

January 31st, 2010

Please note that self-help is generally illegal in many states! ;)
What makes it my seat?: I have claimed adverse possession of it from the law library. I have changed its state by rearranging the chairs, have been open and notorious about it being my seat, can exclude the library from it (with the use of signs and/or Supreme Court Reporters used as barricades), have held it continuously (while studying, with no long gaps while studying), and am hostile and adverse about anyone else taking it!

I have also been studying way, way too long, I think. :D
I was wondering how long it would take for someone to take the joke dead-seriously!

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Safety For Hunters – Some Useful Survival Tips for hunters

December 18th, 2009

Occasionally it’s wanton to fall behind your path in a strange forest. Channeling a compass and geographical map as a whole of the field in which you shall be hunting in may facilitate in the issue on being clueless about your whereabouts. Pack a flashlight including additional batteries just in cases when you get disoriented after sunset. There are likewise flashlights in stores at present which function through simply a shake, out-dating the demand for battery powered flashlights. Matches in a rainproof casing are indispensable and a razor-sharp knife is beneficial to own also. A conventional a Swiss Army or Bowie knife both attends to the intent.

A few granola, sugarcoat bars, or candied fruit are a sound idea to take along whenever you are not adept at getting hold of food in the wilderness. Never feed on whatever plant life, leaves or berries not unless you are intimate on what types are inedible. If you are uncertain of the harmlessness of a plant’s fruit or any other parts , don’t feed on it. Adventuring an illness when marooned in the wilderness is not desirable to an hungry belly. A bottle or 2 of drinking fluid, especially water is necessary as well. Individuals could hold up for a long time without nutrient but merely 72 hours without water supply. You will not prefer to booze on any water supply bumped on the solid ground without churning it for various minutes foremost to exterminate whatever parasites or bacteria.

It is advisable to bring a thread and needle included inside your kit for surviving the wild. These materials may be accustomed to fix ruptured clothing. You are able to also sew together an injury to contain profound bleeding just in case an accidental injury takes place and you cannot receive medical aid immediately.

Most huntsmen bear a 6 to 8 ft long rope to aid drag their plot back to the hand truck or catch equipment upwards into a tree support. This rope may be applied in several means whenever you are isolated in the forest for a prolonged time period. You will be able to manipulate a rope as number one help purposes, to serve make a steady shelter, or to fasten gear on your hiking expedition. You may even knot up a improvised clothesline to air-dry soaked clothing should you dip into stagnant water. Make sure to maintain your rope on you and not in the motor truck.

It is likewise an effective thought to put on a belt once off during hunting. A belt perhaps can be employed for an emergency tourniquet, also to aid protect a splint on an arm if required. A belt makes up for a handy first aid particular which you don’t charter to drag around either.

Fire precaution while stranded

This is crucial to abide by customary camp out safety guideposts once beginning a flame under whatever circumstances in the wilderness. Never forget to go over it triple times to be sure the flame is entirely extinguished prior to departing the field to keep flare ups which can lead to a possible forest fire. Select an area distant from trees and bushes, and course your pit with minor boulders or rocks to help hold in the coals.

Collect bulkier lumbers and pegs and pile them up in a teepee manner. And then assemble itsy-bitsy twigs and trashes of non-synthetic paper to consumption as inflaming at the foundation of your contraption. Blowing lightly upon your kindling shall serve your flaming to increase. You may apply pine both to protect your ablaze fire from breaking wind whenever needed. You are able to likewise use boughs to base or sit down on if snowfall is naturally occurring. This shall facilitate keep your feet warm from the cold while thawing yourself close to the fire.

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Guide On Some Survival Tips in Deer Hunting

November 27th, 2009

It is better to spend a night in the dark wood than getting yourself more confused when you are lost. And it always safe to know some survival tips when you are in that situation. There are many factors that could lead us to get lost in the wood even in the daytime. Reads more on how you could survive in those kinds of situations.

There are times when even the best of woodsmen are forced to spend a night in the wilderness. A man might travel so far into the woods, after a deer that it might be unsafe or impractical for him to try to find his way to the camp in the darkness. He might become lost as to direction, and prefer to camp out instead of risking the chance of becoming more confused by aimless traveling. If, for any reason, it is necessary to spend the night in the woods, knowledge of some of the fundamentals of woodcraft will aid in the comfort and even the survival of the lost person.

People seldom become lost on a day when the sun is shining, so the chances are that cold, wet or stormy weather has to be dealt with. If a person becomes lost early in the day, it is all right to travel (unless he finds that he is traveling in circles) with the hope of stumbling onto some tote-road, which could be followed to habitation. Otherwise it is best to try to make a camp somewhere in the vicinity and prepare to spend the night. Usually one night out is all that is necessary, unless the lost person is a lone hunter and no others know of his absence, or in the case of a continued storm of several days’ duration. In any case the camp should be made as comfortable as possible.

Fire is the most important item in the camp. The hearth is the symbol of the home and nothing does more to make a man feel at ease in the woods than a good fire. Build it against a fallen tree or a dead stub so that there will be a back-log to hold the heat. Gather as large a supply of dry limbs and down-wood as possible, because an open fire can use a surprising amount of fuel in a night and it is no fun to hunt for it in the dark. Gather anything which might burn and which can be dragged. Long pieces can be burned into shorter lengths and damp wood may be dried enough to be burned after the fire has had a chance to get a good start. Sometimes it is hard to find enough dry wood which can be used for kindling the fire, but the dead branches on the lower part of the softwood trees are nearly always dry enough to start with. Any of these branches that will break with a snap are satisfactory. Some of the mosses which hang from fir and spruce branches may be used for tinder if there is no birch bark nearby.

Sometimes a man will be caught with no dry matches or other conventional means of starting a fire. In such cases it is possible to borrow a page from the days of the flint-lock, when the hunter would use his gun as a fire starter. This modern adaptation should not be used except in an emergency, but it is usually effective.

Remove the bullet from a cartridge and empty about half of the powder onto a dry piece of bark. Cover this powder with crumbled, dry punk which is found in decayed stumps or in the interior of dead trees, or stubs where woodpeckers have been working. Be sure to keep this dry. Fill the bullet-end of the partly loaded cartridge with cotton cloth, or, lacking cotton, any cloth of vegetable origin. Place the cartridge in the gun and shoot it in a direction that will permit recovery of the cloth. This cloth will be smoldering from the heat of the explosion. Place this smoldering cloth in contact with the punk and powder, using sticks to handle the burning cloth and being careful to keep the hands and face away from the flash fire which is almost sure to result. Powder will not actually explode in the open air, but will burn very rapidly with an intense heat which will ignite the punk, leaving a mound of glowing coals that can be utilized to start a blazing fire.

There is something that you should learn which could be useful when lost in the woods especially in the woods. These tips given above will help you in your fight to survive in the woods when you are lost in the deer hunting. You can starts practicing them now, if you have any plan to go deer hunting in the near future.

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Can someone name some survival techniques for being stranded in the wild?

November 24th, 2009

I need to know some survival techniques for a project I’m doing please help???

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Backpacking Survival Kit – Some New Ideas

November 19th, 2009

There are the usual backpacking survival kit ideas that have stood the test of time. Almost everyone agrees that some way to start a fire, some medical supplies and some kind of blade are necessary. Other items, ranging from saws to signal whistles can be very useful, but their necessity in a basic kit are argued.

The following are the usual things that survival kits may have. After that you’ll find a few new ideas. The usual survival kit items: Fire starter (like a magnesium stick), waterproof matches, signal mirror, sewing kit, foil blanket, water purification tablets, fishing line and hooks, compass, fire tinder, plastic bags, duct tape, knife, bandana, nylon cord, paper, pencil or pen, dental floss, and a condom (the latter for carrying water in a wilderness emergency).

First aid items usually include bandages, aspirin or other pain killers, gauze pads, tweezers, and antibiotic ointment. More extensive first aid kits might also have splints, medical tape, sun block, safety pins, and a snake bite kit. Of course, any crucial medications you need are a good addition as well.

New Survival Kit Ideas

Here are some ideas you may not have heard of. First, why not have two survival kits? Make one for all-around use on easy hikes and when using a vehicle (ATV) or bicycle. These are the times when it is easier to carry a little extra weight. Of course, the problem is that we tend to leave a kit behind – or even leave a whole backpack behind – when we want to avoid the weight, like when you see a summit you want to climb up to. That is where the second kit comes in.

The second survival kit can be kept inside the first, so there is no unnecessary repetition of items. The point of this one is to have the most crucial items in the smallest lightest package. It can include bandages, a razor blade or small knife, aspirin, water purification, duct tape, pencil stub and paper. It should comfortably fit in the pocket of your pants or jacket. An altoids container can hold all of this, and has a mirrored surface inside as well, for signaling rescuers in the case of getting lost.

Another good idea for a survival kit is a couple small photos of those who are important to you. Survivors of wilderness disasters often report that thinking of their loved ones kept them alive. A photo or two to look at makes this even more of an inspiration.

Notes are a good survival kit idea too. First aid kits have tiny guides to help you in medical situations, but  you might also want a reminder of survival techniques. My own notes have the most common edible and useful wild plants listed, so I’ll remember what to look for and why. You can fit a lot of information on one piece of paper.

Then there is your “mental survival kit,” meaning the knowledge and practiced attitudes of your mind. Practice thinking of how to survive, for example, rather than about how bad a situation is. Read and recall a few good true survival stories, too. You’ll feel more confident in your abilities and chances, and telling such stories to others in your group might lift everyone’s spirits.

Apply these new survival kit ideas – they’re cheap wilderness emergency insurance for your next backpacking trip.

Copyright Steve Gillman. Visit the Wilderness Survival Guide and get the free ebook version of Ultralight Backpacking Secrets, as well as gear recommendations, and true adventure stories, at: http://www.The-Ultralight-Site.com/wilderness-survival-guide.html

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what are some survival tips on earthquakes?

November 12th, 2009

what are some earthquake survival tips,giudlines,safety tips, and preventions having to do with earthquakes,like seismographs about earthquakes,like the safest place in your home when you are in an earthquake,and more usefull information earthquack and posiblly prevent them if possible in the world .even how scientist rate earthquake.i would also also like to know information on earthqukes that hit channelview.

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