What about analysis of how to lower the risks of the hiking, camping, and canoeing that you want to do? Or have you pushed that aspect as far as it’s likely to go?
For example, my existing kit already includes bear bags to keep tempting food away from the campsite, anti-bear pepper spray, a “bear banger” shot for the flaregun… and I’ve just added those “QuikClot” rapid-coagulation sponges to the first-aid kit.
That’s a fairly open-ended question, and I’m not sure how to answer. One version or another of the “SAS Survival Handbook” has been in my library for a couple of decades, which seems to offer a good overall framework.
It’s open-ended because it’s an area that I don’t know much about. When I thought about how a person could end up dead from camping, the first thing I imagined was twisting an ankle after a stumble a steep hill, and not being able to get back to civilization. Add more trouble, and I imagine a fall down a steep hill, maybe with a concussion. (Yes, I have issues about falling.) However, I don’t know if those are the biggest risks.
What about analysis of how to lower the risks of the hiking, camping, and canoeing that you want to do? Or have you pushed that aspect as far as it’s likely to go?
I’m open to any suggestions on that front.
For example, my existing kit already includes bear bags to keep tempting food away from the campsite, anti-bear pepper spray, a “bear banger” shot for the flaregun… and I’ve just added those “QuikClot” rapid-coagulation sponges to the first-aid kit.
I was thinking about choosing terrain and temperature and such.
Do you know specifics about the risks of camping?
That’s a fairly open-ended question, and I’m not sure how to answer. One version or another of the “SAS Survival Handbook” has been in my library for a couple of decades, which seems to offer a good overall framework.
It’s open-ended because it’s an area that I don’t know much about. When I thought about how a person could end up dead from camping, the first thing I imagined was twisting an ankle after a stumble a steep hill, and not being able to get back to civilization. Add more trouble, and I imagine a fall down a steep hill, maybe with a concussion. (Yes, I have issues about falling.) However, I don’t know if those are the biggest risks.
Possibly of interest: Deep Survival: Who Lives, Who Dies, and Why.
I currently have “http://www.amazon.ca/The-Unthinkable-Survives-Disaster-Strikes/dp/0307352900″ http://www.amazon.ca/The-Unthinkable-Survives-Disaster-Strikes/dp/0307352900 in my to-read pile, and that looks like a good companion piece.