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![]() "Big John" wrote in message ... As an aside. When I bailed out in a snow storm in the arctic (Greenland) I took the booklet included in my survival pack and tore out the tropical instructions and used to start a small fire. On matches the kit contained a small container that held 12 or so 'kitchen' style matches. Container was water proof and anyone interested might look in some of the military surplus stores to see if they have any. While there was water in the survival kit in a sealed container, I always carried about a extra quart of water in several smaller containers. If one got broken in crash I still would have extra water (which is a life saver). Heavy coat, gloves and knit cap. Set of knit long johns would be nice also. For those who say don't need this in summer need to send a few night in mountains where it gets cold at night even in the summer. This clothing if selected with the down or plastic filling can be rolled into a very small package and only weigh a couple of pounds. It can be stuffed in almost any little space in cabin that is not used for any thing else. Air out at least once a year. A knife and other things are also high priorty but basic life saving items are a necessity. Hope you'all never have to use a survival kit. Big John ````````````````````````````````````````` On Fri, 09 Jun 2006 17:49:54 -0400, Roger wrote: On 8 Jun 2006 09:42:43 -0700, wrote: wrote: MATCHES ... The two basic types of match are those which may be scratched anywhere versus the 'safety' type which can on be struck on an abrasive pad treated with red phosphorus. The 'strike-anywhere' type are preferred since there's no need to provide for the special striking-surface. The surprise came from hearing some folks insist that the 'strike-anywhere' type of match was not available, at least to them. I assume they are the victim of some do-gooder regulation which allows only the sale of 'safety-type' matches in their locale. Before the last long trip we took I specifically went shopping for "kitchen matches" IE the ones that come in the large box. When I got them home the damn things were safety matches and I didn't want to have to take the whole box with me. After several days of hunting with no success, I gave up. I did find the Tapers (SP?) or fireplace matches work well, but are expensive and you end up throwing most of each one away, but they are great if you don't want to get too close to the fire. OTOH a box of the things have enough wood to make a small fire :-)) As to the paraffin, as a boy scout we dipped the whole match, usually molding 6 or 8 together. When we wanted one a thumbnail would peel one off the bunch and clean off the paraffin to the back of the tip. You learned to hold them hot end up as with all that paraffin you could get quite a blaze including your fingers when held hot end down. The new LED flashlights are great. I have several. Some have switches like the old flashlights that are momentary when pushed part way down and toggle when pushed all the way down. If you know the Morse code these can be really handy IF whoever sees it can read Morse. I have a couple that are a single LED on a flexible "goose neck" and a clip that will hold them to my shirt. The brightness is just right for the panel. I had one of the earlier single LEDs that also was about the right brightness and it would clip on to the bill of a cap which meant they lit up where ever you were looking. Unfortunately the cheap plastic clip broke. OTOH I have a TAC light with 5 LEDs and they are BRIGHT!. In the center is a single red LED that can be seen from a long way off. Knives: I almost always carry a "box cutter" that folds up like a jack knife, is all metal, has extra blades, and clips to my belt. There is usually one in the glove compartment with the spare batteries and flashlights. Tinder: You look for tinder with a chart case full of bible paper? Of course this is assuming that you can get back to the stuff in the plane you are not carrying on you. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com I've been there and done that several times. Real story: I'm down in the mountains at 8200 foot elevation at a deserted airstrip having landed a glider there at about 8PM. Crewperson is 350 road miles away and doesn't have a car charger for the cell phone which has dying battery. Crewperson also has a problem with the idea of travel from A to B. I THINK crew knows where I am. I'm dressed in shorts and T-shirt. I have three liters of water left in my water pack and a Pemican Meal Bar in my survival vest which does nicely for the evening meal. A quick check of my 12V sealed lead acid battery shows 12.6 volts after 7.5 hours airborne - the radio will work if I need it. It's cool and getting colder by the minute so I get back in the cockpit and close up. After a while it gets cold in the cockpit and the canopy starts to fog over so I break out the space blanket from the vest. Now I'm toasty but sweaty. I think about a fire but there's nothing even remotely flamable in sight - anyway the fire danger is extreme and theres a "Red flag" warning in effect for wildfires. Lighting a fire might get expensive with the fines. I'll stick with warm and sweaty. After a while I work out a ventillation scheme that gets the humidity out of the cockpit - much better. The remaining problem is boredom. There's a lighted runway about 35 miles away with pilot controlled lighting so I try 5 clicks on 122.8 and lo! the runway lights come on - kewl. Then, just visible in the moonlight, a grey fox trots by and freezes when hes sees what must look to him like a huge wounded bird with one wing on the ground. He cautiously approaches the nose until I wiggle the rudder. He jumps three feet straight up and streaks out of sight. Still worrying about whether my crew got my position before their cell phone died, I try a passing airliner on 121.5 and get a quick response. I explain my situation and get an offer of help. In a few minutes, he calls back to say that his operations folks have called my departure airport. They know my situation and my crew is on the way - ETA 1AM. Jeez! That A to B thing again. I thank the guys in the big airplane and settle in. Crew arrives at midnight to find me asleep. We're on the road with the glider in the trailer in 15 minutes. Crew then complains about being tired and hungry. Darn! No Rambo knife. We get a very early breakfast at a truck stop and all ends well. BTW, I notice that Satellite phones rent for less than $30 a week and air time is about $1.50 a minute with no pre-paid minutes. If you plan a flight over wilderness areas, that might be worth it if you wanted assured communication. bildan |
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