(12-09-2016, 03:09 AM)KAV Wrote: I was the longtime forum administrator for a survival website. People buying 'survival knives' need to figure out what it is you are going to survive, and avoiding behaviours that get you into a fix thinking to exchange them for the level heading thinking, alfa leader to get out of it. Most of us spend a lot of time in a vehicle. If you don't have a knife with a windshield punch and safety blade for cutting restraining belts get one. My #1 survival item? A quality sleeping bag that will keep you alive long enough to do all those TEEVEE
tricks later. toss in some water and food, some manner of stove and a first aid kit a few steps above the joke in the company front office but not beyond your skill. You can toss
a kit together on the cheap too. An Old Hickory kitchen knife isn't much different from what Daniel Boone carried, 100' of grandmother's clothes dryer ( cheap rope, if you plan on using a parachute buy paracord) cheap tarp, a mess of $1 lighters from the liquor store, some GI wool gloves, watch caps and a decent flashlight and you're a survival Tyranosaurus Rex compared to 99 percent of people.
Great post! Thanks for sharing!
If I have my bugout kit with me, it's not really "survival"
. When I had a vehicle with doors, I always had a small selection of utilitarian knives and multi-tools, a -25* mummy bag, an ultra-light fly rod and a selection of flies suitable for all 4 seasons in my area, and usually a full 200' climbing rope in a bag, if not a full rack of gear. I only own a motorcycle these days, so I couldn't carry a full range of gear if I wanted to.
I use paracord that contains at least 1 strand of core that can be shredded and used to build a tinder nest if you are in a vegetation-free area, or the dead of winter in several feet of snow, and is also suitable for making a small body lanyard if I find myself at the top of a cliff, and I need to be able to lean out and look for a route down. When I go out hiking in the desert, I try to carry at least 2 knives that will accomplish the widest array of tasks from heavy to refined cutting, chopping and digging as necessary. I know how to make a couple different varieties of trap, and where I live, small animals are plentiful from lizards and cottontails to pheasant and grouse. I carry a magnesium striker when out "in the field" as well, because none of it is worth a darn if I can't cook, prepare water, or stay warm...
I do want to get one of those handy seatbelt rescue cutters though. A very handy tool to have...