Showing posts with label tracking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tracking. Show all posts

Sunday, 19 August 2018

5 Clues for Tracking Wild Animals Besides Tracks

5 Clues for Tracking Wild Animals Besides Tracks

Look for these traces instead of just hoof or paw prints in the dirt
 
 CommentsTracking isn’t just the search for clear footprints. There are many more traces that animals leave behind. The search for these other indicators is called sign tracking, and it can be used in almost any environment. This method of tracking involves the signs, marks, disturbances, and leavings of an animal. Trails, beds, rubs, and chews can give a general idea of the species that are present. Hairs, feathers, and droppings can tell us exactly which animals are nearby. It’s important to learn to track by looking for these common animal signs, because in some terrains—it’s all you’ll have.

1. Look for Trails and Runs

These signs are equivalent to the highways and side roads that animals use to go between feeding areas, bedding areas, cover and water sources. Some trails are used by many different species, while runs are typically used by just a few animals or even just one species. In trails, you may see a few different tracks and pushed down vegetation. For trails, you’ll often find that they are worn down to bare dirt or rock, and filled with a variety of tracks. Since trails are the superhighway of the wild, they are heavily used and they rarely change. Trails are usually not a great place to set traps, since larger animals may just knock them down. Runs are better suited for trap placement.
learning to track animal sign
One of the author's tracking classes.
Tim MacWelch

2. Find a Bed

For the animals that don’t make nests (like deer), they will often bed down in fields and thickets. Some beds are used only once, and they can be seen as an oval depression in the vegetation. More frequently used beds may show a greater disturbance. Some animals will only make beds in thick vegetation and brush, to better hide from predators.
turkey tracks in red dirt
You don't have to rely on an animal's hoof, paw, or footprints to find it.
Natalie Krebs

3. Spot a Feeding Area

These places are species specific and seasonal. Feeding areas can be berry patches, grassy areas, open spaces in the forest, or almost any other spot that can provide nutrition. You may find places that are crisscrossed with runs, as the animals feed on vegetation. You may even see a place where an animal has eaten its way through a patch of vegetation, eating through and coming out the other side. By examining the actual chews in a feeding area, we can also make an informed guess about the animals using it. Vegetation with a clean 45 degree cut has likely been bitten by the sharp incisors of a rodent. Small serrations on grass are typically made as deer pull grass up against upper palette and their lower teeth cut the blades of glass (deer don’t have teeth in the front on their upper jaw). Vegetation that has been pierced full of holes has probably been chewed by a sharp toothed predator (think of the way your dog or cat chews grass for fiber and minerals). You might also find gnaw marks from rodents. This can occur on nuts that have been chewed by squirrels or mice, or on wood chewed by a beaver.
buck rub
An older rub.
Tony Hansen

4. Locate Rubs and Scratches

Commonly found along trails and runs, rubs are places where an animal will rub against a tree or some other object. They may do this to scratch themselves or mark the territory with their scent. As an example, deer bucks will rub their antlers against small tree trunks to develop their neck muscles and to display dominance, says Bowman. This can be either intentional or unintentional.

5. Watch For Hair and Feathers

If you are very alert, you may even start to find hairs or feathers. When deer rub under low hanging vines and branches, I can sometimes find hairs stuck in the rough bark. At an animal rub, you may also find a spot where the hair gets snagged. Beds are another site to look for hairs or feathers, and of course – kill sites will have clumps of hair or feathers from an animal that was devoured.

Wednesday, 18 July 2018

The 5 Most Important Survival Skills When You’re Lost In The Wilderness

The 5 Most Important Survival Skills When You’re Lost In The Wilderness

Image source: galleryhip.com
Image source: galleryhip.com
You don’t necessarily have to know 200 ways to sharpen a knife, but if you’re new to the art of bushcraft/survival you will want to make sure that you’ve got a few of the basics out of the way prior to your first serious group outing in the backwoods.
This knowledge also is important for any survivalist for the simple fact that it can be useful for anything from a time when you’re lost in the wilderness to a bugout operation when the big one hits. The five following skills are critical areas of study to master before you find yourself in the middle of nowhere.
No. 5: Tracking
The science and art of tracking is basically the study of how to interpret what the land is telling you about recently transpiring events within the immediate vicinity. Whether it’s a fallen tree, a deer track, a human footprint or a broken twig, the land itself tells a story. And you need to learn how to read that story. Trackers are essentially detectives, but without the chalk outlines and paperwork.
Tracking knowledge is not just needed for hunting and trapping. If you know what you’re doing, you’d be able to tell if there’s a nearby human presence (which would be a critical skill during a bugout situation). This is one reason why elite combat units learn tracking – it helps them determine troop strengths and their corresponding movements.
No. 4: Weather
A few years back, I had mulled over the idea of purchasing an altimeter wristwatch. I wanted the slight edge of being able to predict immediate changes in local weather. Let’s face it, knowing what the weather is going to do on any given day would give me a HUGE advantage, especially during a 24/7 post-bugout situation.
Well, it didn’t take me long to realize that I’d have to drop at least $200 to get one that actually worked the way I needed it to. After I spoke with the owner of the hiking store I frequented, he literally said: “Dude, I wouldn’t get one. For why you need it, just learn to study the clouds.”
Image source: survivalbased.com
Image source: survivalbased.com
What a novel thought, right? Needless to say, knowing how to predict the weather while in the field is a huge necessity. But purchasing expensive gear in order to do so is not. If you learn how to interpret signs in the sky, then you’ve just saved yourself a pretty penny on gear you didn’t actually need in the first place.
No. 3: Shelter and Fire
These two topics are probably the most obvious on this list because exposure is one of the biggest killers in the field. If you can’t build a fire then you could be up a creek, especially when the temperatures begin to plummet.
This skill will be your key advantage in everything from signaling for help to cooking your day’s catch. Perhaps the most commonly held requirement in the business is that you should know at least five ways to build a fire, including at least three “primitive” methods.
Having shelter, like having fire, is crucial for staving off hypothermia. If properly built, your shelter should also keep you dry during rainy nights. It’s also a way to keep that sleep-robbing mental boogie man at bay while you’re out there in no man’s land. In order to be prepared, I recommend knowing how to build the basics: a debris hut, lean-to, A-frame, and wickiup are common but time-tested shelters.
No. 2: First Aid
Think about it. If you’re in a survival situation, then how did you probably end up in that predicament in the first place? It’s usually because something unpredictable happened, like capsizing your canoe on the Snake River or flipping your sedan in the Adirondacks. And when people find themselves in these scenarios, injuries are usually an accompanying factor.
If you’re well-studied in first aid, then you’ll know precisely what to do when somebody on your team (or you) is bleeding, has a broken bone, or desperately needs their body’s core temperature increased after a fall into that breathtakingly frigid mountain river.
By the way, having even basic medical knowledge will make you indispensable in a disaster scenario. Your team might just want to do their due diligence in protecting the one guy that knows how to fix a nasty knife wound.
No. 1: Land Navigation
This is my No. 1 for a very, very good reason.
Image source: oars.com
Image source: oars.com
If you’re in a 72-hour survival scenario, and ESPECIALLY if you’re rolling full-steam toward your retreat, then there’s no way you’ll succeed in arriving safely at your intended destination without knowing where you’re going. Quite frankly, if you have no clue how to get around without your GPS, then you might as well have just stayed home in relative safety.
Getting lost could walk you right into hostile situations. It also will increase your bugout time during a very chaotic and dangerous time. And worst of all, you might not even make it to your retreat because you run out of roads to follow. Following a road is easy. Moving from point “A” to “B” over dense, foliage-covered land is not, especially if you have little or no experience in doing so.
In the same way, knowing how to orient yourself after you just wound up on a river bank, soaking wet with all your gear being churned with the rapids could profoundly reduce the time it takes to get you back home.
Let’s Get After It
Getting where you’re going and accomplishing this in a non-bleeding or broken or freezing or dehydrated or lost fashion is always the primary objective. So study up on Google, YouTube or any of the many other resources out there and get prepared.

Friday, 4 May 2018

The Definitive Bushcraft Skills List

The Definitive Bushcraft Skills List


Bushcraft is the art of living in a natural environment, within and in harmony with nature. It is distinct from (though it shares a lot with) survival, where the mindset is only about getting out at the other end as safely as possible. Bushcraft will teach you skills not just to survive, but to thrive in comfort, and rely not on your gear, but yourself. This is a list of the skills you will need.

Finding and Purifying Water

Water is almost certainly the very first thing to worry about when learning bushcraft. The rule of three gives you a maximum of three days without water, which goes down to one in very hot, arid conditions. Remember that even once you have found water, in most cases it will then need at least to be filtered and possibly distilled or boiled before it is safe to drink.
Finding water is often just a matter of understanding your surroundings well, such as knowing that water flows downhill, so valleys and gullies are always a good start. Humans are only animals, and all other animals need water too, so following animal trails or watching for birds flying quickly (they fly slower after drinking, because they are heavier) are also good strategies.
There are many, many different ways to purify water, and there is not space here to do justice to all of them, but suffice it to say that filtering will remove only the larger particles, distilling will get rid of smaller stuff, and boiling will kill bacteria. Sometimes all three may be needed.
Finding Food
There are three ways to find food in the wild: foraging, hunting and trapping. Foraging is by far the easiest to learn, and is likely to produce the most reward. Learn what plants you can eat, and how best to cook them, but be very careful of lookalikes and mistakes. It is best to take a knowledgeable guide out with you at least for your first few trips, and to begin with ingredients and recipes which are simple and well known, like nettle tea and blackberries. Richard Mabey’s Food for Free is an acknowledged Bible for foragers.
Remember that bushcraft is not an ‘all or nothing’ venture’, it can be whatever suits you, so starting off by trying recipes out at home, and then only cooking what you are confident with in the bush is a good way to go. With all foods, but especially in the case of mushrooms, be very careful to only ever eat what you are absolutely certain is safe. Try to get off the beaten path, because the passage of many often obscures or kills plants, and fungi especially are very delicate.
After foraging, trapping is the next most reliable source of food. Learn first to make a few good traps. The Bushcraft Field Guide to Trapping, Gathering, and Cooking in the Wild is a great introduction to many types of snares and traps, with some basic bushcraft tips as well.
wilderness trap
photo: Apache foot trap
Remember that one of the most important things when trapping is to know your quarry, so go out and learn, not just about whatever you want to eat tonight, but also about its environment, where it’s likely to be, what might get to the trap first and so on, and try to factor this into your considerations when building traps.
Finally, there is hunting. Hunting is certainly the ‘coolest’ but also the least efficient way of getting food, and is best suited to large, wild game which it is unrealistic to trap safely and must be killed from a distance. Even in this case, the best course of action may still be to construct a trap to keep the animal immobile, and then approach and kill it from afar with a ranged weapon such as a bow or spear. On the other hand, this approach requires that the hunter checks all their traps very regularly, to avoid inhumane treatment of animals, or losing their quarry to another predator.
If you do decide to hunt directly, obviously ranged weapons are the far preferred choice. What you choose depends on your style of bushcraft, but most people will be going for some kind of bow. Once you have made this decision, the most important thing is the welfare of the animal as it dies. Bowhunting is great, and you may be perfectly happy with the ethics in principle, but surely a quick, clean death is preferable to a slow, dirty one? Make sure you are using the appropriate arrows and a strong enough bow to kill the animal as quickly as possible, and of course make certain that you will only hit an animal, not any people who might be in the vicinity.
Train hard first, practice in your back garden, then on static, and (if possible) moving targets in the woods, before attempting to hunt live game. If you get advice and help from a more experienced hunter then always heed it! Other than that, have fun, happy hunting!
In the case of both hunting and trapping, it is wise and educational to follow the Native Americans and try to use as much of the animal as possible. The primary reason for hunting is meat, but animal skins are a classic of bush tailoring and can be stitched with sinew of the same carcass. Antlers and bones make good tools (including needles), fish hooks and knapping strikers.

Making and Using Fire

Fire Starting methods can be categorized as: strikers, friction, and ‘modern’ methods. Strikers (such as flint and ferrocerium) will last forever (or near enough) but can be tricky to get used to using, and require very good, dry tinder.
With the exception of the fire plough, (which can be useful, but is very labor intensive) all friction methods are drills, which are the most ‘primitive’ of the fire methods. Most use some kind of wound cord, but you can also use your fingers. Drills are difficult to master and can be very tiring, and only really work in the right (dry) conditions with good tinder.
Once you can build (and build up) a fire, learn and practice building different sizes and shapes of fire, for different uses. For example long, thin fires (which can be made to be much hotter at one end) are the best for cooking. The Native Americans of old had a saying which went something like “Red man builds small fire and stays warm, white man builds large fire and stays warm collecting firewood”. There’s nothing wrong with being white, just don’t be white and stupid, build the correct fire for the job, and always clear up and leave no trace.
For longer term living and the beginnings of homesteads, you can also build perfectly good wood-fired ovens and kilns for making baked food and fired pottery. Practicing pit roasting (where you bury a fire with what you are cooking and dig it up the next day) is also an easy way to learn to cook big, hearty meals, without much advanced field dressing of meat.

Tracking

Tracking is an incredibly important bushcraft skill, with applications across the field. Good tracking will of course aid your hunting, but also realize that the flight pattern of a bird or a cloud of midges can lead you to water. The best way to learn tracking is in the field, by long practice. If possible start with a guide, who can teach you what to look for and ‘how to see’ in the right way, then develop further on your own.
Tracking should eventually become not a skill that you actively decide to use, but a part of how you see the world around you, an awareness of your environment and its mechanics.

Tying Knots

Although this is not ‘directly’ a useful bushcraft skill, you will find it comes in handy in a lot of situations. Building shelters is the most obvious, but tying up fire drills and hanging cooking pots also come to mind. Try to learn a range of different ones, across different applications. This is a good list to start with.

Situating and Building Shelters

The title includes the word ‘situating’ because the very first thing to know about shelter is what to build in a given environment, and exactly where to build it. Learn a variety of different environment-specific types (snow hole, debris hut etc.), and practice, practice, practice! Practicing and learning the little tricks which can only come with experience will make your shelters much better when you need them. Shelters should also be appropriate to conditions. If the weather looks good and you are only staying for one night, a few sticks and some debris as a heat reflector are enough, but a two week camp in late Fall is obviously a different matter.
Once you have the smaller, faster types of shelter down, invest time and build a more solid structure like a log cabin, or a shelter built into the side of a hill. This is good experience for long term bushcraft, or if you ever decide to set up a small homestead.
Remember not to discount man made shelters. Try out a few different tarps and learn to use them well. Learn the difference between heavyduty and ultralight and find what you like. If you prefer the heavier side of things, this advice applies more to tents. Remember also that many countries also have systems of free ‘mountain huts’, such as the bothies in Scotland, which provide free accommodation, and sometimes a fire and basic rations.

Finding your Way (Home or Away)

The most basic navigational consideration is to know how to get back to where you started. After that, you also need to know how to get where you are going, and ideally some place of safety in between.
The most important thing is to have a good working knowledge of your environment and its geography, so that even without specialist skills you can have a fighting chance. Look at some maps before you leave, and know where important resources like rivers and public shelters are.
Next is a compass, and knowing how to use it, as well as knowing at all times roughly what direction important places (your home, the nearest place of safety, your shelter etc.) are in relation to you. From this standpoint, you can work on ‘wild compass’, skills like learning to read the stars, sun and moon, and pick up signals from your environment, like feeling rocks, and using which side is warmer to work out where north is.

Taking Care of Yourself

Often overlooked is the art of what do when things go wrong in the bush, which is surprising given the number of sharp tools and fearsome animals available to cause havoc. Foraging again comes in useful here, as some plants (most notably the dock leaf) have medicinal qualities, and any non-harmful, large leaved plant can be used to improvise a bandage, at least briefly.
This is probably the only area of bushcraft where unless you have vast experience, and really know what you are doing, you must take ‘non-primitive’ equipment out with you, making sure to cover every eventuality. Pay particular attention to treatments for injuries from wild animals if they are in the area, serious cuts and bruises (so go heavy on dressings and plasters) and food-related illnesses (food poisoning, indigestion etc.).  Do not be afraid to take a big kit with you, it will be worth it one day.
Many first aid organizations such as the red cross offer training courses, and mountaineering and survival schools often do the same for specialist, bushcraft related first aid. Guidebooks can also be useful, and both The Bushcraft First Aid: A Field Guide to Wilderness Emergency Care Expedition Medicine come well recommended.

Hand Skills

These do not really come under a particular heading, but are important to mention nonetheless. Learning to use an axe, saw and knife properly, as well more specialist tools like a froe or a crook knife for whatever you are particularly interested in will save you a lot of time and effort.
A good place to start is with learning to make tools and equipment for all of the above skills. Make yourself a netting needle, fid or bradawl for complex ropework, or learn to make a knife from flint and pine pitch. Knowing a few ways of building a compass is also very handy. Hunting equipment is very satisfying to make, fishing hooks, lures and flies have endless variations to learn and play around with and bow making is a great thing to add to your arsenal of skills. Good guides can be found all around the internet, but in the case of blacksmithing, forging and more complex bow making skills like tillering, a course or at least some advice from a professional is must.
For a lot of the more ‘primitive’ inclined bushcrafters, the end game here is to flintknapping. With a good knowledge of flintknapping one can make all the tools for bushcraft, including those necessary for making further tools (bow making supplies for example). In the modern day, flintknapping techniques can also be applied to the thick glass which often washes up on river shores, for making arrowheads and blades.
A similarly fundamental skill is making rope, thin cords and threads (and then presumably needles, for which bone is often best). This skill more than any other is a part of ‘absolute bushcraft’ or primitive skills, where everything is made by you, from what you find around you.

In Conclusion

The best way to truly learn ‘bushcraft as a whole, is to combine these elements together, for example, you might take a weekend to learn more about bushcraft cooking, and eat only wild food, prepared only on a campfire, with only vessels you yourself have made. The point is to not treat these skills in isolation, but as parts of a single ability to live independently in the wilderness.

Monday, 26 March 2018

Focus on These 10 Areas to Start Learning Bushcraft Skills

Bushcraft is the name we give a collection of skills that all involve thriving in the wilderness.  From knowing how to build a fire in various conditions to finding food by hunting and foraging, to carving and building necessary items from wood and other natural materials; bushcraft is all about surviving long term without the need for grocery stores, sporting goods stores, or the corner market.
You can break bushcraft down into 10 basic categories to start with, and add more in as you gain more and more skills. Check out the 10 areas of bushcraft skill below and start learning how to survive one bushcraft skill at a time.

Fire Craft

Anyone car start a fire with a lighter, some matches, and a can of lighter fluid, but what happens when all you have is a striking rock and the organic materials laying around in the wilderness?
Fire craft is all about starting and maintaining fires in any condition. This includes multiple techniques for building a fire like flint, the sun, and smoldering plants. It also covers how to use fire for survival and how to transport the fire you built form one location to another to avoid having to rebuild.

Tracking

tracking
There are a lot of reasons why it’s a good idea to get good at tracking. First, it’s a pretty great way to catch your dinner but past that it’s a very important part of OpSec.
By being able to track people and animals you can see if your proposed campsite is frequented by any specific animals or if people have been through it before. You can also see if anyone has been around your campsite or homestead recently.
Animals and people tend to follow the same paths over and over again, so being able to recognize these and track where they go can show you where to set snares, get water, and where to avoid when the footprints are bigger than you’d like.

Hunting

This one is pretty obvious, but you need to know how to hunt effectively with a variety of tools. Sure, using a high-powered rifle makes hunting a lot easier, but in the bush you may only have basic supplies and a rifle might not be one of them.
The most common way to hunt in the wild is by trapping. Setting a snare to catch small game is a great way to learn how to survive off the land. Beyond the knowledge of trapping you need to learn how to handle what you trap and hunt once you’ve gotten it.
Learn simple butchering and skinning techniques to make sure you can actually eat what you catch.

Fishing

Similar to hunting and trapping, learning to fish with a variety of tools will make sure you have a good high-protein and fat source of food. The two basic ways of fishing are with a line and hook and by trapping. You can build a fish trap as seen in this video to collect fish without extra work on your end.
Keeping learning how to make a hook and lures is important as well, but the fish trap is your best way if you have the materials and the ability.

Foraging

You can’t survive solely on animals and fish you’ve caught, especially if you can’t build a fire to cook them on, which means foraging is just as important. You need to learn what plants are OK to eat and which ones aren’t, as well as how to determine this in the wild.
Check out this site for some basics on eating plants and foraging, but make sure you learn what’s available in your area and what is your best bet for the most carbs and protein per ounce to save energy while foraging.

Shelter Building

Building a proper shelter is more important than just keeping dry, it gives you a sense of safety and belonging and keeps you safe from animals. Keeping dry is more important than just comfort too, keeping dry will keep you from getting sick and keep your gear usable.
Learn not only how to build a basic shelter, but how to build one from a variety of resources so you’re never stuck out in the cold.

Knives and Axes

Survival knives
One of the most important tools to bushcraft has to be the bladed implement. Survival knives and axes are vital to survival and knowing how to use and care for them correctly is as important as knowing how to find water.
We’re not talking about heavy-duty knifes here, but instead they are generally smaller and built for durability. Learn how to not only use a knife and axe correctly, but to sharpen, repair, and even make your own. Remember, there may very well be a time that there aren’t stores to buy knives from, so learn while you can!

Wood Carving

You use a lot of wooden implements every day and don’t even think about it. From wooden spoons to handles for knives and other tools, knowing how to make wood into what you need it to be is pretty important.
Learn how to work with wood from start to finish and you can make just about anything. Think back to your woodshop days and replace all the power tools with hand tools.

Container Construction

Being able to make the containers that clothes, food, and tools go into is pretty important to learn. Today we go to the store, find something that fits and use it until it breaks and repeat the process. The bushcraft way is very different and once you build a few containers yourself, you’ll respect them a lot more.
Learn how to work with a variety of materials including leather, metal, wood, and even odd materials like tire rubber, which by the way makes a great sandal. You can make a waterproof tarp or food container by melting and applying wax to canvas and buckets out of hollowed out logs. Whatever you choose to make, remember that once you’re on your own, there’s no more Tupperware lady coming around to sell you containers.

Rope Craft

Anyone who was a Boy Scout knows that rope craft and knot tying is one of the most important survival skills out there. From being able to tie down your tent to tying snares and quick release knots for climbing, rope craft is pretty important stuff.
Beyond tying knots however, knowing how to make rope is pretty important stuff. There are a few ways to make rope yourself, and this site has some great information on how to do it from natural fibers.

Wild Camping Tips and Kit List

The first rule of Wild Camping club is...  actually really simple! Leave No Trace: if you take it in, you carry it out. What is wild camp...