Popular Posts

Labels

Showing posts with label CANADA'S NATIONAL GAME.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CANADA'S NATIONAL GAME.. Show all posts

Thursday, 31 December 2015

Emergency Preparedness, Response & Recovery,Face Book Posting.


Emergency Preparedness, Response & Recovery.
Are you prepared for an emergency? Make sure you’re as ready as you can be for an accident, environmental emergency or natural disaster. Click on MY WEBSITE--http://www.cookingforsurvival--yourdownbutnotout.com. AND SAVE YOURSELF A LOT OF MONEY; or Go to >
Prepared BC
Explore Within Emergency Management
Emergency Management BC is the Province's lead coordinating agency for all emergency management activities, including planning, training, testing and exercising, to help strengthen provincial preparedness. Quote:
Know the Risks
Ready or Not?
Prepare Your Home
Build an Emergency Kit
Neighbourhood Preparedness
Emergency Mommy
People with Additional Preparedness Needs
Response & Recovery
Travel Safe
Definitions You Should Know
Build an Emergency Kit

Creating a Home Emergency Kit Doesn't Need to Take Long. Just Follow the Basic List Below and Store Your Collected Supplies in an Easy to Access Location.
First-Aid kit
Battery-powered or hand-crank radio
Flashlight and extra batteries
Whistle to signal for help
Cellphone with charger
Cash in small bills
A local map with your family meeting place identified
Three-day supply of food and water
Garbage bags
Dust mask
Seasonal clothing and footwear
The Importance of Water
How Much is Enough?
The general rule is four litres of water per person per day, but there are a few caveats:
Children, nursing mothers and sick people may need more
If you live in a warm region of B.C., hot temperatures can double water needs
Pets need about 30 millilitres of water per kilogram of body weight per day. For example, an average-sized cat or small-sized dog needs at least 1/5 of a litre, or half a cup, daily
How and Where do I Store my Water?
It’s recommended (by those greedy person—those who are out to rob you blind) you purchase commercially-bottled water and keep it in its original container in an easily accessible, cool and dark place. Don’t open it until you need it.
Observe the expiration or “best before” dates. Set a reminder in your phone or remember to check the dates when the clocks “spring forward” and “fall back”.
What Hidden Water Sources are Available in my Home?
It’s easy to locate safe water sources in your home. These DO NOT include the water in your hot-water tank, pipes and ice cubes. It’s also recommended you don’t use water from toilet tanks or bowls, radiators, waterbeds, swimming pools or spas.
Can I Purify my own Water?
Yes! Most Definetly!
I and the Ministry of Health has information on the steps you can take to purify and bottle your own.
What About Water Filtration Devices?
These devices are becoming more and more popular, perhaps because they don’t take up as much room as several litres of bottled water. There are a lot of different options out there – different brands offer many different types, ranging from water bottle-sized to 18-litre containers or larger. If you choose to go this route, it’s still not a bad idea to store some bottled water as well. Grab-and-go—MAYBE!

Don't Ever Count on Being Home when there's an emergency. In addition to having one at home, create grab-and-go bags for your work and vehicles that contain:
Food (ready to eat) and water
Flashlight and batteries
AM/FM radio
Medications
Seasonal clothing
Blanket
Cell phone charger
Pen and notepad
Personal toiletries
Small First-Aid kit
Extra pair of glasses or contacts
Cash in small bills
Local map with your family meeting place identified
Whistle
December 30, 2015-B.C. feels a bump in the night — a 4.3 magnitude earthquake

There were no reports of damage or injury following the 11:39 p.m. jolt centred north of Victoria and felt across much of southern B.C. Tuesday night's 4.7-magnitude earthquake is just a hint of what could strike at any time. An earthquake struck near Sidney, British Columbia, according to Earthquakes Canada. It happened 19 kilometres northeast of Victoria, 58.7 kilometres below the earth’s surface, at 11:39 p.m. on Tuesday, December . it was the strongest tremor to shake B.C.'s south coast in years. Some thought a car had rammed their home. Others thought it was someone pounding on the door; or at 23:39 some actually claim they thought it was ”the neighbours moving furniture”.~~Al (Alex-Alexander) D Girvan.

Sunday, 10 August 2014

What Do You Need To Do To Survive.


Your First Priority-The Hierarchy of Survival Needs- is to look after that which is most critically needed-FIRST AID-in that particular situation, at that particular time. the person who is drowning is not apt to be concerned with building a shelter on dry land; and the person who is rapidly bleeding to death needn't be overly concerned about hunting for food or water.

About Shelter or Shelters, Survivor Style.
While in many cases you will not have much time in which to look after all your survival needs, shelter is never your first priority and, probably, not your second, third, or even forth.The most important need for shelter is insulation; between you and the ground, in cold, and, the sun in hot weather—insulation first and breaking the wind second.
If you were to sleep on the cold ground, your body heat would conduct into the ground quickly and you might not wake up because of this rapid heat loss.
If, ground cover is your first shelter consideration, and all you have, available, is a thermal blanket, for example, then wrap in it instead of trying to build a tent out of it for overhead cover. Then add to your shelter with natural cover and/or insulation.
You can spend all day building a roof over your head and then freeze to death lying on the cold ground. Build an elevated bed, if possible, or, at least have ample insulation between you and the ground. Pile up boughs and other vegetation underneath any raised beds to keep the wind from flowing under the platform. Then focus on the roof. In extremely hot weather just reverse the process.

Fire Craft
Fire is may be needed for warmth, water purification, to repel predators and insects, signalling rescue personnel and/or just for morale. Fire might, possibly, be a priority as soon as your shelter is constructed and it is usually a good idea to have one, with ample wood for the night, before it gets dark..
In dry warm climates, anyone can create a fire but it takes a certain skill set and knowledge to start a fire in a wet environment. Unless you have extensive fire starting skills, you would need the means to create fire on your person((smoker or not, always carry a cigarette lighter or mini-torch in your pocket, make sure that it is refillable and has adequate fuel) . You simply cannot begin rubbing two sticks together to create fire unless the conditions are near perfect-not exactly true, but, you do have to have some workable knowledge about it. Wet or damp wood and tinder might not allow a fire to be created this way.
Carry a fire kit that contains magnesium sticks, Ferro rods, waterproof matches and dry tinder. Tinder can be cotton balls saturated with petroleum jelly, which are ideal for damp conditions. Alcohol based hand sanitiser or alcohol wipes can also be used. A spark from flint and metal can ignite tinder that has alcohol applied to it. Carry char cloth, which can also be ignited from a single spark along with dried grasses and/or fatwood (pine resin) and wood curls from seasoned wood.
Rope (Cordage)
Cordage might be needed for shelter building, snares, lashing materials to your pack or body, and for carrying or pulling items.
Making cordage from materials found in the wilderness while, like fire building, maybe harder than some survival manuals, and survival adventure, reality shows, try to make it out to be, can be done by anyone—with basic industrial arts, or, home economics knowledge. Always remember, while cord making can be a fun pass time—you know like stone knapping—it is almost never a necessity(there are other ways of obtaining cordage in any disaster/survival situation-it is seldom, ever a necessity and might be almost impossible to accomplish in cold weather, particularly if there is a good deal of snow as well. But, should you have the time-to waste, persistence might, eventually pay off , provided of course, you have any idea, at all, of what you are really attempting to do—that is succeed at Canada’s national game and--WIN. Certain types of rope, string or twine may be made from plant material as well as animal sinew; and, you are—well maybe-- surrounded by plant materials in a wilderness environment.
Plant materials that are ideal for making cordage include dogbane, milkweed, hemp, flax, bulrushes, cattails, yucca, willow, cedar, tuliptrees (many times mistaken for poplar) and basswood. You can essentially make twine or string from any plant material that can be twisted or plaited.
The fibre of the plant is used and then the individual strands are twisted or braided together. In some cases, a supple vine can be used as is. Grasses can be used by tying the ends of three pieces together to do a simple braid. Larger fronds like those found on cattail or certain cacti can be used to make carrying containers by weaving the fronds into baskets, bowls or even into sleeping mats. To make string from cattail fronds separate the fronds into fibres and twist or braid together.
Clothing and other material can be unravelled and, or cut into strips and twisted together—so may strips of plastic. If, you become stranded in a vehicle, you may have plastic grocery sacks that can be used and even the vehicle wiring can become cordage. The material in car seating can be cut into strips and braided together as well. Do not forget shoelaces and drawstrings on clothing and backpacks.
Food Gathering
Hunting
Always, in any disaster/true survival situation, ALWAYS, ALWAYS, hunt for and gather WATER, and any, available, berries, nuts, vegetation, first and foremost.
To many weekend survivors and urban bushcrafters; those really not at all familiar with Canada’s true national game; humans and grizzly bears, are considered apex predators, living in an environment where they are the biggest animal with no predators that consider them prey because of their size and ferocity; which would mean they are hunters and typically not the hunted.  
A human’s ability to reason and use weaponry along with the capability to control the environment around them is why humans are considered, by most of these people, to be APEX predators. While, of course, again, as usual; neither premise is true- for not many humans normally do any hunting and:
1.   YOU HAVE TO HUNT. But more importantly, you have to know what to hunt for-If you enter the wilderness without hunting or gathering; not necessarily, killing trapping skills, you may very well, probably, go hungry.
2.   While historically, grizzly bears did at one time live in an environment in which they were, arguably, among the top FIVE or so, land animals in size (total bulk), after woods bison, prairie bison, elk (North American moose), and the polar bear of the high-Canadian- arctic. While they might have run up against an odd very large elephant seal, or sea lion; their normal range was too far south for them encounter many walrus.
3.   Grizzly bears are not carnivorous, the only truly carnivorous bear, in the entire world is the (most live in Canada- Churchill is considered, the polar bear capital of the world).

  • Nearly five times as many people are STILL, killed or seriously injured each year in North America by bison as by all predators combined.
4.   In any case, being an apex predator does not mean that prey give themselves up to you. Learn hunting skills before you need the skills to provide food for you and your family. Hunters that are desperate rarely do well for obvious reasons and hunters become desperate because of lack of success that stems from lack of training and experience. You do not need to come back to camp more than one time empty handed with hungry mouths staring up at you to understand desperation.
You need certain skills sets, tools, and equipment to hunt successfully. This does not mean you cannot improvise. You are not an apex predator and probably never will be but, hopefully, you do have ability to reason, in other words you may be able to, intelligently, solve some simple, problems.

Hunting Trapping Snaring Small Game
If you do not have a firearm, cross bow or longbow and after most any disaster or in a true survival situation, you won’t; then your chances of bringing down big game are low. This means you have to concentrate on smaller game that can be caught in snares or traps or in some cases brought down by thrown sticks or stones (highly unlikely, considering most “week end, survivor /adventure game players would not have the first clue as to how to go about doing so. Certain birds can be knocked down by stones and hunters in certain parts of the world routinely hunt birds and small mammals with sticks.
Spears can be used as well but success with a spear for most “Survivors” has more to do with luck than knowledge or skill. However, spears can be used by practically anyone to fish with if you stand directly over the fish and plunge straight down while still hanging onto the spear.
Thrown-something you don’t want to be ever doing- spears unless specifically designed, and balanced, (not a “survival” tool) do not have enough thrust behind them.

Snares once set can be considered a passive food-gathering method so set your snares first and then fish or hunt. You simply cannot rely on just one method of capturing game. You have to increase your chances of success by employing multiple methods.
Set snares along game trails that lead to and from water but keep in mind larger predators also use these trails so you will be competing for resources. Trapped animals are an easy meal for larger animals so you have to check your traps often.
A simple snare is nothing more than cordage or wire in a loop with a slipknot. The animal walks into the noose and it tightens as they try to push through. The loop must be sized for the type of game in the area. Too big of a loop and the animal walks through the snare and two small of loop means their head cannot enter the loop.

Tracking
You see tracks in the snow or mud, now what do you do? You are hungry, do you follow the tracks or sit tight and hope another animal comes along because the tracks may indicate a trail that other animals might move along as well.
You should be able to tell right away if it is a trail used by all animals, trails usually lead somewhere, and it is usually to a water source. Multiple tracks of various animals and the age of the tracks would indicate a game trail that has been used for some time.
You have to know to some extent how old the tracks are, if they are days old it will not do you any good to follow them. In a survival situation, you have to balance the effort against what you may gain. If you burn up 2,000 calories in hopes of stumbling upon something then you will likely end up with a deficit at the end of the day.
With a little practise, you can determine fresh tracks from old tracks particularly in snow or mud. Tracks in snow will lose their shape quickly depending on wind and temperature. If you cannot look at the track and see an actual print embedded then it is likely an old track. Older tracks in the snow all tend to look alike and it is difficult to determine if it is a deer, rabbit or even human after a while because of snow melting and from snow that has been blown into the tracks.
Tracks hours old in the mud may, but, do not count on it, begin to crumble at the edges. If, there is sun or breezes, you can easily see where the mud is drying around the rim.
Bent or broken vegetation is another sign an animal or human has passed by. In cold weather, it will be harder to determine how long ago because the vegetation will not likely have sap. Green vegetation will have seepage, a fresh break is easily identified by the fresh sap, and older breaks will be readily evident as well by the effects of weathering. Note the height of the break from the ground to get an idea of the size of the animal.
Grasses that have been trampled will typically begin to spring back after an hour in warm weather but the time it takes depends on how high the grass is. If the grass is, only a few inches high it will spring back into position faster than deeper grass.

****Foraging, Gathering****
Foraging is simply the act of gathering supplies usually food. Edibles to forage for in a wilderness environment include nuts, berries, and edible plants.
There are edible plants however, that are readily identifiable from their pictures such as cattails, arrowroot, and even day lilies growing wild. These plants do not resemble other plants that may be poisonous.
Pinion nuts, for example, were a staple of Native Americans diets and the local people often migrated according to the Pinion nut’s growing season.
Berries that are easily identified include blackberries, raspberries and Indian strawberries, which should not be confused with so-called wild strawberries. Strawberries really are not wild berries and if you find the white blossomed berries then they are traditional strawberries and not Indian berries. The white blossomed plants are likely holdouts from a farm that was in the area or birds have carried the seed. Indian strawberries have yellow blossoms and do not taste like a strawberry but they are edible and plentiful if you find a patch.

Foraging must be done regularly because you are competing with birds and other mammals in the area so you need to keep track of the ripening process. Over time, you will know when to begin looking and where to look.©Al (Alex-Alexander) D Girvan. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, 22 July 2014

Bivouac and Hammock Tent Survival Shelters


A “ bivouac” shelter may include  any of a variety of improvised, or now, more commonly, manufactured,(top, left image)  camp site shelters; such as those used in scouting, mountain climbing, week end adventure Survival  scenarios. The term may often refer to sleeping in the open with a bivouac sack, but it may also refer to a shelter constructed of natural materials like a structure of branches to form a frame, which is then covered with leaves, ferns and similar for waterproofing and duff (leaf litter) for insulation. Of course, the term could also be used in reference to an all snow iglu in which the only heat was, traditionally a Kudlik (stone lamp or "bitch lamp". In any case, what we usually think of as a bivouac is rather small and were as a Kudik was enough to provide all the heat wanted in a snow iglu; a candle can provide- more than- enough heat for any other bivouac type shelter.
The word bivouac is French; and ultimately derives from an 18th-century Swiss German usage of beiwacht (bei =  by, wacht =  watch or patrol).

In North America, a bivouac is sometimes called a bivy for short.©All (Alex, Alexander) D Girvan. All rights reserved.

Monday, 27 January 2014

About Bushcraft and About Survival

Imagine a place, maybe the vast, boreal woods of Canada or the verdant jungles of Costa Rica, maybe even in the United States of the Americas. Imagine a place where wildlife, solitude and raw beauty greet the senses at every turn.
 Now, imagine that you are in the exact same place but that it is after a disaster, plane crash, vehicle breakdown; or that you have just wandered off the trail and become lost. You haven't got a lot of fancy gear or equipment—you probably do not have any “REAL” weapons and it is extremely unlikely that you will have any firearms.
But, also imagine being able to comfortably satisfy your needs in such a place with minimal LIGHTWEIGHT equipment and supplies. You know, like your great grandfather and mother, grandfather and mother, possibly even your father and mother were able to do—and DID.
They did not consider that it took a high skill level. In their daily lives, they did not consider  it a knowledge-based approach to combating nature and they sure didn't find it to be extremely liberating; or deeply enriching. They were not much concerned with immersing themselves in nature more fully. These were the techniques that most young boys and girls learned to use in home economics, and industrial art/shop courses. These were the tools and techniques that they would use each and every day of their lives. These were the necessary TECHNIQUES OF SURVIVAL.
These people were concerned with the matters of business, EVERYDAY LIFE, and being Canadians. 
They were concerned with the building. Building villages, town, cities, bridges, dams, roads and the best country on earth. Many of these people lived on the prairies and some, because of the Klondike Gold Rush and other CANADIAN mineral prospecting, or exploration, lived in arctic regions. Many, perhaps most, did not know BEANS” about “Bushcraft. But they did know about improvising; and they did know about using what they had available (hand tools, nature’s bounty/pantry)—the tools building.
They did not have to embolden themselves to venture into nature with confidence and competence. Theirs was not a search to be comfortable in remote wilderness - it was about, comfortably, surviving. It was about enriching the lives of their children and for future heirs. Some even learned some degree of appreciation and enjoyment for and of our local woods, waterways, mountains etch. 
Who-or- What is: Bushcraft, a Pioneer, Self Reliance, a Survivor.  
Do You Really Want to be Counted Amongst the Survivors?
© Al (Alex-Alexander) D Girvan. All rights reserved.   

Tuesday, 19 November 2013

A Varied Thrush has Become a Welcome Visitor in my Home.

11/17/2013-after being harried to the point of complete exhaustion by the resident crows and gulls in our area; this Varied Thrush (female) then hit one of the windows in our apartment building and was almost dead when I picked her up of the adjacent side walk. 11/19/2013-as you can see, from the photo, she has recovered nicely; but, has, none the less, consented to remain visiting me and my six budgies for a while longer. Shortly before the second photo was taken, I placed her little house, with the door open, on the side walk, near where I first found her. She ventured out about two feet but then  quickly returned. It is my guess that she does not particularly like the cold, wet, or today, windy; weather. Common in the Cascades, Northern Rockies, and Pacific Coast, Varied Thrushes forage for insects in summer and switch to berries and seeds in winter. She is shown here (top photo) consuming her favourite meal (as a visitor in my home) of cranberries, wild blueberries and raw, shelled sunflower seeds. Notice her body position in the photo below; a pose also commonly assumed by Robins. In fact, Varied Thrushes are often called "Winter Robins".
So far, her only  complaints: it is her well considered opinion that both blueberries and cranberries should be cut in half; and sunflower seeds broken or cracked, before being served to a dainty little lady of her stature. Also, the house I provided is not large enough (requires cleaning at least three times a day) but she still prefers it to being outside--for NOW. She has let it be known that for her to truly enjoy living in any bird house it must contain; at least, one small mountain. We will see what happens, tomorrow.
UPDATE: 11/20/2013, 0805-My little Varied visitor has just, reluctantly, returned to Nature, where she belongs.The winds have subsided today. I also took her out toward the back of the yard where there are several juniper and pine trees that she can use for shelter. So, although there were numerous crows and gulls in the area she did finally decide that it was now or never. She was beginning to resemble  a cross between "Chubby Chicken and a Christmas turkey, from eating too much. I was beginning to think that I might just have to sign her up with Jenny Craig. I do wish her well.

Sunday, 10 November 2013

Typhoon (Hurricane) Haiyan, Yet, Another Reminder--Survival is not an Adventure; nor a Macho, Reality Game.

“Typhoon Haiyan appears to be the deadliest natural disaster on record.”
With up to 10,000 dead, Philippine typhoon (Hurricane) “a great human tragedy “ and another reminder SURVIVAL IS SERIOUSLY DEADLY. SURVIVAL IS NOT A N ADVENTURE GAME; nor is it a ‘MACHO FAD’  ‘WAY OF LIFE” or a “LIFE STYLE”
“As many as 10,000 people are believed dead in one Philippine city alone after one of the worst storms ever recorded unleashed ferocious winds and giant waves that washed away homes and schools. Corpses hung from tree branches and were scattered along side walks and among flattened buildings, while looters raided grocery stores and gas stations in search of food, fuel and water.
Officials projected the death toll could climb even higher when emergency crews reach areas cut off by flooding and landslides. Even in the disaster-prone Philippines, which regularly contends with earthquakes, volcanoes and tropical cyclones Haiyan hit the eastern seaboard of the Philippine archipelago on Friday and quickly barrelled across its central islands before exiting into the South China Sea, packing winds of 235 kilometres per hour (147 miles per hour) that gusted to 275 kph (170 mph), and a storm surge that caused sea waters to rise 6 metres (20 feet).
It wasn’t until Sunday that the scale of the devastation became clear, with local officials on hardest-hit Leyte Island saying that there may be 10,000 dead in the provincial capital of Tacloban alone. Reports also trickled in from elsewhere on the island, and from neighbouring islands, indicating hundreds, if not thousands more deaths, though it will be days before the full extent of the storm’s impact can be assessed.”

Wednesday, 7 August 2013

Basic Firecraft

If you must eat, if you need warmth, if you just wonder what nameless thing crouches in the night, ready to pounce and make you pay for your indiscretions or sins,; if you fashion tools, if you would signal and communicate with others, or just enjoy social networking you can use fire. And when you have the skills necessary to provide fire when you need it, in any kind of weather, you are  in the way to becoming a true SURVIVOR. Just remember The Mother's rules and that though it can be called Canada's true national game and belongs lock, stock, and barrel, to Canada, it is not the most popular of-- Let's forget the BS--it is NOT a game or at least not one that anyone really WANTS to play.

The ability of making fire is important; it can even save your life. If you can't already light a fire, learn to do it-correctly and efficiently:
 A fire can provide warmth on cold days and nights.
 You can cook your food.
Purify (or at least disinfect-they are not the same thing) water.
You can signal for help (signal fire)
It can help you make and temper tools
It acts as a moral boost in an emergency situation. I'm sure you know the feeling one gets just gazing into a fire at night.

Our early Canadian pioneers-those of European or mixed European native decent- as did the earlier purely indigenous (first migrant) predecessors used fire as a basic survival tool. Whatever our distant racial heritage, fire helped all our ancestors develop this country, at the forge, clearing the land, cooking their meals, heating their homes and shelters, and in many other ways. The very first migrants, those we often called Indians of course, used it for warmth and cooking, making tools and weapons and as a signalling method as well as just a tool of survival.


Although obviously not made in their own image, to most primitive peoples of the world, fire was a god; and this is quite understandable as it raised them- in one way- somewhat above the so called dumb animals and made what we now call "civilization possible. The Greeks regarded fire as a gift from the gods they had created and come to worship. From away back in time, fire has been held in awe by man--even men who did not directly use it for warming themselves, cooking their food, lighting their way, melting their metals, or any of the basic needs. You only have to stare into the curling flames, to be lost in many dreams of comfort, fellowship, and safety in the dark.© Al (Alex-Alexander) D. Girvan. All rights reserved.

Friday, 19 July 2013

Traditional Foods of Puget Sound, Lake Simcoe Areas:

 As most of you already know, my experience and interest is primarily in or from the Arctic and Western Canada; however, historically, the families of both maternal grandparents were among the very earliest pioneers of this area.
Nuts
Hazelnuts
Acorns
Berries
*Blackcap Raspberry
*Cranberry
Elderberry
Huckleberry
Salal
*Salmonberry
*Saskatoon (Service Berry)- introduced by horticulturists , originally not common  in the area.
Soapberry
*Thimbleberry
Wild Blackberry- Native to Western Canada, introduced by horticulturists , did not originally grow in the area.
Wild Strawberry
Fruits
Bitter cherry
Chokecherry
Crabapple
Current
Gooseberry
Indian Plum
Wild Rose-while very important to geed health and nutrition- rose hips were NOT recognized as a food item by most of the indigenous tribes
Edible Greens
*Cat- tail
Cow Parsnip (Indian Parsley)
*Fiddlehead Ferns
*Fireweed Shoots
*Horsetail Fertile Shoots
*Nettles
*Sprouts (salmonberry or thimbleberry shoots)
*Spruce shoots
*Wild lettuces - spring beauty, violet,
watercress
Roots/Bulbs
Camas
Biscuit Root (wild carrot- Lomatium)
*Bracken Fern Root
Lily Roots (several possible varieties)
*Pacific Cinquefoil
Springbank Clover
Wapato (Indian Swamp Potato)
Wild Onion
Other
Bedstraw (Cleavers)
Maple sugar (possible)
Mustard
Seaweed
*Kelp (with herring row)
Non-native Nutritious Wild Foods
Chickweed
*Dandelion Greens
Lamb’s Quarters
Common Seafood
Clams (many types)
Geoduck
Muscles
Gooseneck barnacles
Oysters
Shrimp
Crab
Seal
Octopus
Fish
Salmon
Smelt (eulachon)
Halibut
Ling cod
Sturgeon
Trout
Wild Game
Duck
Grouse
Deer
Elk-meaning the wapiti which is not an elk; but is an animal found only in North America.
Moose-Meaning an actual elk and the national animal of Norway.
Bear


*Indicates species that were not found in archaeological digs. Some, like chickweed, dandelion and thistle are introduced species; while others like cattails, and the gift of the conifers, were not recognized as possible food, medicinal, or nutritional, items by natives who were truly indigenous to the area –they learned how these items could be used as food or to prevent scurvy or rickets from Europeans.

Tuesday, 25 June 2013

Survival and Alberta Flooding

Survival is NOT a TV Reality series. Survival is NOT an adventure. Survival is NOT a weekend excursion into the "Boonies". Survival IS REAL.
Other trained media reporters, medical and emergency personnel have covered the whole scenario much better than I could ever hope to.
http://www.cookingforsurvival--yourdownbutnotout.com/2013/06/calgary-high-river-alberta-canada.html

For, and In This World, Calgary, High River, Alberta, Canada, The Absolute Necessity of Being Prepared,

The absolute necessity of being prepared: sensibly supplied, well maintained, home, vehicle, and personal disaster/emergency kits/ has once again been driven home to the people of Alberta, the High River, Calgary areas, Canada, and hopefully the world.
Survival is NOT an adventure. Survival is NOT a TV Reality series. Survival is NOT a weekend excursion into the "Boonies". Survival IS REAL. 
Other trained media reporters, medical, and emergency personnel, have covered the whole scenario much better than I could ever hope to. I will just provide some important (in my opinion) links.

Alberta flood recovery could take 10 years, says premier.

Man caught with knife wanted to find his dog, say RCMP.

Other Disaster Emergency Kits.

Monday, 15 April 2013

Survival Bushcraft vs. Leave No Trace, Weekend, Camping or Scouting


Many of you, followers this blog, seem to be very conflicted over the two terms; I on the other hand very much enjoyed learning about survival, just as I enjoyed working at Camp Gardner-the Boy Scout camp, located near Bragg Creek, just outside of Calgary. I also enjoyed getting outdoors with my kids at the weekend, going on day hikes, and practising our bushcraft skills like making fire-sticks  carving pot hangers, and learning how to properly build and start a camp fire. We, as do the Scouts always adhered to the core principles of Leave No Trace, as much as humanly practicable, or possible. However, it has recently been brought to my attention that many of you consider that these two schools of outdoor ethics may actually be at odds with one another.
Bushcraft, in my mind, is about surviving and thriving in the natural environment. It's about using-NOT ABUSING- natural materials; to practice age old skills like fire starting, fishing, hunting, shelter building, foraging, twine making, and wood carving. it is not about altering or destroying the environment. It is not about bashing, burning, destroying, chopping, "developing", garbage( INCLUDING CIGARETTE BUTS/FILTERS-which can take 40 years to decompose and which can be deadly to wild life), fuel/gasoline/oil spills, hacking, slashing.
Survivor bushcraft encourages us to use the Mother’s available natural materials in a responsible way.
While many of the "survival experts"???out there teaching SURVIVAL COURSES AS A WAY OF LIFE are pretty much free to do as they wish on their own private land; the seven key principles of "for real, survival bushcraft" are exactly the same as those practised by staunch followers of LNT or any other responsible person: plan ahead and prepare, travel and camp on durable surfaces, dispose of waste properly, leave what you find as you found it, minimize camp-fire impacts, respect all life, and be considerate of others. Knowledgeable survivors, in order to improve their own circumstances, will go to extreme lengths to ensure that they do not disturb, or especially harm; in any way, the natural beauty of their surroundings.
What “Survival Bushcraft” is Not About; and What True Believers in LNT Object to ; Especially When it is Done Under the Guise of "Survival Training" and Then Left in Wilderness Areas.
Cigarette butts represent not only a threat to MAN but to the continuance of life on earth. Not only are they deadly to all of The Mother's world; they take up to forty years to bio-degrade or disintegrate.

It’s fair to say that there is no real consensus on what skills and practices really constitute bushcraft or survival. Part of the reason for this is that it varies so much in different conditions and locations but the main reason is all the “reality” “survivor” television game farces.
There is general agreement about what Survival Bushcraft is not about. In recent years however, because of all the Crocodile Dundee and Rambo type action movies, there also seems to have been a disturbing increase in practices that are anything but low impact. It’s as if people think the woods and the wilderness can just be torn apart for their own enjoyment; typical are drinking camps and dens that have gone on for years in places close to urban areas. Nothing new there and not much you can do about it but clear up after they have gone home.What seems to be a new development is the widespread practice of building natural shelters in the woods.These are not the kind of dens that kids often tend to build, but serious attempts to copy the types of shelters shown in TV “survivor” shows. Several things characterise these shelters as having been built by this type of people: people with no real understanding of what bushcraft, pioneering or survival is all about though. While it is true that not even an insect or reptile can live in an area without leaving any trace at all; it is also true that it is of first and foremost importance to a true bushcrafter/survivor to “leave no unnecessary trace and then only of responsible usage.”
·         Hacking down live trees to build shelters or fires is destructive, unsustainable and definitely not what any of it is all about.
·         Leaving shelters built in the woods is an eyesore, potentially dangerous and definitely not what bushcraft is all about.
·         Leaving rubbish around or even buried is illegal, slovenly practice and definitely not what bushcraft is all about.
·         Lighting fires and then leaving charred ground with a ring of stones and beer cans is disgraceful behaviour, potentially devastating to the environment and definitely not what bushcraft is all about.
·         All these practices show a total lack of respect and understanding for the outdoors. It is the practice of a lout, not a SURVIVOR or bushcrafter.
·         When I leave a campsite, I make sure I leave no trace of ever being there.
·         Everything carried in must leave the same way, that means carrying your rubbish home with you ,when you’ve completed your little game.
·         Natural shelters should only be built where there is enough dead material to not impact on the local environment. They should always be dismantled and the site returned to natural condition before you leave. Using a tarp or a tent is almost always a better option.
·         You need the permission of the land owner before you can set up any kind of camp, natural or otherwise.
·         Camp fires are illegal in many places even if you do have permission to camp.
·         If you do have permission to light a fire, it must be lit in a container or on bare earth, not on leaf litter, pine needles or peat. Fires can spread and smoulder underground in these conditions and re-ignite with disastrous consequences. Wildfires caused by a foolishly sited campfire, damage large tracts of land and can devastate wildlife and livestock.
·         Do not cut trees or branches for firewood, live wood is full of water and does not burn well anyway. Collect fallen, dead wood or don’t have a fire at all if there is insufficient fuel. A stove or a small hobo stove is usually a far better option.
·         Make sure any fire is completely extinguished before you leave.  Pour enough water onto the fire area that you can pick out any ashes left over with your bare hands and scatter them to hide all traces of your fire.
·         Cover any scorched areas on the ground with fresh soil or detritus.
If you can look back and see remains of your campsite when you have packed up to leave, then you have no right to call yourself a real SURVIVOR