I wonder if the difference is:
PSK for accidents
Bushcraft EDC on purpose
PSK for accidents
Bushcraft EDC on purpose
There is a great overlap between EDC/Possibles/Survival KitI wonder if the difference is:
PSK for accidents
Bushcraft EDC on purpose
ive got some of those tins still, did have one as a fak and also a psk when i was younger. my belt FAK is similar but ina capsule...pills, plaster, compressed towel, needle, tampon....and shemagh on bigger pouch kit...Never mind PSK what about FAKs I prefer to have a seperate FAK. Does anyone remember the old Elastoplast tins? You can pack a small field dressing, a few plasters, some tape and a couple of antiseptic wipes in one of them, for anything bigger than that you have got your shemagh or bandanna haven't you or a knife to cut your trouser leg into bandages
nothing wrong with carrying PSK, and often the contents are backups if main items die or go missing, main thing is generally otehr non PSK items work better, so PSK only ( ratehr than raiding a PSK) is rare in UK, as we geenrally have other kit, or wait for other people to help or throw money at it. if you have a PSK that you access regeularly then its not a PSK tin, its EDC. EDC can most definitely be used for survival, its just how its used. if a PSK is tighlty packed to minimise space, to be small so its easier to transport its more difficult to get in to. if we have the core items of a PSK, just spread out easier to access but in laregr forms ( laregr ferro, larger knife/multitool, large light) then they suddenly become allowable to use on daily base but not when they are small and tightly packed seems odd. its interesting philosophically, , but to say you dont need a PSK tin, different to saying a PSK tin has no use, just for some of use, EDC is more usefull, or perhaps used far more regularly, if even containing similar core items...I was about to wade in on the side of PSK (as opposed to an FAK) on an overpopulated island where you are never more than 70 miles from the edge is probably redundant.
However were I to pursue that line of argument I could say much the same about Bushcraft in general.
Surely we who practice Bushcraft are keeping alive heritage skills. Putting together a PSK, feeling good about your choices and having it in your rucksack is surely much the same as owning and carrying that big bowie knife or your fire bow.
Of COURSE you could just go to a Premier Inn but you’re a Bushcrafter.
pee ess
People have suggested that they never use anything from the PSK - oh come on! When did you ever bring the Kendle Mint Cake home????
Kind of sums it up for me.I wonder if the difference is:
PSK for accidents
Bushcraft EDC on purpose
Yes kind of my point.Any water based activity does change things as it drastically changes both chances of losing gear underwater, and becoming wet and exposure being an issue, so an emergency kit then is vital...but not everything in a PSKtin, like Minotaur said fishing kit.
a small PSK tin for emergencies would be limited, a larger survival kit however obviously far more usefullI’ve never heard, nor understood this ‘being separated from your main kit business. OK, you just flipped your floatplane in Alaska
Made it out soaking wet and your mandated survival kit is still in the wreckage. Or you capsize a canoe
Get surprised by Bigfoot who steals it or walk off to relieve yourself and can’t find your Camp.
Sorry, even a haversack or daypack enter into serious basic kit.
PSK as backup? That’s sending a 22 gun frigate against the French battle line because because HMS Victory was to inconvenient to outfit in Bristol
sorry if i'm going somewhat off topic, but is this treatment necessary for all kinds of wire or only brass?! it's long time ago now, but i snared rabbits and hares on a farm in New Zealand using copper and steel wire without any prior treatment... (never used brass wire) makes me wonder about all those folks on "alone" who set out with what seemed untreated wire...I would like to raise one small point.
A little roll of brass snare wire (actually only the same as for hanging pictures but doubled up into 4 strands during the process of making the snare) will not catch anything without first being seasoned by boiling, rinsing, boiling again with grass and mud and then being buried in soil or at a pinch wood ash to get rid of every last trace of oil from the manufacturing process or human scent.
This raises the entire question about the competence of the people who push the concept of these kits.
Setting a snare made with bright, freshly manufactured brass wire is a sure recipe for living off leaves and roots.
It is considered to be best practice. Treating your snares to remove the scent of oil and humans and using weathered wooden pegs (not fresh cut) will increase your chances whatever wire you use.sorry if i'm going somewhat off topic, but is this treatment necessary for all kinds of wire or only brass?! it's long time ago now, but i snared rabbits and hares on a farm in New Zealand using copper and steel wire without any prior treatment... (never used brass wire) makes me wonder about all those folks on "alone" who set out with what seemed untreated wire...
Its been a long time. Welcome
When I first come to the uK i was interested to learn that there is no where more than half a days walk out to a road. Think that was Scotland - 11 miles? And in England even much less. If you can walk out I don't need to fish, trap game, light fires or make shelter.
Here no hunter carries a survival kit. Our survival kit is what we use - out hunting some days travel away from our cabins then my survival kit is what I hunt with. Rifle, knife and axe. Wjhen I always used sledge an dogs in winter trapping they too were my survival gear along with canvas tent and dog food. Look after dogs and they look after me - they know the way home too. Now skiddos are more used so I guess a couple of spanners and spare petrols become survival tools these days......
Most of us get cuts and so on. we just know we won't bleed out!! And we can't eat bandages or plasters...
I never quite figured out why you need compass day or night. If you know your surround landscapes then you should know which way south or north even with no sun, moon or stars. When `i was a boy all the hunters could recognise the stars and planets where they were in the sky and what direction was north or south from them.
When I was first in the UK I found finding direction not hard after time. Wind normally from West or SW, trees and so on lean away from wind, more moss on shady north side. Plenty of clues. My English friend is good at this too even at night....
What is good for one man in one country or place maybe no use to someone else.
EnjÜ Joe.
This is usually given as advice for people who are going up a mountain they might not be very familiar with or have never been to before in a place where upland areas tend to be featureless and very similar looking with lots of little streams leading you down into the wrong valley and where the weather tends to move in quickly and reduce visibility significantly.I never quite figured out why you need compass day or night. If you know your surround landscapes then you should know which way south or north even with no sun, moon or stars. When `i was a boy all the hunters could recognise the stars and planets where they were in the sky and what direction was north or south from them.
When I was first in the UK I found finding direction not hard after time. Wind normally from West or SW, trees and so on lean away from wind, more moss on shady north side. Plenty of clues. My English friend is good at this too even at night....