hi santaman, you always seem to catch the tetchy brits about to go to bed after a long night! .....
Reading a recent thread, i was surprised at how many people routinely carry knives in the UK ('surprised' is a softer and less contentious word than 'concerned'.) as I've had a Swiss army knife in the lid pocket of my rucksack for about 20 years and i can't recall ever having used it. I go out for the day a lot with no kit and only a couple of cheats - i can freely choose the place and time (not the mountains in winter for example) and pub meals feature a lot in the itinery, but the thread got me thinking - can i manage overnight in the UK with no kit at all?
Anyway, now that spring is (almost) here, i'm going to have a crack at it. Richard Mabey says that 'playing at survival is, i feel, the unacceptable face of foraging, smacking of SAS endurance tests...' but an SAS endurance test is not what i'm looking for - I'm just questioning the need for a rucksack full of gear, not in the UK at least, and then taking it a couple of steps further. You need water, of course, but with a little planning, you can get it in situ and you can manage without hot food for quite a while. These chaps: http://v-g.me.uk/index.htm have something interesting to say about water - "We never treat collected water in any way. Period. We never boil the water either, in fact in the summer months we don't even carry a pan and stove. People worry too much.".
So - any advice that people would like to give? Any pointers? Anybody do this on a regular basis?
Cheers.
easy, search for the thread "survival, no kit" all the answers you need. Happy reading ha ha
what Lanny said ! just because something bad has'nt happened to you yet does'nt mean it won't happen ! have a backup plan and kit...vince g. 11B INF...as to the OP, do it, try your night or days and nights out with out any kit, but take a back up kit with you, just to make sure if all goes wrong you can ad-least be safe...
a day sack with a sleeping bag and bivi bag, quick boil stove, pot, water and high carb quick release and slow release foods, some warm clothes as a back up just to be sure.
I know a mate who was mountain biking in Scotland in cold weather, but not so bad, just a day trip, good job he knows his stuff because he took the basic back up kit, warm clothes sleeping bag and stove, he started to get hypothermia, and quick, thinking he would be able to push through a higher section, he could not, got cold and into trouble. he told me the only thing that saved him was knowing he was in the poop and his jet boil, he heated water and got it down him, he kept doing this to warm up while in his sleeping bag and bivi bag, he managed to sort him self out and went down the next morning feeling rather pants...
things can change very quickly, unless you have what you need there and then it can be very dangerous...
so go and do your worst but ALWAYS have a back up, and dont just rely on a phone call, take what you might need enjoy and keep safe....
regards.
chris.
These days people prefer bus shelters. I know a number of people who do this on a very regular basis (but not to visit girlfriends, just for the sake of getting in a long cycle ride)..... would literally sleep under hedges when doing a mammoth cycle ride to visit girlfriends, eg London to Westward Ho!
Members on here and other similar forums engage in "Bushcraft" for many various reasons. My own interest stems from learning and practicing skills that would help me feel confident in such a survival situation. I suppose the only reasonable way to put these skills into practice would be to do something like the forces escape & evasion exercise over a couple of days. But lets not forget that such exercises are well monitored with a large support team, and I would not consider deliberately putting myself in such a situation.
Trim your kit down to an acceptable level for you and go out there and enjoy it. The skills you learn will come into play at some stage. Should you loose or damage your stove - you will have learnt at least a couple of methods of making a fire... If you lost a water bottle you will have learnt how to source and treat water..... If your tarp or tent gets damaged you will have learnt how to make various shelters....... Use your skills when you need them, but don't deliberately put your self in harms way
That's a neat summary of all the sensible advice i've had so far & i shall follow it - especially the bit about enjoying myself. Many thanks.
This is not exactly what you were talking about, but it's along the same lines: http://woodtrekker.blogspot.com/2013/04/trip-report-wilderness-survival.html
Someone like Red whose a keen gardener/small holder will use a knife and if the rest of us carry one you'll tend to 'find' a need to use it, the majority don't actually 'need' a knife.
The group talking about not treating water made it plain they were talking about remote mountainous UK regions and to be honest I'd not overly worry in certain areas either but with water filter bottles so cheap why take the risk?
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...So - any advice that people would like to give? Any pointers? Anybody do this on a regular basis?
Cheers.
These chaps: http://v-g.me.uk/index.htm have something interesting to say about water - "We never treat collected water in any way. Period. We never boil the water either, in fact in the summer months we don't even carry a pan and stove. People worry too much."