I'd like to echo Mr. Vannerson's thanks. Like him, I'm just a "weekend warrior". I first got interested in survival when I read an item on the local news here in Alberta, approximately 3 years back, about a farmer in Northern Alberta who froze to death in his own barn, sitting next to a wood stove that was full of fuel, after locking himself out of his house. As the police reconstructed it, he had apparently taken off his parka and tossed it into the house through a partially open window in the rear, probably in the mistaken belief that it was hampering his attempts to climb in. A book of matches was found in the pocket of the parka. Had he simply had the presence of mind to drop it on the ground, instead of throwing it through the window (He was afraid it would get dirty?) he would likely have spent the night in relative comfort.<br><br>As a small plane pilot and a non-smoker, I realized that I never carry matches and would probably have no way of starting a fire if I were to lose an engine - at least, none that I then had the knowledge to make use of.<br><br>(When the local Recreational Aircraft Association was asking for suggestions for topics at their monthly meetings, I suggested that a talk on Wilderness Survival would be of general interest; the co-ordinator's response was "Great, I'll put you down for June" and thus an "instant expert" was created ;-)<br><br>Mr. Vannerson makes an interesting point: the paradox is that, the more you know about this stuff, the less likely you'll be to need it. That's as it should be, though. :-)<br><br>
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"The mind is not a vessel to be filled but a fire to be kindled."
-Plutarch