#84660 - 02/02/07 07:14 PM
Re: Noobie, first attempt at a BOB and MANY questi
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Old Hand
Registered: 03/08/03
Posts: 1019
Loc: East Tennessee near Bristol
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The only difference between the LAWKS that is on your CRKT's and the new AutoLAWKS is that it is spring loaded to engage any time the knife is opened. I have one of them. They lock up solid and the liner lock CAN'T unlock until you operate the lever.
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#84661 - 02/02/07 07:54 PM
Re: Noobie, first attempt at a BOB and MANY questions.
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"Be Prepared"
Pooh-Bah
Registered: 06/26/04
Posts: 2211
Loc: NE Wisconsin
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1. Are the Columbia River AutoLAWKS knives good enough, or should I save money towards Doug Ritter's Mark 1 knives? And is it just me, or is everyone experiencing security-guard freak-outs when they learn I'm carrying a pocket knife?
A - Any knife is much better than no knife at all, but Doug's knives are wonderful and worth it.
2. How many spare batteries is too many?
A - They're pretty small and light. I'd certainly bring at least one extra set, if not two or more, especially in a car.
3. There's myself, and what I should carry for saving myself. And then there is the wife, the two young boys and possibly the mother-in-law. How much stuff is enough, and how do you plan for the possibility of having to protect an extended group in a BOB? For instance with my first attempt at setting the kit up, I had put (15) MRE main-meal envelopes in the duffel bag. That might be overkill... Is one emergency bivvy enough, or should I have two, or enough for everyone?
A - your shelter will need to accomidate everyone in your party, but then again your vehicle might be a shelter too.
5. Anybody ever have a BOB stored in the back of their car or truck stolen by thieves who thought they'd get something better? What do you do to protect your kit?
You might put it in one of those small black plastic Rubbermaid tubs with the clip-on tops sold at Walmart. The black color hides it from view a bit.
6. My SUV is diesel-powered, so I have a yellow five-gallon CARB diesel gas can in my garage, to throw in the truck if we have to bug-out. I've already read the various forum posts on storing extra gas to take with us if there's the chance of being caught in a traffic jam. I'm looking at roof-top basket racks to hold it. How would you lash it down to a roof rack basket if it didn't have welded gas can brackets on it already?
A - Rope. I have a diesel tractor, so I have to haul the fuel in those 5 gallon plastic cans. I bought a large Rubbermade tub that can fit two cans side by side. This helps prevent them from flipping over on the short side and limits the junk on the bottom from "infecting" my SUV.
6. Should I wrap the magnesium/flint firestarter in something plastic to prevent inadvertant scratches from rubbing against othermetal in the bag or pocket from causing a problem?
A - I wouldn't worry about it. I'd be more likely to put it in a little snack bag to protect other items from it - not so much as to prevent sparking. BTW, I much prefer the Magfire type sparkers to the Doan's one.
7. Considering I live outside of DC in central Maryland, some of this is ridiculous, right? No Oregon mountain BLM roads around here and we rarely leave a suburban environment. Or is that the point -- it's when you do something unusual that something happens? Or is it better not to try to explain to unenlightend people and just let them think I'm nutty?
A - I have a bag that can go into my truck if I'm going outside my normal commute (in the Chicago suburbs). I don't leave it in my truck all the time.
8. Any chance we'll see GPS-equipped PLB's come down to the $100 level in the near future? I remember when GPS units were much more expensive, but they've come way-down in price too.
A - Not likely at all. You're barely seeing $100 GPS's right now. The PLB makers have to make a product that is much tougher than a GPS (in an environment that is more akin to automotive standards than a typical GPS - high temps, vibration, etc...) that has to be able to sit for years unused, but have a very high chance of functioning when needed. Just the fact that is is clearly a safety item means the manufacturer inherents some liability if something goes wrong - there is a price for that liability.
9. Does anyone pack a snake-bite kit anymore, or is that old-school? Also, the QuikClot products and an epinephrine injector sounds useful, although expensive. How do you buy these things without a doctor's prescription?
A - Skip the snake-bite kit. These days the recommendation is to get as good a look at the snake as possible and get the victim to treatment ASAP. The cut & suck thing is ancient history. Even the Sawyer Extractor's effecacy - for insect & snake bites - is up for debate. Some say if it is applied almost immediately it may help. It doesn't look like it could do any harm.
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#84662 - 02/02/07 08:53 PM
Re: Noobie, first attempt at a BOB and MANY questions.
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Enthusiast
Registered: 02/08/02
Posts: 312
Loc: FL
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Digimark:
I use the following categories, derived from the rule of threes.
Medical Shelter Fire Signals Water Food Tools
So I sorted your lists into those categories, and did a casual examination. The few things I'd suggest are:
In the shelter group, you could add a fleece or velour sleeping bag or blanket. Just seems right in the vehicle for a multitude of applications, including treating accident victims for shock. (Make it cheapish so you won't mind giving it away to someone.)
Also in the shelter group, I was thinking about having to hunker down under your tarp in the winter. (I live in Florida, so I'm not too concerned about cold weather.) You could add a couple of closed cell foam pads to keep you warm underneath. You could cut them to size and store them flat. They can also be used to improvise splints.
In the Tools group, I think you'd enjoy having a Frosts or Mora fixed blade knife. They're inexpensive, and will do most anything that a more expensive knife will do.
I carry a roll of mason's twine in my trunk for the multitude of odd jobs that don't warrant paracord.
Aside from those ideas, nothing seemed missing from your lineup.
I would go ahead and get a pot of some kind for cooking, boiling water, digging, fetching water, etc. If you get an MSR Stowaway pot, you'll have a locking container for part of your kit, plus a pot with its own handle.
For stoves, I really like Trangias -- of any model. You can get a similar deal in used Swedish army gear, but just now I'd avoid the used ones available at Sportsman's Guide. I've tried my luck several times, and they're always very heavily used and generally damaged.
Means you have to carry a small supply of alcohol (methanol or ethanol) with you, but for convenience and a clean fire, it's hard to beat.
None of these suggestions are especially well thought out -- just my casual ovservations and ideas.
Bear
_________________________
No fire, no steel.
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#84663 - 02/02/07 10:39 PM
Re: Noobie, first attempt at a BOB and MANY questi
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Addict
Registered: 04/21/05
Posts: 484
Loc: Anthem, AZ USA
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Gary -
Nice beginning. You do realize your list will forever remain a work in progress ... right? You're finding out ... a good excuse for 'gear acquisition.'
Since you have two young lads, you may wish to consider adding some small-to-pack items that you know will entertain/keep them occupied. You'll appreciate having these kinds of things should you find yourself needing to focus your undivided efforts on the situation at hand.
Dan
_________________________
"Things that have never happened before happen all the time." — Scott Sagan, The Limits of Safety
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#84664 - 02/03/07 06:08 AM
Re: Noobie, first attempt at a BOB and MANY questions.
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Member
Registered: 04/09/06
Posts: 105
Loc: Richardson, TX
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6. My SUV is diesel-powered, so I have a yellow five-gallon CARB diesel gas can in my garage, to throw in the truck if we have to bug-out. I've already read the various forum posts on storing extra gas to take with us if there's the chance of being caught in a traffic jam. I'm looking at roof-top basket racks to hold it. How would you lash it down to a roof rack basket if it didn't have welded gas can brackets on it already? Whilst loading up the truck to head to Mississippi post Katrina, I carried 21 gallons on the roof rack. I have a Yakima Basketcase up there, which has a solid bottom to it. It's small, but good for bungee cording things to. One thing that came to mind while convoying out, was that we were dragging all this unprotected stuff into a disaster area. So we stopped and got locking cables. Those got strung through the gas can handles.
_________________________
John Beadles, N5OOM Richardson, TX
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#84665 - 02/03/07 05:48 PM
Re: Noobie, first attempt at a BOB and MANY questions.
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Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 11/09/06
Posts: 2851
Loc: La-USA
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Welcome aboard!! You are certainly off to a good start!
I advise that you identify the threats that you are facing. Then separate those into "likely" and "not so likely" groups. Out of the "likely" list, select the most serious of them AND prepare for that, which means you will be fairly well prepared for all of the others that are "likely".
Block acquisitions result in block obsolescence, so buy a little along the way and this becomes an affordable habit.
Read "Nuclear War Survival Skills"-Chapter 4 Evacuations, Put it in a search engine & it will come right up.
Learn to gather information. I personally maintain files on all of the 50 states and some foreign countries. This info consists of tourist packages (hotels, restaurants, etc), newspaper articles (mostly dealing with geography, topographics), military (bases & stations locations, units assigned), every kind of map or chart, state and national parks/forests, etc.
Actually, and physically, write up practical contingency plans AND make sure that your spouse knows where they are located and when to read and follow those plans (when you're not home).
6P's: Proper Planning Prevents [censored]-Poor Performance. Above all, proper planning provides more options in emergencies.
_________________________
QMC, USCG (Ret) The best luck is what you make yourself!
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#84666 - 02/04/07 01:54 AM
Re: Noobie, first attempt at a BOB and MANY questi
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Journeyman
Registered: 01/28/07
Posts: 70
Loc: Chesapeake Beach, MD
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Everyone -- sorry again for the long message. I usually run on at the keystrokes...
ironraven --
I didn't know that KI tabs have to be taken days before the problem. It says to me that I should leave them in my cabinet at home. It's still tough to know I'm in the wind pattern for DC though.
I'm certain that I don't know enough first aid to know when/how to use QuickClot, so its probably better if I skip it for now. I'll look at Bleed-X, but I suspect it will be the same conclusion. What is the "shrimp stuff"?
I'll probably keep the Splenda -- being able to pull a couple of packets out for someone's coffee when they forget it seems to make a good justification for having the rest of the stuff. 8-) "See honey, if I have your sweetener when you needed it, then the JetBoil stove and $1600 desalinator will be just as useful..."
I have two emergency ponchos and a pair of work gloves in the pack.
Meline --
I took a look at nols.edu-- that may be way beyond my interest anytime soon. Although it would be fun to tell people, "yup, going to go mountaineering in Patagonia." I will check out local clubs though. I've only been camping once in my life, when I was in Cub Scouts for a year and my brother and I went to a three day Jamboree. I'm betting that wasn't exactly the same thing. But I don't want my sons to grow up the same way I did. It would be nice to see them build their own fire and know they can.
Arney --
The Calvert Cliffs NPP is south-east of me in Calvert County, about 37 miles. (Thank you Google Earth.) And further away north of us is TMI near Harrisburg. I think there's another NPP in southern Virginia too. But the wind patterns from those plants don't go our way. If the rumors about a reactor under the Pentagon are true, that's another story.
I'm a computer systems and network manager by career and I receive sentinel-type alerts from critical infrastructure machinery on an alpha pager. (A Motorola Talkabout two-way through SkyTel.) I'd love to have the messages route to my cell phone so I can stop carrying the pager, but it has the advantage of being two independent ways to reach me in an emergency, which happens often enough. It occurs to me that there is a parallel between the constant what-if planning I do for my networks and the what-if planning we do for these BOBs...
The Streamlight headlight takes three AAAs. I haven't really thought about extra batteries for it. More lithiums...
Teacher --
Adding the sanitary napkin. Apart from other possible uses I guess you never know when someone's time-of-the-month will coincide with disaster. Would probably make good tinder for the fire. 8-)
Asthma is scary scary stuff when you see your son struggling for breath.
Regarding rain/cold jackets -- I guess I'm taking as a baseline that the people in the car will be dressed appropriately, plus we'll stay with the car if that question comes up. I am beginning to wonder whether it would make sense to carry a change of clothes - more often than an emergency I might need to swap a coffee-covered shirt or a ripped pair of pants. It seems easy to give into mission creep -- what is this kit designed for?
I could fill another forum with all the stuff I keep at home for stay-in-place evac.
NightHiker --
I read one forum posting where the suggestion was made to write the kit date on a piece of tape and stick it to the bag, then check the contents and maintain them on a regular basis. Seems like good advice.
Good to hear about the CRKT knives. They seem pretty good to me, but I still second-guess myself regularly.
I'm keeping the batteries as long as they are lithium and don't get zapped by the cold. The HDS light takes one and the Inova takes two, so this gives me two complete replacements. (I've been collecting LED flashlights and I also have a Surefire L1 and L6, so lots of 123A-needing devices...)
UTAluminus --
The two CRKT knives I'm using have the AutoLAWKS feature, and I'm glad of it. I cut myself once (not badly) on a folding boy scout knife I had once, and remain leery ever since. Thanks for the confirmation.
KenK --
I'm pretty much assuming we'll have the car available to us. This lets me scatter some of the supplies to other pockets in the car. But the backpack I'm using for my kit is big enough that if I had to collect everything together and leave the car, I could. If we go camping I plan to repack a subset of everything anyway, then put it back afterwards.
Good advice about the tub -- checking into it. Should make it easier to move the contents around too. I'll pass on the snake-bite kit too,
dchinell --
Interesting way to group the stuff. Like a Chinese menu, pick at least one from each category. I'm resisting putting a sleeping bag in the back though. At this rate there won't be any room back there to carry everyday stuff.
(I just remembered I keep a blanket back there already. So I'm already following your advice...)
Regarding fixed blades -- is it expected that you can really split wood for fires with these blades? It seems like that would be crazy, no matter how good they are. And what are you supposed to use as a hammer?
I don't know how to properly sharpen a knife, but a small knife sharpener might be something to add to the kit.
The MSR pot seems like a good pot. And I looked at various Trangia reviews... but I'm still leaning towards a JetBoil with the larger pot. More money but it seems more reliable and less hassle when you need it. Something like a JetBoil might be useful for real camping too. (With all this kit, I could throw in a tent, a few sleeping bags, some clothes and a toothbrush and be ready to go!) Anyone with JetBoil experience who can tell me what its like to use one?
xbanker --
It seems like we should add an "Entertainment" category to dchinell's list. I think they're too young at this point to know what to do with a pack of playing cards. I'll keep my eyes open for more ideas.
There's a five-dice game called "Cosmic Wimpout" that my wife and I play. It packs into a small tube and doesn't require paper or pen. It's really fun and easy to play -- that's a starting point. The five-year-old will probably be the tougher one to manage. What did the Kim's do with their four-year-old for a week and a half?
beadles --
That picture is awesome. Did all that stuff stay on at highway speeds? I'm leaning towards a Thule Rapid Crossroad rack and 696 Xpedition basket, so we'd have something similar, although I don't know what kind of floor the Thule basket has.
Adding locking cables to the list...
Wildman --
Thank you for the advice. It was a long time ago, but I used to be certified by the government to run a radiological shelter (took a class through my ham radio club) and was totally into the civil defense thing as a hobby. I was in the CIvil Air Patrol as a teenager too. I think I might have read those books then -- thanks for reminding me. I'm digging them back out. You'd think I'd remember some of that training and experience, but it's been 25 years...
-Gary
Edited by digimark (02/04/07 02:08 AM)
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#84667 - 02/04/07 04:25 AM
Re: Noobie, first attempt at a BOB and MANY questions.
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Crazy Canuck
Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 02/03/07
Posts: 3241
Loc: Alberta, Canada
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It seems to me that, having done as much as you have already, you are in better shape than most to weather the unexpected.
I'm no expert but, looking at your list, I do have a few thoughts, FWIW:
Tools: I think you need to beef up your contingent of tools. These will allow you to do basic repairs, harvest materials that happen to be at hand, and turn "junk" into things you can use. I'd suggest: - a Leatherman or other multi-tool (or some 8" needle nose pliers); the miniature Gerbers just aren't enough, in my experience (great briefcase items, though) - Vise-grips (with the heavy-duty wire/bolt cutters) are the maid of all work; 5" is useful and compact, 7" can handle most jobs, 10" is the undisputed Chairman of the Board; avoid imitation brands - an 8" crescent wrench and/or a small pipe wrench (one wrench is like one hand clapping) - heavy duty flat screwdriver (light prybar, chisel, scraper, screwdriver; use this for abusive jobs and spare your knife for cutting) - if you can afford the weight: a light axe with sheath (I prefer a minimum 24"), both for cutting and hammering/demolition; fiberglass handles are heavier but take a lot more more abuse - a good 8" file, for sharpening, shaping, repairing - multi-bit screwdriver with every bit known to Man - hacksaw or reciprocating saw blades (metal cutting, but also cuts plastic, copper, wood, wire, fabric) - a handful of assorted nails, self-tapping metal screws, wood screws - some solid mild steel wire, and some braided automotive copper wire - needle and thread, for rough-and-ready repairs to or improvising of clothing etc.; I have mostly used them to repair zippers, gloves and boots Reference Materials: - survival reference book, including info on "survival psychology" and "keeping yourself out of survival situations" - first aid reference book, or better, a wilderness extended first aid book (guidance that assumes you may be on your own for a number of days)
Pots: - every kit outside your pockets should have some metal container that you can boil water in - a well-washed coffee tin is better than nothing, at least to melt snow or boil water, and it's free - a big, tough, single-wall stainless steel cup is (I think) the minimum in each backpack or large fanny pack - a 2-quart or larger stainless steel pot is a necessity in a larger kit; don't worry about a fancy camping one, you can get a serviceable item just about anywhere, including a thrift store; add a handful of stainless steel soup spoons too
Firestarters: - you could do worse than to lay in a fistful of good quality candles, both for firestarting and raising spirits in troubled times
Stove: - If you're thinking of adding a camp stove, consider getting one that will use the fuel you have at hand or can get easily (i.e., unleaded gasoline or diesel fuel). Multi-fuel mountaineering stoves such as the MSR XGK can digest just about any fuel (don't expect to do a lot of fancy simmering on these blowtorches, though). Mine is ten years old and going strong; and tune-up kits are available everywhere. Take some time to get to know it; it's not as simple to light as a propane stove.
Entertainment: - 2 packs of cards will do a lot for morale for adults ("I'll see your Brooklyn Bridge, and raise you an Eiffel Tower!") and keep the kids from driving you crazy because they're bored and out-of-sorts (War, Crazy 8's, etc.)
Best of luck!
Edited by dougwalkabout (02/04/07 04:29 AM)
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#84668 - 02/04/07 05:52 AM
Re: Noobie, first attempt at a BOB and MANY questi
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Member
Registered: 04/09/06
Posts: 105
Loc: Richardson, TX
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Anyone with JetBoil experience who can tell me what its like to use one? Got one in my truck 72hr kit. I don't have the experience to compare it to anything else, but I'm loving it. it is super fast. Still want a separate cup, though, just to keep the jetboil clean. That picture is awesome. Did all that stuff stay on at highway speeds? I'm leaning towards a Thule Rapid Crossroad rack and 696 Xpedition basket, so we'd have something similar, although I don't know what kind of floor the Thule basket has. Oh yeah. Enough bungees will hold anything. I do recommend getting some of the bungees that are adjustable in lenth, and several long heavy duty ones. My plan for my next vehicle is a pickup with a camper shell, with another rack & basket on top. I can't find any larger baskets I like, so I may wind up custom making something.
_________________________
John Beadles, N5OOM Richardson, TX
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#84669 - 02/04/07 03:07 PM
Re: Noobie, first attempt at a BOB and MANY questi
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Old Hand
Registered: 03/08/03
Posts: 1019
Loc: East Tennessee near Bristol
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I've also got a couple of the older models. I wouldn't go back for anything.
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