“Making a Survival Kit,” Family Home Evening Resource Book (1997), 337
“Making a Survival Kit,” Family Home Evening Resource Book, 337
Making a Survival Kit
Outdoor activities are no fun when someone gets lost. Adequate preparation will usually keep this from happening, but some simple equipment can prepare a family member to survive if he does get lost. This activity will teach family members to make a lightweight survival kit that they can easily carry with them.
Activity
First make sure that family members understand a few simple rules:
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Wear a shrill whistle around your neck when you are hiking or fishing in an isolated area.
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Tell someone where you are going and when you are coming back. Don’t leave the camping area by yourself.
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Orient yourself to the area and do not explore longer or farther away than your family feels is safe.
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Remember when you are lost to—
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Keep calm, find a sheltered place, and stay put. Get out into the open if planes are overhead.
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Build a fire if possible, conserve your heat and energy.
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Mark your location. Move out from it to seek familiar landmarks and return to it.
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Shout, use a whistle, and concentrate on being found—not on finding someone.
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Prepare for the night, gather wood, build a shelter before dark.
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Then have all family members help construct a survival kit. Make sure they know how to use each item. The following items can be put in a 2 1/2-by-4 1/2-by-16 1/2-inch (6-by-11-by-16-cm) leather pouch and will weigh less than one pound (.5 kilograms).
Survival Kit | |
Item |
Uses |
Pocket knife with cutting blade, can opener, leather punch |
Carving, cutting, spearhead |
Metal canister 1 1/2-by-3 1/2-by-4 1/2 inches (4-by-9-by-11-cm). Many of the following items can be put in this canister. |
Cooking pan, reflector, cup |
Surgical tubing, 40 inches (100 cm) |
Drinking tube, tourniquet, flipper |
100 halazone tablets |
Water purification |
Six small cotton balls |
Swabs, pad, dressing |
1/32-inch (5-mm) twine, 96 inches (30 meters) |
Fishing line, snare, sewing |
Aluminum foil, 12-by-18 inches (30-by-45 cm) |
Cooking, heat reflector |
Wire survival saw 15 inches (36 cm) |
Sawing |
Three razor blades |
Cutting, snares |
Twelve safety pins, 1 inch (1.5 cm) |
Repairs, clothespins, securing shelter to rope |
Six No. 12 fish hooks and 12 feet (3.5 meters) of line |
Fishing, snares |
Three balls of steel wool |
Tinder for fire in wet weather |
Waterproof matches, candle, metal match |
Fire |
Metal whistle |
Signal, reflector |
Small sharpening stone |
Striking matches, sharpening |
Pencil and paper |
Leaving notes or directions |
Twelve heat tablets |
Cooking |
Electrician’s tape, 120 inches (3.6 meters) (wrapped around canister) |
Repairs, fastening shelter to rope |
Six small band-aids |
First aid |
Card showing ground-air signals |
Giving directions, sending distress signals, signaling location |
Six bouillon cubes, dried soups |
Food, morale, body heat |
Two plastic sheets 9-by-12-feet (2.6-by-3.6 meters) |
Shelter, ground cloth, water collection |
1/8-inch (2-cm) nylon cord, 12 feet (3.5 meters) |
Shelter rope, snares |
Sewing kits: two needles, three buttons, 6 feet of thread (1.8 meters) |
Patches, first aid |
Small compass with mirror on back |
Directions, signaling |
Additional Activities
Try each component in your backyard or on a simulated exercise to prepare yourself and your family for possible use.