Table of Contents Making Fire
Building Shelter
Catching Food By Keith McCafferty
Last November, my son, Tom, and I weathered a snowstorm in Montana's Crazy Mountains while hunting elk. At the height of the storm, when whiteout conditions made it difficult to see where we were going, I found a sheltered spot and gathered some downfall to build a wickiup, a primitive half-teepee. I sparked a fire by glancing the back of my knife blade against a piece of flint and lighting some bark tinder. With shelter and warmth, we rode out the storm, easting sandwiches and talking elk.
At the same time, a 49-year-old hunter was lost and in serious trouble in the Absaroka Range a few dozen miles to the south. Rescuers with search dogs unraveled a 6-mile scent trail the man had left before finding him collapsed on a logging road, hypothermic and barely breathing. Despite their attempts to warm him, he died six hours later. Apparently he had been unprepared for the storm, but it was not a terribly cold day, and had he been able to build a fire or construct almost any kind of primitive shelter before sweating through his clothing, this tragedy might have been avoided.
Most sportsmen rarely find themselves in life-or-death situations. But it can happen. Could you survive the way your ancestors did? Read this, and you just might make it.
A deer caught in a snare can feed you for weeks, but your odds of catching small game, birds, and fish and of gathering wild foods are much higher. Here's how
The things you carry can keep you alive. Here are three survival kits perfect for outdoorsmen, plus a step-by-step plan to build your own. Today: The Pocket Kit.