HJ
I think you’re set for signaling. If you are out in the winter I like to also carry matches or a lighter for warmth, melting snow, signaling, etc but you need to know how to make a fire in the cold damp windy environment that you might find yourself stranded in and reading about it is no substitute for trying it in non survival conditions. I used to hear/read a lot about solar stills and even survival instructors advocate them. When I would ask how much water they’ve gotten from them in the summer I’ve had some say they’ve never personally tried it. My experience has been dismal in the hot summer, marginal soon after a rain in favorable places at other times.
Lots of people talk about the "ten essentials". Back in the late '60s when I started as a back to nature hippie, many of the books back then were "woodcraft" oriented. When I looked at the Mounatineers Freedom of the Hills book, though primarily about climbing, it did give some useful hiking info. I found it strange that the woodcraft books talked about building shelters using a tarp and hacking down saplings while the mountaineers book talked about the ten essentials for the minimum but no shelter. I had a problem with it back in those days and I think the so-called ten essentials need to be adjusted for location and time of year.
Somewhere I once read 3 minutes without air, 3 hours without shelter, 3 days without water, and 3 weeks without food as a general guide for surviving. To me, some type of shelter should be paramount. I’ve used space blankets many times. I remember in a summer thunderstorm downpour while going up Devil’s Slide I stopped on the trail, I took it out and stayed perfectly dry under it while other hikers trudged by getting soaked. I caught up to the group up above getting stuff out to make camp and trying to “get dry”.
Anytime I go out I carry at least a space blanket (shelter, warmth, signaling, snow melter, lots of uses). On SAR missions I carry a space blanket, aluminized mylar emergency bag, and a custom made three person Gortex bivy bag for putting a hypothermic person between two warm bodies. On the marine we recently rescued, he was put into a sleeping bag with the bivy bag over it and the space blanket over that. In an hour or two he was warmed enough to be able to hike out under his own power (plus warm liquids and food). But again, I think people need to practice being out with what they normally carry.
The first time I tried out my newly constructed Gortex bivy sack was when a storm was forecast for Mt San Antonio. Thinking it would be a great time to try it I hiked up Baldy with my day pack (no sleeping bag) and got in my bivy sack when it started snowing. I survived but I thought a few hours into my ordeal that I should have conducted my “experiment” back down by my car with my sleeping bag nearby. I didn’t need to endure the whole night out in it in a snow storm.
I have mixed feelings about the PLBs. They are expensive and I think a survey of hiker/backpackers would show very few have them. For people in trouble, they work great and save time, expense, and lessen the risk to SAR people that otherwise would have to search a much larger area. Avalanche beacons are similar. Expensive, most skiers don’t have them but could save your life if you’re caught in an avalanche (incidentally, on the way up the gully we found the marine in earlier this month, we did have to retreat to the sides of the gully twice when a couple of snow slides came down from above). Because FRS radios are inexpensively mass produced, I’ve thought it would be great if the manufactures could incorporate a button or feature to use it as an ELT beacon…help find lost kids (and hikers). At very least, it could be a good selling point for a manufacturer. For group hiking, they do allow people to communicate if they get separated (I was on a search years ago where that happened and the separated person has still never been found). Perhaps this is getting off the original thread…maybe be a new thread? Maybe should post it under the 2 ways to lesson risk on the mountain.
Rick
