Shared Survival Knowledge

The Knowledge You Need To Survive

Archive for the ‘Tools’ Category

How to siphon liquid

Posted by nwnikkie on December 8, 2011

In emergency situations you may need to know how to siphon gas out of a tank. In other instances you may need to know how to siphon water. You just never know, that’s why I am adding this skill to SharedSurvivalKnowledge.com

What you need:

Tube or hose (ideally a clear tube works best so you know what is going on, and you don’t end up with a mouth full of liquid)

A bucket, can or other vessel to catch the liquid

How to do it:

Position the bucket lower than the tank you are draining.

Place one end of the hose into the tank as far as possible until you hit the bottom at least.

Start with the dry end of the tube higher than the water source, and suck water into the hose. Fill as much of the hose as you dare with liquid. Even with an opaque hose, you should feel the liquid approaching your mouth and have plenty of time to stop before you get a mouthful.

If you are using a hose that is too long, it will create a problem – an air bubble. To avoid bubbles from forming, keep the hose flat or running up towards your mouth, like a drinking straw.

Maintaining mouth suction on the liquid, crimp the hose or slip your thumb into your mouth over the (lips) end of the hose. You are trying to prevent air from getting back into the hose and ruining your hose-full of liquid.

Next, drop this (lips) end of the hose into your target bucket, gas can or front lawn. Release the crimp (or your thumb) and water should immediately start flowing out of the hose.

A good siphon is quiet. If there is a lot of gurgling and bubbling, you have some air in the hose, which will slow or stop the siphoning. It usually isn’t worth the trouble to re-start a slow siphon unless the water flow has completely stopped.

Once the liquid is flowing, your attention should turn to the wet (source) end of the hose. Keep it submerged. The longer you can keep air from getting in, the more liquid will be removed.

Eventually, air will get pulled in and will interrupt the path of the water, stopping your siphon.

If you follow these easy steps then you should be able to siphon without getting a mouthful of liquid.

 

 

 

Posted in Safety, Survival, Tools | Tagged: , , , | Leave a Comment »

How to make Pitch Glue

Posted by nwnikkie on October 4, 2011

What you will need:

1) Wood chips or charcoal

2) Pine trees

3) Fire pit safe cooking pot

The recipe is 1 part charcoal 2-3 parts pine sap

Instructions

Make Charcoal:

  1. Cut the wood into small pieces, no bigger than 4-by-4 inches. Cut enough pieces to fill a cooking pot.
  2. Fill a fire pit safe cooking pot with the small pieces of wood. Pack the wood in the pot as tightly as possible.
  3. Build a fire in the pit
  4. Place the cooking pot filled with wood on top of the fire. Put a lid on top of the pot.
  5. Leave the cooking pot on top of the fire until the fire burns out.
  6. Wait 12 to 24 hours for the cooking pot to cool off before opening it to remove the wood pieces.
  7. Remove the lid from the cooking pot and pour out the blackened (charcoal) wood pieces.

Making the Glue:

  1. Collect dried sap from pine trees. When pine trees are injured, sap slowly drips out and dries on the trees’ surface. Look for the thick light brown sap on the outside of the trunks of the trees. Carefully scrape the dried sap off the tree using a knife.
  2. Grind up the charcoal into a fine powder using a rock.
  3. Melt the sap in a fire safe cooking pot over a fire . Wait to put the sap into the pot until the flames are low to prevent the flames from touching the sap and possibly igniting it. The sap takes five to ten minutes to melt.
  4. Pour ground charcoal into the melted sap. Use an equal ratio of ground charcoal and sap.
  5. Stir the ground charcoal and sap with a long metal stirring utensil until it is thoroughly combined and remove it from the fire. The glue will harden to putty like consistency when it cools off. Heat it over a fire before use if you want it to be thinner.

Reheating it will loosen the bond, meaning you can make a large batch of it all at once and heat it as you need it.

Pine is a sappy tree, it will ooze sap from wounds that will harden into a resin and is easily collected. Pine resin, pitch, is moderately flammable, and can be used as an accelerant in low intensity fires for short bright bursts of heat.

Pitch glue is sufficient for simple tasks like arrow-making. Large clumps of pitch glue are also effective as a kind of bush-craft napalm. Pine sap is also has limited applications for waterproofing.

Downside of pitch IT IS EXTREMLY STICKY and hard to get off of skin. USE CAUTION.

Posted in Tools, Wilderness | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

Bartering – 100 Items to disappear first

Posted by nwnikkie on September 13, 2011

By Joseph Almond

#1. Generators (Good ones cost dearly. Gas storage, risky. Noisy..target of thieves; maintenance, etc.)

#2. Water Filters/Purifiers (Shipping delays increasing.)

#3. Portable Toilets (Increasing in price every two months.)

#4. Seasoned Firewood (About $100 per cord; wood takes 6 – 12 mos. to become dried, for home uses.)

#5. Lamp Oil, Wicks, Lamps (First choice: Buy CLEAR oil. If scarce, stockpile ANY!)

#6. Coleman Fuel (URGENT $2.69-$3.99/gal. Impossible to stockpile too much.)

#7. Guns, Ammunition, Pepper Spray, Knives, Clubs, Bats; Slingshots

#8. Hand-Can openers; hand egg beaters, whisks (Life savers!)

#9. Honey/Syrups/white, brown sugars

#10. Rice – Beans – Wheat (White rice is now $12.95 – 50# bag. Sam’s Club, stock depleted often.)

#11. Vegetable oil (for cooking) (Without it food burns/must be boiled, etc.)

#12. Charcoal; Lighter fluid (Will become scarce suddenly.)

#13. Water containers (Urgent Item to obtain. Any size. Small: HARD CLEAR PLASTIC ONLY)

#14. Mini Heater head (Propane) (Without this item, propane won’t heat a room.)

#15. Grain Grinder (Non-electric)

#16. Propane Cylinders (Urgent: Definite shortages will occur by September, 1999.)

#17. Michael Hyatt’s Y2K Survival Guide (BEST single y2k handbook for sound advice/tips.)

#18. Mantles: Aladdin, Coleman, etc. (Without this item, longer-term lighting is difficult.)

#19. Baby Supplies: Diapers/formula/ointments/aspirin, etc

#20. Washboards, Mop Bucket w/wringer (for Laundry)

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Survival, Tools | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Expedient Water Crossings

Posted by nwnikkie on September 12, 2011

In a survival situation, you may have to cross a water obstacle. It may be in the form of a river, a stream, a lake, a bog, quicksand, quagmire, or muskeg. Even in the desert, flash floods occur, making streams an obstacle. Whatever it is, you need to know how to cross it safely.

RIVERS AND STREAMS

You can apply almost every description to rivers and streams. They may be shallow or deep, slow or fast moving, narrow or wide. Before you try to cross a river or stream, develop a good plan.

Your first step is to look for a high place from which you can get a good view of the river or stream. From this place, you can look for a place to cross. If there is no high place, climb a tree. Good crossing locations include–

  • A level stretch where it breaks into several channels. Two or three narrow channels are usually easier to cross than a wide river.
  • A shallow bank or sandbar. If possible, select a point upstream from the bank or sandbar so that the current will carry you to it if you lose your footing.
  • A course across the river that leads downstream so that you will cross the current at about a 45-degree angle.

The following areas possess potential hazards; avoid them, if possible:

  • Obstacles on the opposite side of the river that might hinder your travel. Try to select the spot from which travel will be the safest and easiest.
  • A ledge of rocks that crosses the river. This often indicates dangerous rapids or canyons.
  • A deep or rapid waterfall or a deep channel. Never try to ford a stream directly above or even close to such hazards.
  • Rocky places. You may sustain serious injuries from slipping or falling on rocks. Usually, submerged rocks are very slick, making balance extremely difficult. An occasional rock that breaks the current, however, may help you.
  • An estuary of a river. An estuary is normally wide, has strong currents, and is subject to tides. These tides can influence some rivers many kilometers from their mouths. Go back upstream to an easier crossing site.
  • Eddies. An eddy can produce a powerful backward pull downstream of the obstruction causing the eddy and pull you under the surface.

The depth of a fordable river or stream is no deterrent if you can keep your footing. In fact, deep water sometimes runs more slowly and is therefore safer than fast-moving shallow water. You can always dry your clothes later, or if necessary, you can make a raft to carry your clothing and equipment across the river.

You must not try to swim or wade across a stream or river when the water is at very low temperatures. This swim could be fatal. Try to make a raft of some type. Wade across if you can get only your feet wet. Dry them vigorously as soon as you reach the other bank.

RAPIDS

If necessary, you can safely cross a deep, swift river or rapids. To swim across a deep, swift river, swim with the current, never fight it. Try to keep your body horizontal to the water. This will reduce the danger of being pulled under.

In fast, shallow rapids, lie on your back, feet pointing downstream, fanning your hands alongside your hips. This action will increase buoyancy and help you steer away from obstacles. Keep your feet up to avoid getting them bruised or caught by rocks.

In deep rapids, lie on your stomach; head downstream, angling toward the shore whenever you can. Watch for obstacles and be careful of backwater eddies and converging currents, as they often contain dangerous swirls. Converging currents occur where new watercourses enter the river or where water has been diverted around large obstacles such as small islands.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Shelter, Tools | Tagged: , , | Leave a Comment »

How to make a ring-pull smoke grenade

Posted by nwnikkie on September 2, 2011

You never know when you might need some kind of survival deterrent. This is a very easy “tool” to make! It may even save your life if you need it in an emergency situation.

 

Posted in Safety, Tools | Tagged: , , | Leave a Comment »

Survival Compartment – Contents and Layout

Posted by nwnikkie on September 2, 2011

This is the second video in a series, I thought it to be very useful to see how other people organize including the reasoning behind it.

 

Posted in Survival, Tools | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

How Do We Communicate With Each Other During A Disaster?

Posted by nwnikkie on August 23, 2011

 

The Life Network

Posted in Safety, Survival, Tools | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

How to make the “Slatt’s Rescue Belt”

Posted by nwnikkie on July 29, 2011

Posted in Tools | Tagged: , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

How to tie the chain knot

Posted by nwnikkie on July 29, 2011

Posted in Tools | Tagged: , , | Leave a Comment »

Direction Finding

Posted by nwnikkie on July 14, 2011

In a survival situation, you will be extremely fortunate if you happen to have a map and compass. If you do have these two pieces of equipment, you will most likely be able to move toward help. If you are not proficient in using a map and compass, you must take the steps to gain this skill.

There are several methods by which you can determine direction by using the sun and the stars. These methods, however, will give you only a general direction. You can come up with a more nearly true direction if you know the terrain of the territory or country.

This knowledge of the terrain together with using the methods explained below will let you come up with fairly true directions to help you navigate.

USING THE SUN AND SHADOWS

The earth’s relationship to the sun can help you to determine direction on earth. The sun always rises in the east and sets in the west, but not exactly due east or due west. There is also some seasonal variation. In the northern hemisphere, the sun will be due south when at its highest point in the sky, or when an object casts no appreciable shadow. In the southern hemisphere, this same noonday sun will mark due north. In the northern hemisphere, shadows will move clockwise. Shadows will move counterclockwise in the southern hemisphere. With practice, you can use shadows to determine both direction and time of day. The shadow methods used for direction finding are the shadow-tip and watch methods.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Safety, Survival, Tools | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments »

 
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

%d bloggers like this: