Tuesday 26 March 2013

A Suitably Snowy Test for a Super Sleeping Bag



Alpkit is a company I’ve been aware of for a good few years, initially through their fantastic lightweight drybag/daysack hybrids. Their well-designed products dovetail perfectly with my ethos of travelling as light as possible whilst also being as well equipped as I can be (an endless struggle of conflicting concepts, clashing horns to the extent where my kit is arranged and re-arranged to death umpteen times before I can leave the house). In the colder months of the year, a depressingly large amount of available packing space is occupied by my winter sleeping bag leaving me with very few options other than to load up the BIG rucksack. This old dinosaur, a battered Berghaus Vulcan from my days in the forces, weighs half a tonne even before I put anything in it but I absolutely refuse to buy a new, lightweight expedition sack as to do so feels like surrendering to the suppressed kit junky in me. Also, I like it’s worn appearance and hastily repaired straps, non-matching buckles and the elasticated lid that isn’t elasticated anymore, flapping about in the wind like the roof of a ram-shackle tin shed. Having spent many a cold, winters night outdoors without a sufficiently warm sleeping bag in days of yore, I never skimp on my sleeping gear nowadays. My sleeping system is a haven of tranquillity, a cosy, dry place that I can look forward to however grim the weather during the day. So, the big warm sleeping bag takes prime position, above the spare clothing but below the inflatable sleep mat and waterproof tarp. Despite the cavernous size of my Berghaus Vulcan rucksack, this seems to leave me with just enough room for a single Rizla paper and a waffer thin mint. In my minds eye, I imagine the highly unprofessional image of me stooping under the bulk of a massive rucksack festooned with all manner of camping gear, pots and pans clanking about on the outside as I trudge through the wilderness.

This seasonal dilemma has been a familiar one for so long that I’ve come to accept it, however I have made some progress. My first winter sleeping bag was an old 58 pattern army bag with a heavy pvc built in base and a filling of down. I haven’t a clue what grade of down was used but I’m sure I could feel a few feet and beaks in there! Not only that but no matter how well you looked after the old army down bags they still exuded a dank odour of cabbage. With all this and the fact that it weighed quite a bit when damp I think I must’ve made up my mind to avoid down bags fairly early on in my outdoor career. The many sleeping bags that followed in subsequent years were all synthetic fill ranging from fairly small and lightweight right up to the size of a small bungalow. I thought I’d cracked it last winter with a nice, small synthetic bag boasting a decent comfort rating in the minus’s….but (fanfare) then came the Skyehigh 800  four season bag from Alpkit!
The Skyehigh range of sleeping bags compressed
 
It started like this…in recent years, spending increasingly longer periods living outdoors I decided to invest in a good quality down jacket. The antics I get up to outdoors require reasonably bomb proof work clothes combined with effective weather resistance properties. More often than not these tend to be thick heavy wool, tough weatherproof cotton outers (yes, I know cotton’s a killer but it’s hard wearing and won’t melt next to a campfire...) and a spattering of modern, technical fibres. While they perform well when worn in the woods these clothes don’t suit the role of being carried around as a spare or emergency warm layer. Basically they fill a daysack and weigh as much as a small pony. My new down jacket was a revelation, squishing down to almost nothing in my pack but keeping me as toasty warm as two or three heavy wool shirts. Admittedly, it was slightly less robust but this was a garment reserved for evenings, early frosty mornings or really, awfully cold weather when I’d be unlikely to be doing too much manual labour. If I absolutely needed to start man-handling logs or rolling around in the mud then my bomb proof cotton outer layer could give a degree of protection when worn over the top (my cotton smock is single layer Ventile; a high performance, weatherproof fabric…he said smugly). My down jacket gave me peace of mind. It’s pack ability meant that I could always take it along without getting in a flap about an unnecessarily warm layer taking up too much room. If the temperature dropped – BOOM, the jacket exploded into action from it’s tiny stuff sack and warmth and happiness prevailed. The ultimate security blanket!

Looking at the diminutive little package in the bottom of my daysack, knowing how the jacket within harboured such mystical and heroic qualities, I started to consider the benefits of a down filled sleeping bag. I knew the potential problems with down in the wet but it had been a long time since I had to worry about being unable to effectively dry a sleeping bag due to the tactical restrictions of not building an enormous campfire and breaking out the marshmallows. After all, knowing just how brilliant my down jacket was, I always looked after it well and had never got it wet to the point where it became ineffective. Life is a compromise and the small size and tiny weight penalty of a modern down bag seemed to outweigh any of the old problems I had experienced years before. With outdoor kit technology constantly moving forward I was sure a modern down bag would have a lightweight, weatherproof outer, special compartments for the filling, a waterproof coating perhaps? I still couldn’t help wondering if it would smell of old cabbages.
Showing excellent 'loft' even when pulled straight out of the bag


 
And so, a short while later a suspiciously sleeping bag shaped parcel with a pleasant little note from Alpkit arrived at Wilderness Survival Skills HQ. The Skyehigh 800 is a four season sleeping bag from a range that also includes the three season 600 model and a five season beast, the 1000. Somewhat confused by the weight to size ratio (the bag was at it’s biggest and loftiest in the long term storage bag supplied but felt as though someone had slipped a helium filled balloon in there for a joke) I pulled out the bag and gave it a shake to ‘puff it up’ to the max. Within seconds I was in it, zip pulled up to the neck baffle, prostrate on the living room floor watching CBeebies upside down. Even with a three year old jumping up and down on the huge blue worm that had appeared in the middle of the room, I felt immediately warm, comfortable and ever so sleeeeppppyyy…..
Micro ripstop DWR nylon outer
After an unexpected micro snooze I blearily clambered back out for a better look at the bag. As I’d come to expect from Alpkit, my first impressions of the bag were of a subtle, no nonsense, fine standard of quality workmanship. The outer material (micro ripstop DWR nylon) looked as though it would easily shrug off any tent condensation or wind-blown rain coming in under a tarp. The next and most obvious thing that stood out was the bag’s ‘lofting’ properties. Those down filled chambers plumped up immediately and stayed plump, trapping oodles of insulating air among the soft feathers to keep me warm at night, (incidentally the filling in this bag is super warm 90/10 goose down, 650+ fill power EU, whereas the next batch are due to use premium duck down making it one of the best value, high performance down bags on the market). The cowl hood looked more than capable of holding enough spare clothing to make a comfy pillow but still had enough depth to ensure my head would be surrounded by cosiness when scooped up into a cowl shape using the draw strings and snow locks. A good sized neck baffle would easily stop my valuable body heat from leaking out of the bag through the neck. Likewise the substantial zip baffle would prevent heat loss through the zip too. Fine touches around this area included the use of a reassuringly heavy duty YKK zip for a bag that squashes down so small and a length of heavier duty fabric sewn in place along the zip side of the baffle to reduce the chance of getting the zipper all snarled up when you desperately need to get out for a pee in the night.
Tactel nylon lining with good cowl hood and neck baffle
 
 

Positioned around the upper chest area was a handy little internal zip up pocket, ideal for keeping mobile phones warm and safe at night. The 300l Tactel nylon lining looked invitingly soft and the fit suited me just fine (regular length suits folks up to 6ft 1” but there are longer and shorter versions available). I’m what many might consider to be a chunky monkey but there was just enough room around the shoulders so as not to induce a ‘being buried alive’ panic attack in the early hours. I’ve slept in bags before that should have really included a butler or at least a trained mammal of some kind to assist in undoing the zip because the fit has been too slim to allow enough arm movement to operate the zip on your own. Not without dislocating a shoulder anyway. The foot section was also well sculpted and felt in no way restrictive.

The compression sack provided looked lightweight, well made…and possibly a little too small at first glance. All the same, the sleeping bag disappeared inside easily, no problems at all. The top closure consists of a simple drawstring and then the whole caboodle can be cinched down by what seems to be another 50% using the strong webbing straps and tensioning buckles. This gives you a neat little bundle only slightly bigger than a football. All that warmth in such a tiny package! I literally couldn’t wait to pack my kit for the weekend. With all the usual suspects lined up and ready to go (spare clothing, thermal mat, hunka bivi bag, rig 7 tarp, warm top, water, cooking kit, waterproofs and other assorted dry bags containing various useful bits and bobs) I dropped my new, fully compressed sleeping bag into the cavernous depths of my big rucksack. There was a barely audible and muffled ‘thud’ as it hit the bottom about twenty seconds later (ok, a bit of an exaggeration but it was certainly rattling around in the bottom somewhere). All the other essentials followed after and for the first time in a long time I was able to cinch the hood straps right down; virtually unheard of when packing kit for a couple of days winter camping.
Surprisingly heavy duty zip and crafty low snag zip baffle
 

The real test was yet to come, a dramatic drop in temperature over the weekend and snow forecast for the Saturday night and throughout Sunday. My weekend away in the woods was destined to be a cold and busy one; pre-season training for the keen team of Wilderness Survival Skills instructors and assistants. I’d definitely be in need of a good nights kip. Luckily, our base camp in the woods is reachable by 4x4 and as we had a fair bit to unload, we drove right on in. This came with the added bonus of being able to carry my US army cot bed the short distance to my usual tarp spot, not really an option when hiking but a very welcome addition when vehicle mounted. As the sleet was already hanging in the air I slung the Rig 7 tarp up first, between two trees in an open fronted lean to plus porch configuration to provide a dry working space underneath. This little spot is my leafy bedsit for at least a couple of nights every week from spring through until autumn and occasionally much longer when courses run back to back. Having a proper bed is essential for remaining on top form when teaching day after day but I do sometimes miss the simplicity of rolling out my thermal mat straight on the deck and bedding down amongst the leaves. This chilly weekend was definitely not one of those times! As part of my tarp based sleeping system, I usually carry an extra large ‘hunka’ breathable bivi bag to protect my sleeping bag when sleeping on the forest floor or if the weather is particularly cold and wet. This extra protection from the wind chill and additional layer to trap warm air normally increases the comfort temperature rating of any sleeping bag so to give the Skyehigh a proper test, I decided not to use it. As always, I prepared my sleeping kit but left it packed in it’s stuff sack until bedtime to avoid it absorbing any moisture from the damp evening air.
It was a very cold night, but not for me!!
 
Weirdly I was really getting quite excited about hitting the sack that night. As the rest of the team gradually started to flake, I banked the fire up for the night, switched out the lantern and slunk away through the frosty leaves by the light of my head torch until the beam picked up my reflective guy lines through the trees. The Skyehigh bag lofted up nicely with a few wafts, just as it had done at home. I took a deep breath and stripped down to thermals; my mid layers making a warm pillow, trousers tucked away in the sleeping bag compression sack and boots arranged one inside the other, to keep out the creepy crawlies. Despite it being bloomin’ freezing I warmed up extremely quick once zipped up inside the bag, much quicker than my other synthetic fill bags. I just about had time to switch off my head torch before dropping off to sleep, cosier than I’d been for a long time.

So how did the Skyehigh 800 four season bag perform on it’s first winter trip out to the woods? The proof is most definitely in the pudding as they say and I think the fact that I slept right through until morning (and nearly missed a cooked breakfast) despite the temperature dropping further in the night and snow arriving with a vengeance in the early hours, goes to show that this is an extremely warm and comfortable sleeping bag. In fact, without a shadow of doubt, I would say that for it’s size and weight when packed, this is easily the warmest, most comfortable sleeping bag I’ve had so far. I would imagine, the Skyehigh 600, being a three season bag would cope with the majority of weather conditions encountered by the average outdoors person camping from spring through to late autumn and with the addition of a hunka bivi bag would make a very small, lightweight but warm sleeping system for all but the coldest UK weather if you like travelling light. Also, not mentioned yet but definitely of importance to most people looking to buy a good sleeping bag, the price is outstanding for a bag of this quality. But best of all…not a single hint of cabbage!
 

For more details of the superb range of Skyehigh sleeping bags and all other Alpkit products just click on this link

Tuesday 19 March 2013

A Week in the Wilds part 1

This article was originally intended for a magazine but when I started writing about my experiences of living wild for a week with extremely limited equipment, I realised it was going to be a lengthy tome. Too big for the magazine (apparently...) I've decided to publish the first part here so that the all important fine detail can remain intact.

If you enjoy spending time outdoors practicing bushcraft skills (and let's face it, why would you be reading this blog if you didn't..) then I hope you find it useful, perhaps even entertaining. Pull up a log, here we go:
 

The first time I felt the need to test my skill in the art of survival I was a feisty teenager of around fifteen. Having already spent a couple of years of camping out and practicing jungle survival techniques in the Sussex countryside I decided one frosty February weekend to spend two days and a night in the woods with just what I could fit in my pockets. With the help of a fortuitous natural shelter, a small campfire, a foil blanket and a reputation to uphold I shivered the night away whilst watching my best mate (the self-appointed safety officer) snoring loudly in his sleeping bag just a few feet from me. That chilly night, I learnt a lot about the realities of struggling through just one difficult and ill-equipped night outdoors, but also a whole load more about myself and my own abilities. I used that experience as a bench mark for a long time after. It gave me a point of reference on several occasions in subsequent years where I found myself outdoors all night in the dead of winter, with no sleeping bag and no option but to dig into my reserves and make the best of my situation until morning. Without that point of reference I could easily have let panic overwhelm me but being able to draw on such a valuable life experience gave me confidence and a presence of mind that would otherwise have been difficult to attain.

Self-imposed challenges such as this are useful to gauge progress, test theories and ‘top up’ the self-confidence fuel tanks every once and a while. However, it’s important to point out here that most challenges involving survival training come with a high potential of risk and injury. You MUST take steps to minimize this potential and learn your valuable life lessons without risking the life you are ultimately trying to preserve. Take along a fully equipped snoring friend just in case!

Skip forward twenty five years to an autumnal week last year and the latest in a long line of progress gauging challenges. Myself and several like-minded students of the craft stood in a Dorset woodland ready to spend a week alone, in the woods with very little equipment and no resources other than those which could be gleaned from the wild. Shelter, warmth, water and food, all essential to life, were to be produced almost entirely (with the exception of meat, more on this later) from natural resources found at our location. Additionally, we were to carry out these ambitious requirements with relative ease, so as to allow us time to begin improving our situation by making primitive hunting weapons, working on traditional crafts and processing wild foods. Working as a group, this would’ve been hard enough but through some bizarre and twisted logic we chose to go it alone. Not only would this increase the physical workload but for some, would prove to be a sizeable mental barrier to work through.

We chose a mixed woodland for the challenge. Moss covered uneven ground played host to a plantation of spruce, interspersed with hardwoods such as the occasional oak, hazel, birch or holly. As the land sloped gradually down-hill, obvious patches of potentially damp ground were indicated by the presence of pendulous sedge and thick moss. Eventually this led into a small stream which snaked along the woodland margin. Patchy hazel coppice sprung from the stream bank with occasional much larger alder trees stretching out their gnarly toes into the water. Further back into the woods an area of steep ground rose out from the trees to form a plateau covered in young ash and birch. The surrounding countryside was comprised of previously grazed and fallow fields hiding a series of small ponds with cattail and goat willow bordering the muddy waters edge.
Our well stocked pond larder
 
Our kit list for the week was to be minimal; each person took only a small belt knife, folding pruning type saw, one stainless steel cooking pot, a tightly woven cloth bag to filter water, three metres of parachute cord and six brass wire snares. Due to the solo nature of our challenge, we also took a few safety items each; a small first aid kit, a head torch, a whistle and a reliable method of communication (mobile phone, not to be used for ordering up pizza!). Cameras and journals were taken to record events although these items, along with our safety kit were not allowed to be used to assist our self-imposed plight (so no battery and wire wool fires or tinder bundles made from the pages of our journals). Clothing worn had to be natural fibres, wool, cotton and even animal hides in one case. Goretex waterproofs and insulated down jackets were to be left back at camp for emergencies only. The reasoning behind this decision was that without high-tech modern weatherproof clothing systems we would HAVE to make a fire to keep warm at night and our beds and shelters would NEED to be effective by last light of our first day in the field. When fully encased in Goretex and goose down it’s perfectly possible to curl up under a bush and shiver away the night time hours until first light appears; not really the object of the exercise, which was to utilise natural resources for shelter, warmth and comfort.
The only kit taken:  knife, folding saw, 3m cord, billycan, filter bag, snares
 
The last item we would take out into the field was a modest quantity of wild game, our only food for the week. Whilst it may seem a bit of a ‘cheat’ to include a quantity of wild game meat on the packing list for a minimalist week in the woods, it’s worth remembering that this was intended to be a ‘wilderness living’ exercise, not a ‘survival exercise’. The theory being that, to truly live wild from the land requires, in most cases the trapping and hunting of wild game and/or the catching of fish. Exceptions to this rule would depend on specific environments and seasonality. The need for wild meat isn’t just about nutrition and maintaining a balanced diet (as I’m sure many people will argue that at the right time of year and in the right location suitable plant proteins and fats can be found) but about daily calorie expenditure when living and working hard outdoors and the effective replacement of those calories from the wild. It’s also important to remember the valuable resources that wild game provides the ‘hunter gatherer’ such as furs, hides, bones, antlers, sinew, feathers and the effectiveness of a plant based alternative in comparison.

So what about setting out traps or hunting during our week in the wild? In my own experience, survival type courses that involve trapping, fishing or hunting for food in the UK are always hampered by the legality of using improvised or primitive techniques to procure wild game. These laws are quite rightly put in place to protect our wildlife from inefficient, potentially cruel and even sometimes over effective methods of capture, especially by those who may not fully understand or respect the moral, ethical or long term implications of their actions. Obviously, because we are taking part in a training exercise and not a life or death situation, we must abide by the law and so the scenario, whilst still a useful experience, becomes a bit unrealistic in many cases. Basically for long term wilderness living, if we were surrounded by deer and could equip ourselves with the hunting gear required to take them, we would definitely have been eating venison! Don’t get me wrong, I fully understand that in a real ‘living from the land’ situation pretty much everything that flies, crawls or swims is fair game no matter how small or skinny but one important aim of this experiment was to prioritize efficiency with a view to long term survival. Additionally, we weren’t hiding from an imaginary enemy, having to fight our way back to civilisation or spending the whole time attempting to get rescued. This was just us, an extremely limited amount of tools and equipment and a week living in the woods to test our knowledge of natural resources, bush craft and how best to apply them to provide a comfortable and fulfilling existence. Think Robinson Crusoe rather than Bravo Two Zero! We did, however take a handful of brass wire rabbit snares which are perfectly legal to use with the landowners permission. These allowed us the chance to top up on our wild protein supply without breaking any laws.

To further justify the wild meat head start, every person agreed to meet up at a pre-arranged location on the third day, with a primitive projectile weapon they had made from scratch that week. Not only that but they would have to prove they could hit a target from a suitable stalking distance using their hand-made hunting weapon. This would go some way to ticking the box concerning one viable method of obtaining wild meat without breaking any laws or unnecessarily injuring the local wildlife. Admittedly, hunting large game with flint tipped museum pieces successfully would almost definitely require an additional investment of energy and polished hunting, stalking and tracking skills as well as the ability to create an effective hunting weapon and a good aim but by having the last two covered, we felt like we had reached an acceptable compromise. With venison being such a lean meat, gathering and processing energy rich foods from the wild would still be an essential part of the challenge if we were to prove we could live comfortably rather than just sit it out waiting to be rescued.

So, sparsely kitted out but fully equipped with knowledge and brimming over with ideas we set off at the crack of dawn to find a place to call home for the week. I settled on a sheltered location surrounded by immature spruce, much of it dead standing. The living trees provided some overhead cover and sturdy, conveniently spaced upright posts for my shelter. The standing dead wood became building materials, kindling and fire wood. The ground was level in places and soft with existing ditches to act as drainage channels if it rained hard. I was also within five minutes walk of the stream and had clocked a large, fallen oak tree close by which would give me excellent slow burning fuel wood to keep me warm through the night. I couldn’t see any of the others from my spot, or even hear them; there was a mild sense of loneliness mixed with total, uninterrupted focus on myself and my own plans. The latter was such a rare luxury that I didn’t mind at all about the lonely bit.
The proposed shelter site and gathered fire making sticks
My advice to anyone in most hypothetical survival type situations in a temperate climate such as ours here in the UK (after removing yourself from immediate danger, composing yourself and hatching a sensible plan) is to invest your energies initially in finding or providing shelter, protection from the elements. An unexpected situation such as the one imagined would more than likely carry with it several limiting factors such as a possible sustained injury or an injured member of the party. Also, nightfall would probably be fast approaching (who realises they’re going to be stuck out in the open all night at nine o clock in the morning?), stress levels most likely very high, resources would be limited and weather potentially inclement. For those who haven’t had extensive practice, lighting a fire in these conditions might be virtually impossible so providing effective shelter would often be the most achievable aid to survival. Reducing heat loss and minimizing exposure to the elements would increase your chances of surviving the night and hopefully enable you to continue improving your situation or call for help the following day.
Our self-imposed situation was a little different. We were in good health and had the whole day ahead of us. The challenge lay in not just surviving the night but being pretty comfortable and re-charging our batteries for the week ahead despite the lack of a sleeping bag, mattress and tent. From hard won experience, I knew how much effort would be needed to produce fire from the natural environment with nothing but a knife, folding saw and a three metre length of cord. I also knew how that extreme effort compared to the energy expended in getting a quick and effective shelter up, especially having deliberately chosen a site with most of my building materials close to hand and easy to harvest. So for this particular exercise, I prioritised the lighting of a fire ahead of building my shelter. You can make do with a slightly rubbish shelter but fire is either achieved…or it isn’t. I just didn’t fancy building my shelter first only to find that I was too low on energy to create fire. That would mean a cold, sleepless night with no sustaining food and no safe drinking water. After that medley of misery, the chances of then being able to achieve fire the next day would be slim to say the least. A week in the woods in autumn without warm kit, sleeping equipment AND no fire would not just be a thoroughly miserable experience but potentially life threatening too.
Carved bow drill components, gathered and made on site
 
Clematis bark tinder bundle and prepared kindling

 When faced with a situation such as this, the tiniest detail becomes vitally important. You must also put maximum effort into every task. Cutting corners could mean having to start again at the beginning and all the while precious energy is wasted. So, I opted for the bow drill as my most achievable fire lighting option (I could’ve tried striking sharp flint against the spine of my carbon steel knife to create sparks but such a method requires carefully prepared, absolutely bone dry, fine tinder and the rainy build up had dampened much of the fine tinder in the woods). A nice section of dry, dead wood ivy would become my hearth, a dead hazel stem would make a perfect drill while green hazel would be fine for my bow and hard ash for my bearing block. The hanging, shredded bark from a wild clematis vine became my tinder bundle and although ever so slightly damp, dried out sufficiently as I roughly scrunched it to soften the fibres. A ‘fluffier’ tinder bundle would accept the heat from my ember more readily. Birch and spruce twigs in big bundles made fantastic kindling and all my fuel wood, gradually increasing in thickness, lay poised and ready for action. With the various components carved, gathered and prepared I took a deep breath and started bowing, slowly at first to increase the heat where the drill met the hearth. As the resulting smoke thickened and an encouraging pile of blackened wood dust filled the notch, I picked up the pace until I felt certain the wood dust had begun to smoulder. It had, but only just. The worlds tiniest ember was tipped into my carefully prepared tinder and coaxed into life with a few gentle puffs.
A not particularly big bow drill ember

Disaster! The ember vanished leaving a slightly warm tinder bundle and nothing else. At this point it would be very easy to feel beaten or start to doubt your own credentials but at the point of apparent failure, the value of practice and the self-confidence gained through previous successes provides a much needed kick up the bum. I calmly re-adjusted the set, finely tuned the areas where I thought I might’ve made mistakes (I had cut my notch too soon and as a result the drill had wandered slightly off centre allowing the wood dust or ‘char’ to cool), had a breather and got back on the horse. This time it was all or nothing! I span the hazel drill back and forth with increasing intensity until my muscles succumbed to lactic acid build up and stopped working effectively. The fine tuning and extra effort did the trick and I shakily tipped the much larger glowing ember into my pre-heated tinder, carefully blowing to introduce more oxygen into the mix. Smoke became flame and flame became fire and my warmth and comfort was guaranteed…as long as I kept the fire going all week.
Flame at last! Warmth and comfort guaranteed
 
By now, I was just on the precipice of low energy levels due to having worked hard to achieve fire while taking on no food and water. I made a quick trip to the stream to collect water for a drink. Good old fashioned water would help stave hunger pangs, ensure I stayed hydrated and help metabolize any stored energy in my body. To ensure I didn’t take on any unseen nasties I first ran the water through my filter bag and then suspended it over the fire in my billycan to boil. While mooching around down at the stream, due to the low water levels I noticed that the bank was pretty much all clay and just the right consistency to be very easily scooped up as a tacky great lump and carried back to camp for some mid-week wild pottery antics. An old half brick found en route might serve as temper if crushed up so I also grabbed a harder looking rock to act as a suitable hammer stone. With the theme of the week being all about coping just fine with very little I was constantly mindful of how relatively fortunate we were to have items such as a metal pot for cooking food and boiling water, so with this in mind I considered my options if, even these few essential tools weren’t available. Clay could easily become any number of useful cooking pots and eating utensils given enough time and the right skill set. We were extremely lucky hunter gatherers!
Filtering stream water through a Milbank bag
I now had what remained of the daylight (around five hours) to build shelter, make a bed for the night, gather a tonne of fuel wood and butcher my muntjac deer into jerky. When looking into solo natural shelter designs, especially with limited tools and equipment, it’s important to run through a mental check list before you begin building. What building materials are realistically available? What am I sheltering from? How long have I got before nightfall? Am I in perfect health and fully fit? How long am I likely to be here? Do I need a fire for warmth? Am I capable of lighting a fire (last two boxes ticked – yeeha!). To build a fully enclosed, all singing, all dancing cabin with fire included would be too time and resource consuming for me on my own. I settled on a Lean To design, a classic survival cold weather shelter. Although very open at the front and seemingly chilly, a Lean To allows the use of a whopping great monster fire in front of it to warm the occupant. It’s extremely quick to build, relatively easy to waterproof due to it’s steep roof pitch and can be added to and improved as the days go on without having to strip it out and start again. I had a good idea of which direction the prevailing wind came from by observing the smoke rising from my campfire and also taking an average of which direction any downed trees were pointing along with the natural lean of any exposed vegetation.
Lean to shelter ridge and rafters fixed in place
 
After carefully choosing two conveniently spaced, strong trees aligned so that the prevailing wind would hit the back of my Lean to (although also slightly side on to carry billowing smoke away) I wedged a strong ridge pole in place and lashed it firmly with twisted green hazel withy’s. The copious amounts of young, dead standing trees quickly became rafters after I did my best angry bear impression to push them over. Twiggy brash wood followed to close the gaps and as the evening drew in, piles of leaf mulch from the surrounding ditches and hollows were added to become a thick thatch. I saved the green hazel brash from any green rods cut to provide a thickness of leaves over the moss which was to be my bed. With my homemade wool hoody laid down on top it looked inviting enough to down tools and catch some Z’s right there and then. My thoughts turned to the rapidly dropping evening temperatures and while I still had daylight to play with, I gathered as much solid, seasoned oak firewood as I could to see me through the night. In failing light and with a slight cold breeze picking up, I hastily propped up a log pile wall on the far side of the fire place to cut down wind and bounce radiating heat right back at me. As a last minute insurance policy I grabbed armfuls of dry kindling and tucked them away under the lee of my shelter just in case the fire died down to embers in the night…which of course it did. As night fell and my world was reduced to the circumference of the campfire’s glow, I set about butchering my venison as best I could. The tender fillets were sliced thinly and pushed onto green hazel skewers along with any good rib meat (most of the front end was lost due to the stalker seemingly using a rocket propelled grenade to cull my muntjac). Some fillet kebabs found their way onto the fire to be barbequed for dinner. The haunches and jerked fillet meat skewers were all suspended high over the campfire to dry slowly and benefit from the preservative and insect repelling qualities of the oaky smoke. I sat back on my mossy bed, the walls of my shelter illuminated softly by the fire and a warm sense of satisfaction of a job well done. With a barbequed meal of venison warming me from the inside I prepared for sleep and as I took one last sip of stinking boiled stream water I vowed that my first job in the morning would be to find some mint leaves to make tea with.
Laying on a brash wood matrix to close up the gaps
 
My first night went relatively well. I slept in cycles where I fell asleep, lovely and warm to the glow of a well-stocked fire and awoke cold after around three hours, looking through bleary eyes at nothing but glowing embers and charred log ends surrounding the fire place. I would plonk a good handful of dry kindling on the embers, re-shuffle the charred logs to form a jenga style stack above the kindling and finish off with a couple of new logs on top. Bingo! The fire would roar back to life almost immediately and within a couple of minutes I’d be cosy enough to drift off again. This routine continued all week with the only change being a gradual lengthening of my sleep cycles; a good thing because I ultimately got a bit more sleep but a bad thing because the fire died right down a couple of times, requiring some frantic tinder gathering and much blowing. If improvisation has been the only available fire lighting option available then you NEVER let the fire go out.
The following morning and breakfast on the go
Dawn arrived and with it came an immense feeling of satisfaction at having not only survived the experience but having been relatively comfortable too. I had a quick breakfast of skewered venison and some nearby blackberries washed down with a glug of boiled stream water (really did need that mint!) and gathered my kit to go foraging. With all my immediate survival essentials taken care of I had the rest of the week to experiment with wild foods, make a deadly hunting weapon and craft myself some bushcrafty house warming gifts.
In part two I’ll talk through each of the above in detail but in the meantime, get out there and practice!

For part 2 click here








 
 

 

Hello

Well, I've finally got round to starting a blog. Not sure how often I'll update it but hopefully as frequently as I possibly can. With a busy year looming at Wilderness Survival Skills and lots of plans in the pipeline there'll always be something to write about that's for sure! However, as you'd expect I do spend a lot of time in the woods teaching and practicing skills, doing my best to hide from the world of computer screens and squeeky office chairs.....it'll be an interesting juggling act.

So, if you like to read about personal experimentation in all aspects of bushcraft and wilderness survival from an instructors viewpoint, outdoor kit reviews and regular course updates then please check back in as often as you can.

Take care and speak soon

Joe