Posts Tagged ‘Survival Kits’

Survival Kits

Tuesday, November 25th, 2008

Survival kits are a composite of useful tools that ensure you will be correctly equipped in case of a disaster or survival situation. Airplanes, ships, spacecrafts and military vehicles ought to be aptly supplied with survival kits.

There is an assortment of survival kits; each accommodating the user of the survival kit. Inside are utensils and supplies that give the owner essential safety in the event of an emergency situation.

Survival Kits are Useful Because They:

  • give people warmth
  • provide health care and first-aid needs
  • help supply food and water
  • aid discovering a way to help
  • help to signal to rescuers

A first aid-kit, survival knife, sewing utensils, matches, flares, flashlight and fishing line should usually be equipment necessary to keep in your survival kits.

Survival Kits are Universal?

Human’s who work in extreme conditions or in areas with intense weather, unquestionably should have survival kits on-hand. Disaster gear or equipment and survival kits also should be kept by everyday people who live near areas that are prone to receiving natural disasters such as tornadoes, earthquakes, etc.

Survival Kits Donated to Boy Scouts of America

Tuesday, November 11th, 2008

Craig Edwards Field Director with the Boy Scouts of America met with LifeCaps to receive dozens of free survival kits for distribution to some local troops around the greater Salt Lake area. To obtain the rank of Eagle Scout, the boys need to pass the test and obtain their Wilderness Survival merit badge. The fifth requirement is to put together personal survival kits and a survival pill such as LifeCaps could now be added.

Survival Kits

Requirements for the Wilderness Survival merit badge:

  1. Show that you know first aid for and how to prevent injuries or illnesses likely to occur in backcountry settings, including hypothermia, heat reactions, frostbite, dehydration, blisters, insect stings, tick bites, and snakebites.
  2. From memory, list the seven priorities for survival in a backcountry or wilderness location. Explain the importance of each one with your counselor.
  3. Describe ways to avoid panic and maintain a high level of morale when lost, and explain why this is important.
    1. Cold and snowy
    2. Wet (forest)
    3. Hot and dry (desert)
    4. Windy (mountains or plains)
    5. Water (ocean, lake, or river)
  4. Describe the steps you would take to survive in the following conditions:

  5. Put together a personal survival kit or survival kits and be able to explain how each item in it could be useful. (Sample Kit)
  6. Using three different methods (other than matches), build and light three fires.
  7. Do the following:
    1. Show five different ways to attract attention when lost.
    2. Demonstrate how to use a signal mirror.
    3. Describe from memory five ground-to-air signals and tell what they mean.
  8. Improvise a natural shelter. For the purpose of this demonstration, use techniques that have little negative impact on the environment. Spend a night in your shelter.
  9. Explain how to protect yourself from insects, reptiles, and bears.
  10. Demonstrate three ways to treat water found in the outdoors to prepare it for drinking.
  11. Show that you know the proper clothing to wear in your area on an overnight in extremely hot weather and in extremely cold weather.
  12. Explain why it usually is not wise to eat edible wild plants or wildlife in a wilderness survival situation.

Daryl Stevenett Founder of LifeCaps thinks it would be a good idea for everyone, not just Boy Scouts, to learn how to stay alive in emergency situations.

Survival Kits Can Also Be Used in an Urban Survival Situation

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

Many victims of the recent devastation of Hurricane Ike were given 72 hour food pill survival kits to help sustain them since many were without money and the ability to obtain food. LifeCaps, a Utah based company, made the trip to Galveston Island with hundreds of free Survival Kits for the victims there. After the second day, LifeCaps had even more survival kits shipped in to the area due to the demand.

Daryl Stevenett, founder of LifeCaps watched as hundreds of people stood in line for a chance to receive a $200 gift card from WalMart courtesy of the Red Cross. Only 200 cards were to be given out so some people had been standing in line since 10 pm the night before. At 6 am it was dark and the weather was cold and very windy and many people had children that appeared to be sick, wearing flip flops with only thin blankets wrapped around them.

Stevenett said, “It’s hard to watch fellow Americans in so much pain and suffering.” It seemed that FEMA and the Red Cross were overwhelmed and there was really not enough money and help to go around.

Depend on no one to help you in an emergency, get prepared with survival kits and have provisions to help yourself and your own family.

Stocking Your Survival Kits

Wednesday, September 10th, 2008

Placing a few crucial items in your survival kits can make all the difference in your chance for survival. Try to collect the items listed below and place them in your survival kits. The items can be placed in a small container such as an altoids tin. An altoids tin is extremely portable and makes for a great survival kit. Survival kits that are any bigger can be extremely inconvenient to carry. Having a survival kit could help save your life in a disaster or an emergency.

It’s important to waterproof your survival kit. You can easily waterproof your altoids tin with a strip of duct tape, which can be removed and replaced very easily.

Experience has shown that each item earns its place in survival kits, although some are more valuable in certain survival situations than in others.

Here is a list of useful items to place in survival kits:

  • Matches
  • You can make your own waterproof matches by dipping the heads of ordinary matches into melted candle wax. Matches are the easiest method to start a fire for survival.

  • Survival Pill
  • A nutritional supplement is very useful when food is not readily available. It’s extremely portable and can sustain your life until you are able to find food.

  • Candle
  • Candles can be used as a light source. You can even cut a candle into smaller pieces to fit them easier into your survival kit.

  • Flint
  • Flint can easily start a small fire and also works well when wet.

  • Small Magnifying Glass
  • This item is great for starting a fire with the help of direct sunlight. It can also be used to search for small twigs to burn.

  • Needles and thread
  • Make sure to pack a lot of needles. Include various sizes of eyes and sturdy thread that will wrap well around the needles.

  • Fish hooks and line
  • Carry an assortment of various fishing hooks, both large and small (remember that a small hook can catch both big and small fish, but a large fishing hook can only catch large fish). Also include a lot of line to potentially catch birds as well.

  • Compass
  • Always make sure when purchasing a compass that you know how to read it (some compasses are puzzling). Make sure you have a liquid-filled type compass that doesn’t leak or have any bubbles in it. Lastly, check that the pointer pivots freely.

  • Beta light
  • A beta light is an everlasting “light emitting crystal” the size of a small coin. It is a useful fishing lure and useful for reading a map at night.

  • Snare wire
  • Extremely useful for catching game animals in a survival situation. Keep in mind that it is illegal and should only be used in a wilderness survival situation.

  • Flexible saw
  • These can be used to cut down pretty sizeable trees. Take off the large rings at the end of the handles and replace them with wooden toggles, as this will save space. Cover in a film of grease to protect from rust.

  • Medical kit
  • Only include items you know how to use. Use cotton wool to store medicines in air-tight bottles. This is a brief list of some medications that will cover most diseases: Analgesic, Intestinal sedative, Antibiotic, Antihistamine, Anti-malaria tablets, Potassium permanganate, Water sterilizing tablets.

  • Surgical blades
  • Carry at very least two scalpel blades of various sizes. You can make a handle from wood when necessary.

  • Butterfly sutures
  • These can be used to hold the ends of wounds together.

  • Plasters
  • Be sure to pack different sizes of waterproof plasters, for maintaining cuts and small scratches. They are used as butterfly sutures, when not available.

  • Condom
  • A condom makes a great water storage bag and can hold 1 liter (2pt.) of water.

Survival in the Wilderness

Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008

It started out as a typical afternoon squirrel hunt. The three of us were students at Auburn University in Alabama, and we had taken the day off to bag a few squirrels in the nearby Tuskegee National Forest. By the end of the day, two of us sat on the fender of the car, reliving the hunt, squirrel by squirrel. It finally dawned on us that it was a long time past shooting light, and Mike, the third member of the party, had not yet returned to the car. But we didn’t worry because Mike was a highly trained and experienced in wilderness survival. He was working on his master’s degree in forest management and had just recently returned from four years of wilderness survival in the Alaskan back country.

A half hour passed, it was dark, and still no Mike. I blew the car horn three times. No response. For the next few minutes we blew the horn and shouted, stopping occasionally to listen. We were sure now that Mike was in trouble and began to ask ourselves questions. Had he shot himself accidentally? Could he have had a heart attack? Mike was a believer in emergency preparedness and was in excellent physical condition, so these possibilities seemed slight. As the reality that Mike was lost sank in, we began an organized search.

It was after midnight when we found him. A wild-looking man broke through a thicket and into the light cast by the searchers’ spotlights. It was Mike and he was scared and confused. His clothing was torn to shreds from the waist down, and his legs and arms were bloody from the scratches he had received, The.22 rifle, hunting coat and cap he had taken into the woods with him were gone where he didn’t know. We learned later that his hunting coat contained matches, extra ammunition, a pocketknife, and three squirrels, enough wilderness survival gear & food to live comfortably for many days.

Mike needed two weeks to recover fully from his brief but brutal ordeal. He recalled the panic that had struck him at dark when he realized he was lost. He remembered running for long periods of time. He also remembered feeling afraid of the strange people shouting and flashing lights in the woods. Embarrassment, guilt, confusion, and exhaustion only added to his sense of panic and helped cripple his ability to exercise good judgment. Mike, an above-average hunter and outdoors man, had come face-to-face with a wilderness survival situation and had not used his skills.

One of the first reactions to being lost or stranded in the back country is fear. It is fear that causes many people to panic soon after realizing they are in a survival situation. It was fear that made Mike run blindly and foolishly discard his equipment.

Replacing the 72 Hour Survival Kit

Thursday, June 26th, 2008

All sorts of people from the military to civilians have at one time or another searched the web for the best survival kits or maybe they are simply looking for products to include in building their own survival kit. Water of course is the first consideration.

Pack lots of Food, but a pill? Is it possible to live on a pill? LifeCaps has introduced the first survival pill. A capsule you can either chew or swallow that contains all the necessary nutrients you need to survive. The capsules comes three to a packet, breakfast, lunch and dinner. The pill curbs hunger and could come in pretty handy for wilderness survival or in the case of some emergency or disaster.Wilderness Survival

Does the LifeCaps survival pill work? Does it do what it says it will do? According to Russ Bianchi the LifeCaps formulator,

he says “It Works.” Russ has formulated hundreds of products over the years including the majority of the top selling energy and power bars on the market today. Russ says “When the body is satisfied with the nutrients it receives, it will not feel hungry and will give up it’s own stored energy or body fat to stay alive.” Could this be the next new diet pill? Some people I’m sure are using LifeCaps as a weight management tool, however it was never intended to be a diet or weight loss pill.

The idea came to Daryl Stevenett, the LifeCaps founder a few years ago. At the time there were some trapped miners underground in Utah. The search and rescue teams were drilling four-inch holes down to the miners trying to reach them. They supposedly had plenty of water but no food. Daryl thought, “Why can’t someone come up with a pill that people could live on? How hard can it be to put all the vitamins and minerals the FDA recommends as well as calories into a small pill?”

He then contacted his long time friend and formulator Russ Bianchi and asked if he could make such a thing as a survival pill. Daryl asked Russ, “What about adding a stimulant for energy?” Russ immediately said “NO WAY.” He explained that people in an emergency situation would have low blood sugar and if their system was spiked with a stimulant it could cause cardiac arrest. So no stimulants were or ever will be used in the LifeCaps product. A small amount of pure cane sugar was used which helps drive the nutrients into the blood stream within about 20 minutes or so. Anyone who has LifeCaps in their survival kits, has a much greater chance of survival in an emergency.

Since it would be impossible to include the 2,000 calories the FDA recommends into such a small pill, the body could burn its own stored energy or body fat if it needed energy. The body only gives up this reserve energy when it receives nutrients without the calories.

Severe obese people who weigh in excess of 800 pounds find it impossible to exercise to lose their weight, so what do they do? They usually end up in a hospital with their stomach stapled receiving nutrients only through an intervenes line. This solution contains very few, if any, calories which forces the body to burn its own stored energy or again, body fat. This was the idea Russ had for LifeCaps along with his understanding of the Krebs cycle of the human body.

On the LifeCaps web site you can try a free sample of LifeCaps. They do work. The LifeCaps company offers a refund if you are not satisfied with LifeCaps for any reason.

So is LifeCaps a possible solution for being prepared? You bet it is. LifeCaps is the answer to many things from the military to wilderness equipment, disaster emergency preparedness, extra emergency food supplies and even to just add to your survival kits.