I HAVE NEVER THOUGHT OF giving a survival training someday for outdoor guys based
in Baguio City. Must be because Baguio is the center of the tribal peoples of
the Luzon Highlands. I believed that their heritage and culture are still
strong that primitive living skills are just second nature for them. Never in
my dreams until, one day, a guy named Gary contacted me and we set a schedule
of March 11 and 12, 2017 for that.
Going
up to Baguio would be a long bus ride from Manila and to Manila – from Cebu –
would be 90 minutes by plane or 24 hours by boat. (In the old days and where
competition was stiff, it took just 18 hours!) I opt for sea travel to remove
the stress of quick transfers that are inherent in airplane travel. I choose
March 8 as my departure so I would have enough time to move comfortably about
in my journey to Baguio. It was not to be. When passenger sea travel to Manila
is a monopoly, it happens. No options.
In
the process, my departure for Manila got moved several times and my temper came
to its last straw as the frequent rescheduling threatened to jeopardize my
training class schedule in Baguio. At the last hour of 21:00 of March 9, the
slow boat detached itself from the Port of Cebu and sailed north. The boat
arrive the following night (March 10) and it left me the quick transfers that I
disdained to happen and the long queue for the ticket and for the bus.
The
bus did leave as scheduled at 23:30 of March 10 and I catch sleep as much as I
could as it went its way up to Baguio. I arrive at 04:00 of March 11 in Baguio
City and it is very cold. I was just wearing a t-shirt and a flimsy long hiking
pants. Some passengers went on their way while some opt to stay inside the
heated terminal but I just want to stay near a bonfire at the back of the city
tourism outpost to wait for Gary.
From
the bus terminal I was whisked by Gary, Pandoy and Quintin to Crosby Park in
Itogon, Benguet. The facility is owned by Benguet Mining Corporation and it had
seen better days. It is located on top of a hill where some of the participants
had already set up their shelters since yesterday like Doc Mike, Vera and Loco.
As with most of the highlands landscape here, Benguet pine trees dominate the
scene.
Still
groggy from a lack of sleep and a still missing breakfast, I set up my Silangan
Outdoor hammock and an Apexus sheet between two stout pine trees. The Benguet
Highlands is perfect hammock country, that is if you can prevent the shivering
cold winds crawling on your back. It is still the season of northeast monsoons
and the amihan would be carrying the cold winters of Siberia, Japan,
Manchuria and the Korean Peninsula to the tropics.
The
guys are preparing breakfast. Gary is baking a bread that he would cook Bannock
style while Loco has his own idea of bread on a frypan. Any of those are
perfect for any empty stomach like mine. I get to eat their unusual but warm
bread and it is just as filling as if I am eating traditional Filipino food.
Some of the participants arrive with Quintin like Johnson and Kerubin. Another
participant, Charleston, arrived later.
I
have two previous students present: Pandoy who attended one organized in
Montalban last February 2016 and Michael in Cebu on November 2016. The duo are
serious blade enthusiasts but have different philosophies with how they treat
and use their knives. I would ask them to assist me instead although the number
of participants can be managed comfortably by my lone self.
At
09:00 I start the training for the BASIC WILDERNESS SURVIVAL COURSE, an
outdoors educational activity designed for tropical wilderness settings of
jungles and rugged highlands, which I first offered to the mountaineering
community and to emergency responders in October 2013. It is intended as a
three-day training but, when clients insist for two days only, I can only
yield. Definitely, I would not accept doing it in one day.
The
first chapter is Introduction to Survival. Survival situations demand that you
stay tough after the initial impact.
Mental stability and toughness are very important characteristics of a
survivor. You must develop a survival mindset. Do not engage in prolonged mind
games of fantasy and false hopes. You should rein in your mind so you would not
release excess adrenaline and cause you more confusions in a very stringent moment.
The
best thing to do is stay still and fill up your lungs with oxygene. Your brain
needs it most to help you process thoughts. You are now in a high state of
agitation and so does your brain. Your brain will be in hyper mode, collating
and processing many thoughts all at the same time which is beyond human
capacity. We can do so one thought at a time. Just stay still and breathe
regularly, supplying your blood system with oxygene.
In
the hierarchy of needs and of nutrition in a survival situation, water is
always on the top of the scales of both. Rightly so, for we are in the tropics
and humidity plays a big role. With that, we surrender perspiration by the acts
of our exertions and by what the climatic conditions imposed on us. Along with
the lost moisture, is our body heat which we let go without our knowing.
When
you stay still in one place, you lessen wastage of moisture and body heat. Then
you confine the latter by setting up a shelter (if you still have one) or make
one from scratch. That is the second need. The third would be food then warmth.
Although food, and even water, would give you warmth, but heat from a naked
flame or from the rays of the sun or from a person’s body is solace. Last is
security which would complement well with the rest.
Our
body has four hypothetical storage tanks that needs to be replenished from time
to time during survival. First is constant rehydration that would offset
dehydration. Second is food that would give you nutrients, carbohydrates and
proteins. Third is sugar which is converted by enzymes for your adrenaline
rush. Fourth is fat, hardest to find in the tropics yet are wrapped as tissues
in our body.
The
topic for the next chapter is about Water Sanitation and Hydration. The first
chapter had mentioned the importance of water during survival. Water could be
sourced from natural springs, water seeps, man-made water holes, flowing
streams, the atmosphere and from plants. It could be refined through boiling,
by chemicals, exposure to heat, through filtration and by desalination. It is
wise to cache water in your survival camp or just travel early and take
advantage of shady places and breeze if you happen to have less.
We
move fast to the third chapter which is about Knife Care and Safety. The knife
is a tool and should not be used to what it was not designed for like digging
latrine holes and as pry bars. It is a vital piece of equipment that should be
properly handled and cared for because it is your link to your surviving. In
all my trainings, knife etiquette is learned first before you touch a knife.
Besides
my rules, there is a knife law that forbids the display, even of concealed
carrying, in public places unless you are in a lawful activity, which we are in
right now. A knife should be in a sturdy sheath when travelling - for safety -
and should be unsheathed when at home to keep it from rust. There are many
kinds of knives and it is important that you know the parts, blade shapes,
grind styles and the tang designs. You must also learn how to field sharpen a
knife.
After
the much appreciated instructions about the knife, we move on to Survival Tool
Making. Making a tool is essential in survival or even when not in that
situation. I showed them the most basic of tools like the digging stick, traps
and snares from pieces bamboo that I was able to obtain, and the batoning
stick. Since bamboos are rare in the higher elevations, I let each carve a
spoon instead from pine wood to practice their dexterity with the knife. I
settled for a cup of brewed coffee while supervising their practical exercise.
I
was able to finish four chapters in the morning and we have to observe
noonbreak. I noticed that it is not that cold today. It is in a warm 24ÂșC. I
boiled water using my Swiss Army Emergency Burner for my Japanese miso soup
which would be my simple meal. I am tired and I lacked sleep but this is not
the time to show weakness, not while you are working. Outdoors education
vis-a-vis survival instructor is now my bread and butter.
Aggravating
my physical drain is doing this training for two days instead of the desired
three days. You feel the pressure and the instructions are very much
compressed, leaving almost out the finer details which could have made the
lectures most appetizing, most interesting, as I could insert situations and
experiences to the students. Anyway, the hammock is an inviting proposition and
I sneaked into its comfortable clasp for a nap.
Refreshed
after 90 minutes of siesta, I continued with Notches and Lashes. There are five
basic notches that are used regularly in bushcraft. These are applied in
shelters and tool making. Again this is an exercise of knife dexterity together
with the baton stick which lets me rest for a short while. Lashing a cord to
join two sticks or a different object are very important with this process. For
this part, I showed them three basic lashes.
We
go next to Simple Shelters. Before setting up one, it must be noted that you
should be in the safest of places. It should not be near streams, dead trees,
trails, water sources and underneath a forest of combustible trees. As you can
see, we are in a forest of pines which is a very combustible one but the trees
are not so close to each other and allows breeze to move in between. You should
take advantage too of early evening thermals.
Simple
shelters are essentially man-made or natural. Natural are caves, rock
overhangs, tree cavities and underneath fallen trees. Simple shelters could be
synthetic ones or made from natural materials or a combination of both. As it
is a simple shelter, you could only enjoy it in a very short span of time since
your purpose is just to survive from the elements until such time you are
rescued or walked your way to civilization.
When
you have a shelter, your next step is to find food. The next chapter is
Foraging and Plant Identification. Foraging food in the wilderness or on
unfamiliar terrain can be very taxing to the mind. When you are stressed and
hungry, you tend to remove all caution. Looks can be very deceiving in the
tropics like fruits, leaves, nuts, roots, flowers and mushrooms. Likewise, you
need to evade harmful plants while travelling your way in a jungle.
Short
term food would be grub, tree snails, fresh-water shrimps and crabs and frogs.
These can be picked by hand. Cook it if you must to remove parasites and
bacteria. Long term food are meat from mammals, fish, birds and reptiles. For
that, you must use a weapon, traps and snares. Traps could be anything designed
to lure prey into a simple contraption of a hollow bamboo or a dam of rocks. It
must work with the terrain, with gravity and the habits of creatures.
Snares
are more complex. It has a spring mechanism and a trigger mechanism which would
be initiated by the prey. Showed the students a very common snare employing a
pressure-trigger mechanism. It could catch anything from birds to goats. Then
again, you must use bait so prey would be lured to step on it. A single trap or
a single snare would not yield you a catch but a trap line of 20 to 30 snares
or traps would after ascertaining where would the prey would most likely pass
or visit.
Related
to these is the chapter on Food Preservation and Cooking. If you can eat a deer
all in one setting, well and good. You are very fortunate to still possess a
healthy appetite. Meat rot in a short span of time. During survival, meat can
be preserved and its edibility can be extended for a few more hours to several
months. You can boil it. You can dry it. You can smoke it. Or you can cook it
with its own oil from its fat.
Fish
can be preserved by drying and by smoking. Fruits can be digested after a
drying session and provide you natural sugar. Common rootcrops, has high starch
value, and should be cooked, by all means possible, to remove toxins and
poison. Famine rootcrops need to be immersed in running water for five days
before cooking. Salt and vinegar are good food preservatives. Vinegar can be
sourced from any palm.
Last
chapter for the day is Fire, Fuel and Campfire Safety. You cannot make a fire
if one or all elements are not present, namely: fuel, heat and air. Lately,
they added a fourth element – chemical reaction. Fire-making is 80% common
sense, 10% skill and 10% perspiration. We are talking about the friction
methods. Your fire can start if you can acquire and identify the right tinder,
if you are in a dry place, and if you have the patience.
Aside
from friction, there is the conventional method which are matchsticks,
lighters, ferro rods and the flint and steel. Then there is solar magnification
which can be done with any lens, reading glasses, water and even ice. Then you
have pressurized air, exemplified by the fire piston. Since I do not have the
luxury of time, I limit my demonstrations to the flint and steel, which I
paired with charclothe, and the ferro rod. I showed them how to make a tinder
bundle.
Showed
them how the bow drill method is made and spun. Unfortunately, I could only
make thick smoke as sawdust embers refused to light up my tinder. It is now
late afternoon and dusk is just around the corner. I let others try the
bowdrill, the ferro rod, and the flint and steel. All my charclothe are
exhausted to smoke and flames. Unfortunately, we cannot do with the bamboos
because there are none in our location.
The
day ends and the promise of dinner is up in the air. I decide to transfer my
hammock to another part as the ones I placed earlier is now exposed to strong
winds which I have not felt before. After hitching it up, I turn to cooking
milled corn which I brought from Cebu. I was expecting a very cold evening and
milled corn would have helped me in staving off cold. The Swiss Army Emergency
Burner is very efficient and I just used broken up twigs.
Johnson
and Kerubin cooked rice and sardine-laced corned beef on big pots employing a
tripod system of cooking they learned from my lectures. The cooking fire simply
became a campfire after dinner and is now the center of evening socials. Strong
spirits supply the yarns and storytelling into a more animated evening which
crept into the early minutes of the second day. By then, my long awaited sleep
is now a possibility.
Woke
up at 07:30 of March 12, the camp seems deserted. Everyone are still asleep or
just remained invisible. As
my steps shuffled the soft pine needles, I could hear somebody stirring inside
a tent and another a yawn. Slowly, people appear and the bench where the food
are placed are now ringed by them. A firebox becomes alive and a kettle is
settled over it. A good strong coffee starts the day and soon I get to taste
the vegetarian fare made by Vera and Doc Mike as my light breakfast.
The second day start with
Customizing the Survival Kit. It is better that survival kits are made from
scratch than bought commercially because a survival kit’s size and its
components depends upon the type of the activity you are indulging in and the
kind of environment you are going to visit. Your personal preference still
matters. The components should include the medical kit, the replenishment
pouch, the repair kit and a small knife. It could all be integrated in one container
and should be waterproofed.
Next comes Navigation and
Understanding Trails. It is more on traditional navigation which use the
natural terrain, shadows and the sky fixtures for travel; avoiding obstacles
and exposed areas; and knowing how to identify signs on trails made by both
animals and humans. Following that is Understanding Cold Weather. During
survival, exposure to the elements is expected. There are five physical
mechanisms that steal away body heat and the things that we should do to keep us
constantly warm.
The last chapter is Outdoors Common
Sense. This is the subject matter that I based from my yet unpublished book, ETHICAL
BUSHCRAFT. It is about trail courtesy and behavior while on the trail;
choosing the best campsites; practicing stealth camping; increasing individual
safety and security; wildlife encounters; and introduce people the idea of
Blend, Adapt and Improvise.
We finished the training with a
blade porn. It is a traditional bushcraft activity where all edged tools are
laid on a ground sheet to inject another round of useful conversations and to
encourage closer camaraderie among the participants. Gary then presented me a
framed certificate of appreciation signed by, no less, than the Mayor of Baguio
City, the Hon. Mauricio G. Domongan. Along with that is a small stainless steel
pot, a stainless cup and a small lantern.
From Crosby Park, we went on our
separate ways. I am with Gary, Pandoy, Loco and Michael in a car driven by
Quintin. We stayed for a while in a bus terminal to send off Pandoy and Loco.
Gary invited me and Michael to his home to tidy up. My first bath after three
days! We treat ourselves later to a superb dinner of pork ribs in one of
Baguio’s more popular diners. We walk back to Gary’s home and spent the rest of
the hours on the front steps of the condo talking and devising ways to empty
four big bottles of Red Horse Beer.
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1 comment:
Quite valuable information about wilderness survival
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