In these "intriguing" times, it makes sense to be prepared to deal with any situation you're confronted with. No, I'm not one of those survivalist freaks who advocates buying an automatic weapon, 10,000 rounds of ammunition, 500 pounds of Spam and holing up in a mountain redoubt someplace waiting for "them" to come.
What I have become an advocate of is being prepared, and by that I mean being equipped to keep yourself alive and whole in whatever situation you find yourself in - be it your car going over a mountainside late one night, getting hopelessly lost during a weekend outing in the county park, being trapped in a building during a real or imagined terrorist event - you get the idea. To that end, here are my thoughts on what some call 'Personal Survival Kits' or PSKs:
Links to suppliers and sources of
some of the gear are included for both PSKs (but are generally only linked
at the first mention).
Mini-Personal
Survival Kit (current version - 02/ Is this the 'perfect kit'? Probably
not. I'll always be adding some things and removing others as I get ideas
or learn some new tip or technique. I don't think there is such a thing
as a perfect kit - it is always a work in progress. Everything in
this mini-Personal Survival Kit represents a compromise, be
it a size, weight, cost or functionality concern. This is what, for now,
works best for me for the kit I carry every day.
The tiny LED flashlights are a real boon,
since they are not only small, but lightweight, the lithium batteries last for
years in storage, and they now come in white in addition to the more common red
beam. You never know when you may need a good flashlight. Same with the whistle. For attracting
attention, it's hard to beat a really loud whistle. This one glows in the
dark as an added aid for searchers looking for you.
Fire starting can be either an absolute
priority or a nice addition - it depends on how desperate you are. That is why my mini-PSK has two ways to start a fire: the traditional
matches and a flint/magnesium bar and metal striker, along with waterproof
tinder. Tinder should always be waterproofed, because
if you're desperate enough to use this kit to start a fire, conditions
for starting the fire probably aren't ideal and you're going to need all
the help you can get. Admittedly, wind- and -waterproof matches would be
better, but I had the Coleman's waterproof matches on hand.
The duct tape was fixed to the backing
sheet that some computer labels came on, enabling it to be folded tightly
for storage without sticking to everything. I also put a short length of
plastic soda straw inside the kit to wrap the electrical tape around after
I open the kit. When you're in a survival situation, never throw anything
away.
There is no food in this kit due
to its size. It's more important to be able to find water
and treat it so it's safe to drink. The plastic oven cooking bag is tough, folds up
very small and is an OK water bag; besides, I'm sorry, I'm not going
to try to store water in a condom (the usual mini-kit water storage container),
let alone drink from it!
Minimal fishing gear is included because you
never know where you'll be when misfortune strikes. I substituted heavy-duty
poly-cotton 'button' thread for nylon or braided fishing line because it takes
up less space. It is wound around a small piece of
cardboard so it will lie flat. It fits both sewing needles,
of course, so you can also use it for repairs.
The split shot weights are lightly
crimped onto a short length of fishing line to keep them from getting lost.
A trick I use to keep the fishhooks from stabbing into things in the tightly-packed
kit is to put a small piece of cork from a wine bottle on the tip of each
hook. Same for the sewing needles, or you can hold them together with a
small piece of cellophane tape (I prefer Scotch MagicTM tape because it doesn't
leave a sticky residue).
Some people wrap a few feet
of 550-pound military specification parachute cord around the outside of
their kit as a way to include some of that valuable commodity. I chose
not to for the simple reason that I don't want the kit to look like anything
other than a rather battered tin. I admit that the nylon
string I included is not a lot, but the mini-PSK is intended more as a last
resort in case I lose everything else, not as the first thing I
reach for in an emergency. Better to have
a little bit of something than nothing of anything.
I like the Altoids-type tin for holding
a mini-Personal Survival Kit because it's tough, small enough to fit in
almost any shirt or pants pocket and inconspicuous in this day of overly-paranoid
security people. Here is a link
to photos of the contents of the mini-Personal Survival Kit. (Note:
Some of the contents have changed a little as I tinker with things, but
the photos are a good general guide.)
Large Personal
Survival Kit (current version - 7/2021)
Again, this
kit represents a series of compromises regarding weight, functionality,
cost or size. It is enough to keep myself, or myself and a companion, relatively
safe and healthy if I/we get lost or trapped
overnight.
The nylon pouch start its
life as a military-type first aid kit. The gear inside is also segregated into various
freezer-grade zip-top plastic bags to
further protect it, keep it dry and double as more water bags. You've probably
noticed that there are a lot of different ways to do each thing, primarily
start a fire, signal for help, see at night and treat water, because those are the major needs
I envision. An orange/silver Heatsheets emergency blanket is included instead of the more
common metalized 'Space Blanket' because a space blanket is simply not tough
enough to depend on; the Heatsheet weighs just a tad more than a space blanket and
takes up less room. It's also bright orange, enabling it to double as a signal panel.
The knife
is another compromise. With only a 2-inch
blade, it can't be used to fight off a grizzly bear, but its size makes it easy to
stow, and the blade
is partially serrated to make cutting rope and string easier. I may not always
remember to bring along a big knife; this way I will always have some
cutting and tool capabilities.
Note the amount
of duct tape included, again by putting it on an 8 1/2 x 11-inch backing
sheet from some adhesive computer labels (I prefer the Gorilla Tape brand). I am a firm believer that you
can never have enough duct tape in an emergency.
If it can't be fixed
with duct tape, it can't be fixed.
The fishing
line is wound onto one of the small plastic bobbins used for home sewing
machines, which adds a little weight but also keeps the line from coming
unraveled inside the kit.
Discount store
braided nylon mason's twine is included instead of the highly-touted 550# mil. spec.
parachute cord a lot of Personal Survival Kits use because, 1) I had it
on hand, 2) Do you know how expensive genuine paracord is?, and 3) Because
parachute cord is a lot bulkier and heavier (one reason there is none in my mini-PSK).
Again, there
is no food in this kit except a couple of instant coffee packets, primarily to keep the weight down. I usually have
something in another pocket anyway. You can go for weeks without food,
but only a few days without water.
My original goal was to get this kits weight down to 1 pound (16 ounces).
As initially equipped, the large PSK weighed
28 ounces. Further ruthless culling
got the weight down to about 20 ounces - and then I started
rethinking things.
Where I live it can rain a lot, and hypothermia is a
possibility year-round. I had the Heatsheets emergency blanket (2.6 ounces),
thinking that would double as my shelter, but decided that was totally
inadequate.
First I tried a plastic
tube tent, but at 13.4 ounces it added too much weight. So, again, I
compromised, and bought a two-person bivvy sack made out of something more
robust than the cheapie Mylar space blankets, that weights only 5.9 ounces. I also decided to use a different,
larger container for the entire kit so
everything wouldn't be quite so crammed together, and I could keep the PLB in
the same kit. For paying the price of 6 ounces of weight, I will be able to
stay warm and/or dry under almost any conditions. In some sense, the small
multi-pocket pouch I'd originally chosen for the kit was forcing me to make dangerous
compromises on what I should be carrying, simply because everything wouldn't
fit. A note
on the Personal Locator Beacon:
It is only for use
when things get really, Really,
REALLY bad. Again - Really,
REALLY bad. Let me emphasize that - this is
not a toy. You only pull this out and activate it when all other hope is
lost. Here are links
to photos of the large Personal Survival Kit and its contents grouped under
the following areas: Complete Kit;
Signaling;
Emergency
Devices; Shelter/Personal Protection;
Medical;
Water/Food;
and
Multi-Purpose/Miscellaneous.
(Note:
As with the mini-PSK, some of the contents have changed a little as I tinker
with things (in this case a LOT), but the photos are a good general guide.) Micro-Personal
Survival Kit (coming sometime soon) I'm
going to see how much I can cram into a mini-Altoids tin. Should be fun!
The Rest of the Stuff
2 Heatsheets emergency blankets 1 C.E.R.T. pry bar, handle wrapped in 550 paracord 8 Clif energy bars (packed separately in car trunk) 12 4.2 ounce foil pouches of drinking water (packed separately in car trunk)
1 8-hour candle 4 12-hour chemical light sticks - green, orange and yellow
1 butane cigarette lighter 25 feet of 1/4-inch braided nylon cord;
25 feet of 1/16-inch braided nylon cord;
1 fire kit with 40 waterproof matches 1 4-inch folding lockback knife 2 red Skyblazer aerial flares 1 LifeStraw personal emergency water
filter
The fanny pack
keeps everything together and safe from abrasion or puncture damage, acts
as an additional bag around the large Personal Survival Kit and provides
a larger carrying sack in case I become stranded and have to abandon the
vehicle (which should almost always be your last resort). Everything
together (except the water) weighs a shade over five pounds.
Quantity
Item,
Brand
Use
1
Altoids-type
mint tin [3 5/8 long x 2 5/16 wide x 3/4 inch high]
(Bite Beauty)
To
hold mini-Personal Survival Kit, mirror inside of lid used for signaling,
for cooking
1
Contents
list, Survival Tips (fluorescent yellow)
To
keep track of expiration dates, as signal panel; Basics of signaling, fire
making, water treatment, direction finding, etc.
12
Waterproof
matches with striker strip (Coleman)
To
start fires, for light
8
Tinder
Quick Fire Tabs (Four
Seasons Survival)
Waterproof
tinder to start fires
1
Flint/magnesium
spark stick, with metal striker bar and beaded
chain (Ranger Rick's)
To
start fires, for signaling at night
1
Whistle
(Acme
Tornado, photo luminescent)
For
signaling
1
2-quart
plastic oven bag (Reynolds)
For
water storage and treatment (cut down from 4-quart size)
1
Nylon
locking tie (Reynolds)
For
closing water bag
20
Water
purification tablets (Potable
Aqua)
For
water treatment (in small brown glass vial)
1
Knife
(1 1/2-inch blade),
file, can opener combo tool
For
cutting, fire starting with spark stick, prying, improvising other tools, etc.
3
Fish
hooks, 2 small (No. 4), 1 very small
(No. 12) [Eagle
Claw]
For
fishing, catching birds
1
Fishing
lure, dry fly (Silverlake)
For
fishing
4
Split
shot lead weights (Eagle Claw)
For
fishing
2
Sewing
needles, 1 large, 1 medium (Coats & Clark)
For
repairs, splinter removal, hunting
25 feet
Thread,
heavy duty poly-cotton blend (Coats
& Clark)
For
fishing, repairs
1
Needle
threader (Singer)
For
repairs, as fishing lure
50
feet
Light-duty
nylon
string (Lowe's
Home Improvement)
For
repairs, fishing, shelter building, etc.
1
White
LED flashlight (Princeton
Tec Pulsar)
For
light, signaling
2
12
x 12-inch sheets heavy duty aluminum foil (Reynolds)
For
cooking, signaling
1
Button
compass (Coleman, from zipper pull)
To
find directions
1
Single-edge
razor blade (Lowe's)
For
first aid, food procurement and preparation, cutting tool, etc.
1
30-inch
wire saw (Coghlan's)
For
fire or shelter building, as improvised snare (using pull rings)
5
Safety
pins, 1 extra large, 1 large, 3 medium
For
repairs, fishing
10.5
inches
Duct
tape (Lowe's Home Improvement)
For
repairs
4
Adhesive
bandages, medium (Johnson
& Johnson)
For
first aid
2
1-inch
nails (Lowe's Home Improvement)
For
spears, shelter building, repairs, etc.
1
3-inch drinking straw
To suck water out of small places, to wrap electrical tape around after
opening kit
4
feet
Electrical
tape (Scotch
3M 88T telephone repair)
To
seal and waterproof kit, for repairs
5.7
ounces
Total
weight mini-Personal Survival Kit
Quantity
Item,
Brand
Use
1
Nylon
zippered pouch [8 long
x 6 wide x 3 1/2 inches high] (Cheaper
Than Dirt)
To
hold large Personal Survival Kit, weight 7.8 ounces
1
Survival
Tips sheet, laminated
Basics
of signaling, fire making, water treatment, etc.
1
rescueME Personal Locator Beacon
(Ocean Signal)
To alert search
and rescue organizations, weight 5.1 ounces
1
Whistle,
JetScream Micro (UST Brands)
For
signaling
1
Plastic
laminate signal mirror (small) (CountyComm)
For
signaling
1
Mara-Flect
reflective ruminous rape, 2x3 inches (CountyComm
No. D08)
For
signaling, marking positions and/or important gear
18
Waterproof
matches, with striker strip (Coleman)
To
start fires
10
Stormproof
matches, with striker strip (Industrial
Revolution)
To start fires
1
Brass
flint wheel sparker w/ extra flints (CountyComm)
To
start fires, for signaling at night
10
Tinder
Quick Fire Tabs (Four Seasons Survival)
Waterproof
tinder to start fires
2
Packets Fire
Paste (PyroPutty)
Waterproof paste
to start fires in cold weather
1
HeatsheetsTM emergency blanket (Adventure Medical
Kits)
For
shelter, use as signal panel, rain/dew collection
1
Survive
Outdoors LongerTM
emergency bivvy sack, 2-person (Adventure Medical
Kits)
For shelter, use
as signal panel, rain/dew collection
8
Extra-strength
Tylenol [acetaminophen] caplets (McNeil
Pharmaceuticals)
For
pain relief
2
Generic
anti-diarrheal caplets (CVS)
For
diarrhea relief
2
Generic
Benadryl capsules (CVS)
For
allergy and insect sting relief
7
Adhesive
bandages, 2 extra large, 4 large w/ antibiotic (Johnson
& Johnson)
For
first aid
1
Neosporin
triple-antibiotic ointment packet (Pfizer
Consumer Healthcare)
For
first aid
2
Tick and insect
repellent wipes (Ben's)
For biting insect
protection
4
Salt/Pepper
packets (IHOP)
For
seasoning, food preservation, first aid (dehydration, heat stroke)
2
Coffee
single-serving packet
(Kenco)
For
a hot drink, morale, foil envelope to store water
2
1-liter
Whirl-Pak water bags (5col.com)
For
water treatment and storage
20
Water
purification tablets (Potable Aqua)
For
water treatment
1
Compressed
washcloth (Heininger
Holdings)
To
mop dew from plants, etc., for drinking
1
Compass,
dry
(CountyComm SERE
No. B36)
For
directions
1
Folding
lockback knife, 2-inch blade (Gerber)
For
food gathering, shelter building, fire starting with flint, repairs,
etc.
1
Single-edge
razorblade
For
repairs, first aid, cutting tool, food preparation
1
30-inch
wire saw w/ paracord pull rings (Coghlan's)
For
fires, shelter building
1
Norton's
Universal Cleaning Stick (CountyComm)
For
repairs
6
feet
Orange
plastic flagging ribbon (Lowe's Home Improvement)
To
mark snares and trails, for signaling
50
feet
Braided
nylon mason's twine, fluorescent yellow, 40-pound test (Lowe's
Home Improvement)
For
shelters, repairs, traps
1
Maratac
Rev. 5 AAA flashlight
(CountyComm)
w/ 2 batteries (Duracell)
For
light (3 levels), signaling
1
Plasma
arc lighter/flashlight/whistle combo (Survival
Frog)
Fire
fire starting, light, signaling
4
Safety
pins, medium
For
repairs, fishing
2
1-inch
nails (Lowe's Home Improvement)
For
food gathering as spear points, shelter building, etc.
3
12-inch
steel fishing leaders (Eagle Claw)
For
fishing, small animal snares
50
feet
16-pound
test monofilament fishing line (Berkley Trilene
XT) on plastic spool (Singer)
For
food gathering, repairs, shelter building
7
Fishing
hooks, 1 very large (No. 3/0), 3 medium (No. 4), 3 small
(No.
8) [Eagle Claw]
For
fishing, catching birds (small hooks), large hook to use as gaff
4
Split
shot lead weights (Eagle Claw)
For
fishing
2
Fluorescent
yellow foam earplugs (Howard
Leight Industries)
For
fishing bobbers, tinder
3
Small
screw eyelets
For
improvised fishing pole
3
Sewing
needles, 1 large straight, 1 large curved, 1 sailmaker
(Coats, Singer)
For
repairs, first aid, food gathering
1
Needle
threader (Singer)
For
repairs, as fishing lure
4
14-inch
nylon cable ties (Radio
Shack)
For
shelter building, lashing, repairs, emergency tourniquet
2
Plastic-coated
twist ties
For
repairs, lashing
33
inches
Duct
tape (Lowe's Home Improvement)
For
repairs, shelter building, first aid, etc.
4
12
x 12-inch sheets heavy duty aluminum foil (Reynolds)
For
cooking, signaling
1
Mini-carabiner
(Wal-Mart)
For
securing critical gear to person, repairs
1
Plastic
Fresnel lens, 3 x 2-inch (CVS)
For
fire starting, finding splinters, reading survival instructions
5
Sheets 3 x 5-inch water resistant paper
(Rite in the
Rain)
For notes, messages, event diary, fire starting
1
Pencil
stub
For
emergency messages
1
Rosary
card
For
spiritual support
38
ounces
Total
weight large Personal Survival Kit (a bit over 2.3 pounds)
If you do store drinking water in your car, and you live in a cold climate, make sure it's in leak-proof containers like the foil pouches I use, so when it freezes, it doesn't make a mess of things. Plastic water bottles won't cut it. And don't ask me how I know that.
Final Thoughts
To start the search for what should be in your own Personal Survival Kit, here is an excellent link - Equipped To SurviveTM. If it has to do with survival in any kind of disaster or situation, survival kit contents for a myriad of situations, gear, techniques, etc., it's probably here. The 'Survival Forum'TM is especially informative and highly recommended.
This link,
My
PSK Cheat Sheet, takes you to my version of something to keep you thinking
clearly in an emergency and highlights important information you need to
remember:
For a much more comprehensive (i.e., way better than my effort) cheat sheet that is a little
bigger, go to
this
link on Equipped to Survive
Double click
to view and right click to download this Adobe Acrobat .pdf file, which has two
cheat sheets on each page. It fits in an Altoids tin. I have it in my mini- and large PSKs and my wallet.
Portions of the material were used with the permission of Equipped
to SurviveTM. You'll have to experiment with your printer to get it centered
correctly on both sides. I recommend using a laser printer for durability
and printing it on brightly colored or fluorescent paper so you won't lose
it and so it can double as a small signal panel.
More comprehensive guidance on making your own kit can be found here, Montem Hiking Blog, which includes a video of a guy who makes Altoids tin survival kits.
And lastly, to those of you who have read this and are still thinking, 'Why bother? That'll never happen to me anyway,' ponder this: How much is your life worth?
This page was last updated
July 18, 2021