- 100% bio-washed chino twill
- Six-panel, low-profile
- Pre-curved visor
- Adjustable self-fabric back with tri-glide buckle close
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Frostbitten toes. (Photo courtesy of Dr. S. Falz, WikiMedia.org) |
The Wilderness Medical Society has released a position paper on frostbite. One of the points they made refers to the decision of "to thaw or not to thaw." Partial or full-thickness injury is ideally thawed in a warm water bath at 99-102°F (37-39°C). However, in the backcountry, skin-to-skin contact might be most practical. If this is not possible, spontaneous or slow thawing may be unavoidable and should be allowed. Don't purposely keep tissue frozen for extended periods of time. Read the entire paper at:
"Wilderness Medical Society Practice Guidelines for the Prevention and Treatment of Frostbite," by Scott E. McIntosh, MD, MPH; Matthew Hamonko, MD, MPH; Luanne Freer, MD; Colin K. Grissom, MD; Paul S. Auerbach, MD, MS; George W. Rodway, PhD, APRN; Amalia Cochran, MD; Gordon Giesbrecht, MD; Marion McDevitt, DO; Christopher H. Imray, MD; Eric Johnson, MD; Jennifer Dow, MD; and Peter H. Hackett, MD. Wilderness & Environmental Medicine (Volume 22, Issue 2), Pages 156-166, June 2011.
Source: This article was adapted from Frostbite—To Thaw or Not to Thaw, by Tod Schimelpfenig, EMT, FAWM, Curriculum Director, Wilderness Medicine Institute (WMI), National Outdoor Leadership School (NOLS). Copyright © 2014 by the National Outdoor Leadership School (NOLS), Lander, Wyoming. All Rights Reserved. Excerpted with Expressed Written Permission. To learn more about WMI and NOLS, point your Internet browser here.
Source: This article was adapted from Map Reading and Navigation, Second Edition, (Part IV, Manual 7), by Emergency Management Australia, Attorney-General’s Department; Dickson, Australian Central Territory, Australia. Copyright © 2001. All Rights Reserved. Excerpted with Expressed Written Permission.
Source: This article was adapted from The CMC Rope Rescue Field Guide, Revised Fourth Edition, by CMC Rescue, Inc., of Santa Barbara, California. Copyright © 2013. All Rights Reserved. Excerpted with Expressed Written Permission.
To purchase a copy of this handy, 133-page, spiral-bound, pocket-sized field guide, or schedule technical rescue training, point your Internet browser here.
For more than 30 years, CMC Rescue has been developing innovative tools and techniques used by professionals in the fire service, USAR, wilderness rescue, tactical, rigging, and work-at-height industries.
Today, an employee-owned company, the CMC Rescue brand is synonymous with technical rescue and rescue training around the world.
CMC Rescue still manufactures its harnesses and sewn products at its headquarters in Santa Barbara, CA.
The company’s complete line of rescue equipment can be purchased from authorized dealers in more than 40 countries worldwide.
• Visit CMC Rescue's Web site
• Follow CMC Rescue on Facebook
Average distances from object in rain dance to determine Critical Separation |
Source: This article was adapted from The Textbook for Managing Land Search Operations, by Robert C. "Skip" Stoffel of Emergency Response International, Inc., in Cashmere, Washington. Copyright © 2006. All Rights Reserved. Excerpted with Expressed Written Permission.
To purchase a copy of this massive, 540-page, spiral-bound manual, or schedule search-and-rescue training or a survival course, point your Internet browser here.
Skip Stoffel is the President and founder of Emergency Response International, Inc.,
(ERI), formally known as Emergency Response Institute, Inc.
The company was formed in 1978 to provide information and courses in Search & Rescue Management, Survival Education, and Emergency Response to private, corporate, and government organizations.
Skip's experience includes:
- service as a USAF Rescue/Survival Technician during the Vietnam era,
- running a professional guide business for five years,
- working in the Washington State SAR Coordination Center for five years,
- and running a successful training and consulting business for over twenty-years.
Skip has authored three-dozen books on SAR Management and Survival Education, His most notable book—Survival Sense for Pilots and Passengers—has been used extensively in general and corporate aviation.
Skip is trained as a:
- USAF Survival Instructor,
- EMT,
- SCUBA diver,
- and glider pilot.
As the company's lead instructor and consultant, Skip continues to build innovative courses and support material for ERI's programs throughout he world. Learn more about ERI here.
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The Toggle Hitch |
Source: This article was adapted from Ridgeline Toggle Hitch, by Alan Halcon, owner and operator of Outdoor Self Reliance (OSR) Wilderness Survival and Bushcraft Training in Southern California. Copyright © 2014. All Rights Reserved. Excerpted with Expressed Written Permission. To learn more about Outdoor Self Reliance, or sign up for a class, point your Internet browser here.
Author Alan Halcon, in his own words: Ever since I can remember, I’ve loved the outdoors. My dad was an avid outdoorsman and always taking the family camping, fishing and hunting.
Alan Halcon, owner and operator of Southern California's
Outdoor Self Reliance (OSR) Wilderness Survival and Bushcraft Training.
I reckon I must have been about 10 or 12 (circa 80s) when I went to Segovia, Spain and spent a summer there. While my parents wanted to go sight seeing, I was more interested in staying back and playing with my friends. I spent a lot of time in the outdoors with my friends, learning Survival skills, though at the time to me it was just goofing off in the wilderness. Oh how my mom hated me hanging out with them. But try as she may, I didn’t listen and was always running around with my friends. I reckon she had good reason to keep me away from those kids… They were Gypsies! Oh but how I learned some skills.
Those Gypsy kids were the ones that taught me how to poison fish with plants, hand magfishing, and bird trapping with a substance called “Liga” or birdlime—A sticky substance smeared on branches that would cause the birds to stick when they landed on the branches. This Liga was made from the bark of a tree through a pretty drawn out process. It was during that time I also bought my first survival book, in Spanish, no less. I also very much recall heading to the hills for some wildcrafting with my aunts and Grandmother. My Grandmother was always gathering medicinal herbs and I also learned how to make wood ash soap from my grandmother.
While I got older and had different interests, my passion for the outdoors remained. It must have been maybe in 1995 I met Christopher Nyerges and Dude McLean. We all quickly became friends. Sometime in the late nineties or early two thousands, I began writing for Wilderness Way Magazine, of which Christopher was the editor.
A lot has gone on since that time. I’ve been featured in Ron Hood’s video series (Number 15 of the Woodsmaster series). I currently hold the record at getting a handdrill coal (2 seconds). I’ve written for a couple of other magazines and have ghost written sections of other books and I’ve traveled the country teaching outdoor self reliance.
Along with Christopher Nyerges and Dude McLean, I own Dirttime.com. I’ve made a lot of friends because of it. In fact, we have a yearly event that reunites instructors and students for a week long family oriented shindig in the outdoors.
I don’t consider myself an expert, never will. I will forever be a perpetual student of the outdoors. I do enjoy sharing my experience and teaching others skills that will help them become more self-reliant and proficient in the outdoors. I run workshops year round, and I am still rewarded every time a student accomplishes their first coal, or sets their first trap.
My discipline is more Wilderness Living, than it is running around in a panic when one gets disoriented. Woodcraft/Bushcraft are the foundation of what I do and it is what I try to instill in my students by helping them grow their woodsmanship skills
One of Alan's favorite quotes....This panic stricken craze and sense of fear so prevalent in the survival community is the antithesis of the accomplished woodsman. For it is he or she who looks upon such circumstances as minor annoyances, at best, and more often as opportunities.—Anonymous
• Alan's OSR Web site; Follow OSR on Facebook
• Alan's Dirttime Web site; Follow Dirttime on Facebook
The
author working K-9 Anvak through tractor/trailer engine-noise fear. |
The only way I learn about a dog's attraction or phobic response to an animal or object is through his body language. There is no other way, because the dog cannot speak to me. I am charged with the duty to be cognizant of what affects the dog. My job is that of an interpreter, motivator, and leader.
Training a police K-9 puppy to not be concerned with gunshots. |
Training a police K-9 puppy to not be concerned with gunshots. |
Source: This article was adapted from K-9 Trailing—The Straightest Path, by Jeff Schettler. Copyright © 2011 by Jeffrey Hampton Schettler. Alpine Publications, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Excerpted with Expressed Written Permission. To order your copy of this book—which was written by a man-hunter for man-hunters— point your Internet browser to the Georgia K9 National Training Center.
Jeff Schettler is a retired police K9 handler who worked for the City of Alameda and County of Amador in California, and was attached to the FBI’s Hostage Rescue Teams’ K9 Assistance Program for two years. This program was designed to locate and apprehend high-risk fugitives on the run.
Jeff has worked hundreds of trailing cases across the USA and is a specialist in the area of tactical trailing applications. He and his police bloodhound, Ronin, made numerous successful finds during their 11-year career.
Jeff has trained under many well-known manhunters, including Jerry Yelk, Glenn Rimbey, Jerry Nichols, John Lutenberg, John Salem, and Doug Lowry.
Jeff is considered a law enforcement expert witness in the areas of scent evidence and trailing with bloodhounds. He has qualified as an expert in the counties of Santa Clara and Alameda in California. He has also corroborated other police K9 handlers in court with regard to their trailing training and experience.
After leaving the police force, Jeff founded TacticalTrackerTeams.com and later integrated it with the Georgia K9 National Training Center, LLC, with his partner Kelli Collins.
Georgia K9 National Training Center is a specialty K9 training company with nationally recognized dog trainers and clients across the country. GAK9 offers a variety of services, each tailored to fit the needs of civilian, law enforcement, and search & rescue dog owners and handlers.
Jeff rarely relaxes at his home/dog training facility in Canton, Georgia; there are just too many dogs running around.
He has recently expanded his K9 horizons and began training Basenjis to find narcotics and explosives. His series of nine articles called the “Hunter Basenji Chronicles,” covering the use of the Basenji for hunting and detector dog work, were published in the Basenji Magazine.
To schedule training, or learn more about the Georgia K9 National Training Center—which has offices in Georgia, South Carolina, and Virginia—point your Internet browser here.
• Follow Georgia K-9 on Facebook.
Notes: The "hand" applied tension was an attempt to apply a tension similar to what could normally be applied with one hand on the rope, and the other hand at one's side—as if behind a belay device when belaying/abseiling/rappelling. The"max" applied tension was an attempt to apply a tension similar to what could normally be applied holding the belay rope with two hands, standing behind the device with good footing. Richard also measured these subjective approximations and got 10kg for one hand, 10-20kg for two hands at the waist height behind a device, and 50kg for the max/two hands standing pulling out in front effort. He used 11mm Edelrid super static rope, says all "figures should be viewed as +/- 20kg or so," and described the test process as an "example of experimentation and interpretation."
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The setup Richard used for this test. |
Train with Richard: An internationally-recognized expert in rope rigging, Richard is coming to North America—the United States and Canada—to instruct several 3- to 5-day Rigging Physics Courses during 2014. To learn more about these courses, point your Internet browser to the Rescue Response Gear Rigging Lab.Source: This article was adapted from Standard belay devices and their loading-handling capabilities, by Richard Delaney, Copyright © 2014. All Rights Reserved. Excerpted with expressed written permission. To learn more about rope access work, climbing, and rope rescue, visit Richard's Rope Test Lab.
Richard Delaney has worked professionally with ropes since 1992. Initially, this was as a multi-pitch, rock-climbing guide, but this soon morphed into specialized rescue instruction and rope access work.
He is currently an accredited Vertical Rescue Instructor/Assessor, a Level 3 Rope Access Technician, a Technical Director of the Australian Rope Access Association, and the administrator of the Rope Test Lab group on Facebook.
Understanding and teaching the Physics of Rigging is a core passion of Richard's, one based on his experience, and his prior professional life as a qualified engineer.
Source: This article was adapted from man-tracking course material provided by Fernando Moreira of Professional Tracking Services in Reno, Nevada. Copyright © 2014. All Rights Reserved. Excerpted with expressed written permission.
Fernando Moreira has been involved in man-tracking for over 40 years. He learned the art of tracking in Portugal, from his father—a Portuguese Combat Tracker—as well as from African bushmen, the Rhodesian military, and his four years with the Portuguese Army, where he served as a combat tracker during the African wars in Mozambique, Guinea, and Angola.
Fernando is a long-time member of several search and rescue units, including the Washoe County Sheriff’s Hasty Team and Washoe County Search & Rescue, Inc. His certifications include PSD Diver, Swift Water Rescuer, Back Country, SAR Tech II, Technical Rope, and Mine Rescue. He has been a State of Nevada-certified tracking instructor since 1997, and is a Nevada State P.O.S.T.-certified investigative tracker and instructor.
In addition to working on over 15,000 man-tracking cases—the longest of which was 46 miles!—Fernando has assisted local law enforcement officers in numerous manhunts for felons and searches for critical evidence in several high-profile investigations, including bank robberies, child molestations, and murders, most notably, the case against Siaosi Vanisi, who brutally murdered campus police officer George Daniel Sullivan in 1997. Fernando has received numerous awards, citations, and letters of merit, including: two-time recipient of the American Red Cross Real Hero Award; Rescuer of the Year; Excellence in Search and Rescue Medal, etc. He was nominated twice for America’s Most Wanted All Star Award
As the founder of both the Tactical Tracking School and Professional Tracking Services in Reno, Nevada, Fernando has taught over 5,000 military combat man-trackers, law enforcement tactical man-trackers, and search-and-rescue man-trackers across the United States and the world. To learn more about Fernando's man-tracking career, read "America’s Most Wanted: Staying on Track and Learning from the Best," which appeared in the Spring, 2008 issue of the Forensic Examiner.
• Fernando's Tactical Tracking School: Web site
• Fernando's Professional Tracking Services: Web site; Facebook Page No 1, No. 2
• Follow Fernando on Facebook: Personal Page; Tactical Tracking Group Page