Camping and Survival Skills

July 3, 2009 · Filed Under Recreation and Sports 
by Ethan O. Tanner

As our society becomes increasingly technical and urbanized, more people are starting to feel the desire to escape it all. Outdoor sports allow for an excellent getaway from urban life, but one must recall common sense survival skills to enjoy the outdoors with no serious troubles.

More people are beginning to feel the impulse to break loose from everything, pause contemporary life, and regress to the ways of our ancestors. Maybe this causes the growing popularity of camping vacations, the highest experience of going back to nature and surviving in the wild, with just a plain structure for protective cover and a fire for fixing food.

Of course, lots of people don’t exactly do it that way. Camper vans are popular, and all sorts of electrical appliances have been adapted for camping - there are even camp microwaves. Most people consider at least modern toilets and showers to be a campsite necessity, regardless of whether it’s really true to the spirit of the outdoors. Camping doesn’t really have to be an outdoors thing if you don’t want it to be, as many camper vans aren’t that much different from houses on wheels, and many families stay in them for a large part of their holiday. It’s all about doing what you feel comfortable with.

For intense campers, however, the sincerest form of camping is camping which involves survival skills, including consuming wild caught food, finding your way around by the placement of the sun and building fire. You would have to be incredibly hungry to eat the animals that can be found in the woods of most countries, however, and on these grounds, camping with facilities and brought food is often more popular.

A staple survival instrument is a good flashlight. There are many newer LED flashlights which are quite bright, and long-lived on battery lifespan. Even more dependable in an emergency is a crank or shake flashlight which doesn’t call for any batteries, and which will always be there in a time of trouble.

Most campsites are in woods or open fields, and are often publically-owned - if you want to find one, they should be clearly marked on maps for walkers and on road signs for cars. It’s up to you what you take with you, but most people will prefer to have at least a tent, sleeping bags, torches, and either a tool for making firewood or portable oven where campfires aren’t allowed.

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