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Q&A

Does anyone have an account of someone using a survival tin in a survival situation

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I have read several books about survival and outdoor field craft skills. Many of these books suggest building a survival kit out of an Altoids tin or something similar. These kits include very basic materials to allow someone to survive until help can be found. Many retailers sell pre-made kits and there are plenty of How-tos on the internet.

Does anyone have a first hand accounts, links to news articles, or maybe a few books describing how someone used one of these kits to get rescued in a survival situation?

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I have heard of a wide range of stories where people were saved using some string, a piece of flint etc. (A related example from earlier this month is reported in the Hamilton Advertiser where a boy used the laces from his trousers to save a dog.)

and if they had had a survival kit they would have used that, but the problem is that most people do not carry a survival kit. The only people who regularly do tend to be military, and their kits do get used - records are available on 2nd World War aircrew who had to bail out over enemy lands, or more recently Andy McNab described using some of his emergency kit in the middle east in Bravo Two-Zero.

Some paracord was even used by astronauts during STS-82, the second Space Shuttle mission to repair the Hubble Space Telescope!

More anecdotally, my father once had to use paracord to tie Prusik knots to get up out of a crevasse (not sure whether it was Antarctica or Greenland) - not a full emergency, as the rest of the team had possible alternatives, but a good practical use, nonetheless.

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I have carried an Altoid tin survival kit for years, but have never had occasion to use it in a life-and-death situation. I have used the flashlight, knife, duct tape, and ferro rod, but always in non-threatening situations.

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I carry a tailored pocket kit with me wherever I go, simply due to how easy it is to throw into a pocket or backpack. May as well carry one if you have the space, right? Note that I said tailored. It's not a commercial tin and it's been constructed to meet conditions in South-East Queensland. As such, it carries items I know will be practical in this region. I've had cause to use my folding knife, ferro rod and tube of super-glue for all kinds of purposes, but only once in something close to a life-or-death situation. I'd torn a deep gash in my calf after getting caught on a barbed wire fence. Since my kit contains a dozen water purification tablets, which double as prophylactics when dissolved into a cup of water, I was able to get a fire going, boil the billy (context: this was during a fencing repair run on the farm, so I had the ute and what amounts to a full camping kit at hand) and was able to mix up an antiseptic solution. After cleaning the wound to the best of my ability, I glued the gash back together. Didn't have time for stitches, so super-glue it was. It held up long enough to get into town and drop by the clinic, and I avoided infection, so the puri-tabs must have done some good.

Moral of the story: Carry a kit with you, but only carry what is practical for your expected conditions. For me that means not wasting space with fishing tackle and cold-weather gear. Still keep a space blanket in there with all the necessities for a rough and ready shelter, but everything i did to patch myself up could have been just as easily achieved with local bush ingredients (melaleuca leaves, acacia sap and palm leaves for bandaging).

It's always worthwhile to carry a basic kit tailored to your environment, but commercial tins try to be all-in-one and thus are practically useless without adequate practice and foreknowledge of the conditions.

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