>From: "Rev. Bob Carter" <revkayak_at_ptialaska.net> > I would be interested in suggestions from the paddlewise gang on >contents >of the survival kit. If you carry one what do you carry it in and where? >Bob Gosh, Bob, given your line of work I'd have thought just a couple of loaves and a few fishes would be all you'd need:-) but I guess you're of the school that believes "the Lord helps those who help themselves." I've snipped and pasted my response to a similiar question from last year below. Hope it's of some help as a springboard for disscussion. I have to confess I'm sometimes embarrassed by the amount of stuff festooning my PFD when it's configured for offshore/expedition mode - it looks a bit like I'm a Navy SEAL wannabe. However, everything I carry does have a purpose, and I bear in mind the point made in "Deep Trouble" about emergency and survival gear: if you don't have it on your person, you don't have it. So here's the guided tour of my PFD: Left front shoulder: Geber paddling knife (fends off sharks, cuts entangling lines, spreads peanut butter, assuages feelings of inadequacy). Right front shoulder: the existing pocket is modified with a custom Velcro loop to hold my VHF radio for one-handed removal/replacement (There's also a custom webbing loop above the pocket to keep the "rubber duckie" antenna from poking me in the eye.) The radio is in an Aqua-Pac drybag and lanyarded to the PFD. Lower left PFD pocket: Part of my survival kit, housed in a watertight sealing stainless steel camp cook pot (sort of flat and oval, like those "mess kits", but much smaller and sturdier). The pot content's include: two food bars as used in liferafts, a couple of bullion cubes, two herbal tea bags, fishing line, lures, hooks, and sinkers, a few assorted bandages, a "Photon Micro" key fob flashlight, fire-starting materials, a wire "pocket chainsaw", about thirty feet of thin but strong braided nylon line (for rigging lean-tos, Space Blankets as tarps, snares, etc.) Even fully packed, the pot is slightly positively buoyant, and rides low enough on the PFD not to drag me down. Outside the pot, in this pocket, I carry a Space Blanket where I can get at it without opening the kit, for possible use on the Sea Seat (see below). Lower right pocket: Three Skyblazer self-contained flares, a signal mirror on a lanyard, a "Cylume" chemical lightstick, and sunscreen. On the zipper pull of the PFD: a basic "watch fob" compass In a custom back pocket, behind my shoulder blades: A "Seat Seat" personal life raft, protected from UV by a layer of Space Blanket material. Note: this after-market pocket technically invalidates the PFD's government approval, but it is removable (Velcro straps) to pass inspection. Not on my PFD, but part of the survival "system" that is: Under my sprayskirt, I wear a small "Sealbag" that dangles at my front like a sort of sea-going Scot's sporran. It contains my money, credit cards, my prescription glasses (I wear contacts at sea), a second Space Blanket, a folding cup, a folding water bottle, and iodine tablets (for suspect water). These items were chosen for the Pacific Northwest, where finding drinking water ashore is not usually a problem, but hunger, cold, and exposure might be. I'd modify the selection as needed for different paddling environments. Philip Torrens N49°16' W123°06' *************************************************************************** PaddleWise Paddling Mailing List - All postings copyright the author and not to be reproduced outside PaddleWise without author's permission Submissions: paddlewise_at_lists.intelenet.net Subscriptions: paddlewise-request_at_lists.intelenet.net Website: http://www.paddlewise.net/ ***************************************************************************Received on Fri Dec 10 1999 - 16:17:43 PST
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