Mad_Mat wrote on Nov 26
th, 2010 at 2:00pm:
"And before you experiment with those snares, read your hynting and trapping regs to be sure it is legal - I'm pretty sure it would be illegal to snare a rabbit in Colorado, for instance.
Again, excellent point. I was hazy on details, so I checked it out for clarification. I have a MN small game and trapping license, both of which are required for trapping on public lands. But a guy can trap on his own property (read: primary residence) with only a trapping license. Residents can buy both licenses online from the MN DNR, unless you were born after 1989 - then you need to complete a trapper education program before they will issue the trapping license. Rabbits are legal to snare, trap, or shoot in Minnesota during the desingated winter season.
I was under the false impression that a guy could trap on his own land in Minnesota without a license, so I'm glad you brought that up! I have been reading about snaring methods (and rabbit recipes, yum) so I will put some of them to test over the winter.
Also a good point about the flagging tape, in combination with the pen or marker for leaving details in case someone is following your trail. However, I share your frustration about left-behind flag tape, and I also often leave the woods with a good handful of the stuff in my pack. I think it was in the other survival kit thread (maybe we should combine the two?) where Denton_Doc posted a link to a an online merchant which sells a good variety of nifty survival items. Among them was this
(You need to Login or Register to view media files and links), which I think is a good idea. I will likely order a few rolls of that stuff for my own personal use, and some will likely end up in the final version of the ditch kit.
Wouldn't it be a b**** to get lost, make a camp, then lose the camp while out searching for a trail or some other necessities? Jason Rasmussen's story headlined that idea, and that is why I always have more than one compass, paper and pen for making patrol maps, and a reliable means of measuring distance while walking, like the paracord pedometer. When I'm out hunting or searching for fishing holes, job #1 is navigator. Meat in the bag is a nice bonus, to be enjoyed
at home with a cold beer and a hockey game on TV. Having some flagging tape would be convenient, and save the hassle of counting paces, taking azimuths, and drawing pictures.
I marked my deer stand "trails" with so-called Trail Tacks, basically a reflective button that you pin into trees to mark a path. You can't really see them during the day, as they're small and don't stand out like ugly flag tape, but at night or dusk/dawn with a flashlight, you can see them from a good distance away. At first I thought these wouldn't be very helpful in a survival / SAR situation, but then I read about the dog teams and their handlers preferring to operate at night. A trail tack marking a spot where you've left a flag or note with details about your condition and intentions would be easily noticed at night from across a large swamp, etc.
But does that possibility warrant the tacks' inclusion in a ditch kit of limited size? I guess we'll see once I start putting it together.
If you left a note in your car or with a friend before you headed out, and mentioned something like the tacks as part of your emergency gear, then maybe searchers would have a good idea of what to start looking for. I'd be willing to bet that these reflective tacks could be seen from the air as well, and provided you had a good quantity of them, could be arranged on open ground to form arrows, messages, etc.
Which brings me to a point unrelated to the ditch kit, but relevant to the situations requiring their use. Leaving detailed notes with whomever you trust before heading out, detailing your intentions and with instructions on who to contact if you don't return, which also details your experience, familiarity with the area, type of emergency gear, medical conditions, etc. would be a great help to rescuers and might help get you found faster. I've been pretty lax with this, but for future trips it will provide some security and peace of mind, if not for me than for the people I leave the details with.