|
"OK, I'll bite............what's an FA kit?"
that'd be First AId Kit
like a ditch kit, its value is proportional to how long you'd need to survive with it - a couple of days in Quetico in summer is a different scenario with different requirements than two weeks in a remote location.
I have several versions of a first aid kit, depending on what I'm expecting from it and the number of people it may need to serve - for a weekend trip, I don't need Immodium, or 40 aspirin, so my weekend FA kit is gonna be smaller, than say the kit in my climbing pack which may be called upon for more serious duty.
my real "survival kit" is always in my pockets, as I'm never without a pocket knife and matches and compass in the woods - that's essentially all I'd need to survive, and unless there were special circumstances like an extended trip where you might not see another person for 2 weeks or more, or a desert trip with water issues, or XC ski trips where winter is an issue, I don't normally take anything else. But in my ditch kit (small fanny pack that attaches to my PFD) I carry a bottle of bug dope, and a crushable hat/bug net combo - I can't think of anything more miserable than trying to survive a hungry horde of mosquitos while your getting yourself out of trouble. That won't fit into an altoids tin - though I think there is or was some foil wrapped towelettes of bug dope avaiable that might fit in the tin.
I can't see a need for a ditch kit unless you are solo, though two guys in one canoe is nearly the same if you go over or whatever - more than one boat in a party and help shouldn't be all that far away. But I don't trust to a ditch kit tied to the boat - aside form a boat getting blown away from shore, it would be really easy to lose your boat out on a windy lake - if you somehow fall out (landing a fish? or other carelessness) the wind is gonna blow that canoe away from you a whole lot faster than you can swim, and if its cold water and the near shore is the upwind shore, your gonna have to abandon the boat - so when I take my ditch kit, it stays with me.
I was googling for altoids tin dimensions, to see if my little knife and sharpener idea would fit - they would - and came across an example of a kit put together on Field and Stream - more silliness, this kit had a mini fishing kit, including several swivels - yeah, what are you gonna use a swivel for when all you've got is 30' of handline and a baited hook ? this kit also contained some Potable Aqua tablets (good) and a like quantity of neutalizer tablets - so in a survival situaltion, your gonna worry that your water tases like iodine ? don't think so.
The point I was making about the saw blades/wire saw, and the same for swivels and neutralizer tablets, is that there are much more important things that you could pack instead - certainly a second source of fire (more matches, small lighet, whatever) would have more value than swivels and neutralizer tablets!
The Field and Stream kit had one good idea for water container - rather than a condom, it was to pack one of hte turkey cooking bags - they are very compact and seem quite strong (I just depend on multiple ziplocks that keep my stuff waterproof, but I may pack one of those bags also)
Probably, if I did put an altoid tin kit together, I'd include several twist ties - you can use them for lots of things, including replacing buttons, wiring your eyegalsses together if you lose a screw, etc. Snare wire might work for those things too, assuming it was soft enough wire so that you could bend it to break it - your not likely to have wire cutters with you.
|