1665 lines
63 KiB
Plaintext
1665 lines
63 KiB
Plaintext
WARNING! WARNING! WARNING!
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THE FOLLOWING FILE IS NOT TERMINATED BUT SOON WILL BE DONE ASAP IN
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HYPERTEXT AND WITH PIX WHEN NEED BE SO PLEASE BARE WITH ME TILL
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THEN, MUCH INFORMATION CAN BE USED MEANWHILE FOR YOUR
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ENJOYEMENT OR PLEASURE. MEANWHILE IF YOU HAVE ANY TIPS FOR ME SEND
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THEM UP BY E-MAIL TO:richard@io.org
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MACHETE:
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There's no possible use for machetes in Temperate climates, except
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for trimming a lawn if you like to do things the hard way. A
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machete is an excellent Jungle knife, ESSENTIAL for hacking through
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dense but tender underbrush.
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In lush Tropical areas, where the water content of most plants is
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considerably higher than it is up north, it's most effective. If
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that's the direction in which you're heading, by all means take
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one. Otherwise forget it.
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Also forget, if you do have to use a machete, about those old
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Jungle Jim movies where they slash once to the right and once to
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the left. Then move forward three or four steps and slash again.
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Swinging a machete through really dense undergrowth is good hard
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work.
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If you're stubborn enough to want to get through, you may proceed
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at a rate of fifty feet or so a day. That's why river travel is so
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popular in Jungle regions.
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TROPICS SURVIVAL & SPECIAL PROBLEMS:
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The jungle is not the same everywhere. A primitive jungle has a
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multitude of giant trees with peak up to 30 metres forming a dense
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and well furnished dome. This jungle has few bushes and receives
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little light, and is easy to cross.
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Many regions of the primary jungle are filled with immense glade &
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bush clearing which are cultivable. When those spaces are
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abandoned, the jungle takes over its right and transforms it in a
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bushy complex. This secondary jungle is much more difficult to
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cross than the first.
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In the Tropics over half the land are cultivated. We mostly find
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rubber plantation, tea and coco nuts. In those places the people
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who take care of the plantation will be able to help you.
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If the dry regions which are characterized by a stunted vegetation
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are naturally more open than the damp jungle, they are however more
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difficult to cross, since we find very few landmarks, no trails and
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no human being.
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Armed with a compass & much good sense One can venture through it
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in good faith. It is not as difficult as many persons believe to
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survive in inhabitated tropical zone. Lots of people see the
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tropics as an enormous and impenetrable jungle which you have to
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cross using a machete all the time, (which Even Tarzan MUST use it.
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(Wrong!)
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Under the Tropics land varies from thick forest, to #mangroves# to
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swamps to great pastures or stunted semi arid zone. In reality the
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greater part of tropical regions is not covered by this virgin
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jungle. Sure it is difficult to cross the jungle but normally there
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is little danger to fear the animals.
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In fact in the Tropics the true dangers are not the animals nor the
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reptiles but rather the insects and bugs.
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Many of them carry deadly diseases, one of the deadliest is the
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#paludism# transmitted by a mosquito.
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In the jungle many persons are scared by yelling, cries and other
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sounds given by birds, animals and insects. However those fears are
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born from imagination rather then existing real danger. (Too many
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of us have seen too many Tarzan movies!)
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FIRST MEASURES TO UNDERTAKE:
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After a crash landing the first thing after F/Aid is to decide if
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you will stay near by the plane or abandon it and go search Rambo!
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If you are in area where the plane nor the signals can not be
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easily seen and that you don't have any wounded one in your group
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it might be wiser to leave.
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FIRST YOU MUST TREAT IMMEDIATELY ANY WOUNDS:
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For under the Tropics the smallest scratch can turn into an ugly
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wound in a few hours.
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Do not leave the crash scene without marking the trees and as you
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go on to mark along as well your road should you have to turn back
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as well as to indicate any rescue party that could come along &
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would follow your direction.
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SHELTER:
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In the jungle night falls quickly, so get ready to go to bed early.
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In the jungle one has to take more rest and more sleep in order to
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keep your strength and offer greater resistance to sickness. Try to
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raise camp on a hill or elevated place or bush clearing as far as
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possible of any swamps.
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Thus you will be less plagued by mosquitoes and insects, and the
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soil will be dryer. Also it is the best place to install ground-air
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signals. Don't think nor dream to sleep directly on the ground.
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Rather make a bed by piling up branches which you will cover with
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palm leaves or any wide leaves.
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You can build a water proof shelter in "A" shape which you cover
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with a thick layer of palm leaves, pieces of bark or sod of turf.
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It is similar to the shelters used in Northern Forest except that
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under the tropics it has 2 inclinations instead of one. Shelter
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file.*
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If you stay near the plane, use it as shelter, you will probably be
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dry inside even in a damp jungle. Try to stop the mosquitoes to get
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in by blocking the door with a parachute or any tissues. Don't
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install your camp near a waterway or a swamp especially during the
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rainy season, you will be flooded.
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Don't construct your shelter under dead tree or with dead branches
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nor under a coconut tree. A coconut could fall and kill you.
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CLOTHING:
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They protect you from weather, insects and other harmful bugs. Get
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the bottom legs into your socks and tie them solid. Make yourself
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a pair of leg puttee to protect your legs from leeches & ticks.
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Lower your sleeves and button up, thus you will protect yourself
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from mosquitoes bites, scratches from thorns and branches.
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REMEMBER THE SMALLEST SCRATCH CAN TURN QUICKLY IN INFECTION.
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When you undress (Jane or Tarzan) look on your body for any ticks,
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fleas, insects, leeches or any other vermin which will cling to
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your clothes or on your skin. Inspect your clothing & remove all
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insects that you see.
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It is CAPITAL to keep your clothing clean, dry and in good shape.
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Dirty clothing wears out fast & can cause skin diseases.
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REMEMBER the Trick to have a second shirt on a stick which dries up
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while you walk, and that you change at every rest, so as to avoid
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Malaria.
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CLOTHING #2:
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1) Loose fitting clothing are best, (no fashion show here unless
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you want the monkeys to have a good laugh Even Tarzan would!)
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2) Most particularly at dawn and dusk cover your head and neck of
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a mosquito net or any piece of clothing.
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3) In open country and undergrowth protect your head & neck from
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the dust and sun rays.
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4) Walk carefully in undergrowth, for certain tall grass are
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sharp as knife and will cut your clothes to shred and you too.
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5) If you have lost or worn out your shoes, improvise a pair of
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sandals using piece of bark or solid tarp.
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6) Dry your clothing before night fall to avoid chills & fever.
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7) Wash your clothes, specially the socks every day. Dirty
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clothes will rot & cause skin diseases.
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8) When you don't wear them, ALWAYS hook your clothes so that
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ants nor scorpions, nor snakes will slide in them. Check your shoes
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before putting them on.
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SIGNALS:
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If unbroken your plane radio is your best bet, for the rescue
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radios in the jungle don't work too good.
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ANY FIREWORKS SIGNAL DEVICES MUST BE KEPT DRY AND NEAR AT HAND.
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It could be very hard to find the place where to install the
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signals, however you can use parachute panels or objects with
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contrasting colours which you install as *#youyous# across
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waterways or a bay or in middle of swamps. Smoke signals or fires
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installed in bush clearings are equally really efficient. Use all
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means you can think of.
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FIRE:
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In the jungle it is your advantage to make a fire. You can cook
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with it, warm up in cool nights and it keeps away the mosquitoes &
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curious animals. No need to have a big fire, a small one will do
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and is easier to care. The bigger the fire; the bigger the fool.
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Usually the combustible is abundant, but in the rainy season it can
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be difficult to light a fire for the dry wood is very rare. Among
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the great trees either alive or dead, we find many which have an
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empty trunk core so at this spot, slice or cut or tear at this core
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for dry twigs which will serve as tinder.
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Once the fire is well lighted you can add damp wood. Dry wood can
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also be found suspended to liana or laying on branches.
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DON'T burn bamboo, it burns too fast, the smoke is dangerous and it
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can also explode and it does beleive you me.
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We find at the foot of palm trees some fibbers which ignite easily.
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The interior or termites nest is also very good to light a fire.
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Make a good provision of dry wood and keep it in a dry place either
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in your shelter or by covering it with big leaves. Dry your tinder
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and combustible near your fire camp if need be.
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WATER:
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Normally under the tropics, food and water are abundant. One finds
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water in rivers, small streams, swamps, lakes, ponds but this water
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is no good to drink unless it has been purified in some ways, best
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being. ALWAYS boil it 10 to 15 minutes.
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COCONUTS:
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When green and the size of grape-fruit it is at its BEST!
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OTHER MEANS: see water file**
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FOOD:
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Food is plentiful in tropics, with much fruits and vegetables among
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the most comestibles are:* #sagou ou chou-palmier*# bananas, young
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bamboo shoots, coconuts and papayas and yams.
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MONKEYS FOOD:
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All that a monkey eats can be eaten by man. Raw flesh soon goes bad
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fast in Tropics.
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FISH:
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In the jungle most water streams are filled with comestibles
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fishes. Unless you would be close to a civilised region you don't
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have to worry about poisonous or polluted contaminated fishes. Only
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if you are close to the sea then there are some poisonous fishes
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JUNGLE WALK AND MOVING AND EQUIPMENT:
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Not being any Tarzan to swing along nor Jane to follow the tail end
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of its circus, walking in the tropics can represent MUCH
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difficulties. Because of thick under bushes, heat and humidity,
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swamps #mangroves# & the absence of landmarks, no telephone, no
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bus, in other words, the pits. NO BARS!
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MACHETE WONDER TOOL:
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The most useful tool is the machete if one needs to move around.
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You use it for nearly everything, clear a path, find food, cut it,
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make shelter or rafts.
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OTHER EQUIPMENT:
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Also needed are a compass and a f/aid kit in case of fever or
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infection and a hammock plus a good pair of boots, 2 shirts with
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long sleeves and 2 pair of long pants. An axe, a watch, a mosquito
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net and any light material to use as shelter or signal sign. And
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this Survival Bible.
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If possible follow the downstream of a water way which usually will
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dump itself in a greater water stream which will lead you to some
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habitated places. If you can, built a bamboo raft or any light wood
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and go down the stream. Rafting is the fastest and easiest
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transport in the Tropics.
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Avoid crossing thick bushes, #taillis, mangroves# * and swamps.
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Stop early and prepare camp night for night under tropic comes
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early & suddenly.
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MOVING ALONE:
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Relax! Don't panic. Think??? and REMEMBER these tips. Step by step.
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1) No one can outrun the jungle not even Tarzan!
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2) Establish your position as clearly and rigorously as possible
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to determine your direction, if no compass try the sun and your
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watch (the old type). see map file***
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3) Make provision of water and food.
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4) Go in the same direction but not necessarily in straight line.
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Avoid obstacles, don't confront them or try to go through. Easiest
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way is the safest, even if it means more walking. Take advantage of
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natural shelters.
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MOVING JUNGLE TECHNIQUE:
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There is a technique to move in the jungle and to crawl is not one
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nor to walk # a tatons # which would give you bumps, contusions and
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scratches. Rather turn your back and use your hips in a swinging
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motion, bend your body, make yourself small or bigger, slow or
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accelerate as need be.
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TROPICS:
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Survival experts tell us that:
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NO OTHER CLIMATE ZONE OFFER SUCH GOOD CHANCES OF SURVIVAL and in
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the tropics one can find water food and enough raw material to
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produce the ESSENTIAL things such as tools, shelter, clothing.
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TROPICS ITS DANGERS & REMEDY: DANGEROUS CREATURES:
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The insects and other creatures shown here are not a major problem
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to survivors if sensible precautions are taken but can easily
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become one if not treated with respect.
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According to survival experts, poisonous SPIDERS are not the menace
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they are often made or imagined to be. The Tarantula for instance
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rarely bites people. It much more likely that when men come in
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contact with it, some of its tough hair gets attached to his skin
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and cause a severe itch.
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The bite of most other tropical SPIDERS has an effect similar to
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wasp sting. (Ouch!)
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REMEDY:
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Natives of tropical islands alleviate the pain with a mixture of
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salt and or sea water, honey and vinegar. Holding the lighted end
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of cigarette near the bite; its heat would apparently break the
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poison but at any rate the pain vanish immediately.
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SCORPIONS ETC.:
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You can usually keep away from large millipedes, although their
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bite can be as painful as a wasp sting.
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But SCORPIONS are very insidious creatures, often lurking in
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clothes or shoes not being worn or an empty bed. If you happen to
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come in too close a contact with them they will sting you in a
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flash.
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REMEDY:
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Their poison causes nausea and fainting. American cowboys still use
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mud & cold compress as efficient remedy and in southern latitude
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the wound is rubbed with grated coconut.
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SCORPION #2:
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Are found in the deserts, forests and jungle of tropical and
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subtropical and warm temperate areas, one kind living at 3,600m
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(10,800ft)in the Andes and are mainly nocturnal.
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Most Desert kinds are yellowish to light green, those from moist or
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higher mountain areas brown or black. Average size is 2-5cm (1in)
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but giants in Southern Africa and New Guinea reach 20cm. (8in).
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Some burrow but they are usually found under tree bark, rocks or
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other shelter, including your gear and shoes. The sting is in the
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tail. Many kinds cause only trivial discomfort, a few produce nerve
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toxins causing temporary paralysis for 24-48 hours.
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Some scorpions from the Middle East, Brazil and West Mexico can
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inflict a fatal bite, but this is very rare and death is more
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likely in young children and the old or ill, who offer little
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resistance to it.
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RECLUSE OR FIDDLEBACK SPIDER: (Loxocees reclusa)
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Of North America is recognise by a violin shape on the back of the
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head. There are several different kinds, but "L. Reclusa" is the
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worst.
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Bite produces fever, chills, vomiting, joint pain and spotty skin,
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within 24-48 hours. Although rarely fatal, tissue degenerating
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around the wound can cause disfigurement, or even lead to
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amputation if left untreated.
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BLACK WIDOW OR HOURGLASS SPIDERS: (Latrodectus)
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Occur in warmer areas, including desert, over much of the world.
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Small dark, all can be recognized by the red, yellow or white
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markings on the abdomen, hourglass-shaped in some. Bites produce
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severe pain, sweating, shivering and weakness, disabling the victim
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up to a week. Rarely fatal.
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FUNNELWEBS: (Atrax)
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Are large greyish or brownish spiders of Australia. Chunky, with
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short legs, their names allude to their web's shape. Nocturnal and
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not in hot dry, sunny conditions, but locally common. A bite can
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kill; symptoms as for the Black Widow.
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TARANTULA: Theraphosidae & Lycosa
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Are very large hairy spiders of tropical America; one kind occurs
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in Southern Europe. Of menacing appearance but although a bite is
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painful the poison is fairly mild and not disabling.
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CENTIPEDES & MILLIPEDES:
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Are mostly small and harmless but some tropical and desert kind may
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reach 25cm (10in). Their feet have sharp claws, which can puncture
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the skin and cause infections, and a few kinds have a poisonous
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bite. Brush off in the direction they are moving, there is less
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chance of them digging into you.
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HORNETS:
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Occur in swarms and make nests that are guarded ferociously. Some
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tropical kinds are VERY AGGRESSIVE AND VERY POISONOUS, and should
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be well avoided. The sting is like being punctured by a hot rivet
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& several at once can be fatal.
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TICKS:
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Are large and common in the Tropics; flat bodied and round, with a
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small biting head that eats into a wound.
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Do not pull off; the head will remain & cause infection. Use heat,
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petrol, alcohol or hot water to make it drop off.
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LEECHES:
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Are blood sucking worm-like creatures of Tropical jungles and other
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moist areas, waiting, thread-like, on vegetation, before attaching
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themselves to a victim.
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Better not to pull them off. Remove with fire or a pinch of salt.
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Leeches often carry infection.
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VAMPIRE BATS: (Desmodus)
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Occur in Central and South America. Small, nocturnal, they suck the
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blood of sleeping victims. Their bites may carry rabies. Keep
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covered at night in these areas.
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SNAKES TIP 2:*
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As to poisonous snakes the experts hold that men in the jungle come
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upon them no more often than on beast of prey. (Pray to God!) "You
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will probably NEVER see a poisonous snake, unless you try hard to
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find one."
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The thing that will scare you most in the tropics is the shrieking
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and howling (Jane?) (Tarzan or You???) and all the other noises
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produce by birds, monkeys & giant tree toppling. Marston Bates
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Traveller quotes: "I have seen more snakes both poisonous and
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harmless in Florida than I ever did in S. America. Certainly there
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are some there.. but as a rule they keep well hidden."
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SNAKE REMEDY from STEAD*:
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The simplest thing also the hardest to carry out, to keep as still
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as possible and just relax until help comes. Animals do this
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naturally. Dogs often bitten by a rattlesnake have been observed
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lying in the ground & staying in the same place for several days,
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then getting up again as if nothing had happened.
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When snake poison gets into the blood stream, it destroys red
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corpuscle. It's is not fatal till it reaches the heart. The more
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slowly a victim of a snake bite moves the better is chances of
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survival.
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TOURNIQUET & CAUTION:
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If there is no antidote available, those chances of survival can be
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further increased by putting a tourniquet between the heart and the
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byte;
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BUT LOOSENING IT EVERY 20 MINUTES.
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So as not to stop the circulation completely. They could also
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disinfect a knife on an open flame, make a CROSS shape cut about
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half an inch 1/2 deep into the wound and sucked some blood off.
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(Socket to me baby?)
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The Swelling slowly went down. Finally when it had quite
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disappeared, they remove the tourniquet and as this did not bring
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on nausea the opposite effect from that desired.
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POISONOUS SNAKES & WARNING:
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||
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Unless otherwise indicated to the contrary, these snakes should be
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regarded as Deadly poisonous. Do not approach provoke or handle.
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SAFETY RULES, WATCH WHERE YOU STEP:
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||
|
||
On average snakes eat only once a week. After eating and at the
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times when they shed their skin, they are sluggish and more easily
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trodden on.
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LOOK CLOSELY:
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||
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||
Before parting bushes, picking fruit, some snakes are arboreal =
|
||
(Live in trees) (not in 3's!)
|
||
|
||
NEVER TEASE, PICK UP OR CORNER:
|
||
|
||
A few snakes such as the bushmaster of South & Central America,
|
||
Black Mamba of Africa and King Cobra of Asia will attack when
|
||
cornered or guarding a nest.
|
||
|
||
USE STICKS NOT HANDS:
|
||
|
||
To turn over stones and logs and for digging.
|
||
|
||
WEAR STOUT BOOTS:
|
||
|
||
If you have them. Teeth of many snakes are too small to penetrate
|
||
them.
|
||
|
||
CHECK BEDDING, CLOTHES, PACKS: BEFORE PUTTING THEM ONNN!
|
||
|
||
Snakes are known to use them as shelter. (Snaky bastards!)
|
||
|
||
STAY CALM:
|
||
|
||
If you encounter a snake. Do not move suddenly or strike at it.
|
||
Back off slowly. In most cases the snake will be only too eager to
|
||
escape.
|
||
|
||
TO KILL OR NOT TO KILL?:
|
||
|
||
If you have to kill a snake, use a long stick, preferably with a
|
||
spring to it, and a single chopping blow to the back of the head.
|
||
Make it effective the first time. A wounded snake is very
|
||
dangerous.
|
||
|
||
NOTES ON SNAKES:
|
||
|
||
Snakes have excellent camouflage, only movement gives them away. In
|
||
snake-infested areas you will pass many every day without ever
|
||
noticing them. (Yerk!). The chances of being bitten are small and
|
||
all but the worst cases recover.
|
||
|
||
In Malaysia more people are killed each year by falling coconuts
|
||
and in India rat-bites produce many more cases for hospitalisation.
|
||
A bite from a poisonous snake should ALWAYS be taken seriously, but
|
||
there are degrees of severity. When biting in self defence, many
|
||
snakes inject only a little venom occasionally none at all.
|
||
|
||
If the snake is out of condition or has recently bitten something
|
||
else, its venom may not be fully potent and there may be only a
|
||
little in its venom sacs.
|
||
|
||
Clothing or shoes may have deflected the full force of the bite. In
|
||
many poisonous snakes the dose of venom needed to kill a man far
|
||
exceeds the amount that can be injected in one bite. Aren't you
|
||
lucky or what!
|
||
|
||
SNAKES:
|
||
|
||
They are deaf, so you can yell your head off, loudly for help.
|
||
|
||
SNAKE BITES: FIRST AID:
|
||
|
||
Nearly all snakes will bite. If non-venomous the bite MUST BE
|
||
WASHED, cleaned & treated as ordinary wound.
|
||
|
||
If you are not an expert better treat it as if it was a venomous
|
||
one.
|
||
|
||
1) Avoid running, because the venom runs faster to the heart.
|
||
2) Stay calm but act quickly.
|
||
|
||
3) As much as possible, immobilize the affected part in such way
|
||
as to be under the heart level.
|
||
|
||
4) On the bitten limb, at 2 or 4" from the bite, tighten lightly
|
||
an improvised tourniquet (garrotte).
|
||
|
||
If swelling progress upward, stop its progression by getting the
|
||
tourniquet, garrotte higher.
|
||
|
||
The tourniquet MUST BE TIGHT ENOUGH TO STOP the blood flow in the
|
||
surface veins, but without stopping the arterial pulse.
|
||
|
||
5) In less than 1 hour, make one incision only with a (sterilised
|
||
knife, razor blade etc.) just above each wound left by the hooks.
|
||
|
||
This "cutting MUST be parallel to the bite & MUST not exceed 1/2"
|
||
long by 1/4" in depth.
|
||
|
||
6) If you have a suction pump from a snakebite kit use it on the
|
||
wound to suck the venom, if not then use your mouth to suck, then
|
||
spit off frequently the blood & other liquids coming off.
|
||
|
||
The snake venom is inoffensive into the mouth unless you have a
|
||
wound inside. Even then the risks are very small. Before letting
|
||
off the tourniquet (garrotte)*, you MUST operate the suction for at
|
||
least 15 minutes non-stop.
|
||
|
||
7) If after a time, the patient doesn't feel dryness & stiffness
|
||
in the mouth, of any headache, of pains or swelling it means the
|
||
venom was not toxic.
|
||
|
||
8) If its the contrary then it means: toxic, so keep doing the # 5.
|
||
|
||
CANADIAN & USA SNAKES:
|
||
|
||
Most Canadian snakes, reptiles are not poisonous, but when provoked
|
||
they will bite. Treat this byte as simple wound. Although rare, the
|
||
most common poisonous snakes in Canada are: Rattle snake, water
|
||
moccasin, copper head snake. If you know you are going in such a
|
||
region better to carry a snake byte kit.
|
||
|
||
4 KINDS OF POISONOUS SNAKES IN USA: Rattler, Coral, Moccasin,
|
||
Copperhead.
|
||
|
||
The dangerousness of these is in general considerably overrated.
|
||
Mortality from properly treated snake bites being less then 1%.
|
||
|
||
Even without treatment of any sort mortality runs only to 10 to
|
||
15%: hence the mistaken acclaim given such useless & often harmful
|
||
"remedies" as tobacco juice whisky kerosene even potassium
|
||
permanganate.
|
||
|
||
RATTLESNAKES: (Crotalus and Sistrurus)
|
||
|
||
Many kinds occur in all parts of North America, varying from 45cm
|
||
(18in) to over 2.1m (7ft).
|
||
|
||
All have a chunky body, wide head and rattle on the end of the tail
|
||
that is usually but not ALWAYS sounded as a warning The largest are
|
||
the various Diamondbacks, with distinctive diamond-shaped blotches.
|
||
|
||
COPPERHEAD: (Agkistrodon contortix)
|
||
|
||
Averages 60-90cm (2-3ft) with a stout body coloured buff or
|
||
orange-brown with rich brown bands & a copper-red head. Found
|
||
mainly in the eastern USA. Fairly timid; bites are only rarely
|
||
fatal.
|
||
|
||
COTTONMOUTH OR WATER-MOCCASIN: (Agkistrodon piscivorus)
|
||
|
||
Averages 60-130cm (2-4ft) with a thick brown or brownish olive
|
||
body, sometimes blotched & a yellowish, also blotched belly; the
|
||
inside of the mouth is white. Aquatic, in and by fresh water in the
|
||
Southern USA. Belligerent. Do not annoy.
|
||
|
||
NORTH & SOUTH AMERICAN SNAKES:
|
||
|
||
TROPICAL RATTLESNAKE: (Crotalus durissis)
|
||
|
||
Average 1.5-2m (5-6ft) with diamond shaped marks, two dark stripes
|
||
on the neck and a rattle on the tail, nocturnal. Found in drier
|
||
areas from South America north to Mexico. Large aggressive.
|
||
VERY DANGEROUS.
|
||
|
||
FER DE LANCE: (Bothrops atrox)
|
||
|
||
Is brownish with paler geometric markings and averages 1.3m-2m
|
||
(4-6ft) causes many deaths. Its many relatives vary from grey to
|
||
brown or reddish with similar markings. Bothrops vipers occur in
|
||
South America north to Mexico; some are arboreal (live in trees).
|
||
All loop their body before striking.
|
||
|
||
BUSHMASTER: (Lachesis muta)
|
||
|
||
Is large headed, pinkish-brown marked with large dark brown
|
||
triangles and average 2-2.5m (6-8ft) or more nocturnal. Found in
|
||
lowland forests, often using burrows and holes, in Central and
|
||
South America.
|
||
|
||
VICIOUS IF CORNERED; THE MOST FEARED OF ALL NEW WORLD SNAKES.
|
||
|
||
CORAL SNAKES:
|
||
|
||
Average 45-90cm (1 1/2-3ft) are slender & strikingly coloured in
|
||
bands of black & red separated by bands of yellow or white; from
|
||
the southern USA into South America. Similar kinds occur in South
|
||
east Asia. Small mouthed, reluctant to bite but DEADLY.
|
||
|
||
NO RULES AND NO ID:
|
||
|
||
THERE ARE NO RULES FOR IDENTIFYING POISONOUS SNAKES.
|
||
|
||
Cobras usually show hoods & rattlesnake rattle on their tail, but
|
||
these are NOT reliable guides.
|
||
|
||
Poisonous snakes MUST be learned individually. If in doubt treat
|
||
every snake as poisonous.
|
||
|
||
EUROPE:
|
||
|
||
ADDER: (Viper berus)
|
||
|
||
Averages 30-75cm (12-30in) varying from olive-grey to reddish-brown
|
||
with a zigzag pattern of darker colouring. Found especially on
|
||
**heaths, moors and open areas into mountains. The only poisonous
|
||
snake of northern Europe, hardly ever fatal, but with larger and
|
||
more dangerous relatives in southern Europe.
|
||
|
||
AFRICA & ASIA:
|
||
|
||
PUFF ADDER: (Bitis arietans)
|
||
|
||
Is thick-bodied, short tailed and large headed, straw brown with
|
||
darker marking and averages 90-130cm (3-4ft). Found in semi-arid
|
||
areas often near water, of Africa and the Arabian Peninsula.
|
||
|
||
Similar relatives occur in other habitats. Many different vipers
|
||
are found in all parts of Africa & Eurasia, from sandy areas to
|
||
thick jungle.
|
||
|
||
SAW-SCALED VIPER: (Echis carinatus)
|
||
|
||
Is rough scaled, pale reddish to sandy-brown with darker markings
|
||
and white blotches, and averages 40-55cm (12-26in). Found in arid
|
||
areas from North America West to India. Vicious, common, causes
|
||
many fatalities.
|
||
|
||
RUSSELL'S VIPER: (Vipera russelli)
|
||
|
||
Averages 1-1.25m (40-50 in) Brownish, with three rows of spots
|
||
formed of white bordered black rings with a reddish-brown center.
|
||
In most areas except thick forest from Pakistan East to Taiwan.
|
||
Responsible for most viper bites in the area.
|
||
|
||
MALAY PIT VIPER OR MOCCASIN: (Calloselasma rhodostoma)
|
||
|
||
Averages 60-80cm (24-32in) and is fawn, reddish or grey marked with
|
||
geometric patterns, the belly yellowish or spotted greenish brown.
|
||
Found in light growth in South east Asia & parts of Indonesia. A
|
||
frequent cause of bites and with many relatives in the area. AVOID
|
||
any that resemble it.
|
||
|
||
COBRAS:
|
||
|
||
Occur from Africa east through India to Indonesia and the
|
||
Philippines. They usually average 1.50-2m (5-6ft) and when alarmed
|
||
are recognisable by the raised head & spreading often marked hood.
|
||
Found common in some areas especially Rocky and Semi-Arid regions.
|
||
THEY ARE DEADLY.
|
||
|
||
MAMBAS: (Dendroaspis)
|
||
|
||
Are small headed, very slender, typically with large green or
|
||
greyish scales & averaging 1.5-2m (5-7ft). Found in Africa south of
|
||
the Sahara usually in trees, but the large Black Mamba (D.
|
||
polylepis) is largely terrestrial.
|
||
|
||
Often quick to strike; FATAL IN ALMOST ALL UNTREATED CASES.
|
||
|
||
BOOMSLANG: (Dispholidus typus)
|
||
|
||
Averages 1.3-1.5m (4-5ft) very slender, varying from greenish to
|
||
brownish or blackish. Found in trees & very hard to spot, in
|
||
savannah parts of Africa south of the Sahara. HIGHLY VENOMOUS; it
|
||
inflates its throat when alarmed.
|
||
|
||
KRAITS: (Bungarus)
|
||
|
||
Average 90-150cm (3.5ft)* are small-headed and some have black and
|
||
white or black and yellow bands down the body. Found in both open
|
||
and forested areas from India to Indonesia. Nocturnal inoffensive
|
||
but BITES ARE OFTEN FATAL.
|
||
|
||
SPITTING SNAKES: (NOT SINGING?)
|
||
|
||
A few cobras, including the Ringhals* of Southern Africa, spit
|
||
poison as well as bite.
|
||
|
||
This is purely defensive measure and is not dangerous unless the
|
||
poison reaches open cut or the eyes. If it does, wash out
|
||
immediately with water or in emergency with urine.
|
||
|
||
DEATH ADDER: (Acanthophis antarcticus)
|
||
|
||
Is brownish, reddish or grey with darker banding, thick bodied and
|
||
averages 45-60cm (18-24in). Found in sandy areas of much of
|
||
Australia, Papua New Guinea and some nearby islands. Well
|
||
camouflaged.
|
||
|
||
HIGHLY VENOMOUS, but not so dangerous as the Tiger Snake and
|
||
Taipan.
|
||
|
||
AUSTRALIAN BLACK SNAKE: (Pseudechis porphyriacus)
|
||
|
||
Averages 1.5-2m (5-6ft), slender bluish-black with a bright red
|
||
belly. Found in or near fresh water over much of Australia. There
|
||
are several different kinds. Very rarely fatal, it flattens its
|
||
neck when aroused.
|
||
|
||
AUSTRALIAN BROWN SNAKE: (Pseudonaja textilis)
|
||
|
||
Is slender, yellowish-grey to brown with a pale belly and averages
|
||
1.5-2m (5-6ft). Found in drier parts of Australia & Papua New
|
||
Guinea. There is more than one kind. AGGRESSIVE AND VERY POISONOUS.
|
||
|
||
TIGER SNAKE: (Notechis scutalus)
|
||
|
||
Averages 1.3m-1.6m (4-4.5ft) thick bodied, large-headed,
|
||
tawny-ochre banded with greenish -yellow, grey or orange -brown.
|
||
Found in semi arid areas of Australia and in Tasmania.
|
||
|
||
AGGRESSIVE, VERY POISONOUS, the principal cause of fatal bites.
|
||
|
||
TAIPAN: (Oxuranus scutellatus)
|
||
|
||
Is uniformly light to dark brown with yellowish brown on the sides
|
||
and belly, and may grow to 3.5m (11ft). Found in open and forested
|
||
areas of Northern Australia. Ferocious when provoked, DEADLY
|
||
POISONOUS.
|
||
|
||
SNAKES AS FOOD = YES:
|
||
|
||
Pilots crashing in the jungle, once they had eaten a snake could
|
||
not praise the flesh high enough. It was as tender as a young
|
||
chicken. An airman in Borneo lived for a whole week on snakes which
|
||
he caught in wire nooses.
|
||
|
||
SNAKE FREE COUNTRIES:
|
||
|
||
There are NO poisonous snakes in New Zealand, Cuba, Haiti, Jamaica,
|
||
Puerto Rico, Ireland, Polynesia & the Polar regions.
|
||
|
||
MOTHERUS-IN-LAWUS:
|
||
|
||
A deadly snake worst than IRS boys! It comes in all size & shapes
|
||
usually along with the bride or the groom even the pride and the
|
||
gloom.
|
||
|
||
SEA SNAKES:
|
||
|
||
Occur in the Indian and Pacific Oceans; some are partly
|
||
terrestrial, in estuaries and coastal swamps.
|
||
|
||
They vary in colour and size, averaging 1.3-1.5m (4-5ft) with a
|
||
flattened, paddle-like tail. Their scales distinguish them from
|
||
eels.
|
||
|
||
NOT AGGRESSIVE, BUT SOME ARE THE MOST VENOMOUS SNAKES OF ALL.
|
||
|
||
LIZARDS:
|
||
|
||
GILA MONSTER: (Heloderma suspectum)*
|
||
|
||
Is a lizard found ONLY in the deserts of Arizona, Mexico and nearby
|
||
areas. A large rounded head, thick chunky body, short stumpy tail
|
||
and brightly patterned in yellow, it averages 37-45cm (15- 18in).
|
||
|
||
The bite is poisonous but likely only when handled.
|
||
|
||
BEADED LIZARD: (Heloderma horridum)
|
||
|
||
Resembles the Gila monster but is darker and larger, with a
|
||
slenderer tail and spots rather than a mottling of colour. Found in
|
||
a few arid parts of Mexico and Central America. Docile but the bite
|
||
is poisonous. Do not handle.
|
||
|
||
JUNGLE FOOD POISONS & REMEDY:
|
||
|
||
A Basic Rule from experts: which also derives partly from the
|
||
customs of natives in Tropics Islands.:
|
||
|
||
NEVER EAT BLACK SEEDS FROM EARS AND GRASSES.
|
||
|
||
AVOID PLANTS WITH MILKY SAP Except for; Wild Figs Breadfruit and
|
||
Papayas & Coconuts.
|
||
|
||
NEVER eat large quantities of a strange fruit before you have
|
||
tested it for 24 hours minimum.
|
||
|
||
TASTING TEST EDIBILITY:
|
||
|
||
Here is what another survivor did after crashing in Jungle. He
|
||
found a fruit on a tree which look like a potato. First he cut a
|
||
piece of it and boiled it, then he chewed a bit and kept it in his
|
||
mouth for about 5 minutes, as it still tasted good, he swallowed
|
||
it. Had it been bitter or too sour, he would have spat it out.
|
||
|
||
ALSO A BURNING TASTE WHICH CAUSES NAUSEA IS ALWAYS A DANGER SIGNAL.
|
||
|
||
He then waited a day and as he did not feel ill, he ate the rest of
|
||
the fruit, on which he finally subsisted for 3 days.
|
||
|
||
This pre-tasting is no good for fungi however, only experts can
|
||
tell which of them are edible. Best caution; AVOID ALL FUNGI.
|
||
|
||
OTHER SURVIVORS EXPERIENCES TASTING TEST:
|
||
|
||
Survivors in the Tropics have safely eaten all fruit and parts of
|
||
plants which were fed on by birds and mammals. Many have watched
|
||
mice, rats, hares, beavers or apes feeding and then eaten the same
|
||
food. To be on the safe side said one man "I cooked the plant
|
||
thoroughly.
|
||
|
||
I first cut the roots into thin slices and let them soak for a few
|
||
days in river water, thereby washing out the possible poisons."
|
||
"The Indians of American jungle do the same with poisonous tubers."
|
||
There is an abundance of food in the tropics, you only have to know
|
||
how to find it and in many cases to overcome your repugnance.
|
||
|
||
There are 700 different kinds of YAMS.*** (The South sea potato
|
||
basic food.)
|
||
|
||
PALM TREE:
|
||
|
||
The best know tropical plant of course is the palm described by the
|
||
botanist as the princess of the plant world and by survivors as a
|
||
Gift of GOD. There are 1500 species of Palm but the most popular is
|
||
the coconut palm. ***
|
||
|
||
ITS FRUIT IS EDIBLE at almost every stage of ripeness and legions
|
||
of castaways who their life to it.
|
||
|
||
The hard fibrous husk of the unripe coconut is the fruit's only
|
||
disadvantage and opening it with a bush knife is quite a problem.
|
||
|
||
HOW TO OPEN COCONUT EASILY:
|
||
|
||
This is why Stead trainers tell them to use the wedge method, you
|
||
ram a stake into the ground and grind the top end to a wedge
|
||
(sharp), grasping the coconut in both hands, you can bring it down
|
||
on the wedge until the green husk is pared off.
|
||
|
||
COCONUT OTHER ADVANTAGES:
|
||
|
||
South sea Islanders use the coco oil against sunburn, insects,
|
||
parasites or they rub their legs with it up to the hips before
|
||
standing in the water for hours with their fishing lines, this
|
||
stops the salt water affecting their skins.
|
||
|
||
A survivor report says; the simplest way to get this oil was by
|
||
boiling the coco flesh, this brought the oil to the surface of the
|
||
water, when it had only to be scooped. Survivors have use the oil
|
||
for frying, cooking, as lamp oil for earthenware lamps & this is
|
||
still done regularly today in Africa and South Pacific. A South
|
||
saying is that palm is used in 1001 ways.
|
||
|
||
A party of Japanese soldiers stranded on a South Sea Island for 4
|
||
months had not only lived the whole time entirely on palms but had
|
||
made the following things from the fibbers and kernels. Sandals,
|
||
loin-cloth, hammocks and floor mats, shelters, a raft with floats
|
||
from kernels sucked dry, water containers and climbing rope. Their
|
||
rescue was celebrated with palm wine.
|
||
|
||
TROPIC FOOD # 2:
|
||
|
||
About less appetizing food, in New Guinea some airmen lived for
|
||
weeks on flower blossoms. We did not like them much raw but in the
|
||
end we had the idea of baking them and then the taste was
|
||
excellent. Others survivors have eaten bamboo shoots, even using
|
||
them for a goulash with the meat of a monkey they had killed.
|
||
|
||
Just as the natives of the Tropics are berry gatherers and mainly
|
||
vegetarians, most survivors in the tropics have to get used to a
|
||
vegetarian diet, since meat is hard to come by.
|
||
|
||
In New Guinea the biggest game for the Pygmies is the size of a
|
||
rat. They chiefly live on Caterpillars, Beetles, Larvae & Maggots.
|
||
So can survivors. What does this sort of food taste like? I soon
|
||
ceased to think about it, said a survivor rescued from the Burmese
|
||
jungle after 22 days.
|
||
|
||
At first I made up my mind to starve rather than eat such vermin.
|
||
But I soon conquered these foolish inhibitions and started
|
||
feverishly hunting for these things. I caught tree-insects large
|
||
and small. After pulling off their legs and feelers I gripped them
|
||
by the wings and cheerfully bit off their bodies. I did just the
|
||
same for grasshoppers.
|
||
|
||
I ate larvae & butterflies whole. The butterflies bodies had a
|
||
slight aroma of meat and were best of all. The larvae alas were
|
||
hard to find or I should have eaten more of them. Beurk! Without
|
||
ketchup!
|
||
|
||
SURVIVOR TROPIC FOOD # 3:
|
||
|
||
In New Guinea survivors have eaten larvae raw or baked, in ashes,
|
||
lived on ants. One pilot said after his rescue; I scoured old tree
|
||
trunks & anthills where the ants were positively swarming. So I
|
||
could be choosy and look only for the biggest specimens
|
||
|
||
Another said: "Instead of snipping off the ants which crawled up my
|
||
legs, I ate them. I enjoyed getting my own back for their
|
||
greediness." Eat them before they eat you!
|
||
|
||
THERE IS SCARCELY ANY KIND OF INSECT WHICH A SURVIVOR COULD NOT
|
||
SAFELY EAT.
|
||
|
||
TRICK TO EAT INSECTS ETC.:
|
||
|
||
By closing your eyes, pinching your nose you can easily eat
|
||
whatever seems too much to eat. And in the countries of the FAR
|
||
EAST it has been said many of them are considered distinct
|
||
delicacies.
|
||
|
||
On the coast of China fried Water Beetles and Water Lice are as
|
||
nourishing and as much enjoyed as peanuts with us. A crew who had
|
||
crashed in Burma hills lived for several days on water beetles
|
||
which they fished out of a pool and roasted.
|
||
|
||
Then to vary the style they did as natives with roasted bees. In
|
||
India some soldiers got lost and were served by a mountain tribe
|
||
with a dish of rice sprinkled with chopped Cockchafers.**
|
||
|
||
Roast Grasshoppers are much appreciated in Thailand and many parts
|
||
of Africa.
|
||
|
||
Cicadas* are generally boiled, bees and wasp fried, ants and flying
|
||
termites pickled and some kinds of spiders roasted others eaten
|
||
raw. Locusts are also a delicacies.* Of course insects are not much
|
||
for filling stomachs, and should be more of a survivor
|
||
"hors-d'oeuvre" (try it at your next party?)
|
||
|
||
MONKEYS:
|
||
|
||
A good roosted monkey can provide you food for 2 or 3 days. Here is
|
||
how the Aucas prepare it according to Elizabeth Eliot; Monkeys are
|
||
singed whole and cooked with the skin on, so that the thin layer of
|
||
fat under the skin is not lost.
|
||
|
||
The tail is roasted and heads are eaten with brains, eyes, ears and
|
||
all. Sometimes the teeth are carefully pulled and carefully sucked
|
||
before being thrown away.
|
||
|
||
Dogs flesh as been eaten by survivors in Arctic, Antarctic, N.
|
||
American Indians & also served as a delicacy to survivors in the
|
||
tropics by their native rescuers. (Hot dogs!)
|
||
|
||
TROPICS FOOD # 4:
|
||
|
||
Starving survivors have eaten nearly hatched birds eggs as long as
|
||
the embryo had not started to grow feathers. A British soldier in
|
||
the rain forest of Burma loosened the many leeches on his legs with
|
||
a cigarette, shuts his eyes and swallowed them raw.
|
||
|
||
After all he said, I did want to get back the blood they had sucked
|
||
off me, he said to his rescuer apparently the leeches were very
|
||
tasty. (Chip of the old block?) So finding food and drink in
|
||
Tropics is no insoluble problem.
|
||
|
||
TROPICS TRAVELLING: ???
|
||
|
||
In Tropics whenever help can not be expected from outside, it is
|
||
best say the survival experts to leave the scene of the crash
|
||
quickly and try to walk to the nearest settlement generally the
|
||
coast. This according to the survival experts is easier than most
|
||
people think.
|
||
|
||
The uninitiated have the wrong ideas about this. They imagine a
|
||
journey on foot through tropical terrain to be harder than it
|
||
really is. For one thing the average castaways is usually stranded
|
||
only on the edge of tropical country, on the coast.
|
||
|
||
Of course there are those who bail our deep in the jungle, where
|
||
the coast is often hundreds of miles away. But even in those
|
||
circumstances he has great chances of survival according to Stead
|
||
trainers. A search is almost ALWAYS made for him and he can bring
|
||
it to a successful conclusion if he gives distress signal to these
|
||
rescuers as missing people should do.
|
||
|
||
SIGNALS IN JUNGLE: (Call 911?)
|
||
|
||
For instance some USA pilots had bailed out in the Burmese Jungle
|
||
in 1944. Their approximate position was known but no search plane
|
||
had been able to spot them because of the dense foliage of the tree
|
||
tops. Nor would any pilots have seen their signal fire.
|
||
|
||
The men knew this and began to clear a patch of wood with swords
|
||
and axes from their emergency kit. They lighted a fire there and
|
||
were promptly sighted. 2 weeks later a patrol reached them & led
|
||
them back to the coast.
|
||
|
||
Another party who had done the same thing, also waited for the
|
||
search patrol, but soon became afraid the patrol would not find
|
||
them. This fear reduced the moral more and more, until they had the
|
||
idea of attracting the rescuers by shrill whistles.
|
||
|
||
They cut off some bamboo stems & made them into flutes. Then the
|
||
man on watch had to send out continuous SOS calls on the flute.
|
||
Finally with 3 more flutes they all blew together. The shrill tones
|
||
carried well. It attracted the attention of the rescuers who were
|
||
just about to pass the clearing where the missing men were.
|
||
|
||
TROPIC TRAVELLING # 2:
|
||
|
||
Wrongly people picture the tropics as largely impenetrable jungle.
|
||
The Tropics are by no means all jungle (ask Tarzan) & not all
|
||
jungle is impenetrable. (Ask Jane?). In every jungle there are
|
||
rivers and every river leads somewhere safe to sea. To find them,
|
||
many survivors have followed game track.
|
||
|
||
In Burma 2 pilots having discovered a river, builded a raft, loaded
|
||
with roast monkey and drifted on it safely to the coast. (Rafts are
|
||
your best bet) (Ask your travel Tarzan)
|
||
|
||
Certainly there are zones which can be penetrated with great
|
||
difficulties and loss of time. It is ALWAYS best to pass them by
|
||
even if it means a detour of several days.
|
||
|
||
SKIRTING IS BEST:
|
||
|
||
For ex. A party of airmen after a crash landing struggled for 5
|
||
days to get through a bamboo forest which they could comfortably
|
||
have skirted in 4 hours. In the jungle as elsewhere, the easiest is
|
||
the best.
|
||
|
||
TROPICAL FORESTS:*
|
||
|
||
The land between the Tropics includes areas of cultivation and
|
||
extremes of swamp and desert but 1/3 is undeveloped forest.
|
||
Equatorial rain forest, sub-tropical rain forest and mountain
|
||
forest. All feature high rainfall & rugged mountains which drain
|
||
into large swift flowing rivers with coastal & other low-lying
|
||
regions often as swampland.
|
||
|
||
SAVANNAH: *
|
||
|
||
This is Tropical grassland, lying usually between the desert and
|
||
the tropical forest. Near the forests the grass is tall, up to 3
|
||
metres (10ft) high, and trees more frequent. Temperature is high
|
||
the whole year round. More than one third of Africa is savannah and
|
||
large areas of Australia which are dotted with Eucalyptus trees.
|
||
|
||
Similar areas are the Ilanos of Venezuela & Columbia & the *Campos
|
||
in Brazil. Often water is not easily available but where it is
|
||
found, there will be lushes vegetation and plenty of wildlife. In
|
||
Africa large herds of animals can be found.
|
||
|
||
TROPICAL REGIONS:
|
||
|
||
Everything in the jungles thrives, including disease-germs breed at
|
||
an alarming rate & parasites. Nature provides water, food & plenty
|
||
of materials for making shelters. Indigenous & native people have
|
||
lived for millennia from hunting and gathering, but for the
|
||
outsider it can take a long time to get used to the conditions and
|
||
the non stop activity.
|
||
|
||
Native people wear little, except as ornament but the newcomer
|
||
inured to insects & leeches & unaccustomed to moving through dense
|
||
jungle growth, needs to keep as covered as possible. Clothing may
|
||
become saturated by perspiration but it is better than being stung,
|
||
scratched and bitten all over.
|
||
|
||
Do not remove clothing until you halt and then with humidity at
|
||
80-90% there is no point hanging it up to dry except in the sun or
|
||
by a fire. Clothes saturated regularly with perspiration will rot.
|
||
Except at high altitudes, both equatorial & subtropical regions are
|
||
characterised by high temperatures, heavy rainfall & oppressive
|
||
humidity.
|
||
|
||
At low altitudes temperatures variation is seldom more than 10C.
|
||
(50F) & is often 37C (98F). At altitudes over 1,500 m (5,000ft) ice
|
||
often forms at night. The rain has a slightly cooling effect, but
|
||
when it stops the temperatures soars.
|
||
|
||
Rainfall is heavy, often with thunder and lightning. Sudden rain
|
||
beats on the tree canopy, turning trickles into raging torrents and
|
||
rivers rise an alarming rate, but just as suddenly it is gone.
|
||
Violent storms may occur, usually towards the end of the summer
|
||
months. Typhoons, hurricanes, cyclones, develop over the sea and
|
||
rush inland causing tidal waves and devastation.
|
||
|
||
IN CHOOSING CAMP SITE MAKE SURE YOU ARE ABOVE ANY POTENTIAL
|
||
FLOODING.
|
||
|
||
Prevailing winds create variation between winter and summer with
|
||
dry season (rain once a day.) and the monsoon (continuous rain).
|
||
|
||
In Southeast ASIA winds from the Indian Ocean bring monsoon, but it
|
||
is dry when the wind blows from the landmass of China. Tropical day
|
||
and night are of equal length, darkness falls quickly and daybreak
|
||
is equally sudden.
|
||
|
||
EQUATORIAL RAIN FORESTS:
|
||
|
||
The climate varies very little in these forests, spread over the
|
||
Equator in the Amazon & Congo Basins, parts of Indonesia & several
|
||
Pacific Islands. RAIN of 1-5 to 3-5m (60-149cm) is distributed
|
||
evenly throughout the year. Temperatures range from 30C (86 F) to
|
||
20C or (68 F) at night.
|
||
|
||
Where untouched by man, jungle trees rise from buttress roots to
|
||
60m (200ft) bursting into a mushroom of leaves. Below them, smaller
|
||
trees produce a canopy so thick that little light reaches the
|
||
jungle floor. Seeding struggle beneath them to reach light and
|
||
masses of vines and lianas twine up to the sun.
|
||
|
||
Ferns, mosses & herbaceous plants push through a thick carpet of
|
||
leaves and a great variety of fungi grow on leaves and fallen
|
||
trunks. It is fairly cool in this PRIMARY JUNGLE, with little
|
||
undergrowth to hamper movement, but visibility is limited to about
|
||
50m (170ft). It is easy to lose a sense of direction and also
|
||
difficult to spot anyone from the air.
|
||
|
||
RESCUE SIGNALS:
|
||
|
||
Smoke is diffused by the tree canopy and may not be seen,
|
||
especially if there is mist about as well.
|
||
|
||
SET SIGNALS IN CLEARING, more often found near river bends, or
|
||
better-out on rafts on the river itself.
|
||
|
||
SECONDARY JUNGLE:
|
||
|
||
Growth is prolific where sunlight goes penetrate to the jungle
|
||
floor-mainly along river banks, on jungle fringes and where primary
|
||
jungles have been cleared by man for slash and burn farming. When
|
||
abandoned, this is reclaimed by a tangle mass of vegetation-look
|
||
out for cultivated food plants which may survive among the others.
|
||
|
||
Grasses, ferns, shrubs and vines of secondary jungle, reach heights
|
||
of 2-3m (7-10ft) in a single year. Moving is slow often hacking a
|
||
way with a machete or parang-hot work with visibility only a few
|
||
meters.
|
||
|
||
Jungle vegetation seems to be covered with thorns and spikes and
|
||
bamboo thickets can be impenetrable barriers. Sometimes, as in
|
||
Belize in Central America, the jungle trees are low. Light does
|
||
reach the fertile ground, producing abundant undergrowth even in
|
||
primary jungle.
|
||
|
||
SUB-TROPICAL RAIN FORESTS:
|
||
|
||
Found within 10 degrees of Equator, in Central and South America,
|
||
Madagascar, Burma, Western India, Vietnam, southeast Asia &
|
||
Philippines. These forests have a season of reduced rainfall, even
|
||
drought, with the rain coming in cycles-monsoons. With more marked
|
||
seasons there are more deciduous trees so that more light reaches
|
||
the forest floor and undergrowth is dense.
|
||
|
||
MOUNTAIN FORESTS:
|
||
|
||
When altitudes reach about 1,000m (3,000ft) in the Tropics and the
|
||
areas bordering them, Tropical forest begins to give way to
|
||
Mountain forest. It becomes true mountain at about 1240m (4900
|
||
feet) as in the Monts Gotel in Cameroon, the Amhara Plateau of
|
||
Ethiopia or the Ruwenzori Range of Central Africa.
|
||
|
||
The Ruwenzori the Mountains of the Moon are typical; sharply
|
||
contoured slopes making a crater-like landscape covered in moss
|
||
between ice-capped peaks.
|
||
|
||
Plant growth is sparse, trees stunted and distorted, their branches
|
||
low & difficult to walk beneath.
|
||
|
||
Nights are cold, day temperatures high with lots of mist and long
|
||
periods of cloud cover. Survival is difficult in this terrain.
|
||
Leave it and make your way down the mountainside to the tropical
|
||
rain forest.
|
||
|
||
SALTWATER SWAMPS:
|
||
|
||
Where coastal areas are subject to tidal flooding, mangrove trees
|
||
thrive. They can reach heights of 12m (40feet) and their tangled
|
||
roots are an obstacle both above and below the waterline.
|
||
|
||
Visibility is poor and passage difficult. It may take 12 hours to
|
||
cover 900m (3,000feet). Sometimes channels are wide enough to raft,
|
||
but generally progress is on foot. There are mangrove swamps in
|
||
West Africa, Madagascar, Malaysia & the Pacific Island, Central and
|
||
South America and at the mouth of the Ganges.
|
||
|
||
The swamps at the mouths of the Orinoco, Amazon and rivers of
|
||
Guyana consist of stinking mud and trees which offer little shade.
|
||
Tides can rise as much as 12m (40m). Everything in the mangrove
|
||
swamps seems hostile, from water leeches & insects, to Cayman and
|
||
crocodiles. Avoid them if you can.
|
||
|
||
If forced there by mishap look for a way out. Where there are river
|
||
channels intersecting the swamp you may be able to make a raft.
|
||
|
||
YOU WON'T STARVE AMONG THE MANGROVES.
|
||
|
||
There is plenty of fish and vegetation. At low water crabs,
|
||
mollusc, catfish and mudfish can be found. Arboreal and aquatic
|
||
animals include water opossum, otter, tapir, armadillo and, on
|
||
firmer ground peccaries.
|
||
|
||
Inland of the mangroves, nipa palm swamp is common. ALL THE PALM'S
|
||
GROWING POINTS ARE EDIBLE. If forced to stay in swamp, determine
|
||
the high-tide level by the line of salt and debris on the trees and
|
||
fit up a raised bed above it.
|
||
|
||
Cover yourself for protection against ants and mosquitoes.
|
||
|
||
In any swamp a fire will have to be built on a platform. Use
|
||
standing deadwood for fuel. Decay is rapid in a swamp. Choose wood
|
||
that is not far decayed.
|
||
|
||
FRESHWATER SWAMPS:
|
||
|
||
Found in low-lying inland areas, their mass of thorny undergrowth
|
||
reeds, grasses and occasional short palms makes going difficult and
|
||
reduces visibility to only a few metres- but wildlife abounds and
|
||
survival is easy.
|
||
|
||
A freshwater swamp is not such a bad place once you get used to it.
|
||
It will often be dotted with islands and you are not chest-deep in
|
||
the water ALL the time. There are often navigable channels and raw
|
||
materials available from which to build a raft.
|
||
|
||
SHELTER: SAS 52
|
||
|
||
There are ample materials for buildings shelter in most Tropical
|
||
regions. Where temperatures are very high, and shelters directly
|
||
exposed to the sun, make roofs in 2 layers with an airspace in
|
||
between to aid cooling. (KOOL IDEA NO!)
|
||
|
||
Much of the heat will dissipate on striking the upper layer and
|
||
with the air passing between this lowers the temperature of the
|
||
layer beneath. The distance between should be 20-30cm (8-12in)
|
||
Double layers of even permeable cloth will help keep out the rain
|
||
if well angled.
|
||
|
||
FIRE:
|
||
|
||
Everything is likely to be damp. Take standing wood and shave off
|
||
the outside. Use that to start your fire. Dry bamboo makes
|
||
excellent tinder (store some) so does a termite nest.
|
||
|
||
FOOD:
|
||
|
||
A large variety of fruits & leaves are available. Mango, figs,
|
||
banana, papaya, are easily recognized.
|
||
|
||
PAPAYA IS ONE OF THE FEW PLANTS WITH WHITE SAP THAT IS EDIBLE.
|
||
|
||
The large and thorny fruit of the Durian* of the Southeast Asia,
|
||
smells disgusting but is good to eat.
|
||
|
||
Palms provide an Edible growing point and manioc produces massive
|
||
tubers-though they MUST be washed and cooked before eating. Taro,
|
||
wild potato and some kinds of yam MUST also be prepared to remove
|
||
Poison before they are eaten. You may find the wealth of tropical
|
||
food hard to identify, if you are not sure use the test described
|
||
in Food, before risking eating them.
|
||
|
||
ANIMAL FOODS:
|
||
|
||
Deer, pigs, monkeys and a wide range of animals can be hunted and
|
||
trapped according to location. In primary jungle, birds spend most
|
||
of their time in the trees canopy among the fruit and berries.
|
||
Place traps in clearings and lure birds with fruit.
|
||
|
||
Some such as the * ASIAN HORNBILL also feeds on lizards and snakes.
|
||
Near rivers traps (see traps**) can be baited with fish or offal
|
||
for fish Eagles and similar species which patrol rivers for prey.
|
||
|
||
Parrots & their relatives abound in the tropics-their mad
|
||
screeching makes their presence known from early morning. They are
|
||
cunning, get them used to taking bait before setting the trap.
|
||
Snakes are easy to catch go for the non-poisonous constrictors &
|
||
very tasty. Catch them using a forked stick.
|
||
|
||
FOOD FROM RIVERS:
|
||
|
||
Rivers support all kinds of life: fish, plants, animal, insects. If
|
||
you have no fishing tackle, small pools can be dammed and then
|
||
emptied with a bailer.
|
||
|
||
FISH AND TURTLES IN SURPRISING NUMBERS CAN BE FOUND IN THE MUD.
|
||
|
||
Try constructing traps or crushing certain roots and vines to
|
||
stupefy the fish. Fish are easily digested and have good protein
|
||
content. Many jungle people depend on them for nourishment, but in
|
||
the Tropics they spoil quickly.
|
||
|
||
Clean thoroughly, discard entrails and eat as soon as possible, do
|
||
not preserve them by smoking or drying. Fish from slow moving
|
||
waters are more likely to be infested with parasites. If suspect
|
||
boil in water for 10 minutes. In areas where locals use the water
|
||
as their sanitation system. Fish may carry tapeworms & other human
|
||
parasites and the water itself could be infected with amoebas which
|
||
cause dysentery.
|
||
|
||
ALWAYS BOIL WATER FOR 10 MINUTES.
|
||
|
||
Rivers can bring DANGERS too. Piranha may be found in the Amazon,
|
||
Orinoco, & Paraguay river system of South America.
|
||
|
||
A smaller fish is found in BURMA. Electric heels are slow-moving
|
||
and not aggressive but they can grow very large & discharge 500
|
||
volts or more. Sting rays also occur in some tropical South
|
||
American & West African rivers.
|
||
|
||
Look out for crocodiles or alligators & water snakes and take care
|
||
in handling catfish which have sharp dorsal fins & spines on their
|
||
gill covers, the Electric Catfish can also deliver a powerful
|
||
shock.
|
||
|
||
DANGERS!:
|
||
|
||
COVER YOUR FEET:
|
||
|
||
Good footwear and protection for the feet is ESSENTIAL.
|
||
|
||
They are most exposed to leeches, chigoe & centipedes. Wrap bark or
|
||
cloth around the legs & tie it to make puttees.
|
||
|
||
INSECT ATTACK!: (RAIDDD!)
|
||
|
||
Slashing your way through jungle you may disturb bee, wasp or
|
||
hornet nests. They may attack especially hornets, whose sting can
|
||
be especially painful. Anywhere left bare including your face is
|
||
vulnerable to attack. Run! Don't drop anything, you won't want to
|
||
go back for it. Goggles would help protect your eyes.
|
||
|
||
As you work up perspiration there are insects, desperate for salt
|
||
that will fly to the wettest parts of your body. Unfortunately they
|
||
also sting. Protect armpits and groin.
|
||
|
||
BEWARE INVADERS: (UFO?)
|
||
|
||
Keep clothing & footwear off the ground. Then scorpions, snakes and
|
||
other nasties are less likely to invade them.
|
||
|
||
ALWAYS SHAKE OUT CLOTHING AND CHECK BOOTS BEFORE PUTTING THEM ON,
|
||
and be wary when putting hands in pockets. On waking up take care.
|
||
Centipedes tend to curl for warmth in some of the more private body
|
||
regions.
|
||
|
||
MOSQUITO PROTECTION:
|
||
|
||
Wear a net over your head or tie a tee-shirt or singlet over it,
|
||
especially at dawn and dusk.
|
||
|
||
Better, take a strip of cloth long enough to tie around your head
|
||
and about 45cm (18in) deep & cut it to make a fringe of vertical
|
||
strips hanging from a band that will hang around your face and over
|
||
your neck.
|
||
|
||
At night keep covered, including your hands. Use bamboo or a
|
||
sapling to support a little tent of clothing plus large leaves
|
||
rigged over your upper half. Oil, fat or even mud spread on hands
|
||
and face may help to repel mosquitoes. In camp a smoky fire will
|
||
help keep insects at bay.
|
||
|
||
LEECHES: (Good to eat too!)
|
||
|
||
Leeches lie on the ground or on vegetation, especially in damp
|
||
places, waiting to attach themselves to an animal or person to take
|
||
a meal of blood. Their bite is not painful but they secrete a
|
||
natural anti-coagulant that makes it messy.
|
||
|
||
Left alone, they drop off when they had their fill- but if you are
|
||
covered in them you MUST do something! Don't pull them off!
|
||
|
||
There is a risk that the head will come off leaving the jaws in the
|
||
bite which could turn septic. (Poisonous) Remove with a dab of salt
|
||
alcohol or the burning end of a cigarette, an ember or a flame.
|
||
|
||
BEWARE THE CANDIRU!:
|
||
|
||
This minute Amazonian catfish about 2-5mm (1 in.) long very slender
|
||
& almost transparent suck blood from the gills of other fish. It is
|
||
reported to be able to swim up the urethra of a person urinating in
|
||
the water-where it gets stuck by its dorsal spine. The chances of
|
||
this happening are remote but the consequences could be dire. Cover
|
||
your genitals and don't urinate in the water
|
||
|
||
HEALTH RISKS IN JUNGLE: *
|
||
|
||
To live in the jungle, you MUST keep in good health. Even under the
|
||
best conditions all becomes difficult.
|
||
|
||
IT IS ESSENTIAL IN ORDER TO INCREASE YOUR SURVIVAL CHANCES TO
|
||
FOLLOW THESE RULES:
|
||
|
||
1) Stay CALM, you will NEVER conquer the jungle by rushing it is
|
||
Impossible, even Tarzan slows down!
|
||
|
||
2) Don't climb in the height to orient yourself, better to do a
|
||
long round about way on flat land.
|
||
|
||
TESTS HAVE SHOWN THAT IT IS LESS TIRING AND ENERGY CONSUMING TO GO
|
||
AROUND A STEEP HILL ETC. THAN TO CLIMB OVER IT.
|
||
|
||
3) Take WELL care of your feet in changing and washing your socks
|
||
very often. Protect your boots by greasing them often.
|
||
|
||
4) When you have a fever, WAIT till it disappears before getting
|
||
back on the road. Drink A LOT of water, MAKE SURE it is good,
|
||
STERILIZED!
|
||
|
||
5) Ticks, leeches, bugs, insects of all kind threaten your health
|
||
& security. So use insecticide or mud if nothing else, & stay away
|
||
from places where there are abundant Swamps.
|
||
|
||
6) Guard well from any infections. In the heat and humidity of
|
||
tropics, any wounds infect rapidly. You MUST cover them with a
|
||
sterile dressing home made or not.
|
||
|
||
7) Prevent exhaustion, cramps and sunstroke by drinking a lot of
|
||
water to replace lost liquid from perspiration. If heat is too
|
||
much, relax take a rest in a shady place.
|
||
|
||
TROPICAL DISEASES:
|
||
|
||
Malaria, Dengue, Yellow Fever & Encephalitis * All of them are
|
||
caused by mosquitoes bites carrying these germs. Violent chills &
|
||
high temperature are the symptoms. If you believe you have any of
|
||
these, rest and drink plenty of liquid.
|
||
|
||
DYSENTERY:
|
||
|
||
It is caused by water and polluted food.
|
||
|
||
SANDFLY FEVER:
|
||
|
||
Presents the same symptoms as malaria. Drink a lot of water or
|
||
other liquids and rest till fever drops down.
|
||
|
||
TYPHUS:
|
||
|
||
In Tropical regions, Typhus designs many infectious diseases.
|
||
Louses and flees carry the germs of many of them. Headaches,
|
||
weakness, fever and general pains are usual symptoms.
|
||
|
||
The victim has a pale colour and can develop skin eruption. Some
|
||
forms of Typhus are deadly if not treated, in a proportion up to
|
||
40%.
|
||
|
||
It is ESSENTIAL to develop a very strict body hygiene and to avoid
|
||
all contact with louse, flees as well as all rodents which are
|
||
infested of them as well as herbs carrying maggots. It is very wise
|
||
to get a vaccine regularly when possible.
|
||
|
||
EXHAUSTION:
|
||
|
||
In Tropics, the heat and humidity combined will drain your energy
|
||
faster than anywhere else in the world. Slow down your activities
|
||
and take a lot of rest. Drink a lot of water.
|
||
|
||
Dilute if possible 2 salt pills per quart of water. If you suffer
|
||
from heat stroke, rest in shadow and drink 1/2 of this quart of
|
||
salted water every 15 min. Keep doing it until you are back on your
|
||
feet.
|
||
|
||
CHILBLAIN OR TRENCH FOOT: (Not French foot)
|
||
|
||
In Vietnam this type of infection has taken more toll on the
|
||
soldiers than all the mines, snares etc. The "trench foot" looks
|
||
much like frostbite but the cause is very different.
|
||
|
||
It appears when the feet are kept in water or dampness during a
|
||
period of more than 12 hours. There are 2 types of "trench foot"
|
||
one comes from "immersion in hot water" limits itself to the foot
|
||
sole.
|
||
|
||
This infection comes after having crossed creek, small streams,
|
||
drains and swamps cut off by dry lands and terrain. About 3 days
|
||
after the thick layer inside the foot sole becomes white & wrinkly.
|
||
Some of these wrinkles on the sole becomes very sensitive and
|
||
bothers walking. In the 2 or 3 following days the pain increases
|
||
considerably and the feet start to swell.
|
||
|
||
If you take off your shoes then it is impossible to put them back
|
||
on because of the swelling and the pain it gives. The pain is even
|
||
then more accentuated at the heels & to #eminence
|
||
metatartasiennes#, the victim has the feeling that he walks on
|
||
tight ropes stocked inside his shoes.
|
||
|
||
The only treatment consists in taking off your socks and shoes and
|
||
to rest. The skin MUST be dried & stay that way. The wrinkling,
|
||
#whitering# and dampness will disappear in about 24 hours but the
|
||
sensitivity of the foot sole will stay for a few days, then the
|
||
thick layer of the underfoot will come off bit by bit.
|
||
|
||
RICE FIELD FOOT:
|
||
|
||
The other type of "Trench foot" also called "Rice field foot"
|
||
attacks the upper part of the feet and legs. This disease affects
|
||
people who walk in muddy rice field, swamps, creeks and water ways.
|
||
|
||
It is far more frequent when the water temperature or mud maintains
|
||
itself to 30C. and more. This infection wounds the feet, the
|
||
ankles, and legs at the height of the boots. In 2 or 3 days, the
|
||
skin turns to red, covers itself of #cellulite# & swells up. The
|
||
pain increases more & more as the skin tightens up & hardens then
|
||
the skin bruises & scratches.
|
||
|
||
The boot friction causes the skin to peel off and brings the skin
|
||
at raw state. 50% of the victim suffer from #nodules lymphatics# up
|
||
to the groin with fever up to 40C. The treatment consists in taking
|
||
off your socks and shoes and to rest in a dry area while keeping
|
||
your feet up. In 6 hours the #"oedema"# becomes soft.
|
||
|
||
It swells under pressure of the fingers. The pains, swelling and
|
||
fevers disappear after a few days of good resting. (Time for a
|
||
break, lucky you!)
|
||
|
||
SURVIVAL WAR EXPERIENCE:
|
||
|
||
2 Japanese soldiers spent 16 years in the Guam Jungle, one of the
|
||
toughest jungle in the worlds and were found very healthy. "They
|
||
supplemented this "Liberated" food with bamboo shoots, coconuts,
|
||
lizards, #breadfruit#, snails, snakes, plus sea food from the
|
||
nearby sea coast, seaweed, lobsters, fat nut crabs, an abundance of
|
||
other fishes.
|
||
|
||
The Guamise say that there are so many fish that you can catch them
|
||
with bare hands if you are not too lazy to bend down for them.
|
||
After a few months, the 2 Japanese had gotten use to living like
|
||
natives of the jungle, even their senses became adapted to this
|
||
existence.
|
||
|
||
"Although we were both smokers and missed tobacco, we took care to
|
||
pick up the stubs thrown away by USA soldiers. We were afraid if we
|
||
smoked ourselves that we would loose our sense of smelling others
|
||
smoke from a distance."
|
||
|
||
Our sense of smell became so sensitive that we often smelled the
|
||
hair oil of USA soldiers before we heard them talking. It was vital
|
||
for us to discover other people before them. Both men and others
|
||
they were with from time to time went foraging only at night,
|
||
always walking in a single file.
|
||
|
||
The first man tested the ground ahead before putting his foot down
|
||
(like cats and tigers), it was the last man business to see that
|
||
all tracks were wiped out. Taking care not to tear off any grass or
|
||
thread it down in a conspicuous way or to break off branches of any
|
||
weight where no animal could have done it.
|
||
|
||
If they took fruits from a tree, they would only take a few so that
|
||
it would not be notice afterwards. Upon making a fire they always
|
||
buried the ashes or scattered them in the ocean. If they lost a
|
||
tool or a piece of clothing they went searching until they had
|
||
found it again so as not to leave any tokens that might betray
|
||
them.
|
||
|
||
And through 16 years only talked in whispers. They would also catch
|
||
more game in simple wire nooses. Or they would sit on a tree above
|
||
a game track and wait till a deer ran past they are plenty of them
|
||
in Guam then drop on it and stab it. Deer were imported to Guam,
|
||
few islands are that lucky. After the first months they felt safe
|
||
enough to roast the meat instead of eating it raw.
|
||
|
||
FIRE MAKING #1:
|
||
|
||
Almost every day they lit a fire. They had no matches so when the
|
||
sun shone the bottom of a bottle served as a burning glass.
|
||
|
||
FIRE MAKING #2: *
|
||
|
||
When it was raining they would use a simpler way by forcing open a
|
||
cartridge and mixed some powder from it with paper, dry leaves and
|
||
wood shavings. Then one of us rubbed a piece of wire along a piece
|
||
of hardwood until it was red hot and simply pushes it into the
|
||
tinder. The powder fired at once & set the shaving alight.
|
||
|
||
NATURAL REMEDIES:
|
||
|
||
Worrying a lot about the chances of illness they set about finding
|
||
natural remedies. When they killed animals, they would cut open its
|
||
stomach collected the gastric juice and dried this in the sun. They
|
||
ground the solidified mass into a greenish-white powder & kept it
|
||
in a bottle, it proved an excellent gastric tonic.
|
||
|
||
They also made charcoal from animals bones ground it to powder &
|
||
used it as a remedy for dysentery, diarrhoea & other stomach
|
||
troubles.
|
||
|
||
Other survival schools tell us of the common COLTSFOOT * to use the
|
||
leaves to reduce the swelling of a sprained ankle or wrist.
|
||
|
||
FIGHTING FEVER:
|
||
|
||
To fight fever including MALARIA with an infusion from the bark of
|
||
willow branches from 4 to 6 years old and effective gargle for
|
||
throat troubles, a few mouthfuls will alleviate abdominal or
|
||
intestinal chills.
|
||
|