Build a Survival Shelter

Learn how to build a survival shelter out of the materials nature has provided you so you can stay safe if you find yourself lost and in a crisis.

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by Fred Demara

Learn how to build a survival shelter out of the materials nature has provided you so you can stay safe if you find yourself lost and in a crisis.

“Emergency” implies you need shelter quickly and you don’t have much with which to work. Even burrowing into the snow greatly increases your odds of survival; digging a cave in a snow bank is even better. Get out of the wind. If you’re in the woods and darkness is upon you, even a deer bed of moss, leaves, ferns, grasses, or evergreen boughs into which you can crawl will go a long way toward keeping you from dying of hypothermia before daylight. Even if you are wet, keeping the wind off may by itself save you from hypothermia. Ignore stickers and bugs; they come with the territory. If you have an hour or so of daylight to prepare shelter in the woods, you may even have time to get comfortable.

Building quick shelters is not rocket science. It is intuitive but does take common sense. Native Americans and aboriginal people everywhere survived, and often thrived, because of their wealth of common sense, and backbone. People in any situation, if blessed with these same qualities, can do the same.

Trenches & hides: Digging in but not very deep

Being on your own in the wilderness – cold, wet, and hungry – is not a good situation, but it is one you can largely control. What’s for dinner has been addressed in other books (including my two, Eating on the Run and Surviving on Edible Insects), so in this context we’ll just note that battling hypothermia takes a lot of calories. Thus, I’ll address shelter first.

  • Published on Feb 11, 2020
Tagged with: emergency, shelter, survival
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