Showing posts with label emergency preparedness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label emergency preparedness. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 19, 2014

Are You Prepared?

Are You Prepared?

So you've decided that you needed to be better prepared.  You probably came to this decision after some event in life where you found yourself unprepared.  So you've done some research and have started prepping for a future that is unknown.  Fantastic, but are you prepared enough?  What are you prepared for?  Which areas are your strengths and which areas are your weaknesses.  For that matter, what are the areas that you should be working on?

Here is a quick list of the key areas that you need to be prepared in.  There are lots of different skills that will fit into some of these areas.  Some may be specific to your location or your age or abilities but they will all fit under these six key areas.

1.Are you prepared mentally?  Do you have the confidence to take on a huge crisis and not give up? Do you have a play book that will eliminate some of the costly time needed to make a plan in a crisis?  Do you have a positive mental attitude that will keep yourself and members of your family properly motivated?  Do you have enough experience to feel confident in your decision making?

2.  Are you prepared physically?  Is your physical body capable of dealing with the workload this will accompany a major crisis?  Is your diet under control and designed to transition into using 100% of your food stores to survive?  Are you healthy enough to be a capable and performing asset to your survival team?

3.  Are you prepared medically?  Do you have the training and the supplies to treat yourself and members of your team for medical reasons that would come from survival or combat?  Are you prepared for a possible pandemic?  Does more than one member of your team have these skills?

4.  Are you prepared technically?  Do you have the gear, equipment and food that you are going to need?  Is your load stored and planned to be moved if need be, sometimes in a big hurry?  Is your food stores enough and how much is enough?  Are your food stores safe?

5.  Are you prepared skillfully?  You may have the food and the gear but do you know what to do with what you have.  Do you practice and if so how, where and how often?  What is the best way to practice?  Do you have the skills to find what you need, grow what you need or hunt/trap what you will need to survive.

6.  Are you prepared tactically?  Are you trained and equip to defend yourself, your family and your supplies with unarmed and armed combat?  Do you know the attack and escape routes from your home or camp?  Do you have the proper firearms or weapons to defend your home and family and are your trained to use them?  Not just shoot them but how to use them to stop an attack without firing shot? 

     All these areas of preparation need to be balanced.  If you are heavy in one area and weak in another you will naturally try to survive with what you have.  If you have lots of guns but little food you will have no choice but to use those guns against your friends and neighbors to keep from starving.  If you have lots of food but can't defend them you better stuff yourself fast before someone comes and takes them away from you.

SPEAR Survival is a system that will teach you how to get better prepared in a balanced way and how to practice.  
SPEAR is an acronym for: Survival, Preparedness, Emergency Anticipation, & Readiness. 
     
 Just as a white belt learns the basics of a martial art so will you with the level one course.  Most people who have been preparing for a while will have most of these lessons covered and will only have to fill in the holes in their training.  Others will use level one to create a solid foundation for the lessons that follow which will get them better prepared in a balanced fashion.

SPEAR is a very low cost solution to solving these tough questions that are listed above.  Most people don't know where to start and have no idea where they want to go with their prepping.  This martial art system of survival will give you a simple road map to follow to keep moving in the right direction as well as teach you how to practice the skills that you already have in a method that is easy and fun.

SPEAR is free to start and free to continue to learn.  The certification and the support of people at your same level of training is the real key.  You will have access to the training forum that is relevant to your level of training.  You will be able to share ideas and ask questions of people who are proud to be studying this system and who share the same values you do.  As you grow and become better prepared you will be promoted to the next level and will be surrounded by inspiring people again that will challenge you to grow even further.

In the higher ranks of this system you will be able to teach the skills that you have to people around you and to develop a team of like minded people who can come together in a crisis.

Just as in a combat martial art, the path to mastery doesn't end at the black belt, it truely begins.  The more you know and the better your skill the clearer you see the road ahead.  It will change you physically.  It will change you mentally.  It will change you spiritually.  

Unless you have it all figured out and are prepared for anything I urge you to head over to our website and fill out the student registration form and become a SPEAR student.  

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

SPEAR lesson 13 Shelter 1.2 Rule of 3, Heat Transfer and Shelter Selection

Lesson 13  Shelter 1.2 

Rule of 3, Heat Transfer, Shelter Selection

For survival you have a lot of options.

  1. You can simply stay in your house
  2. You can build a primitive shelter from sticks and branches
  3. You can tunnel into the snow and make a cave
  4. You can set up a tent or tarp
  5. You can stay in a vehicle
  6. You can find any other abandoned structure
  7. Or you can take the shelter of someone else.
With all these options, and many more I didn't list, you have to identify what makes one shelter better than another.  If you have to build a shelter what do you have to know to make it work the first time.  This lead us into the rule of threes:

  • You can live three weeks without food
  • You can live three days without water
  • You can live three hours exposed to the elements 
  • You can live three minutes without air.
Most survivalist know this list and use it to prioritize the actions in an emergency.  Preppers use a similar formula in how they prepare for the unknown.  If you can go three weeks without food then that gets knocked off the top of the "to do" list.  Water is a little more pressing but if you are without shelter and the temperature is getting down below freezing you better put shelter on the top of that list.  The three minutes without air will come in later.

The number one reason for shelter is to protect our core body temperature.  If it goes up or down more than a couple of degrees we are facing death.  So the first thing to consider for a shelter is whether or not it will retain heat.  This brings me to the next list which is basic heat transfer:
  • Conduction- This form of heat transfer comes when things are touching.  Think of electrical wire. You electricity is conducted through wires but it doesn't work if the wires aren't touching
  • Convection- This is simply hot air.  Or heat that is transferred by the air.  It can transfer to your body or away from it.  To remember this think about a convection oven.  It is different from a regular oven by that is has a fan that blows the hot air around.
  • Radiation-  This heat is best illustrated by a magnifying glass as it concentrates the radiant energy of the sun.  Another good example is when you are sitting in front of a fire and you can feel it heating your face.  It is the radiant heat that is doing this not the convected air.
Your shelter needs to hold in convection that comes from your body or from a fire that you build.  A solar blanket can be used to reflect back the radiation from the fire.  And by building your shelter off the ground you can avoid the loss of your body heat through conduction to the ground.

Insulation that is in our homes uses this same principle of stopping heat loss.  It creates lots of small air pockets that eliminates convection and due to the poor conduction rate of the trapped air it takes a long time for heat to transfer through it.  You winter clothes are designed to do the same thing.  If you find yourself stuck out without shelter you can fill the clothes that you do have with anything you can find that will produce those small pockets of air.  You can use crumpled up paper, dry grass, strips of cardboard or whatever you may be able to find.

The last item of heat transfer that you need to understand is evaporation.  When you want to turn water into steam you have to add heat.  When you want to turn water into ice you need to remove heat.  Anytime you change the state of an element the price you have to pay is paid in heat.  If you lick the back of your hand and blow across it you can feel it get cooler.  The saliva is evaporating and taking your heat with it.  When we sweat we do so for this very purpose.  The sweat that we generate evaporates to keep our core temperature down when it is hot or we are exerting ourselves.  If it is really cold outside that sweat will freeze and take much more heat than your body designed.
          The other thing that happens when we sweat and it it cold our clothes get wet.  The reason this is bad goes back to conduction.  Remember all those little air pockets in our clothes, well they are now filled with water.  Water transfers heat ten times more effectively than air does.  If you get wet and it is cold you need to get out of those wet clothes and into dry ones as soon as possible.  If you don't have dry clothes you need to build a fire and dry your clothes if front of the fire.  Don't wear them when you are drying them.  The steam could burn you but it is better to take your chances with the cold air then it is to let the cold water suck the heat out of you.

Oh yeah.  The three minutes without air.  Don't make a shelter so tight and closed up that you don't let in any fresh air.  If you sleep in the cab of a vehicle and there are a couple of people with you the air will only last a couple of hours with the windows all closed up.  Make sure that you have a fresh source of air to keep from falling off into that sleep that you don't wake up from.

Continue on to Lesson 14
Start at the beginning:  Lesson 1
Visit our website: www.thesageinstitute.com
SPEAR Survival
Prepared For The Everyday
Till The End Of Days.

SPEAR Lesson 15 Fire 1.2 Fire Purpose and Safety

Why is fire so important? 

SPEAR Lesson 15 Fire 1.2 Fire Purpose and Safety

          In wilderness survival the most popular lesson that you will find probably has to be fire starting.  This is mostly because it is an easy lesson to do and it films well. But here in the SPEAR course we need to look at this lesson a little deeper to find out why we need to know this at all.  
          Fire was undoubtedly a game changing skill for primitive man.  It allowed them to cook their food, heat their bodies and keep away predators.  In the pioneering days of the US they used fire to do much of the same things with just better equipment and skill.  Fires were used to smoke meat and fish to prolong their shelf life and the fires that warmed them were put into small wood stoves that allowed them to use it as a stove to cook on as well.
          Today the very same things apply.  The improvement from the prehistoric times to the pioneering times continued into today. We have made improvements to the way that we start fire and how we use fire as well as how to keep the fire under control.  For survival training though we have to pretend that none of these advancements were ever invented.  You need to be able to use fire in its most basic form so you don't get too comfortable with modern items that you may not have when you need them.
          Lets take a brief look at some potential hazards you might face where fire would save your life:
  1.  You are out hunting and you twist an ankle making walking impossible.  The temperature is dropping into the single digits tonight and you are already feeling the chill.  Without a fire to get through the night morning will probably never come.
  2. The power has gone out and you have to cook the food in your freezer before it is all spoiled.  Without fire to cook the food  you might need to eat uncooked meat leading to food poisoning or just lose it all.
  3. You are lost in the woods and need to find your way out.  You have enough food in your back pack to last for two more days but your canteen in gone.  You find a small stream where you can fill up your canteen but you don't know if the water is contaminated with bacteria or parasites.  Without a filter or disinfectant tabs the only way to treat the water is to boil it.  If you were to choose to drink the water you could start to show symptoms in as little as 24 hours. This would make moving very difficult and escape almost impossible.  More than likely you would become dehydrated and within days would perish.
Fire is an essential skill that everyone should know and one that SPEAR students will master.  To have the ability to make fire and cook food will make the difference between life and death in a long term crisis.  
          Fire making is important but fire is a dangerous element that can cause serious damage.  When you use fire or practice with fire you need to make very sure that the fire is out when you are done.  Forest fires will ruin your training area and potentially do far worse than that.  Make sure that you put enough water on your fire that it stops steaming.  This may take several trips to the creek for water but it is a great rule to live by.
          In a long term disaster the fire departments might not even be still in operation.  If you are careless around your house it may burn to the ground from the smallest of fires without proper equipment to put it out.  


          The final item on this lesson is one that you won't find in many of the other fire lessons or classes out there.  The energy of fire.  I am not referring about steam power or anything like that.  Fire itself has energy, fire is energy.  The kind of energy that you can feel deeper than your body.  
         The energy, or chi, of fire is what makes you relax and just stare at it for hours.  It helps your brain settle and focus.  It helps your soul heal.  Small campfires are the first lesson of magic in this course.  The next time that you build a fire take some time and just sit and enjoy it.  Feel it, not just in your skin, but in you spirit.  Feel it connect with your spirit and see where it goes.
          This magic is very helpful to calm a scared group.  Before you explore your options start a nice fire and let people connect.

Please share your comments on fire magic below then go out and make some magic or your own. 


Continue on to

Start at the beginning Lesson 1
Visit our Website: www.spearsurvival.com

SPEAR Survival
Prepared For The Everyday
Till The End Of Days!

Friday, February 7, 2014

SPEAR Lesson 11 Water 1.2 Water Safety

Core Training
Lesson 11 of 25

Water 1.2 Water Safety

Now that we have established the importance of water and how your body will suffer without it we have to discuss where to get it.  You can't just drink from wherever you want.  This is obvious for most people but to make this as basic as possible so that everyone is on the same page from this point forward it must be included.  Pure water is not the best thing for us.  Pure meaning distilled water or water that has almost all impurities removed.  The minerals that are in the water for the most part are good for our bodies if not required.  A clear fresh spring would probably be the top of the water gathering list.
          Water that comes from lakes and streams can be used but it needs to be filtered, treated or boiled to make it safe.  The reason for this is that the water you may be contaminated with bacteria and parasites that will make you sick.  Filtering the water through a high filtration filter that is designed for it will take them out of the water while boiling it will kill them.  The third option is to treat the water with a chemical like chlorine or iodine.  These kill the contaminates but leave them in the water.  This is how most of our municipal drinking water is treated.
          The water from our home plumbing is safe as long as the source of the water isn't contaminated.  If you have town or city water that is pumped in from the street it is probably going to be safe unless there has been a major disaster that has left the water treatment facility abandoned.  If you find yourself in a long term crisis and are waiting it out at home you need to evaluate your water situation and make decisions early.  Filling as many containers as possible in the beginning is a smart choice.  You never know how long the water will stay on.  Most water systems rely on gravity to provide the water pressure to get the water up to the upper floors of buildings and houses that are located on the top of hills etc...  The water is pumped from the source, either a reservoir or a well into large water towers that hold the water.  After a crisis the water will stay in that tank until it runs out.
          If you have well water at your house chances are good that you have clean drinking water that has been pumped up from the water table a couple of hundred of feet below ground.  Almost all contaminates get filtered out from the soil leaving the water safe to drink.  Although sometimes your well housing itself can get contaminated from water coming down the pipe from the top.  It is best to have it tested yearly or simply pour some bleach down the pipe every year and let it kill everything,  A gallon of bleach in the pipe will kill anything in the pipe but can be dangerous to plastic pipes so dilute it with water before you dump it in.  Let is sit for an hour and flush the pipes by running the water to pump the bleach out.  Usually when the smell of bleach is gone it is safe to use but run it another ten minutes to be safe.

          The well has one great Achilles heal and that is that it requires electricity to run the pump to get the water out.  It is possible to have another well put in with a hand crank or to have a hand pump added to your existing pump.  The easiest way to ensure that the water keeps flowing is to have a backup electric system like solar and batteries or a propane generator that you can use to run the pump to fill containers.  It doesn't make sense to have your generator running all the time just for the convenience of running water when you can store water and save your fuel.

          Water storage is the next part of the lesson.  If you don't have the capacity to store water at home you need to consider that a top priority.  Water containers don't need to be anything fancy they just have to be clean and safe to store water.  You can use old milk or soda bottles that have been washed out to save costs.  I would use my bathtub to store water only as a last resort or just for cleaning purposes.  Remember we are trying to keep bacteria out of our bodies.

          Urban water collection offers it own set of challenges.  The chemicals that could be in water that is found could be not only bad for you but could be deadly.  With how important water is, if you find yourself running low when a crisis outlasts your storage you need to find ways of gathering rain water or you need to find your way to a place where the water can be free of chemical contaminates.  If you are completely opposed to leaving your home or neighborhood then you should use that information when doing your emergency planning and practice water collection now to be ready later.

Continue on to
Start at the beginning Lesson 1
visit our website: www.spearsurvival.com
SPEAR Survival
Prepared For The Everyday
Till The End Of Days!

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Martial arts Survival Frame of Mind

          Having the proper frame of mind in a crisis is easily the most important factor to getting through it.  Someone with a depressed mental attitude won't have the strength, mentally, to dig deep and push through the hard times to survive.   For the most part your mental attitude is defined by your character itself as well as your environment but there is work that you can do to improve it.

         In general survival the best thing you can do is simply practice.  By putting yourself in mock situations you will feel far less panicked when it really happens.  For example, to spend time hiking and camping would make being lost in the woods less stressful than it would to someone who doesn't spend much time in the woods. In the martial arts the same method applies.  The more time you spend sparring makes actual confrontations easier to handle.  As your skill improves your self esteem and confidence also improve.   This leads to having a Black belt attitude.
        
         Black belt attitude permeates into every part of  life.  If defines your character and makes critical decisions easier to make.  A strong belief in who you are and what you are capable of will go a long way in staving off the "I quit" attitude.  

         SPEAR craft involves every part of life and allows for much more practice than simply mock survival situations.  When you practice you feel more confident and less apt to panic in an emergency.  So practice often.  Small portions of training everyday will define your character and when you feel this new status or title you will be far more effective.


Monday, January 27, 2014

SPEAR Survival Lesson 10 Water 1.1

Core Training
Lesson 10 of 25
Water 1.1 Water 101

          Water has so many uses that we tend to take for granted on a daily basis.  We use it to bath, we wash our cloths with it, we wash our dishes, our car and our animals with it.  Most importantly though we drink it.  Now if you had to forego the washing of yourself and your cloths, dishes, car and animals you would survive just fine.  You, however, cannot forego the drinking of water.  Your body is comprised or almost 75% water and every organ and system of your body uses it in one way or another.  When these systems start receiving less and less water and your body becomes dehydrated they start shutting down non essential portions and work at only a percentage as normal.  When your life is on the line the last thing you need is for your brain and body to let you down because you didn't have enough water.
          Water is a huge importance in your life and to be really serious about preparing and surviving you need to change the way you look at it and use it.  Most people spend a majority of their lives dehydrated to a certain degree.  Our diets in america are almost designed to make us that way.  What I want you to change is to start learning for yourself the signs of dehydration and the effects that it has on the body and your brain.  You need to drink more water everyday and make it a positive change in your lifestyle.  You never know when you are going to be forced to react to an emergency or crisis and by being fully hydrated you are going to be thinking your best and be able to more your best.
          Drinking water on a day to day is important but during an emergency it is going to keep you sharp which will give you an advantage.  Rationing will be a normal part of life in a long term crisis but water shouldn't be on the rationed list.  Water stored at your home is the next part of the lesson.  At this stage of training you should think about having a solid 72 hour survival kit at home.  The standard for water stored is one gallon per person per day.  This is not just drinking but for cooking as well.  So if you live alone you should have three gallons of water stored. Easy, Right?  
          Once you have the water stored it is best to rotate your stock so it doesn't just sit in plastic jugs for a couple of years.  Simply drink a gallon and put aside a new gallon.  If you are filling from your own tap then just dump and refill.  Fresh water just tastes better and you morale will thank you for keeping your supply fresh.  If you are storing for a large family or for longer term then you might consider storing in five gallon jugs.  I use the water bottle jugs from water bubblers with a sandwich bag taped on the top with electrical tape.  They were free and store well with a nice handle for pouring.  I also like that they are clear and I can see what is in them.  If you use these make sure to store them in a dark place so the sun doesn't encourage things to grow in your water.
          The next part of basics of water is cooking.  If you have a nearby water supply that you can tap into to bring home to use for cooking then you can use that instead of depleting your drinking water supply.  I wouldn't count on that and store less water though.  In fact, store more!  As important as this it to your health and life, and also that it is nearly free, you should make this your number one prepping priority.  Store as much as you can and keep building.  Remember, in a crisis you have no idea what will come next and when a family finds there way to your door and is on the brink of death from dehydration you probably aren't going to kick them to the street.  
          If future lessons on the topic of water we are going to cover multiple ways to treat, filter and boil water to make it safe.  We will also cover livestock and gardening watering, water travel and even water power generation.  We will also discuss to potential hazards to drinking water and how to recognize them. 

In the next lesson we are going to cover water safety to explain why you can't just drink from a stream and how to treat your water to make it safe. The goal is that by SPEAR level 10 you will be capable of finding water and staying hydrated no matter what life throws at you.  You will also be capable of using this amazing resource to grow food, provide effective transportation, and even generate some power for you home.

Continue onto Lesson 11
Start at the beginning Lesson 1
Visit our Website: www.spearsurvival.com


Tuesday, January 7, 2014

SPEAR Survival Lesson 9 Nav 1.2

Core Training
Lesson 9 of 25
Nav 1.2 Polaris and the sun

Let me start this lesson with a couple of explanation to the mentality of this system.  First of all keep in mind that this is the most basic levels of knowledge for the ten branches of training.  They are intended to simply insure that everyone is on the same page as the lessons get more involved.  Secondly it is important to explain why this is important to survival.  There are thousands of skills out there you can try to learn to help yourself be better prepared for an uncertain future.  The question is which one is more important and should be learned first?  Without knowing what is coming there is no way to answer that question.  The only thing that we can do is to sharpen the best tool that we have, ourselves.  I don't mean just is learning skills and buying gear, I am talking about making yourself better.  Better informed, better trained, better equipt and better prepared.
          The martial arts is about striving for perfection.  You work on a technique until it is flawless.  You work on your character to make it the same.  A black belt represents the best that we can be physically as well as mentally and spiritually.  That is why is lends itself so well to survival and prepping.
          You can have enough food for two years and enough bullets to shoot a million attackers to your home but if you are not ready in your mind then you will lose everything, one way or another.  These skills in this course are just simple lessons to give you an understanding of the ten branches and a solid foundation of knowledge that we can build upon later.  Before you learn to run you must first learn to walk.
          Navigation is one of the ten branches of knowledge in SPEAR Survival because without the ability to move you are stuck in one place and that is dangerous.  You will need to move at some point in an emergency whether it is to get home or to get to a family members house.  You might be at home and need to go out an find resources when you don't know what is going on in the world just a couple blocks away from your house.  Basic navigation will be essential for you to be able to move but also to be able to move quickly and unnoticed which we will cover in a future lesson.
          Remember, at this point you are just a white belt and these simple skills need to be practiced over and over to become part of who you are in order to proceed.  It doesn't matter if you have a black belt and karate somewhere else, if you can't put on a white belt and humble yourself to some basic skills then you won't be accepted into most martial arts schools.
          Lets get started, Polaris is the proper name of the north star.  It is a constant in the sky and doesn't move.  It will always be north of your location which makes it great to navigate by.  The north star will help you orient your maps to find your direction without a compass.  To find the north star you can use a simple trick that I learned as a kid.  Find the big dipper  (you know, the pan shaped constellation) and locate the two stars that make up the side of the pan that are farthest away from the handle.  Now take the distance between those two stars and multiply it by roughly two and a half going up from the pan in a straight line using those two stars to find Polaris.  You can't assume that the brightest star in the sky is going to be the north star because if a planet is visible it will usually be brighter than Polaris.
          Polaris is a simple method of finding north while the sun is a bit more complicated.  The sun rises in the east and sets in the west.  I live in the northern hemisphere so that means that the sun at noon will always be directly south of my location.  If you have a watch and know the time of day you can guess which way is south and you will be close enough for simple navigation.  If the sun in almost set you are looking south west and if it is rising you are looking south east.  This changes depending how far away from the equator you are.  The farther away you are the further south the sun travels.  The sun also is lower in the sky in the winter months than in the summer months.
          Regardless of all that, here is a fool proof way to find north if the sun is shining.  Take two sticks and put them in the ground sticking up so that the shadow of the first stick goes over the shadow of the second stick.  You now have two stick that are in line with the sun.  Wait thirty minutes or so and put another stick in the ground that is in line with the shadow of the first stick.  If you connect the two second sticks together in a straight line and put a stick in the middle of those two the line that is formed from the first stick and the new stick in the middle will point due north in the direction away from the sun.
          By knowing north and south you can use that in your basic navigation to be able to move around.  You can head north and continue in that general direction by using the track of the sun.  You can find the moon and set your direction of travel for the next day.
          This is the basics that you need to understand about navigation.  These lessons will make you better today and that is the goal.  Remember, Polaris is north and the sun is south.

Continue to the next lesson: Lesson 10
Start at the beginning: Lesson 1
For an overview of the course: www.spearsurvival.com

SPEAR Survival
Prepared for the Everyday
Till The End Of Days

SPEAR Survival Lesson 8 Nav 1.1

Core Training
Lesson 8 of 25



Navigation 1.1 Street Maps and Compass Points
     When it comes to moving around in unfamiliar territory there is no more important item to have than a map.  GPS units and cell phone apps are very handy on a day to day basis but in a real emergency I don’t want to put my life in the hands of anything that fragile which is connected to systems that might not be in place when you need them. 
             Street maps can usually be found in a book that covers most of the surrounding towns.  These maps will show you routes to locations as well as alternate routes to travel if the main road is blocked.  They also show the location of water features that you can use to get water from or to use as a natural blockade.  
            As was covered in the total load lesson on these maps you can write in your rally point location and highlight the best routes of travel to get in and escape.
            To use a street map isn't as complicated as topographical maps.  They don't need to be aligned with north and you don't have to own a compass, although it does make it easier.  You simply have to find the road that you are on and follow it until it meets another road to find your location.  From there it is merely a matter of left and right turns to get you where you want to go.  If you are traveling in unfamiliar places during times chaos it is best to plan your route carefully and study it before you leave.  The last thing you want to happen is get detoured down a dead end street into unsafe surroundings. 
            The best street maps that I have found include topographical detail as well.  Meaning that there are lines on the map that indicate the change in elevation.  I will cover this in greater detail in a future lesson but for now if you are going to buy a map book try to get one that is topographical.
            Map books should be kept in every vehicle that you own with up to date rally point information.  You should also have laminated pages in your core bag that has just your rally point information and any information of resources that you add to it.  This map will have markings for possible caches that you hide and store.  

            Compass Points.  Most people understand the basics of how a compass works.  The needle points north.  But there is a little more that you need to understand to master the use of this important tool.  Yes it is true that the compass does point north, but it doesn't point to true north (the pole of the earth that the planet actually spins on).  Magnetic compasses point to magnetic north which is a couple of degrees different than true north.  This number changes depending on how far away from the pole you actually are.  For our lesson on street maps this wont be an issue as a general direction of north is good enough.
            A magnetic compass is just that, magnetic.  The little needle that point to that faint signal up north can be interfered with by man made magnetic sources.  To get a true reading on your compass you need to be away from your vehicle as well as any large metal objects.  If you try to use your compass while sitting in you vehicle the magnets in the speakers of your door could give you false readings.  That is just a disclaimer as I would rather you stayed safely in your vehicle while you navigate, just understand that if you get some crazy readings that might be the case.
            To use your compass you need to just find out where north is and turn your map in that direction.  This way the streets that you see out your window will be going in the same direction as they are on the map.  In future lessons we will cover how to use your compass to it maximum potential but for now it just has to point north.  
            Magnetic north is an area near the north pole that is a part of the magnetic pole of the earth.  The magnetic field of the earth pulls down at this point and this is why it attracts the tip of the needle in your compass.  There isn't a manned outpost up there with a machine that makes this field for use with your compass. (just to be clear)
            And lastly I need to add, there is a threat of a form of solar flare that will come from the sun that could be so powerful that it actually reverses the magnetic field of the earth.  This would make your compass actually point south instead of north.  I have heard many reports of what would happen if this did take place and they range from sudden extinction to a more slow paced change of our weather system and the start of another ice age.  You can do your own research on this topic if you are concerned about this threat.  I mention it because there is a slight possibility of this happening and if it did it would obviously change this lesson.  To be as prepared as you can be the more information you have the better.

Continue on to 
Start at the beginning Lesson 1
Visit our Website: www.spearsurvival.com
SPEAR Survival
Prepared For The Everyday
Till The End Of Days!

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

SPEAR Lesson 7 Commo 1.2 Cell Phone, Land Line and Radio

Spear Survival

Core Training
Lesson 7 of 25
Commo 1.2


Cell phone, Land line and Radio

On a day to day basis the cell phone is going to be the number one communication tool that you have.  With smart phones that are no less than a computer in your pocket you are rarely more than a couple taps away from any information that you want.  As we discussed in the previous lesson there are ways to enhance the use of these devices but today I want to give you a simple explanation on how these things work and what the weaknesses are.
     Not to get into great detail at this level of training but you need to understand some simple lessons of radio waves.  Yes your cell phone transmits on radio waves too.  Radio waves come in an array of frequencies from HF (high frequency) which in reality is the lowest frequencies that you need to be concerned with to VHF (very high frequency) which is where you will find most transmissions today from your car radio and personal walkie talkies.  UHF (ultra high frequencies) are where your cell phones live.
     There is a lot more to this then just that but for now that will do.  The next thing to know is that is that the higher the frequency the shorter the wave and the smaller the antenna.  So the bigger the antenna the farther it will transmit.  (you can't hook an old tv antenna up to your phone to increase your range-it just doesn't work like that)  As an example: a ham radio operator transmitting on HF is using an antenna the size of his house can talk to anyone around the world if the conditions are right.  Your cell phone needs towers that are almost line of site to be able to transmit and receive.  That is why there are so many cell phone towers.  The kink is that those towers are usually located as high as they can be to create the most direct line to the devices they serve putting them right in the danger zone of bad storms.
     If you travel into the woods you won't have any service at all unless you happen to stay close to a tower that supplies a more rural area.  In order for cell phone companies to have coverage everywhere they quite literally have to put a tower and antenna everywhere.  When the population isn't large enough it becomes cost prohibitive and there are just zones with no coverage.

Land Lines.  A land line is a hard wired phone in your house or place of business that doesn't rely on radio waves. (use of satellites by the companies excluded)  When you can pick up your phone, dial a number and talk to someone across town you are using a land line.  Typically the term doesn't separate the use of cordless phones within the house but here we must make that clear.  The reason is that if the power goes out then so does your cordless phone.  You will need a good old fashion corded phone to get through in a severe power outage.  Remember that even if you don't have a phone hooked up and paying for service that the provider still have to allow the use of 911 services from that phone line.  If you don't have a house phone because you rely on your cell phone you should still invest in an inexpensive corded phone to plug in just in case of an emergency.  (when you plug the phone in there should be a dial tone, if not call your local phone carrier and get that fixed)

Radio.  We discussed above about how radio frequency effects antenna size and that determines transmission distance.  I want to discuss some basic ideas of ways to get better connected with your family in an emergency.  UHF hand held radios that use GMRS & FRS (General Mobile Radio Service & the Family Radio Service) are a great addition to your commo equipment.  These are the small walkie talkies that you see in the stores that say they have a 36 mile range or something like that. This might be in the deserts of Arizona that they are good for that distance.  Remember UHF small antenna-short transmission distance.  It is actually good that the distance is small because you would here lots of other people talking on these channels in an emergency.
     You may have company on these frequencies in an emergency but when the power is out for a couple of days the people who have to capability to charge them will be greatly declined.  There may actually come a point in an emergency where it is helpful to have multiple members of your community on a single frequency.  The down side of these radios is that they have a short distance and they will be used by lots of people but if you have members of your family going off is search of food or supplies then having a way of staying connected will be worth it.
     There are other options for group communication that we will cover in upcoming lessons.  For basic radio communications you can't beat a low cost set of radios to keep your family connected.


If you haven't read the previous lessons yet I suggest that you do now to get up to date with the training thus far.  Moving forward there is a lot more hands on practice required.  Practice the skills that you learn and expand upon the things that you learn.  Your goal is to improve your chances of survival in an emergency.  This course is designed to be a road map for you to start from or to fill in the blank spots.

This is lesson 7 of 25 of the Core training course of the Sage Institute.  Up next Lesson 8 Navigation 1.1

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Survival Preparedness The Martial Arts Way

Survival Preparedness
The Martial Arts Way
I don't know of any college or university that offers a masters degree in survival or preparedness.  You will never become an expert by reading books, blogs or YouTube videos.  You will know what you could do when things go wrong but that doesn't make you an expert. Does it?

Of course not.  If you were an expert in survival and I said that you could become an expert in front of your computer you would probably stop reading right there.  The truth is that the things that you learn in books and online are great sources of information but without real world practice they are going to be hard to pull off in a crisis.

So how do you do it? Besides packing a backpack with a wool blanket and a spork and heading into the woods for a year, how can you become an expert in survival?  Perhaps you have been interested in survival and preparedness for years now and have been bouncing around from one topic to another only to realize that there is still so much you could learn.  Or perhaps you have just been through a crisis in your life and have vowed that next time you will be better prepared.

You can become a survival expert the same way that you become a martial arts expert, a good teacher and lots of practice.

The path to becoming a martial arts expert "black belt" is really quite simple.  You start your training as a white belt which requires you to humble yourself to the rest of the class.  You can then engage in the lessons appropriate to your level.  Most students find this hard and want to practice the harder flashy techniques that they see the black belts doing.  The instructor has to keep them focused on the multiple repetitions that they must complete to make it to the next level.

The secret here that most people don't know is that when a black belt has to use their skill to defend themselves 99% of the techniques that they will use are those same white belt techniques that they learned as new students.  This doesn't happen by accident it is the goal all along.  

Let me describe how a martial arts technique is mastered and then show the relevance to survival skills.

When a student first learns a technique they are taught how to stand in the proper stance and how to balance their body before they even start to move.  Next they are allowed to slowly practice the technique, let’s say a front kick.  They extend their leg over and over again until it seems like it might fall off.  What this is doing is producing muscle memory and conditioning of the muscles that are used in that kick.  
When they have practiced enough that their kick looks good and is completed without losing their balance then they own that kick, but they haven't mastered it.

After owning the kick they now have to make it effective.  By adding speed and power the likelihood of success of this kick is increased.

Once the kick is fast and strong it is time to learn when to use it.  Sparring practice emphasizes the timing and opportunity to use this kick.  They continue to practice over and over with repetitions and sparring exercises until the final plateau is reached where they have mastered the kick-Thoughtless application. (When they can use that technique without even thinking about it)  It becomes a natural reaction to the situation.

This isn't the end though for the student.  There is more than one technique to any system.  The student must master them all to become a black belt.  They don't master one and then start on another.  They learn a set of techniques for each belt that they obtain.  Usually the techniques of one level are just slightly different from the previous level so it enhances the mastery of the base technique.  They progress up the belt ranks getting better and more capable as they go.

That is the technical part of becoming a black belt.  There is another side, a more important transformation that happens to the student throughout this journey.  As they continue to make their techniques more and more refined looking at them with an enhanced level of scrutiny, they begin to do that to their character as well.  They don't judge themselves by a set of skills but more a set of values.  They become black belts.  When the belt goes on their uniform it is merely a representation of what they have become.  The belt doesn't make them black belts, their dedication to personal development does.

To become an expert in survival you need to have levels of training that allows for you to start as a humble beginner and to build upon basic skills until they become second nature.  You first must learn skills like building fires and finding food.  Then you learn to do them better and faster.  Eventually you do them with a level of confidence that takes them off your crisis worry list.

When you own the skills, like building fire, you then learn the best application of that skill.  Like where to build it and how to gain the most benefit from it. You learn to make it in the snow or with a bow drill.  You master that skill.  But there are more skills to learn.

There are more skills to learn in survival than in the martial arts but they require less practice as they will likely not need a reaction as fast as combat.  You will be able to think your way through a crisis using your knowledge and experience together to succeed.

The final step and most similar feature between the martial arts and survival is the black belt mentality.  If it is practiced with the same level of personal perfection required for the simple front kick it will elicit the same response in the student transforming them into an expert, one that doesn't need a belt to prove it.

There are more complexities in the martial arts than just these few that I listed here but this is the foundation to all the fighting arts.  The techniques may be different but the goal is the same.  In the martial arts we have an expression that says "there are many ways to the top of the mountain but the view from the top is the same".  Survival is just another way up the mountain.

Monday, December 9, 2013

SPEAR Lesson 6 Commo 1.1

Spear Survival

Core Training
Lesson 6 of 25
Commo 1.1



Commo, or communications, is an essential part of everyday life.  We live in a constantly connected world where information and people are only a couple of seconds away.  The cell phone has changed the face of communications from  a house phone  to these little devices that fit in our pockets and we take everywhere.  
     Communications as a basic need serves the purpose of informing us about what is going on and connecting us to members of our group/family.  Primitively there weren't any forms of electronic communication.  Information was delivered in person.  People had to go to see somebody else to ask questions or discuss issues.
      
Lets look at the everyday situation first and how we can be better prepared.  Knowing how important our communication devices are to our daily lives we can do a few small things to ensure that we can keep them running longer.  The battery is the weakest link that we have control over with our phones.  Having the ability to charge your phone when away from home is important.  You may have had good luck with your phone lasting all day and haven't had to get a car charger yet.  Perhaps you have a wall charger at work and can charge your phone there as well.  But what happens if you get stranded in your vehicle and your phone runs out of battery.
(Did you know that a car battery that is too dead to start your car still can be used to charge your phone?)

The car charger should be in every vehicle that you have.  At a price of less than $10 each it is low cost peace of mind.  Inside your core bag you should carry a usb cord for your phone, a wall adapter for that cord and an external battery charging device.

The external charging device is a low weight addition to your core bag that will increase you communication ability if you are on foot and away from your vehicle.

If we change scenarios to a longer lasting emergency, communication takes on a whole new meaning.  We are no longer talking about getting a text out about picking up a gallon of milk on the way home or downloading a cute kitten video.  We are now back to needing to know what is going on and if people are safe.  In an immediate crisis your phone will be all that you have but might not work well or at all with the cell frequencies taken over by emergency services and thousands of people trying to use them at once.  If you and your family have already established a rally point then you can make a plan to meet there or back at home in an emergency.

When the emergency is large enough that it shuts the power off for a few days you will likely have no cell reception as the cell towers require power to operate.  Radio communications and television will be all you have left.  The problem with these forms of communications is that you can listen and watch but you can't send anything out.  Eventually, if the crisis continues beyond a week then even tv and radio may go off the air or your ability to generate electricity might be gone.  The average american doesn't have a communication plan beyond this because they haven't needed it yet.

In a worse case scenario when the world is in crisis and society is falling apart communications will be critical for many reasons.
  1. Connecting with family members to ensure their safety
  2. Receiving information from government and emergency service of the state of the situation
  3. As a warning device of potential dangers (rioting, looting or severe weather)
  4. Community information 
The purpose of this lesson is to demonstrate the importance of communications so that you won't take it for granted and can plan ahead to keep it going.  Commo will be expanded upon greatly in higher levels of SPEAR training covering ways to improve your communication ability in an situation.  At this level of training, get a charger for your vehicle and pack the listed items in your core bag.  Review the rally point with your family and discuss when you will meet there.  Discuss the time frame when they will meet at home is communications are not available in an emergency.

The last thing you want to happen is to be stuck in the dark not knowing what is going on in an emergency.  Plan ahead to keep yourself connected.