Crazy thing happened today. Weather called for possible light rain. I'm 2 miles up a draw and it starts pouring rain. By the time I got my rain gear out I was already wet. No biggie. Spare drys in the pack. Not wanting to end my hunt (as i do if i have nothing dry.) I just hunker down under a tree and start a small fire. Steam starts rolling off of me as I feed this fire twigs. Rain turns to snow. Out of nowhere there's a young 20s guy all but running out of the draw. He comes over and asks if I'm ok. "Yes, are you?" He's soaked. He says, "I'll be fine I just need to keep moving until I get to the truck."
I get it. I've been there. Keep moving and you'll be OK. I insist he dry off a bit. He hesitates. Yes, stopping when you are cold is a risk. Smart kid. But I've got a fire going and can easily make it bigger. He sits down and I gather wood. We get the fire big enough for 2. As the weather clears I move it away from the trees and get it HOT. Steam is rolling off of him now. I keep feeding the fire until he's good and warm and mostly dry. He confessed he tried to get a fire going and couldn't. He used all his matches and his lighter got wet. So he decided to run for it and saw my smoke. Came over hoping to get warm. I reach in my pack and hand him one of my emergency flares. Wal-Mart boating dept. Short, light, dependable if you keep them in a Ziplock. 1 thing I sacrifice weight for is instant fire. A flare will dry and light wet wood. Burns at thousands of degrees for 10 minutes. I show him my match case and lighters on top of that. I show him how branches low on the tree are usually dry while everything else is wet. Brown pine needles take off like flash paper. Toilet paper in a ziplock. Etc. He graciously accepts all the advise. A handshake and he's on his way. I put the fire out and went back to hunting but can't help think, "Poor kid exhausted everything he was taught to carry."
Would he have been okay? Probably. Was it worth watching a kid walk 2 miles soaking wet while the temp dropped to 40? No... He can have my emergency stuff after I got him warm. He might still need it. I've still got plenty. You can go without food for a while, water for a few days, hypothermia will kill you TODAY.
Carry enough to make a fire. Backups for the backups. That might be my kid someday.
I get it. I've been there. Keep moving and you'll be OK. I insist he dry off a bit. He hesitates. Yes, stopping when you are cold is a risk. Smart kid. But I've got a fire going and can easily make it bigger. He sits down and I gather wood. We get the fire big enough for 2. As the weather clears I move it away from the trees and get it HOT. Steam is rolling off of him now. I keep feeding the fire until he's good and warm and mostly dry. He confessed he tried to get a fire going and couldn't. He used all his matches and his lighter got wet. So he decided to run for it and saw my smoke. Came over hoping to get warm. I reach in my pack and hand him one of my emergency flares. Wal-Mart boating dept. Short, light, dependable if you keep them in a Ziplock. 1 thing I sacrifice weight for is instant fire. A flare will dry and light wet wood. Burns at thousands of degrees for 10 minutes. I show him my match case and lighters on top of that. I show him how branches low on the tree are usually dry while everything else is wet. Brown pine needles take off like flash paper. Toilet paper in a ziplock. Etc. He graciously accepts all the advise. A handshake and he's on his way. I put the fire out and went back to hunting but can't help think, "Poor kid exhausted everything he was taught to carry."
Would he have been okay? Probably. Was it worth watching a kid walk 2 miles soaking wet while the temp dropped to 40? No... He can have my emergency stuff after I got him warm. He might still need it. I've still got plenty. You can go without food for a while, water for a few days, hypothermia will kill you TODAY.
Carry enough to make a fire. Backups for the backups. That might be my kid someday.