Healing Bullet Wounds

Stop the bleeding by applying pressure directly to the wound with any available clean cloth. If the bullet has exited the body, apply pressure to both puncture areas.

Remove the bullet, if it’s still inside the body, with a pair of sterlized hemostats, Most of the bullet fragment upon impact to ensure that all bullet fragments are removed.

Healing Bullet Wounds

Healing Bullet Wounds

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SAS 028 - Food
Should stomach trouble occur, drink plenty of hot water; do not eat again until the pain goes. If it is severe, induce vomiting by tickling the back of the throat. Swallowing some charcoal will also induce vomiting and may absorb the poison at the same time. 
SAS 031 - Edible Plants
Some plants have edible stems. If they are soft, peel off outer stringy parts, slice, then boil. Inner pith of some stems, example elder, can be extracted by splitting stem and eaten. Use fibrous stems to make twine. 
SAS 081 - Fire
Tinder is any material that takes only a spar to ignite. Birch bark, dried grasses, wood shavings, bird down, waxed paper, cotton fluff, fir cones, pine needles, powdered dried fungi, scorched or charred cotton arc excellent tinder, as in the fine dust produced by wood burrowing insects and the inside of bird's nests.
SAS 029 - Food
Gathering plants is one of the tedious tasks to identify place for food. Gather plants systematically. Take a container on foraging trips to stp the harvest being crushed, which makes it go off. 
SAS 127 - Sea Survival, Water Rationing & Fishing
Conserve emergency food supplies until needed. Try to live off sea life. There are dangerous fish, but in the open sea, fish are generally safe to eat. Near the shore there are dangerous and poisonous species.
SAS 011 - Water
Water can also be obtained from animal eyes which can be extracted by sucking them.All fish contain a drinkable fluid. Large fish, in particular, have a reservoir of fresh water along the spine. Tap it by gutting the fish and, keeping the fish flat, remove the backbone, being careful not to spill the liquid, and then drink it. 
SAS 052 - Animal Tracking
Trapping needs time but might be truly proficient. Trapping may be sheltered and cheap for the trapper, in any case in present day times it has come to be dubious, due to it is claimed cold-bloodedness. To some extent to location the aforementioned concerns, in 1996, the Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies, a conglomeration made up of state and elected fish and untamed life channel experts, ...
SAS 090 - Preserving Food
If food is not plentiful or is limited by season, ensure that stores keep safely. Do not store food in direct sunlight, near excessive warmth or moisture, nor where scavengers may ruin it.
SAS 066 - Handling the Kill
Consume offal at the closest conceivable opportunity, anyway rest of meat is preferred hung to make it delicate and to execute parasites. In moderate temperatures, leave carcase hanging for 2-3 days. In smoking atmospheres, save or cook pronto. 
SAS 149 - First Aid, Fractures & Shock
During the severe bleeding, loss of body fluids from severe burns or prolonged vomiting or diarrhoea commonly lead to shock. Other causes are electrocution and heart attack.
SAS 060 - Animal Trapping & Hunting
Sharp recognition and an information of creatures make it more effortless to find prey and to exploit terrain. Move Quietly. Move sluggishly promotion stop customarily. To dodge stumbles and decrease commotion, convey your weight on the back foot, testing the afterward step wiht the toes before exchanging your weight. Chase in opposition to the wind. 
SAS 164 - Bites & Stings
The Bites and Strings creatures are not a major problem but should be treated with respect. The image in the post describes various curing options for most of the animals and insects.
SAS 123 - Sea Survival
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SAS 030 - Edible Plants
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SAS 092 - Organising Camp
Camp Discipline: Do not plan amusement in camp: drain, gut and skin on the trap line to pull in event to traps, not to the camp.
SAS 119 - Moving on Waterways
A wide river will be easier to float on than to walk beside. Long-term survivors should experiment with making canoes by burning out the centre of a tree trunk or covering a frame of willow with birch bark or skins.
SAS 155 - Diseases
When in water, the survivor is more likely to be exposed to water - borne diseases, or those carried by insects and animals. Tropical diseases are less familiar and will therefore be dealt with here in more detail. Where drugs are not available, treatment is largely a matter of dealing with symptoms and making patient comfortable.