Finding Direction

Direction finding points to the foundation of the course from which an appropriated sign was transmitted. This can point to radio or different manifestations of satellite correspondence. By joining together the bearing qualified information from two or suitably divided recipients (or a lone portable recipient), the root of a transmission may be found in space through triangulation.

Finding Direction

Finding Direction

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SAS 122 - Sea Survival & Abandoning Ships
Survival at Sea: Four-Fifths of the Earth's surface is open water - the most difficult environment in which to survive. Water and wind rapidly chill the body. Alone in cold water your chances are not good without equipment. If you know your location you may be able to predict where the currents will carry you.
SAS 089 - Cooking Tips
Cooking tips in Camp Craft: Cut the meat into solid shapes and bubble. Check liver: just if firm, odourless, free from spots and hard irregularities. Stew or wrap the fish in leaves and place in sultry ashes Boild the flying creatures in all remains. Gut the reptiles, then cook in their skins. Assuredly bubble the shellfish. Cook and mince the Insects and worms b...
SAS 126 - Sea Survival & Water Rationing
During the survival at the sea, pyrotechnic equipment must be kept secure and dry. Read carefully the instruction and beware of fire hazards. When firingflares do not point them downwards or towards yourself or anyone else. Use flares only when certain they will be seen. Fire when a plane is flying towards you, not when it has gone past.
Knives
The Malayan name for a knife with a large curved blade like a machete. Too large for everyday use, it is ideal in the wilds for cutting down trees and building shelters and rafts.
SAS 043 - Desert & Tropical Plants
Growing tip, enclosed by crown of leaves or bases of leaf stems, is edible in most palms - eat if not too bitter. Avoid fruit unless positively identified. 
SAS 076 - Building Shelter
In rain forests and jungle where the ground is damp and crawling with insects a raised bed is preferable. Unless the nigths are cold, the number one priority will be to keep rasonably dry.
SAS 077 - Building Shelter
Atap and other large leaves when thatched make the best roofs and walls for jungle shelters. Look for any plant similarly structured, the bigger and broader the better. Closely layer halves of atap on a roof frame. Walls can be less dense.
Wigwam
Wigwams take more time to build than open shelters, but your efforts will be doubly rewarded. Not only can the shelter be warmed by a small fire, reducing the need to collect a huge pile of wood, but the firelight reflects off the walls, providing cheery illumination for sitting out a long winter night.
Home Security Tips
Physical security is basically concerned with limiting physical access by unauthorized individuals (normally translated as interlopers) to regulated offices, granted that there are different contemplations and scenarios in which physical efforts to establish safety are valuable for instance, confining access within an office or to particular stakes, and natural controls to decrease physical occurr...
SAS 054 - Animal Dangers & Trapping
It is easier to trap than to hunt small prey. Choice of baits and site is important. Food may be scarce, but a little used as bait may bring rewards.Be patient and give the traps tim. Animals will be wary until they get used to them - that is when they will run into them. 
SAS 010 - Water
Plants often trap water in cavities. Old, hollow joints of bamboo fill up with water; shake them - if you hear water, cut a notch at the base of each joing and tip the water out. 
PS Family Supply Kit (2)
The image in the post shows the six basics that one should stock in the home before even a disaster takes place. They should stock water, food, first aid supplies, clothing and bedding.
Survival Tips B
SAS 025 - Tropical Regions
Along river banks and the edges of the bush daylight does enter to the ground surface and development is productive. Undergrowth achieves statures of 3m in a year. Moving is abate, blazing work, hacking a course with a parang or cleaver. 
SAS 134 - Rescue & Hand Signalling
Some of the codes that are used in the mountain rescues are: Message: SOS, Message: HELP NEEDED, MESSAGE: MESSAGE UNDERSTOOD, MESSAGE: RETURN TO BASE
SAS 078 - Building Shelter
In polar territories gives in and hollows shape basic safe houses. Depending on if you convey a bivouac, stretch it is insurance by heaping up detached snow around and over it, so long as it can back the weight. At exceptionally level temperatures snow is strong and you require spades and ice saws to cut into it or make obstructs of it. 
SAS 097 - Clothing & Ropes
Taking care of Rope: Rope should be protected from exposure to damp or storing sunlight and if made from natural fibres, from attack by rodents and insects. If it does get wet, do not force dry it in front of a fire. Do not drag it or leave it on the ground. Dirt can penetrate and work away at the fibres.
SAS 162 - Medicinal Plants
Intestinal problems can be permanently eradicated by Mountain avens, Balm, Water mint, Elm, Cleavers, Agrimony, Lesser celandine and solomon's seal.