Leave a Note, Save Your Life!
If nobody knows you’ve gone, or where to look, or when you might be back, it could be a long wait to be rescued! An detailed note, left behind before any outing, should be Standard Operating Procedure. The note could end up being a lifesaver!
Before writing anything, though, consider who the note will be entrusted to. It must be a reliable person who cares, and who can be relied upon to contact the proper authorities if you don’t show up as scheduled.
The standard style for an informative news story (which is what this note is) is based on the “Five Ws.” This model is taught in journalism schools, and the name refers to: Who, What, Where, Why and When.
Answer all these questions, and you will give the search and rescue folks a better chance of finding you quickly.
WHO: Start with your name and cell phone number. Also include the names of other people in the party and their cell phone numbers. The phone numbers can be critical: if one cell doesn’t get coverage, another might. Or one phone could be damaged or run out of battery power. All the numbers increase your chances of communication!
Include the make, model, year and license number of the vehicle you’re taking.
WHAT: The purpose of the outing is to do…Fill in the blank, and be specific. A mountaineering expedition to scale a peak differs tremendously from a fishing expedition to the lake at the base. Knowing the purpose of the trip helps narrow down where a lost person might be. It can also help emergency personnel prepare themselves more effectively for the search.
WHERE: I like to use GPS coordinates here. Put the coordinates (and the datum) down of where you intend to park your vehicle, waypoints of your route and your destination. Even if the weather gets nasty and your GPS won’t work, rescuers will have a good idea of where to look. A map left with the “Five Ws” note could be very helpful if you don’t use a GPS! Garmin eTrex Venture HC GPS Receiver
WHY: An important question, and one that will help rescuers know where to look. A wildflower photography or fishing trek may not cover a lot of ground. Rescuers will know to concentrate their efforts around the WHERE. A 20-mile jaunt on the Pacific Crest Trail, though, means you’re ambitious, possibly lightly-clad and equipped and capable of covering a lot of ground. The search may have to be expanded. WHY also provides a clue as to how prepared the lost persons might be.
WHEN: You anticipate getting back at what time? When should the person with the note contact rescuers?
An additional insurance aspect is to take a piece of aluminum foil, step on it with the shoe you will be wearing to leave a footprint. Include the foil with the note. Searchers can then eliminate obviously bigger or smaller footprints with different tread patterns on the trail.
Put the note, map and footprint in a gallon ziplock bag. Write the name of the missing person or party on the bag with a felt-tip pen, and hand the package over to rescuers.
Survival common sense is a combination of many small, inter-related skills and techniques. An informative note before leaving on your trek is a good place to start!
Recommended Reading:
Surviving a Wilderness Emergency
98.6 Degrees: The Art of Keeping Your Ass Alive
The Survivors Club: The Secrets and Science that Could Save Your Life
The Boy Scout Handbook
For more survival common sense tips, click on the highlighted words:
- STOP: Use this exercise to reduce stress and focus your thoughts.
- Take your Ten Essentials on every outing.
- Dress with the right fabrics.
- Have a plan to make a tarp shelter
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Leon, Great to meet you at the CO Sportsman Show at Peter Kummerfeldts booth.
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Excellent comments about leaving a note. I wish more folks would do that. I have a hiker/hunters trip plan on my site that list the info you recommend. All the best.
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While this topic can be very challenging for most people, my opinion is that there has to be a middle or common ground that we all can find. I do appreciate that you’ve added relevant and rational commentary here though. Very much thanks to you!
Thanks for reading! And if we all agreed on everything, there would be nothing to talk about around the campfire!
I own and use three different GPSs. I don’t have a problem with the GPS systems’ precision, convenience or accuracy. But, be careful.
I have had lost GPS reception in Portland, Oregon’s Forrest Park, when I went into a gully, lined with deciduous trees in the rain. My GPS didn’t work in an Idaho canyon on an elk hunt. My GPS, for no reason I could determine, just quit in a Mississippi forest. (In the middle of a historic Civil War mapping project!)
I love technology. But I don’t trust any battery-operated item for wilderness survival.
great post , really good view on the subject and very well written, this certainly has put a spin on my day, many thanks from the USA and sustain up the good work
GPS Systems have grown to be far better every day – it really is truly staggering precisely what technology will be able to realize now!
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Leave a Note, Save Your Life! | Survival Common Sense”. Thank you very much, it helped me out.
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Good tips, I will leave a more detailed note the next time I go out into the world.