L
ike your prehistoric ancestors, you have the ability to har
ness those great human qualities of adaptability and ingenuity that
could save your life during a survival situation. Whether it’s making a
fish hook from the bones of a decaying animal or a crude knife from a piece
of rock, the ability to improvise and create survival tools from materials at
hand will help you when you’ve got nothing else with which to work.
Think Like a Sculptor
ALTHOUGH MOST OF US ENVISION WILDERNESS as being completely untouched
by humankind, the world is not that big anymore. In many ways, this is
not a good thing, but it may help you in a survival situation because you
are more likely than you think to come across abandoned junk that may
be useful.
Some of the best places for finding useful odds and ends are coastal
regions, where the sea often washes up intriguing bits. You should look
upon this stuff as if you were a sculptor: Don’t consider what it is, but what
it could be. That piece of scrap metal might look like a piece of garbage, but
if you change your lens you might see six fish hooks, a knife blade, and
a pot for melting water. When I was in Labrador, I came upon an empty
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