Episodes

  • Camp Hygiene
    May 17 2026
    Camp hygiene is one of those survival skills that gets overlooked until it becomes impossible to ignore. When people think about staying alive outdoors, they usually picture fire, shelter, water, or navigation. But once the first few hours pass, the small daily habits matter just as much. Clean hands, safe food handling, waste disposal, and basic body care can be the difference between feeling functional and falling apart. In a survival setting, camp hygiene is not about comfort. It is about protecting your energy, your morale, and your health. The first priority is personal cleanliness. Even when water is limited, your hands should be cleaned before eating, after using the toilet, and after handling raw food, fish, game, or dirty gear. If you have soap, use it. If you do not, clean water and friction are still better than nothing. A small bottle of sanitizer can help, but it is not a replacement for real washing when grime builds up. Pay attention to your feet, too. Blisters, trench foot, and skin breakdown can start from simple neglect. Dry your feet well, change socks when needed, and keep them as clean as conditions allow. Next is waste management. This is a major part of camp hygiene because poor sanitation spreads sickness fast. Set up a latrine or toilet area away from your water source, cooking space, and sleeping area. In the field, you want to create a habit that is consistent and disciplined. Dig catholes where appropriate, bury waste properly, and cover it well. If you are in an area where digging is not possible, use approved waste bags or follow local guidance. The key principle is simple: keep human waste separated from everything you eat, touch, and sleep near. That one rule prevents a lot of problems. Food hygiene matters just as much. In a survival camp, it is tempting to cut corners once you are tired or cold, but unsafe food handling can put you out of action quickly. Keep raw and cooked foods separate, cook meat thoroughly, and store food where it will not attract animals. Clean your utensils as soon as possible after use. If water is scarce, wipe off residue first so you need less water to finish the job. Also, never ignore spoiled food just because you are hungry. One bad meal can cost you far more time and strength than skipping it ever will. Finally, think about camp organization. A clean, orderly camp supports good judgment. Keep dirty gear in one place, dry gear in another, and cooking gear separate from sleeping equipment. Hang wet clothing where it can dry. Sweep out debris. Keep trash contained. These habits reduce pests, minimize odors, and make it easier to move fast if conditions change. Hygiene in camp is really about reducing friction in every part of your day. The cleaner and more organized your setup, the easier it is to stay focused on the bigger survival tasks. Camp hygiene may not sound exciting, but it is one of the strongest indicators that someone is thinking clearly in the field. A survivor who manages cleanliness well is usually protecting their body, their supplies, and their decision-making. In the long run, that discipline can be just as important as fire-lighting or navigation. If you want to stay effective outdoors, make camp hygiene part of your survival routine from the very beginning. Sponsor: Find the book on Amazon and Books Central Website
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    4 mins
  • Water Procurement
    May 16 2026
    When you talk about survival, water procurement is one of the first skills that matters. You can go longer without food than most people realize, but without water, everything starts to break down fast: judgment, energy, temperature control, and eventually the ability to keep moving at all. In this episode, we’re looking at water procurement as a practical survival skill, not just a theory. That means knowing where to find water, how to make it safer, how to store it, and how to think clearly when supplies are running low. The first step in water procurement is learning to recognize possible sources. In the wild, that might mean streams, springs, rainfall, dew, or water collected from natural depressions. In more developed environments, it might mean water heaters, toilet tanks, ice cubes, or stored emergency supplies. The key is to stop thinking only in terms of “clean drinking water” and start thinking in terms of “potential water sources.” Not every source is immediately safe, but many can become usable with the right process. Good survivors don’t wait until they are desperate to start looking. Once water is found, the next question is safety. Clear water is not automatically safe water. Contamination can come from bacteria, parasites, chemicals, fuel, or runoff, and some of the most dangerous water looks completely harmless. Basic treatment methods include boiling, filtration, and chemical purification, but each has strengths and limitations. Boiling is reliable for biological threats, while filters are useful for removing debris and many organisms, but not all chemicals. Purification tablets are lightweight and convenient, but they take time and may not improve taste. The smartest approach is layering methods when you can. For example, letting sediment settle, filtering the water, and then boiling or chemically treating it gives you a much better margin of safety. Storage is another critical part of water procurement that often gets overlooked. Finding water is only half the job; keeping it available is what turns a short-term solution into a real survival plan. In a home preparedness setting, this means having sealed containers, rotating stored water, and knowing how much your household actually needs. In the field, it means protecting collected water from recontamination. Use clean containers whenever possible, avoid dipping dirty hands or gear into your supply, and label treated water so you don’t mix it up with untreated sources. A solid water plan is not just about access, but also about discipline. Finally, water procurement is about judgment. In an emergency, people often make bad choices because they are tired, stressed, or overly focused on speed. They drink from the first source they see, ignore warning signs, or spend too much energy chasing uncertain water instead of conserving themselves. The better mindset is simple: move calmly, assess the environment, and use the least risky option available. If you can collect rainwater safely, do that. If you can treat a stream before drinking, do that. If you already have enough water to pause and think, use that time wisely. Good decision-making saves more lives than panic ever will. Water procurement may sound basic, but it is one of the most important survival skills you can build. It connects awareness, patience, technique, and planning into one practical system. Whether you are preparing for the backcountry, a power outage, or a longer emergency, the goal is the same: know where water might come from, know how to make it safer, and never wait until thirst has already narrowed your choices. Stay calm, stay prepared, and treat water as the priority it truly is. Sponsor: Find the book on Amazon and Books Central Website
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    4 mins
  • Bugging Out
    May 11 2026
    When people hear the phrase bugging out , they often picture a dramatic last-minute escape: bags grabbed in a rush, a car packed to the roof, and a quick getaway from some looming disaster. But in reality, bugging out is not about panic. It’s about having a plan, making smart decisions, and knowing when leaving is safer than staying put. In survival terms, bugging out means moving from a compromised location to a safer one because the situation has become too dangerous to remain where you are. That could be a wildfire approaching too fast, a flood cutting off access, civil unrest, a chemical spill, or any event where your home, workplace, or neighborhood is no longer the best place to be. The goal is not to outrun every problem. The goal is to recognize when mobility gives you the best chance to stay alive. The first and most important part of bugging out is decision-making. Many people wait too long because they want more certainty before acting. The problem is that survival rarely gives perfect certainty. You need triggers. What conditions would make you leave? What roads would be unusable? What warnings would push you into action? A bug-out decision should be based on objective signs, not hope. If you already know your exit points, alternate routes, and destination, you can move early and avoid the chaos that traps everyone else. Next comes your gear, and this is where a lot of people overcomplicate things. A bug-out bag should support movement, not slow it down. It needs to cover the basics: water, calories, shelter, first aid, navigation, light, fire, communication, and a few personal essentials. But the real question is whether you can carry it, use it, and keep moving with it. Every item should earn its place. The lighter and more functional your kit is, the easier it becomes to travel on foot, switch transport methods, or stay mobile if roads and fuel are no longer reliable. Planning your destination matters just as much as the bag itself. Bugging out without a clear place to go is just wandering with equipment. A good bug-out plan includes a primary location, at least one backup option, and the ability to reach either without depending entirely on one route. That might be a trusted friend’s property, a family cabin, or a prearranged safe location. You should also think about what happens if you arrive tired, wet, hungry, or after dark. The destination needs to be realistic, accessible, and suitable for the type of emergency you’re preparing for. Finally, bugging out is as much a mental skill as a physical one. Stress narrows judgment, and fear can make people act too slowly or too fast. Practicing bug-out scenarios before an emergency helps build confidence. Walk your route. Pack your bag. Time your departure. Talk through the choices you would make if roads were blocked or communications failed. The more familiar the process becomes, the less likely you are to freeze when it matters most. Bugging out is not an admission of defeat. It’s a strategic move when staying put is no longer the safest option. With a clear trigger, a practical kit, and a destination you trust, you turn uncertainty into action. And in a true emergency, that kind of preparation can make all the difference. Sponsor: Find the book on Amazon and Books Central Website
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    3 mins
  • Bugging In
    May 10 2026
    When people hear the phrase bugging in , they often think it means doing nothing and hoping for the best. It does not. Bugging in is a deliberate survival strategy: staying put, protecting what you have, and making smart decisions when moving would be riskier than remaining at home. In this episode, we’re looking at how to turn your home into a safer, more resilient place when the outside world is unstable, dangerous, or simply not worth the risk. The first step in bugging in is understanding why staying home may be the best option. Not every emergency calls for evacuation. In fact, in many situations, the roads are blocked, the weather is worse outside, or resources become harder to find the moment you leave. Bugging in works best when you have a secure location, enough supplies to last several days, and a clear plan for conserving energy, food, water, and information. The goal is not comfort. The goal is control. A calm, well-prepared household has a much better chance of riding out a disruption than one that waits until the crisis is already underway. Next comes the practical side: hardening your home. That starts with the basics—water, food, light, heat, and sanitation. You need enough drinking water to get through the immediate crisis, plus a method of purification if supplies run short. You also need food that requires little or no cooking, because power may be out and fuel may be limited. Lighting should be simple and reliable, with batteries stored properly and backups ready. Sanitation matters more than many people realize; when systems fail, waste management becomes a health issue fast. A bug in plan should also include ways to improve your security: lock inspection, blackout curtains, motion awareness, and knowing which rooms in the house offer the best protection if conditions worsen. Communication is another key part of bugging in. In any emergency, rumors spread quickly and panic can make bad situations worse. That’s why it helps to have multiple ways to receive updates, such as a battery-powered radio, charged devices, and a clear contact plan with family or neighbors. You want to know what is happening without exposing yourself unnecessarily. This is also where discipline matters. If you’re bugging in, do not waste fuel, battery life, or food because you feel uncomfortable. Preserve resources early, because the length of an emergency is often unknown. Small habits—charging devices ahead of time, keeping gear together, and tracking supplies—make a major difference when stress rises. Finally, bugging in is as much about mindset as it is about equipment. A person who stays calm, thinks ahead, and avoids unnecessary movement is already ahead of the curve. Build routines that reduce confusion: check supplies, secure entries, set aside medications, and identify a safe indoor space for the household. Make decisions before you are forced to make them under pressure. If the situation changes and evacuation becomes necessary, a good bug in plan should support that too. But until that moment arrives, staying put can be the smartest move. Bugging in is not passive. It is active preparedness, grounded in realism. It means recognizing when home is the safest place, then making that place stronger, calmer, and more capable. When done right, bugging in gives you time, options, and stability—and in a serious emergency, those three things can make all the difference. Sponsor: Find the book on Amazon and Books Central Website
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    4 mins