SAS 137 – Rescue & First Aid

Before approaching a casuality, check for danger from falling debris, gas traffic, etc. Switch current off before touching electrocution victims.

SAS 137 - Rescue & First Aid

SAS 137 – Rescue & First Aid

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SAS 132 - Rescue & Signalling
Heliograph: Use the sun and a reflector to flash light signals. Any shiny object will do - polished tin, glass, a piece of foil - but a hand mirror is best. Long flashes are dashes and quick ones dots. If you do not know morse code, random flashes should attract attention.
SAS 033 - Edible Plants
Roots are starchiest between autumn and spring. All roots should be thoroughly cooked. Scrub in clean water, boil until soft, then roast on hot stones in embers. To cook more rapidly, cut into cubes. Use a sharpened stick to test if they are done.
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.
SAS 034 - Edible Plants
Nuts acts a very good source of food. Nuts supply proteins and fat. Some of the Nutty food are Pine, Walnut, Pistachio, Oak, Hazel.
SAS 035 - Edible Plants
Even some plants are poisonous. Some of the poisonous plants are Poison Sumac, Poison Oak, Poison Ivy, Jewelweed. Death Camas, Thorn-apple, Jimson Weed are poisons by ingestion. Plants like Foxglove, Monk's-hood, Hcmlock, Water Hemlock, Baneberry and Deadly Nightshade are also the Poisonous plants.
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 036 - Edible Plants
Some poisonous plants are easy to mistake for edible species. Do not take risks: identify carefully. Learn to recognise the following in addition to those illustrated: The ButterCups, Lupins, Vetches or Locoweeds, False Helleborines, Henbane, Virginia Creeper, BUckthorns.
SAS 107 - Knots & Map Reading
Notwithstanding having the capacity to peruse and make a guide, your survival hinges on translating indigenous marks to help you discover your direction and to suspect the climate. 
PS Family Supply Kit (4)
First of all, find out which disaster are most likely to happen in your community. Ask how you would be warned. Find out how to prepare for each. Meet with the family ad discuss the type of disasters that could happen.
SAS 087 - Fire
Cooking in clay: This requires o utensils. Wrap food in a ball of clay and place in the embers. Heat radiates through the clay, which protects against food scorching. Animals must be cleaned and gutted first but need to be otherwise prepared.
How to Perform a Tracheotomy
This strategy, particularly called a cricothyroidotomy, ought to be undertaken just when an individual with a throat obstacle is not fit to inhale to any detectable degree, no panting sounds, no hacking, and just after you have endeavored to perform the Heimlich Maneuver several times without dislodging the obstacles.  
SAS 009 - Water
Most essential thing during a fire disaster is Water. To find enough water, one can keep the mouth of the bag at the top with ta corner hanging low to collect water. Suspend tent from the apes or support with padded stick.
SAS 124 - Sea Survival
Survival Afloat: Rafts, boats and dinghies are built to carry a limited number. These numbers should not be exceeded. Place infants and the infirm aboard, and as many able-boclied as can be accomodated. The rest must hang on in the water, frequently swopping places with fit survivors in the raft.
SAS 022 - Islands
An island is any bit of sub-mainland land that is surrounded by water. Quite humble islands for example emanant land headlines on atolls might be called islets, skerries, cays or keys. An island in a waterway or an island in a pond may be called an eyot, or holm. An amassing of topographically or topographically identified islands is called an archipelago. 
SAS 123 - Sea Survival
Swim slowly and steadily. If abandoning a sinking boat or aircraft get upwind and stay clear of it. Keep away from any fuel slick. If forced to swim through flames, jump in feet first and up wind. Swim into the wind using breast stroke. Splash flames away from head to make breathing holes.
PS Family Supply Kit (1)
Disasters happen anytime and any where. And when disaster strikes, you may not have much time to respond. A highway spill of hazardous material could mean instant evacuation. After a disaster, local officials and relief workers will be on the scene, but they cannot reach everyone immediately. 
SAS 074 - Building Shelter
A shelter is more agreeable in the event that it is sufficiently high to sit in, so grow it is stature by manufacturing a level divider of stones adjust your empty. Caulk between the stones with turf and foliage jumbled with mud. 
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.