SAS 149 – First Aid, Fractures & Shock

During the severe bleeding, loss of body fluids from severe burns or prolonged vomiting or diarrhoea commonly lead to shock. Other causes are electrocution and heart attack.

SAS 149 - First Aid, Fractures & Shock

SAS 149 – First Aid, Fractures & Shock

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SAS 170 - Dangerous Water Creatures
Protection against Sharks: If you have shark repellent, follow the manufacturer's instructions. It may not befully effective, but even so use only if the situation is very grave. Repellent soon dissipates in the water and becomes ineffective.
SAS 083 - Fire
Firelighting: Form a tepee of fuel adjust tinder couch. Depending on if windy, lean fuel in opposition to a log on the leeside. Light tinder. Include greater stays once fuel has gotten. Then again light a heap of attempt match slight twigs and place in tepee. 
Neck Punch
A strong tip is to punch them on the Neck when they aren't looking at you.
SAS 125 - Sea Survival & Signalling
How to Signal at Sea ? Use flares, dye markers and movement of any kind to attract attention at sea. If you have no signalling equipment, wave clothing or tarpauliins and churn the water if it is still. At night or in fog use a whistle to maintain contact with other survivors.
SAS 080 - Building Shelter & Fire
Fire is crucial to survival. It furnishes warmth, security and a method of signalling; it bubbles water, cooks and jam nourishment; it warms metal to make instruments and prepare pots. You should memorize to light a blaze at whatever place under any conditions. It is not enough to know every last trace of the techniques – you need to be master at them. 
SAS 003 - Survival Kit
Make sure you prepare a checklist that contains Equipments for Clothes, Sleeping Bags, Backpack, Stowing Kit, Radio kit and everything pertaining to Vehicles.
PS Family Disaster Plan (2)
To be on a safer side, keep enough supplies in your home to help for no less than several days. Amass a fiasco Supplies unit with things you might need in a clearing. Store the aforementioned supplies in inquiry, effortless to convey holders for instance rucksacks, duffel packs or secured waste compartments. 
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 152 - First Aid & Moving the Injured
During the conscious casuality of the victim, Grasp victim's right wrist. Bend your head under his arm so your shoulder is level with his lower abdomen. Bend your knees, allowing the weight to fall across your shoulders. Place your right arm between or around legs.
SAS 053 - Animal Tracking
Small animals like termites, bees, wasps and hornets, Ants, Locusts, Crickets and grasshopers, snails slugs and worms can be easily tracked and trapped for hunting purposes. 
SAS 141 - First Aid & Choking
Holger Nielson Method of Respiration: Use to resuscitate a drowning victim if mouth to mouth not possible. Face-down position allows liquids to flow freely from mouth without choking the patient. Lay victim face-down, head turned to one side, arms bent, forehead resting on hands. Loosen tight garments, clear mouth of weed, mud etc and ensure tongue is brought forward.
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 163 - Medicinal Plants
The Fevers, Cough and colds can be cured by Camomile, Colt's Foot, Lungwort, Horehound, Yarrow, Musk mallow, Tree mallow, Marsh mallow, Great Mullein.
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 133 - Rescue & Signalling
Rag Signals: Tie a flag or a piece of bright - coloured clothing to a pole. Move it left for dashes and right for dots. Exaggerate with a figure of eight movement.
SAS 026 - Tropical Regions
A wide mixed bag of tree grown foods, roots and leaves are ready. Banana, papaya, mango and figs are effortlessly distinguished, anyhow you might discover the abundance of tropical nourishments puzzling. An extensive variety of well evolved creatures, reptiles, feathered creatures and fish might be chased, trapped and casted a line out there. In addition there are sufficient materials fo...
Surviving a Zombie Apocalypse A
Intimately tied to the origination of the present day zombie is the "zombie end times"; the breakdown of public order accordingly of a starting zombie eruption which spreads. This model has developed as a productive sub genre of prophetically catastrophic fiction and been depicted in countless zombie-identified media post-Night.
SAS 055 - Animal Trapping
A Spring Spear trap is a springy shaft with a lance joined is kept taut over the trail. A slip ring made of smooth material connected to an excursion wire functions as discharge. The Nets which fill in as winged creature trap extend a fine net between trees where winged creatures perch. On the other hand, a fine twine criss-crossed between trees opposite their flight way will harm fledgl...