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SURVIVAL SENSE for UPLAND HUNTERS
The Upland Almanac
|Summer 2025
Mention the word survival and many who engage in outdoor activities may conjure up images of a Rambo-type character wielding a machete-sized Bowie knife as he digs grubs out of a rotted log or a flock of reality TV contestants competing au naturel on a tropical island.
You can create a very basic, roofed shelter using large branches for roof frame and stuffed with field grass.
In reality, many mishaps, even in what most might perceive as rather benign, tame environments — from grassy fields to young/old-growth forests — can quickly deteriorate into life-threatening survival emergencies.
Even seasoned upland hunters in tame environments can experience accidents that threaten their safety and well-being in the field. These threats are not limited to typically “hunting” or gun-related incidents but rather common challenges one is exposed to whenever in the field or backcountry.
Consider these few scenarios:
— While ruffed grouse hunting in northern Minnesota, you re-flush a bird deeper and deeper into a thick understory within an aspen forest when you soon realize you have become seriously disoriented or, in another word, lost.
— Crossing a swollen stream channel in Missouri during a turkey hunt, you severely twist your ankle and take a bad, incapacitating fall resulting in immobilizing injuries, lost essential gear or both.
— Pheasant hunting in Montana in late afternoon, at the edge of usable daylight, and temperatures are starting to drop. You’re several miles from your vehicle. You have the discomforting sense to know you’ll have to hunker down and wait it out until morning.
All of these incidents are the types of injuries and predicaments that can put one on the threshold of an emergency “survival” situation.
Take an inventory of everything around you; many materials can be improvised for multiple uses.Denne historien er fra Summer 2025-utgaven av The Upland Almanac.
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FLERE HISTORIER FRA The Upland Almanac
The Upland Almanac
Tailfeathers
After calmly sipping some bottled water, I leaned back in the passenger seat of Jon Osborn's pickup, calmly pressed a couple of buttons on my cell phone, and calmly awaited the loving voice of my one, true, loving lover.
4 mins
Summer 2025
The Upland Almanac
My Small World
The older I get, the smaller my world becomes.” My father used to say that, and though I thought I understood what he was saying, I was never positive until just recently; my world, too, has become smaller.
3 mins
Summer 2025
The Upland Almanac
SURVIVAL SENSE for UPLAND HUNTERS
Mention the word survival and many who engage in outdoor activities may conjure up images of a Rambo-type character wielding a machete-sized Bowie knife as he digs grubs out of a rotted log or a flock of reality TV contestants competing au naturel on a tropical island.
8 mins
Summer 2025
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Perhaps all you can say is that there are great lapses or discrepancies in time; that and the simple if inexplicable fact that some people have fishing in their hearts.
10 mins
Summer 2025
The Upland Almanac
Taking Chances Finding the Good in "Meh
Leaping from bed, running out the motel door and racing the crack of dawn, you rocket toward the storied covert recently profiled in a magazine story, only to find six other trucks parked, idling, awaiting the arrival of shooting hour.
8 mins
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The Upland Almanac
Walking with Grouse
Walleye and northern pike fishing and the possibility of photographing Ontario's abundant black bears drew me to Errington's Wilderness Resort.
2 mins
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The Upland Almanac
DOUBLES FOR DAKOTA
The two men that I shared a North Dakota goose blind with were both shooting 12-gauge semi-auto shotguns, but they admired my British 10-gauge double.
9 mins
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Artistic License
\"In His Veins ... and His Art\"
4 mins
Summer 2025
The Upland Almanac
Upland Focus: ACRE BY ACRE, HOPE GROWS FOR ONE OF NEW JERSEY'S LAST WILD GAME BIRDS
Every day on the southern tip of New Jersey, a stream of trucks and cars lines up for passage on the Cape May-Lewes Ferry, which has been carting passengers across the Delaware Bay since the 1960s. Cape May has also been a rendezvous point for American woodcock since long before there was a ferry — or a city — at the spot.
6 mins
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The Upland Almanac
Classic Upland Guns
Lefever Arms Company, Part II
5 mins
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