
Outback survival teacher Bob Cooper runs survival, snake handling, tracking and tool makeing courses from his base just outside Perth, primarily for people situated in or travelling through isolated areas. He believes five simple tips could have saved the lives of the 53 people who have become stranded and died in remote WA during the past 25 years.
" If you sip water, the first sip goes to your digestion, the second to your liver and kidneys and none gets to your brain," Bob says. "You need to drink a cupful or those pirtaes will rob it from you." For example, if you are drinking 2l of water over a few hours, drink eight cups, not 200 sips.
Any survival kit should take into account the five most important factors: water, shelter, warmth, signals and food. "Keep food down the bottom of the list," Bob says. "No-one's died of starvation in Australia, including the explorers. It's all dehydration and exposure."
rs ago, who were using tourist maps they'd picked up from a service station. They broke down, ran out of water and walked 9 km along the track looking for water. A detailed, up-to-date map would have shown them that had they walked the other way for a similar distance they would have found a reliable water source.
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