FEATURED AUTHOR
REID KINCAID
Having
grown up in a military family, I continued the tradition
of being chronically mobile even as an adult. Even before
we were married, my wife, Lori, and I were both big adventurers.
We actually got engaged after a climb up Mount St. Helens
in Washington state in 1987, just before heading to Alaska,
where we traveled the state and lived in our tent for the
summer months. Invariably, we have chosen to travel in the
least comfortable but most inspiring way--by backpack and
on the cheap, camping where we could and carrying everything
we owned. This has taken us many places both remote and
distant from home, and it has given me a firsthand idea
of what one needs to get by on limited resources and in
tenuous situations.
Over the course of our extensive travels, we spent 18 months
living in Poland, traveled throughout Eastern Europe, bicycled
around the coast of England, and explored much of the United
States, including a 7,000-mile trip from Washington state
to Virginia via California and Texas.
Our
first house was a 28-foot sailboat on the Chesapeake Bay.
After spending some time in the northern bush of Alaska,
we moved to Metlakatla, a community of 2,000 Tsimsian Indians
on a remote island at the very tip of the southeast panhandle
of Alaska that is accessible only by floatplane or boat.
This move to Annette Island in 1997 was the thirtieth move
of my life (I was 29 at the time). Since then our travels
have frequently taken us to remote and isolated areas –
such as the Round Island Walrus Sanctuary at the foot of
the Aleutian chain, the Anan Bear Observatory, and Denali
National Park – where contact with the outside world
is many hours or days away, even by emergency flight.
In
the lower 48 states, it is much easier to forget the risks
of travel and adventure than it is in Alaska, where we are
yearly reminded of the dangers of the world around us by
the deaths of people we know from accident and environment.
Here in southeastern Alaska, everyone knows someone who
has died either of exposure or in a hunting or snowmobile
accident, drowning, or plane crash; survival situations
are not abstract ideas but rather a reality of daily life.
But even in Alaska, where those outside the cities have
little trouble acknowledging the risk, most people have
no experience or training to guide them in a survival situation.
Survival experience is one of those things that invariably
only comes once, and then the skills learned are never needed
again. The best training for survival, then, is knowledge
accessible on the ground, in the actual situation. It was
with this idea in mind that I set out to write The
Extreme Survival Almanac. I conceived it as a hands-on
survival tool for the majority of people at risk for becoming
stranded in the wild: the inexperienced.
My
first exposure to survival literature came when I started
a technical writing project in the mid-1980s. I wanted to
write a concise guide to local edible plant life around
Pullman, Washington. As I read more and more research material,
I noticed two problems. There was a tremendous gap between
the practical skills used and learned (often by trial and
error) by actual survivors as described in their accounts
of their experiences and the guidebooks that were supposed
to help them get through such experiences. The other thing
I noticed was the incredibly large amounts of eclectic or
useless information included in survival texts. I recall
one book that included three chapters on physical education,
introduced by the declaration that if you followed the prescribed
regimen, you would be in good enough physical shape to make
it through any survival situation that might arise. A second
book dedicated 60 pages to the building of bamboo camp furniture
(which, while it might make for a fine camping trip, has
no place in a survival situation as it wastes precious caloric
outlay)! I recall thinking that while these two books would
be great for losing weight and decorating my backyard, I
sure would hate to have them as my only resources if I were
really stuck in a survival situation. (What could be more
depressing than cracking open a survival guide as you sit
freezing to death on a mountaintop and being told that had
you only been exercising you might actually make it home
to see your kids again?)
The
Extreme Survival Almanac actually began to take
shape at Washington State University in 1986, where I studied
English and technical writing. A form of translation work,
technical writing involves presenting technical information
and jargon in more commonly understood terms. I wanted to
apply these skills to survival literature, since my research
had convinced me that the genre had failed to address the
majority of people who would benefit from knowledge of survival
skills and techniques. In conceptualizing the book, I had
a few rules in mind:
- The book would assume that the reader is in the survival
situation when reading the book.
- The book would assume that the reader is reading the
book for the first time while in the survival situation.
- The book would guide the reader to the basic principles
of maximizing survival opportunity and minimizing risk
by selecting only those techniques that maximize energy
efficiency and minimize work.
- The book would utilize known learning and memory techniques
to minimize reading time and maximize retention.
- The book would be well referenced for rapid and simple
information finding.
The Extreme Survival Almanac evolved over
the 10-year period during which Lori and I traveled to more
than 20 countries and my own knowledge of survival techniques
increased through both study and experience. My training
as a physician assistant, which I received at Hahnemann
University in Philadelphia after we returned from living
and teaching in Poland, allowed me to complete the extensive
Emergency Medical section of the book. Of course, I did
so with an eye toward relevance to a survival experience
rather than the traditional focus on wilderness medicine.
In writing this book, I tried to combine my professional
skills with my personal experience traveling in remote areas
to create something more than an academic report on survival
knowledge or an exploration of the topic for the casual
reader. Designed to maximize survival potential and minimize
the risk of injury or death with or without the aid of a
survival kit, The Extreme Survival Almanac
was intended to be an actual survival tool. Specifically,
it was written as the survival tool I would like to have
had in my car, boat, plane as we traveled to the many remote
and isolated destinations we did. And it's the one I would
now want in my possession, as well as in the hands of my
family and friends, in any survival situation.
Q&A
Paladin: Have you been involved in a survival
situation or otherwise had to utilize the skills presented
in The Extreme Survival Almanac in the
wilderness?
Kincaid: The book doesn't make survival
any less of an ordeal; many of the techniques outlined in
it are uncomfortable and, in terms of food, inhumane. I
have never used at least half of the techniques described,
and I hope I won't ever find myself in a survival situation
where I would need to use them. But there are many techniques
in the book that I have used, just in the course of traveling
outdoors or overseas, hiking, skiing, and boating. Even
when flying from the island where I live or traveling by
fishing trawler when the weather is bad, I carry a small
survival kit with matches, a couple space blankets, and
fire starter. The water is incredibly cold in Alaska, even
in the summer. If I'm lucky enough to get to shore alive
after an accident, I'll be damned if I'm going to freeze
to death waiting for the rescue boat! But the fact is, I
travel and hike and seek adventure because I love the outdoors
and enjoy the challenge of traveling without room service,
not because I get some thrill out of cheating death. The
book was designed for the majority of us who don't go out
and practice starting fires with a mirror or eating grubs
we find under rotten logs. Let's be honest, eating grubs
is not what excites most people about the outdoors, which
is why most people stranded in the wilderness lack the knowledge
required to maximize their chances of getting out. I don't
need to know that grubs are edible to enjoy my camping trip;
I just need to have access to that information should I
need it, which is where The Extreme Survival Almanac
comes in.
Paladin: What are a few of your favorite
survival stories?
Kincaid: I think my all time favorite survival
story is Steven Callahan's Adrift: Seventy-Six Days
Lost at Sea. It's an absolutely epic story of a man
who really should not be alive today, and who demonstrated
that lots of luck with a good dose of information and a
refusal to give in can make that happen. I often remember
the episode in that book where this starving man throws
a can of meat out into the water because he fears it has
gone bad. Survival is about little decisions like that,
every minute making that difficult decision to go on or
go without, improving your odds of survival by constantly
recalculating them. A second favorite of mine is Death
and Deliverance: The True Story of an Airplane Crash at
the North Pole. This survival scenario, which involved
the known crash of a military aircraft flying into a remote
arctic base, is much more common than that experienced by
Steven Callahan. The remoteness of the crash site coupled
with a large storm left the surviving passengers, many severely
injured, stranded for several days in subzero temperatures
awaiting rescue. Reading books like these gives you an opportunity
to identify points in the survival experience where a lack
of knowledge, skill, or equipment means missed opportunity
and, in some cases, death. Steven Callahan survived as much
because he was experienced as because he was lucky. A number
of the passengers in Death and Deliverance died
because they lacked experience and had no access to information
that might have made up for that deficit.
Paladin: Are there certain items that
you carry with you when you travel – things you consider
essential should you find yourself in a survival situation?
Kincaid: As the book explains, the nature
of the "best" survival kit depends on who you
are and the type of traveling you are doing. As a physician
assistant, I kept a completely stocked trauma kit on my
sailboat. I could have amputated a limb in the middle of
the Arctic with that kit. Most people won't need such kits
simply because they could not reasonably make use of the
resources. As I mentioned earlier, I do try to keep on hand
a minimum of items based on the possible dangers associated
with the type of traveling I'm doing. In third world countries,
I take an excellent selection of antibiotics and wound management
supplies but seldom need food acquisition or storage equipment.
When camping in remote parts of Alaska within contact distance
of rescue, I take a very few antibiotics (a double course
of a broad-spectrum antibiotic), then add basic temperature
control equipment such as a white gas stove, multiple space
blankets for each person, and navigation and orientation
information. For remote areas with no contact options for
assistance, I take the full kit outlined in the book. The
full kit is also what I store in my vehicles, including
my boat. So if you happen to forget everything in planning
your trip, you have the pack accessible in your vehicle
should you need it.
Paladin: What are some of the better true-life
survival books that people can read and learn from?
Kincaid: Again, Adrift is a great
one. Callahan's a good writer, and he describes the details
of his decision-making processes and actions so that you
can visualize exactly what he did to address the daily challenge
of staying alive. Another top-notch book is Staying
Alive by the Bailey family, which is not quite as good
as a survival reference but still an excellent primary source
of survival information. The advantage of these sources
is that they do more than just list techniques and information,
they demonstrate the atmosphere of a survival situation
and show how real people coped with them. I'm not convinced
that we learn more from those who survive such experiences
than we would from those who don't, but just knowing that
someone can actually survive 100 days at sea without knowing
how to swim should give us all hope.
Paladin: Of the major survival skill areas
(fire building, shelter making, water procurement, etc.),
which do you think would be most beneficial for the average
person to acquaint him or herself with prior to landing
in a survival situation?
Kincaid: If you're not a camper or a hiker
and don't pick up bits of survival skill just by adventuring,
I would say that a concerted concentration in shelter building
would be most likely to keep you alive. If you can quickly
construct a shelter, no matter how rudimentary, from the
elements, then you will have time to sit down and figure
out how to get water, food, and how to get rescued. Since
most survival experiences are short-lived, building a shelter
may be the only survival skill you will need before you're
rescued, and lack of an adequate shelter will kill you long
before a lack of water or food. Fortunately, some very basic
shelters are easy to build and quite adequate for survival,
as discussed in the book. A brief introduction to shelter
building could easily mean the difference between life and
death in a dangerous survival situation, as it allows you
to protect yourself while you concentrate on the other issues
that you must address to stay alive. This is also the advantage
of a space blanket, which is absolutely the single most
important survival item on the market in my opinion. It
is an instant shelter and can also keep you warm while you
build a larger and more usable shelter. If you look at the
impact of the various skills on your likelihood of survival,
some are more important in the short term (temperature control
and shelter) than others (food and water). Having some basic
knowledge of those skills most important in the short term
will increase your chances of needing the longer-term skills
at all.
Paladin: What do you consider the biggest
danger in a survival situation (i.e., the greatest obstacle
to making it out alive)?
Kincaid: Time is by far the greatest obstacle
to getting out alive. As time passes, so do your opportunities
and strengths. Few people exit a survival situation stronger
than they entered it. The survival process degrades the
very tools you have to stay alive (hope, physical and mental
stamina, health), and most rescue efforts are suspended
within four weeks of the time a person is reported missing,
so maximizing this window of opportunity is part of the
survival process discussed in the book. This involves mobilization
of resources and creation of a systematic approach to your
own survival early on in the survival situation, when you
are most capable of surviving errors and impacting the ultimate
outcome of your decisions.
Paladin: What are the top three considerations
in a survival situation?
Kincaid: What resources do I have? How
long must they last? And how can I maximize their effectiveness?
These three considerations will govern your every act and
interaction after entering a survival situation, including
the use of people, who are both your biggest asset and your
biggest liability. The actual rescue is really little of
your concern unless you happen to have a working cell phone.
Your job, so to speak, is to plan, organize, and implement
your survival experience, not your rescue. Part of that
process is maximizing your opportunities for rescue, but
that is usually a smaller part of your survival experience.
Staying alive governs most daily interaction in a survival
experience, and this comes down primarily to resource management.
Paladin: What is the most important rule
of survival?
Kincaid: The most important rule of survival
is to commit. I talk about this is the introduction, but
it is probably more important than 90 percent of the information
elsewhere in the book. Someone once said that "On the
plains of hesitation lie the blackened bones of millions,
who, at the dawn of victory, sat down to rest, and resting,
died." Nowhere is this more relevant than in a survival
situation. Every second you remain alive is another opportunity
to be rescued or reach safety. The most important choice
you can make in a survival situation is the decision to
stay alive when death would be surer, faster, easier, or
less frightening. Survival is at its most basic a battle
between resignation and commitment. One of the primary goals
of the book is to give survivors some tools that will help
them keep hope, and therefore be able to commit. You may
die even if you do commit, but if you cannot commit to getting
out alive then you assuredly will not.
THE
EXTREME SURVIVAL ALMANAC
Everything You Need to Know to Live Through a Shipwreck,
Plane Crash, or Any Outdoor Crisis Imaginable

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