Last week we finished building our EDC Kit and we talked
about the three characteristics we want our gear to have: familiarity,
compactibility, and re-usability. We packed away all of our stuff into a fanny
pack as well. We valued this kit to be about $57, however I only spent $10 on
my kit for the fanny pack. The rest of my gear I already had lying around the
house. I did not buy gear for this kit. This week we are doing the review.
That’s right, this week we will be comparing the survival water bottle to my
EDC kit.
First let’s get into the survival water bottle and see what
we are getting for $20. The water bottle itself is a 1000 ml. plastic water
bottle with a red carabiner attached to it. I have some black 550 paracord at
the top of the water bottle, one bandage (the card says there were supposed to
be three),
an aluminum carabiner with a compass and an LED flashlight. It also
comes with a tiny pocket knife with a tiny nail file. The next item I remove is
an orange safety whistle, and a floating compass with a container that stores
matches, however, no matches were provided. The last few items are a survival
blanket that reflects up to 90% body heat, an emergency poncho which I can see
from the package is very thin and will not last long, (I may be able to fly it
like a tarp), and an emergency sewing kit with a button and a latch pin. I am
not satisfied with what I have for $20. I do not feel that it meets the
criteria of 3 minutes without air, 3 hours without shelter, 3 days without
water, and 3 weeks without food. My final note is that repacking the bottle was
extremely difficult and all of my gear was crammed back inside.
I am going to be testing the survival water bottle in the
same location where I had my 3 Day Camp. I
am going to attempt to set up my
shelter, start a fire, and boil water. Now, I am not going to spend all day out
here trying to accomplish these tasks with this kit. If I hit a road block that
I cannot overcome or at least overcome quickly, I am going to say the test is
done. I am going to follow this same practice with my EDC kit as well. One flaw
I am going to point out with the survival water bottle right away is that I had
to dig a box of matches out of my car to add to the kit, because the kit itself
did not provide them.
I used my matches to start my fire. If I had not supplied
the matches I would have had absolutely no way to make fire. I could have added
a lighter instead, however, the kit was designed to use matches. While setting
up, the branch above me became over encumbered and fell out so I had to
improvise and suspend the water bottle from a much less distance. I filled it
up with 16.9 oz. of water so that it will be boiling the same amount as my EDC
kit.
Unfortunately I was not able to get the water to boil. While
trying to control my fire the water bottle began to melt and warp. Also the
tripod type branch I was using was dry enough that it started to catch as well.
I probably could have waited a little longer, but I was not satisfied with how
things were going. If you don’t know how to boil water in a plastic bottle
pre-emergency, you are not going to know how to do it in the actual survival
situation. I’m ranking the bottle a D, not an F, because you cannot purify water
in it, but it can hold a significant amount of water and that’s worth
something.
Now that we have finished testing out the survival water
bottle, it is time to test out my EDC kit. Right away you will notice that
there are things I can do with this kit that I couldn’t do with the other kit,
and actually there is one thing that I could have done with the survival water
bottle kit that I could have done, but chose not to. We will talk about why a
little later.
I will be testing my EDC kit the same way I tested the survival
water bottle according to the rule three hours without shelter, three days
without water, and three weeks without food. My first order of business is to
make a shelter. What I did was lash a branch horizontally to a tree with my
bank line. Next I found some small rocks and folded them into the corners of my poncho, tied off the corner to keep them in place, and then tied
the corners to the lashed branch. I took a long stick that was smaller in
diameter to the one I lashed to the tree and used my 11-in-1 card to saw it in
half. The stick was mostly greenwood so the 11-in-1 card had some difficulty
getting the job done, but it did get the job done. Next I used my Camillus
Seize to carve the two half pieces into tent stakes. I repeated the process
with the stones in the bottom to corners of my poncho, attached them to the
stakes, and then staked them into the ground. This results in my poncho being
set up like I would my tarp.
The reason I did not do this with a survival blanket is
because I was having so much trouble with the
survival water bottle kit, I just
wanted to get any kind of shelter together. I absolutely think that the
survival blanket could do this, and it is roughly the same size as my poncho so
I think it would do it well. The only problem being with that kit, if I chose
to make the survival blanket into a shelter, I would have nothing to cover up
with at night. If you have a extra survival blanket in your kit I highly recommend
that you try to do this. Unfortunately with the survival water bottle kit, I
just don’t think it’s worth it.
Now I am going to test the abilities of the second
contractor bag that I packed in my EDC kit. First I
can get into it and use it
like a sleeping bag if needed. While standing the bag comes up to my arm pits,
but lying down I can hunker down into it and it will retain my body heat fairly
well. The next thing I am going to test is how well it holds water. I filled
the bag up just enough for me to be able to lift it and also so it did not rip
out the bottom of the bag. It held up well, I have plenty of contractor bag
left to tie it off and store it, and all I have to do is untie it to get more
water.
Speaking of water, now it is time for our boiling test. I am
going to use the same amount of water as well as the same type of bottled water
as I used in my previous boiling test to be fair in judging which boils better.
I used my lighter in my combustion kit to light my tinder and get my fire
started. After that it was just a matter of placing the metal water bottle into
the fire without the plastic lid on top and waiting for it to boil.
Another thing that I want to show you my kit can do is make
char cloth. The Altoids tin that is also
the container for my combustion kit
can also be used to make char cloth in. Now I didn’t have any cloth packed in
my EDC kit so what I did was cut a strip out of the bottom of my T-shirt,
placed it in the Altoids tin, closed it, and put it in the fire. It’s as simple
as that. Now I can make char cloth while I am waiting for my water to boil,
which it did! To remove it safely from the fire, I used my bank line and a
small stick to make a toggle, carefully slid the stick into the bottle, and
lifted it gently out of the fire to cool. The char cloth actually turned out
very nice as well. It blackened well and there were no white spots.
Unfortunately the inside of the Altoids tin charred up pretty badly as well so
I can no longer use it as a signaling device.For my final thought, I like to think it is pretty obvious which kit is the winner, but we will still go ahead and break it down. Overall I was very pleased with the fanny pack, more so than I thought I would be. Everything I needed was at my hip and was easy to retrieve. The water bottle just did not have what you needed to survive in my opinion. I ranked the combustion kit in the survival water with a D, because I had to provide my own matches and in that kit that was the one and only way provided to make fire. For cover I ranked it a C because of the survival blanket, but I think there could have been more options in the way of cover. I gave the container a D, because I could not boil or purify water in it. It's saving grace was that I could hold a large amount of water in it. I gave the cutting tool an F, as it was pitiful. It isn't the smallest knife I have ever had, but it was definitely the worst knife I have ever had. I gave the cordage a C. It did it's job, however, I had 33ft. of 550 paracord in the bottle, yet in my kit I had 60 ft. of bank line that was much more compact. Moving on to my kit, I felt it performed above and beyond. My poncho worked very well as a cover, and I was even concerned it would rip but didn't. The contractor bags served their purpose as a moisture barrier and even held up to the task of having extra jobs, so to my cover I give an A+. My combustion kit had a rocky start, but I did have multiple ways of making fire and even created a fourth way to make fire while testing the kit so I give it an A. My container did it's job boiling water and my cordage did a fantastic job setting up my camp. I even had plenty left over. The Camillus Seize performed well in the field. I used it to clean up branches and carve stakes with ease. The 11-in-1 card had a rough start, but it did its job in the end. The final results are the Survival Water Bottle overall is ranked D, and the Fanny Pack EDC Kit is ranked A, at the lowest, maybe a B.
Next week we will be picking up where we left off two series ago. David Canterbury first started off with the 5 C's of Survivability, later he added an additional 5, which in total became the 10 C's of Survivability. We will be beginning next week with Compass. It will also be our first on location video. Make sure you don't miss out! As always feel free to comment, hit the follow button in the top right corner, share this blog, and check back next week for a new one on Sunday 10pm (est). If you want to keep up with me and what I’m doing, Follow me on Facebook: @BPackBushcraft and on Twitter @BPackBushCraft. Lastly if video is more your style check out my YouTube Channel backpack bushcraft where there is a video version of this with the same title. Until next time, keep those fires burning and put another log on for me.
What do you guys think?
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