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Hi. I'm Mike Meyers with Zion Wilderness Survival School for Expert Village. We talked earlier
about when you're out in a survival situation seeking a place to sleep. But, a more immediate
concern in any survival situation is finding shelter period. It can be in the middle of
the afternoon. It could be at nighttime. Anytime. In the winter, if you're in an area with snow,
sometimes the only place to seek shelter is actually in the snow. You've probably heard
of digging a snow cave or building what's called a quimsy, which is like an igloo. Obviously,
we'd have a difficult time demonstrating that right now. But, there are other shelters that
one can build. Later on, we will do a separate episode on this. But, in the desert setting,
the kind of shelter that you might think about building would be a simple lean-to which is
nothing more than getting long branches and leaning them up against a rock face, a flat
rock face, or you could, between two trees, you could tie a pole and then lean branches
up against it, large branches, to make a slanted wall, just to give you some relief from the
sun, relief from the rain. You could pile vegetation, grass, leaves, any kind of debris
vegetation onto that to help keep the water off of you. One thing that I always carry
with me on day hikes, backpacking trips, it doesn't matter when, I carry a simple 8x10,
8x12 tarp that I roll up and put under my pack. Now, all of my friends think I'm crazy
until I spread it out to sit on it when it's wet, or when we get caught in a rainstorm.
I can take my two hiking poles, punch them, put them through the grommet holes on the
tarp and tie it down. Put some rocks on the back side. I have a lean-to. It takes you
three or four minutes. That thing is up and ready to go. The tarp, I think, is one of
the greatest things to take with you. You can just sit on the ground and cover yourself
with it for shelter. But, shelter's important not just from rain, but also from the sun.
So, if you're in a desert situation, and you're in an area like this, and you can't find any
shade, that tarp can be your survival. You can put that up and get under it and stay
there for a few hours until the sun has reduced its glare. It's also possible to either dig
or use a ditch and just put your tarp on top of it. Or, if you don't have a tarp, but debris,
some branches, some trees, and so forth, to create a roof. And then, just lie down beneath
it. Anything to get out of the sun. The sun is deadly in the desert. It will dehydrate
you. You'll have to drink far more water. It will exhaust you. Save your strength for
when the sun's gone down some. And, do your work and hike and so forth in a cooler part
of the day. The most critical thing about a shelter is getting started early enough
in the day so that you can complete it before you actually need it. Many people make the
mistake in the wintertime, for instance, of when they get lost of not thinking about shelter
until four or five in the evening and all of a sudden at six it's dark. And, it makes
it awfully hard to find materials and so forth. So, when you realize that you're lost, my
recommendation is to accept that fact earlier than your gut feeling tells you. Just maybe
at one or two in the afternoon, or three or four in the afternoon, make the decision,
"I'm lost, and I better start thinking about shelter." So, when you start to collect these
materials for your shelter it could take you two hours to find all the materials, the tree
limbs, the branches, the debris to make your shelter. So, get a good early start.