Field Guide To Wilderness Emergency Care

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Field Guide To Wilderness Emergency Care
Field Guide To Wilderness Emergency Care

Original price was: $17.47.Current price is: $15.87.

Field Guide To Wilderness Emergency Care Price History

Price History for Bushcraft First Aid: A Field Guide to Wilderness Emergency Care

Statistics

Current Price $12.99 September 11, 2024
Highest Price $12.99 September 11, 2024
Lowest Price $12.99 September 11, 2024
Since September 11, 2024

Last price changes

$12.99 September 11, 2024

Field Guide To Wilderness Emergency Care Description

Bushcraft First Aid: A Field Guide to Wilderness Emergency Care (Bushcraft Survival Skills Series)

Field Guide To Wilderness Emergency Care Specification

Specification: Field Guide To Wilderness Emergency Care

Publisher

Adams Media, 1st edition (June 13, 2017)

Language

English

Paperback

256 pages

ISBN-10

1507202342

ISBN-13

978-1507202340

Item Weight

11.2 ounces

Dimensions

5.5 x 0.7 x 8.44 inches

Field Guide To Wilderness Emergency Care Videos

Field Guide To Wilderness Emergency Care Reviews (13)

13 reviews for Field Guide To Wilderness Emergency Care

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  1. Simone E Genova

    Excelente livro, com informações muito úteis para praticantes de bushcraft e sobrevivencialismo. Antes saber e não precisar do que precisar e não saber.

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  2. Heather

    Great book. The second one I’ve purchased. This one was a gift

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  3. Jonman

    Along with his own obviously extensive experience, Dave has outsourced invaluable medical information from a medical professional friend of his, and together they have provided us “preppers” with… yet another invaluable resource for wilderness first aid. I pre-ordered this because I knew that I wouldn’t be let down and I am happy to say that I was/am not! I like the story examples inside too, very nice touch. There are a lot of books out there on this stuff, but so far Dave’s books are the ones I can read and confidently walk away from, knowing that I’m better prepared to face the challenges that potentially lie in wait before all of us who would dare to venture out into the bush and take advantages of what the great outdoors has to offer. Not full of a bunch of stuff that really isn’t practical at all. This stuff is practical and positions us so much better to face things as they come along. These tactics will buy us TIME and oftentimes solve the problems we face, and you can’t ask for more than that! A bit more humor, perhaps 🙂

    This one also has photos of useful plants inside of it, several pages identifying plants that will most certainly come in handy. And if ppl don’t know by now to make tea with pine needles for vitamin c, then pay more attention!

    Dave, your books are all going with me my “friend” whom i don’t know!. Wherever I go, in my BOB. Well, the 4 main books. Maybe the last 3.. if I’m comfortable that I’ve retained all of the first.

    Also if you have not yet read a certain line of books from long ago (not THAT long ago), please do! You should start with “Rubber Legs and White Tail Feathers” by Patrick F McManus. I am 100% certain that you and/or your whole family would get a big kick out of them. They’re extremely hilarious, great stories for a campfire! Or anywhere for that matter. One before bed and you go too sleep with a smile, and it takes
    5-10 minutes max for each one. My mom used to read the short stories to us as kids. They’re SO great!

    Thanks for another killer read. For those of us who are interested in this sort of thing, it’s a page turner, filled with nothing but useful, concisely written golden nuggets of information and I have absolutely no doubt that they’ll help myself and others thru me many times while I’m here, alive and kicking, post-apocalyptic or not 😀

    Do NOT allow the following to be a discouragement or to prevent yourself from getting this book. I stand by what i am saying about this book being absolutely invaluable. This book really does contain expert medical advice for just about everything you can possibly think of, and then some. It is completely packed full of necessary information that will save countless lives, i have no doubt whatsoever. There’s not much more i can say about this! Buy the book or you’re a dummy lol how’s that? If you don’t get this thing you’re just not that smart! It will save your life if you’re ever in any of the situations, no joke.

    IF i had to pick one thing that would be a con, it would be at the parts where there isn’t enough detail, where we’re left hanging without any further advice on where to go. Things that are super important…. Yes the book would be 3 pages longer, but if a revised edition were to be made, it really should include some further detail on what to do next in certain situations. For example, it talks about a broken bone, protruding from the leg. Well, putting a soft blanket or something of the sort over it and keeping it there, then awaiting professional medicals to come and save the day is all well and good. But what if you’re on a four month trip and you’re a week out and have no cell reception. I mean, i need to know how to set the leg. Is this not why the PHD Jason Hunt is co-author? So, another paragraph is DEFINITELY in order. You can easily put up a disclaimer, but…. i suspect it’s to avoid liability from somebody screwing up with something so serious. But the way i see it, if you can tell us how to create a vent for a sucking chest wound like a bullet, then you can continue on with what to do after that! But it stops there…. How do you set a leg after it’s broken? For the chest wound when sepsis is setting in, how do you fix that or is the person just going to die? We don’t only need to know how to make a vent, we need to know what to do if there is no help on the way, because we are after all in the bush! Do we suture the wound and if so, how do we know when to do this? How do we know if there’s infection there in that wound where suturing would be a bad idea? Same with the bone thing… Other than that, it’s my only only con. It is only some of the very serious, life threatening situations where the medical advice stops at the first step and then you’re left wondering how to proceed from there if there’s no help on the way. Another example is a tourniquet. I have a medical professional tourniquet. But when the book describes using one (only if it’s ABSOLUTELY) necessary, it says to use it and then wait for medical professional. Another part where we’re left hanging, wondering what we should do after that. Again, is the person just going to die if the femoral artery is severed and that’s that? It says we don’t want to risk a clot if we remove the tourniquet. Great advice! But what do we do to prevent that? Should we fully flush out the wound again, removing any clotted blood, then remove it and apply more pressure if it’s bleeding because we flushed it again? There are other examples, but not a ton of them. But these are legit questions! So i hope there’s a revision honestly. I have post-its all over the place with further questions for how to proceed…. All of which i will be answering myself from research and writing into the pages so that this book is a solid go-to when it is needed.

    Looking forward to future books!

    Jon

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  4. George

    I’m not at all an outdoorsman, but I am a former EMT and this book is bang on. It covers just about everything in the textbook I used in EMT class, but clearer and with way more information that’s relevant for the wild, like an entire chapter devoted to plant medicine.

    I highly recommend it!

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  5. MotoJV

    Good basic stuff easy to read.

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  6. Jonman

    Good book

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  7. Alfonso R.

    Great book for a newbi I bought this along with the bushcraft 101. Both have been very impressive and helpfully. Would definitely recommend both books. Thanks alex

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  8. Alex

    I love the bushcraft series by Dave Canterbury. A must have if you want to expand your knowledge on surviving in the wild. Two thumbs up!

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  9. Kyle Schlotzhauer

    My career was Emergency Medical Services. I did Wilderness Rescue for a very short season (did not like spending a day off “working” in the woods). I have tented in every month if the year in Northern New England. The last book that interests me is one on first aid! BUT… This book looked different… BUSHCRAFT First Aid (Bushcraft… Interesting). I like Dave Canterbury (have his other 3 books), but did not know about Jason Hunt. After looking at what Hunt had to offer, I got intrigued! Hunt is solid. So, I ordered the book. I like the approach. Practical, medically appropriate and legally respectful. It is a good reminder/review of what I’ve known. It must be read in the right context and thought process. Scan the big picture, zoom in to a detail and zoom back out to the big picture again. Don’t develop tunnel vision and don’t gloss over important points. Keep a proper perspective. There will be no ambulance to pull supplies from. Use what is available.
    This book gets added to my outdoor library.
    In my humble opion the book will serve beginner hiker and seasoned professional alike.

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  10. Peter Kalo

    Interessante e scritto molto bene, con immagini che si capiscono

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  11. New Hampshire Hiker

    Trae buenos consejos y enseñanzas !

    Viene en inglés !

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  12. Brittany

    I’ve taken a first aid class that was not focused on wilderness first aid but my instructor touched on it since we’re in a rural location. This was a great refresher (would be great to read if you have not had a first aid course) and also goes a little more in-depth about how to fully analyze a scenario and make sure it is safe before you end later the scene. I also love that this book includes some plants that you can use for medicine (what the plants look like and what they’re used for). I also really like that it includes a first aid list for when you’re hiking as well as things you could have in a base camp first aid kit. There are some scenarios where they say to seek medical attention and don’t give you any way to treat the illness but it would be nice to know what to do (if anything) if yelp is a long ways away.

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  13. Ted. K.

    Has a ton of helpful information. Got this for a friend for Christmas and he loves it.

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