6 Steps To Be Rescued When You Get Lost In The Wilderness

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Sentry18

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https://www.survivopedia.com/6-steps-to-be-rescued-when-you-get-lost-in-the-wilderness/

6 Steps To Be Rescued When You Get Lost In The Wilderness

By
Bob Rodgers
September 1, 2019

Every year, millions of Americans choose to leave the concrete jungle behind and go on an adventure to discover and explore the great outdoors.

Spending time in the wilderness is a wonderful experience as long as you prepare and plan for it. If you disregard the roughness of the wilderness, you might get lost, injured, or worse. Learning how to signal for help should be a priority for the “weekend explorers” since these survival skills may one day save their lives.

There’s no telling how you could end up being lost in the wild with no modern forms of communication. One wrong turn is all it takes, and you will find yourself in the middle of nowhere, trying to figure out how to get back on the trail. If your survival skills are dimmed and you rely on today’s technology to accomplish all your tasks, you might not be able to survive for long in the woods.

Your best chance of making it is to stay put and signal for help to get people’s attention. Without a proper signal for help, it will be almost impossible for the rescue parties to find you.


Using the methods described in this article indicates that you need help while in distress, and many are a universal language, recognizable all over the world. There are various ways to produce a distress signal, but it all depends on the materials you have available.

There are two ways to let people know you are in trouble, you could use visual or audio signals. Both will indicate your position, but the visual signals are the most efficient ones to help rescuers pinpoint your location.

Useful methods to signal for help
Using a shiny surface
This is perhaps the easiest method to signal for help, and it’s available to anyone as long as they have a mirror or any shiny surface that can create a flash. This method is usually used to signal a plane or a helicopter that is flying by. However, it can also prove useful to signal your presence to people in your vicinity.

For this method to work, all you have to do is use the mirror or any shiny material you have to reflect the sunlight onto your hand. You need to position the hand so that it covers the target in your field of vision.

Once you manage to figure that out, you will need to remove your hand and wobble the mirror, or shiny surface back and forth. This will work in most cases, but you should also have other alternatives.

Using a campfire
In the woods, some stranded people will choose to use rocks and/or branches to spell out “S.O.S”, the international code for “save our souls” that is recognized all over the world as a signal for help.

However, this may not work since the sign must be big enough to be noticeable from afar. Your best alternative would be to look for a clearing in the forest and build a large fie. This will signal your position perfectly since no fire goes unnoticed in the woods.

To build a large fire, it will require quite some effort since you need to gather a large quantity of wood and other flammable materials to keep it going for a long time.

If time is not on your side or if you lack the physical strength to gather materials, there’s another method you can use. You can light three small fires in a straight line or in a triangular position. Anyone that sees this formation will understand that those are not regular campfires or random forest fires, but in fact, it’s a cry for help.

A smart trick you can use to increase the visibility or the visual effect of your signal fire is to put green branches on it. By doing so, you will create a lot of smoke, and your signal for help can be seen from a long distance.

I also feel there’s the need to mention this:

Stay downwind to avoid inhaling the smoke and make things worse than they are.

Using flares
If you planed for a longer stay in the wilderness, chances are you brought a couple of flares with you. This brings a great advantage to the novice wilderness explorer as long as he or she knows how to use and ration them. Such flares should be used only if the stranded person hears something in the distance, such as a helicopter or small plane. Never use more than one flare at the time.

If a plane passes by and sees your flare, the pilot will try to signal you. They usually rock the plane from side to side, to let you know your signal for help has been seen. Hover, things changes at nighttime, and you will have to wait and see if the rescuers find you.

In case there are rescue parties nearby, and you hear any sound that might indicate their presence, you can use another flare.

Using a flashlight
A flashlight is a critical item to have at night, especially if your campfire building skills are not that great. Besides using it to find your way around the camp, it’s a great tool to signal for help. A flashlight can also be used in heavily shaded areas. I need to mention that if you intend using your flashlight for signaling purposes, you will need to use it sporadically to extend the life of your batteries.

When you signal for help using a flashlight, you have to keep the same pattern. Usually, three small flashes at the time will do the trick. In order to make the S.O.S. code with a flashlight, you have to do this: three short flashes, three long flashes, three short flashes then a pause.

Using a whistle
Some people carry a whistle when they go into the woods. In fact, I advise anyone who goes into the wilderness with their kids to buy a whistle for each child. Make them wear the whistle around their neck and teach them to use it in case they get lost.

Although it’s not as successful as a visual sign, sometimes it can be your only option to signal for help. You have to remember that when you use the whistle, you have to do it in a burst of three. This is recognized as a signal for help, and chances are someone will hear it. Don’t wear yourself out and take breaks.

Also, make sure you drink water because you will lose saliva when you blow the whistle. You will quickly become dehydrated when you signal for help using this method, especially if there’s a warm weather or you are in a hot climate.

Using bright colors
When people get lost, and they hear a plane passing by, they instinctively start to jump up and down and scream their lungs out. Don’t do this since you’re only going to get tired. Motion can sometimes be ok when you signal for help, but screaming or yelling it’s pointless because no flying pilot can hear you.

Instead of wearing yourself out, you can take the most brightly colored piece of clothing you have and wave it around. This will signal your position much better, and you will be less tired afterward.

Bright colors can also help you leave markings as long as you’re willing to sacrifice (although you shouldn’t think twice about it) the clothing item. You can tie pieces of clothes onto trees or rock edges. I know some people that also carry a permanent marker with them with the sole purpose or writing “Help!” on rocks and trees in case they get lost.

You may not know this, but using bright colors to signal for help is a widely used method when there is flooding or any other natural disaster that leaves people trapped in their homes. People will often use paint on their roofs to write S.O.S and signal their presence. This greatly helps the rescue teams to find their homes in crowded neighborhoods when street signs or any other markers are no longer visible.

The use of bright colors to signal for help is a good method, regardless of the environment you find yourself in.

Concluding
The methods listed in these articles are perhaps the easiest ways to signal for help when you get lost in the wilderness. The main thing you should do before heading into the wild is to let people know where are you going and for how long you plan on staying there.

In any emergency situation, the rate of survival increases as long as you know how to improvise. You have to signal for help without putting yourself in danger and without getting too tired to handle other survival tasks. And most importantly, once you create an S.O.S signal, stay put if you want to be found.
 
This will be a faster way to get rescued. Lol

survival-tip-if-you-get-lost-in-the-woods-start-46363406.png
 
In my normal everyday backpack I have a small mirror, 2 ways to start a fire, a flashlight, a whistle and a yellow safety / reflective vest. No flares but I have snacks.
 
My wilderness kit included a mirror, orange smoke, fire starting, and a green cyalume with a string for signaling. Green is the most easily seen color. At night a cyalume light might be missed but put it on a string and twirl it around and you have a 6' or 8' circle of light and it is much easier to spot. Bigger and brighter are easier to spot. Straight lines are not natural so stomping 3 tall wide straight lines in a clearing will catch an eye. Three of anything is a signal for help so 3 fires, three lines in the field or snow, whatever you can come up with.
 
They pretty much covered the basics I had learned.

Key that everyone had ever beat into me was to stay put. If you had done the correct thing and let someone know where you went and when you would be back, this gives them a starting point.

When you first discovered you were “lost” make a sign there pointing to where you are. You want something as large as practicable and as man-made or unnatural as possible. A “sign” might be to scrape a large circle of duff into a pile. Then put several large branches into a T-P or triangle form, standing up, in the middle. This will look out of the ordinary for anyone walking at a distance, looking for you. Then, the standard stones or branches under it indicating the direction you went in. Better would be a note, but if you do not have the implements, natural materials will do.

If you have to travel, say to seek out water or a better shelter place, make sign along the way for someone to follow. The large branches in the TP form are good. Most wooded areas have enough downed timber to construct them along your route. They will also act as a way to help you find your way back to where you originally discovered you were lost.
 
I was always told if lost, STOP, sit down on a log or whatever is handy, if a smoker have a smoke, if not take a drink of water.
chances are after a few minutes you'll remember where you went wrong.
 
Hug a tree!
First that tree has been there a lot longer and is in fine shape. You can get through this!
Hugging the tree will make you feel better. If it is cold, the tree will be warmer and if it is hot the tree will be cooler.
Listen: water communicates - listen for the water. once you find water you have increased your chances of survival.
Now that you have water you need fire. If nothing else fire will make you feel better but you can use it to cook with and to keep you safe and warm.
Build a shelter. I like the tree branches for sleeping. It keeps you away from predators and with a proper platform offers a level of comfort.
gather food: build a few boxes from small branches. Build them with a funnel leading to the inside on at least one side. you can put rocks in it to use as a fish trap or set it on the ground for small game. It is best to set it in the middle of a rodent run or along the bottom edge of a wall - a cliff or log - where rodents will follow in their escapades.
Turn over logs and rocks. You are looking for soft bodied larva. This is an excellent source of protein. Prepare it by heating them in a shallow depression in the coals of the fire.
Set three fires (not yet lit) along the bank of the water source. Make them so you can light them in a hurry and set green branches on top so they make smoke. Your best chance of being found is if you stay put and make it easier to notice that someone is there.
If you decide to try to walk out follow the water. You want to go down stream. It is easier to go down than it is to go up. Leave obvious signs (arrows pointing in your direction of travel) so that you can be tracked easily.
Following a stream will always take you closer to civilization.
 
not too much of a problem in the UK, if I am lost in the woods(never have been yet) I follow a stream downriver, that connects to a larger river which in turn will lead to a house, a road or a main trail back to civilisation.
 

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