Monday, March 26, 2012

Home made stuff sacks


Ok, last post for the month of March. Today I was packing up the gear i'll be using next week on my 1 on 1 survival trek. I noticed that my student poncho was missing its stuff sack. In my plunder I had a fairly good sized piece of tent fabric , scored from a dumpster.

I figured that I could hand sew a decent bag in a short time but my good friend "The wildcat missionary" volunteered his wife Eva's sewing machine and skills...Good idea.

Eva made me 2 decent sized stuff sacks and added double draw strings to them....wayyyyyy better then I would have done. Thanks Eva!

I really like the double draw string configuration, it closes up the bag tighter than the asshole on a pack mule - kinda looks like that too.

Anyhoo, with this new addition to my gear, I was able to pack the student Hammock, Poncho (with extra strings etc.,)Then get to drinking some whiskey.

I hope you like the pics.

Tomahawk - See you on the trail - Scouts Out!

Sunday, March 25, 2012

Deleted YouTube Videos - Apology


I just wanted to apologize to any of you out there that might have notice that the most of my YT videos are deleted.

There are far too many negative types and key board commandos on YT. I made the decision to delete most of my videos after several unnecessarily rude and vulgar comments.

People....

To those of you Intelligent folks out there, sorry for this.

Tomahawk - Scouts Out!

Hennessey Hammock repairs








As some of you may recall, Last fall on the last leg of my hitch hiking trip from Northern Maine to South East Arizona, I tore a coupla holes in the mozzy netting on the Hennessey Hammock (donated by Cyber slyinger).

Next week I have a student arriving for 8 days of semi primitive(1 on 1) Survival training. I told said student that he could use my alternate Hammock instead of packing a tent along with him.

In order to make this Hammock "Operational" I needed repair it. Taking a mesh pocket from a dumpster dived tent, I used that as my patching material.

Next,setting up my work area in Matt's "Pre positioned PAW storage yard" and Utilizing my sewing kit, along with some of the sewing skills I learned as an Army Parachute Rigger - but mostly the skills I learned from my eldest sister Ruth, I began to sew on the patches, and facilitate the repairs.

It was difficult to get a straight line on the smaller patch due to the stretch in the net fabric. I could have made this repair on a sewing machine, inside the house under controlled conditions but, I preferred to work outside in the wind, using only the sewing materials in my kit.

Perfect practice makes perfect.

Tomahawk - Scouts Out!

New Scabbard for my sewing kit Scissors





Today I was doing a bit of sewing and noticed that me kit scissors were poking through the bottom of the card board scabbard I had them in, moreover , I noticed that my supply of artificial sinew thread was low.

Rooting around in the back of my friend Matt's truck, I uncovered some Duct tape and then, refolding the "C" ration box card board(yup "C"- rat card board), I wrapped it well in tape. Next, I added an additional 30 feet (9 meters or so)of waxed artificial sinew thread - when split4 ways, this will equate to 120 feet of sturdy thread.

I added the entire shebang to my cammo sewing kit bag and threw it into my pack to take along on next weeks 1 on 1 survival class.

Tomahawk - Scouts Out!

Crazy creek chair






So,I had to break down and buy a new Crazy Creek Chair. As most of you well know, Im not much of a "Gear head". Back in 1989-96 I was working at a wilderness school in Utah where I first encountered the Crazy creek chair. As I recall, they were kind of expensive back then, as most new types of gear are.

One day, as me and my shift partner "Pog" Sean Kendrigan were preparing for our 8 day rotation in the field, I happened to notice a Crazy creek laying on the floor. This particular one was owned by a staff which had recently (like the day before)departed the program to go work for Outward Bound(I think). Anyhoo, long story short - I snagged it up and added it to my gear.

I have been packing the chair all over the world since then. 1996 to present. I have used it in 8 different countries and a shit load of states.I even used it as a sign while hitch hiking. Over the years from "Normal" use it began to break down, and I was forced to facilitate repairs on it to keep my chair operational.

Last fall while camping in the mountains my chair finally "took a shit on me", try as I might, I could not get 'er fixed well enough to pack in my gear any longer. Bummer.

I bought a new one via ebay in cammo because the other colors looked "Gay" to me.
Here are a few pics of my new one and the old one with said repairs. I would recommend one of these chairs for you adventurers out there, especially if you are an old man like me.

Tomahawk - Scouts Out!

Mykel Hawke's Jungle Survival Kit


I kinda dig this cat, his wife is pretty cool too. Recently, I have been able to catch some TV and have taken in a lot of the "Man woman wild" episodes and "SOS - Science of survival" reruns.

Mykes approach, skills and lingo,reminds me of the type of individuals that I have enjoyed working with around the world.

Anyhoo, Ill post more vids from "Hawk daddy" if I come across them.

Tomahawk - Scouts out!

Friday, March 23, 2012

Entomophagy - eating insects as food


Recently in Thailand I enjoyed some various insects along with my fiery hot Papaya salad called Sumtom(that is what is sounds like to me), and some Kau nau, or as we call it "sticky rice".

The insects consisted of meal grubs, water beetles, and Grass hoppers all fried in peanut oil with lime leaves and chillies then well dowsed with salt - not bad if you are hungry. My mother always said "Hunger is the best sauce" so, these food bugs are the proof. My lady friends in Thailand(city girls mostly) will not eat these bugs, but I like to sample this type of foods on occasion.

I did a little research and discovered that Mexico consumes 168 different types of insects as food - interesting.I have eaten "Chapulines" or Grass hoppers in mexico and found them to have a slight carmel after taste.

Below is a little info from wikipedia on the subject because once again, Im too lazy to write it out myself.

Tomahawk - scouts out!

Entomophagy (from Greek ἔντομος éntomos, "insect(ed)", and φᾰγεῖν phăgein, "to eat") is the consumption of insects as food. Insects are eaten by many animals, but the term is generally used to refer to human consumption of insects; animals that eat insects are known as insectivores. There are also some species of carnivorous plants that derive nutrients from insects.

Human insect-eating is common in cultures in parts of the world, such as North, Central and South America; and Africa, Asia, Australia and New Zealand. Over 1,000 insects are known to be eaten in 80% of the world's nations. However, in some societies insect-eating is uncommon or even taboo. Today insect eating is rare in the developed world, but insects remain a popular food in many developing regions of Latin America, Africa, Asia and Oceania.

Some of the more popular insects and arachnids eaten around the world include crickets, cicadas, grasshoppers, ants, a variety of beetle grubs (such as mealworms), the larvae of the darkling beetle or rhinoceros beetle, a variety of species of caterpillar (such as bamboo worms, mopani worms, silkworms and waxworms), scorpions and tarantulas. Entomophagy is sometimes defined broadly to include the practice of eating arthropods that are not insects, such as arachnids (tarantulas mainly) and myriapods (centipedes mainly). There are 1,417 known species of arthropods, including arachnids, that are edible to humans. The term is not used for the consumption of other arthropods, specifically crustaceans like crabs, lobsters and shrimps.

Other usage:
Insects, nematodes and fungi that obtain their nutrition from insects are sometimes termed entomophagous, especially in the context of biological control applications. These may also be more specifically classified into predators, parasites or parasitoids, while viruses, bacteria and fungi that grow on or inside insects may also be termed "entomopathogenic". (See also Entomopathogenic fungi) In ecology, feeding on insects is usually termed as insectivory.

History:
Before humans had tools to hunt or farm, insects may have represented an important part of their diet. Evidence has been found analyzing coprolites from caves in USA and Mexico. Coprolites in caves in the Ozark Mountains were found to contain ants, beetle larvae, lice, ticks, and mites. This is not unexpected, as there are some deep evolutionary precursors. Firstly, insectivory also features to various degrees amongst primates, such as marmosets and tamarins, and indeed there is some suggestion that the earliest primates were nocturnal, arboreal insectivores.Also, most extant apes are, to a greater or lesser extent, insectivorous.

Cave paintings in Altamira, north Spain, dated to about 30,000 to 9,000 BCE, depict the collection of wild bee nests. At the time people must have eaten bee pupae and larvae with the honey. Cocoons of wild silkworm (Theophilia religiosae) were found in ruins in the Shanxi province of China, from 2,000 to 2,500 years B.C. The cocoons had large holes, suggesting the pupae were eaten.[12] Many ancient entomophagy practices have been passed down to the present, forming traditional entomophagy.

Entomophagy can be divided into two categories: insects used as a source of nutrients and insects as condiments. Some insects are eaten as larvae or pupae, others as adults. Though not insects, arachnids such as spiders, tarantulas and scorpions are also eaten. A total of 1417 species of insects have been recorded as being eaten by over 3000 ethnic groups. These include 235 species of butterflies and moths, 344 species of beetles, 313 species of ants, bees and wasps as well as 239 species of grasshoppers, crickets and cockroaches, amongst others. Other commonly eaten insects are termites, cicadas and dragonflies.:5 Insects are known to be eaten in 80% of the world's nations.

The commercial exploitation of food insects has led to their decline in some places.

The consumption of Atta laevigata is traditional in some regions of Colombia and northeast Brazil. In southern Africa, a species of moth called Gonimbrasia belina is found throughout much of the region; its large caterpillar, the mopani or mopane worm, is a source of food protein. In Australia, Witchetty grub is considered a source of food amongst the Indigenous population.

Entomophagy has been featured on some reality television shows, such as Fear Factor. Barrington Hall, a former student cooperative at U.C. Berkeley held an annual insect banquet for many years until the co-op was closed down in 1990. The New York Entomological Society held a Centennial Banquet on Wednesday, May 20, 1992 at the Explorers Club in New York. The theme for the evening banquet was the use of insects as food. Appetizers and desserts featured insects in their preparations. The keynote speaker was Dr. Gene DeFoliart of the University of Wisconsin who is a leading authority on entomophagy. The Explorers Club itself holds an annual dinner at New York's Waldorf-Astoria Hotel featuring a wide array of unusual dishes including many featuring insects. Theme park operator Six Flags Inc, based in New York, staged a contest as part of a promotion leading up to Halloween in which it also offered customers free entry or line-jumping advantages if they ate a live Madagascar hissing cockroach; the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) opposed the overall promotion. "Insects do not deserve to be eaten alive especially for a gratuitous marketing gimmick," PETA spokeswoman Jackie Vergerio told Reuters.

Advantages:
Insects can be a good source of not only protein, but also vitamins, minerals, and fats. For example, crickets are high in calcium, and termites are rich in iron. One hundred grams of giant silkworm moth larvae provide 100 percent of the daily requirements for copper, zinc, iron, thiamin, and riboflavin. Ants can also contain protein depending on the size of the insect. The smaller the species, the greater the chance of it containing minimal or no protein. Grubs of the sago palm weevil (a staple in Papua New Guinea) are laden with unsaturated fat. Many insects contain abundant stores of lysine, an amino acid deficient in the diets of many people who depend heavily on grain.

Minilivestock:
The intentional cultivation of insects and edible arthropods for human food, referred to as minilivestock, is now emerging in animal husbandry as an ecologically sound concept. Minilivestocking suggests that a wide variety of small animals, including arthropods, be reared as nutritious food, the major advantage being that they do not have to be fed on grains thus saving many crop species for human consumption. It is also considered to be much more ecologically friendly than traditional livestocking.

Insects generally have a higher food conversion efficiency than more traditional meats, measured as efficiency of conversion of ingested food, or ECI. While many insects can have an energy input to protein output ratio of around 4:1, raised livestock has a ratio closer to 54:1. This is partially due to the fact that feed first needs to be grown for most traditional livestock. Additionally endothermic (warm-blooded) vertebrates need to use a significantly greater amount of energy just to stay warm whereas ectothermic (cold blooded) plants or insects do not. An index which can be used as a measure is the Efficiency of conversion of ingested food to body substance: for example, only 10% of ingested food is converted to body substance by beef cattle, versus 19–31% by silkworms and 44% by German cockroaches. Studies concerning the house cricket (Acheta domesticus) provide further evidence for the efficiency of insects as a food source. When reared at 30°C or more and fed a diet of equal quality to the diet used to rear conventional livestock, crickets showed a food conversion twice as efficient as pigs and broiler chicks, four times that of sheep, and six times higher than steers (oxen) when losses in carcass trim and dressing percentage are counted.
Mexican chapulines.

Insects reproduce at a faster rate than beef animals. A female cricket can lay from 1,200 to 1,500 eggs in three to four weeks, while for beef the ratio is four breeding animals for each market animal produced. This gives house crickets a true food conversion efficiency almost 20 times higher than beef. For this reason and because of the essential amino acids content of insects, some people, on ecological grounds, propose the development of entomophagy to provide a major source of protein in human nutrition. Protein production for human consumption would be more effective and consume fewer resources than vertebrate protein. This makes insect meat more ecological than vertebrate meat.

Insects have attractive qualities for food production besides their high energy efficiency. For example the spatial usage and water requirements are only a fraction of that required to produce the same mass of food with cattle farming. Production of 150g of grasshopper meat requires only very little water, while cattle requires 3290 liters to produce the same amount of beef.

Toxicity:
In general, many insects are herbivorous and less problematic than omnivores. Cooking is advisable, ceteris paribus, since parasites of concern may be present. But pesticide use can make insects unsuitable for human consumption. Herbicides can accumulate in insects through bioaccumulation. For example when locust outbreaks are treated by spraying, people can no longer eat them. This may pose a problem since edible plants have been consumed by the locusts themselves.

Cases of lead poisoning after consumption of chapulines were reported by the California Department of Health Services in November 2003. Adverse allergic reactions are also a possible hazard.

In the Carnia region of Italy, moths of the Zygaenidae, known for manufacturing hydrogen cyanide precursors in their body, are eaten by children despite their toxicity. The moths concerned are from the brightly coloured day-flying genus Zygaena and its mimic, Syntomis. Cyanogenic glucosides were present in the larvae and imagos (adults) as well as in the ingluvies but in extremely low quantities along with sugar which is found in much higher concentrations. In early summer, Zygaena is very common and easy to catch by hand and the ingluvies serves as a convenient, supplementary source of sugar. Because the ingluvies have a very low cyanogenic content, children can include this resource as a seasonal delicacy at minimum risk.

"Bear Corn" - Conopholis Americana



Here is a little bit of Pseudo survival info for all of you survival junkies out there - East of the Mississippi river. When I was a kid my friends and I would look for this plant in the wood as enthusiastically as we did Morel mushrooms.

It has a flavor all its own. I will look for it this summer in Maine and Hope to find some. I have never seen it in the Boreal forest but Maybe Ill get lucky.

Anyhoo, here is what wikipedia has to say about it. Im too lazy to write it out myself.

Tomahawk - Scouts Out!

Conopholis americana, American cancer-root or squawroot or bear corn, is a perennial, non-photosynthesizing (or "achlorophyllous") parasitic plant, from the family Orobanchaceae and more recently from the genus Conopholis but also listed as Orobanche, native but not endemic to North America and when blooming, resembles a pine cone or cob of corn growing from the roots of mostly oak and beech trees.

Description:
C. americana is parasitic on the roots of woody plants, especially oaks (genus Quercus) and beech (genus Fagus). The only part of the plant generally seen is the cone-shaped inflorescence, which appears above ground in spring. The entire structure is a yellowish color, turning to brown and achieves heights of 10 centimeters (4 in) to 20 centimeters (8 in) tall.

Stems and leaves:
Stout and unbranched 1.3 centimeters (0.5 in) to 2.5 centimeters (1.0 in) thick stems. Since C. americana does not photosynthesize it also does not have true leaves; it has instead simple, ovate, tiny scales 1.3 centimeters (0.5 in) long and brown, which appear underneath each flower.

Flowers:
C. americana produces spikes of yellow to cream flowers densely crowded all around the stem. Each flower is 5-parted, 8 millimeters (0.3 in) to 13 millimeters (0.5 in) long, tubular with a swollen base and facing downwards. As the flowering spike matures and begins to wither and becomes brown throughout the summer and often persisting through the winter, by which time it has become shriveled and black. There is no noticeable floral scent.

Fruits and reproduction:
Each flower is replaced by a seed capsule that is longer than it is wide and contains many small seeds. This plant spreads to new locations by reseeding itself.

Roots:
The root system is parasitic on the roots of Oak trees (Quercus spp.); dependent on the host tree for its nourishment, the suckers of the parasitic roots cause the formation of large rounded knobs on the roots of the host tree.

Distribution:
Found growing on roots in wooded ravines in every state of the United States east of the Mississippi River.

Night Stalkers by Mike Durant and some other guy


Last week up in the woods I read "Night Stalkers" written by Mike Durant and some other guy. This is a good book and on my recommended reading list for all of you would be warriors out there.

What amazes me in this book though, is that of the Pilots and ground crew soldiers featured, ALL seem to love the Army and have gotten everything they wanted from that organization. Hells Bells, in the 16 years I served in various units, All I ever experienced was Dissatisfaction and Brick walls. When ever I wanted to improve myself or change to a different unit, I was told No. Seems like some folks are luckier than others within the "Green Machine".

I hated the Army, but if I had to serve in the armed forces again, I would endeavor to become a member of the 160 SOAR. It seems like my kind of unit.

Tomahawk - Scouts Out!

Friday, March 16, 2012

Late Lunch at steely Danao - By Trailhawk





Here is another great post from my good friend "Trailhawk" in the pi. THE ONLY PROBLEM WITH my friends stories is that the make me homesick for the Philippines.

Anyhoo, I hope you like it.

Tomahawk - Scouts Out!

I CALL THIS INDUSTRIAL city north of Metro Cebu as “Steely Danao”. Steely Danao of course is Danao City, 33 kilometers from where I write. The word “steely” that I imply do not refer to the machinery that run the industries and commerce there but of the material that makes this city famous for: gun steel for their underground gun-making industry.

It's been a while that I have not visited my friends there, especially “Mr. and Mrs. Fine”, who really are a nice couple and who are very accommodating. Mr. Fine has a shop that specializes with gun steel. No he does not make guns, rather he fine-tune these and improve its appearance by bluing.

I go to him whenever my friends request me to have their handguns repaired, reconfigured or re-blued. Last time I was there was on July 21, 2010 and I even featured this last meeting in this blog titled Early Dinner at Steely Danao.

Today, December 30, 2011, I am going there with my Camp Red buddies, Glenn Pestaño and Raymund Panganiban. No, we are not going there to have guns repaired, reconfigured or re-blued. We are trying our best to be Santa Claus and bring goodwill and happiness to their humble abode and, at the same time, induce Mr. Fine to have a lively conversation.

Me and Mr. Fine have known each other for almost twenty years and I could vouch of his good nature and trustworthiness which his peers are found lacking. I wanted to have Mr. Fine's shop as one of the places where international visitors would stop over if ever the International Outlaw Bushcraft Gathering would be realized.

When we arrive, I saw Mr. Fine doing work on his shop buffering a KG-9 magazine to a shiny sheen preparatory to immersing these in his boiling “tub” of a sinister-looking chemical mixture of lye and hydrochloric acid. He covers half his face to protect himself from fine dust and looks like Mad Wolf (aka Rodderick Scout) of Outdoor Skills. Hahaha...

His son and assistant, “Mr. Coarse”, is not around. Mr. Fine says gun business had been difficult and a few buyers come and Mr. Coarse had to help both ends meet by working in a construction job. It only picked up in late December though. I saw a stack of empty revolver frames on one side and disassembled cylinders and other parts on another side placed inside little boxes per set. A set of disassembled pistols and a submachine gun are among those.

Anyway, I bring a box of ham for them and Mrs. Fine jumped up and down with delight. Hahaha... Since it is almost 12:00 noon, I slip a bill to Mrs. Fine and requested her to buy us raw fish, pork meat, rice and a gallon of fresh coconut wine locally known as “tuba”. We intend to stay for the rest of the day and we could afford a late late lunch.

Raymund gets busy with his DSLR camera while Glenn begins exchanging information with Mr. Fine. Me, I just listened and join the talk when I feel I have to and help Raymund with the picture-taking. Here and there where free ranging fowls and their chicks and a lot of ducks.

The water apple tree begins to bear fruit while the papaya is full of huge fruits hanging all over its top trunk. An Indian mulberry tree beside the shack have grown tall now while the jackfruit and mango trees remained green and healthy amidst a sprawling garden of Malabar nightshades, sweet potatoes, swamp radish, eggplants, pepper, gumbos, lemon grass, horse radish, sweet basil and cantaloupe.

Meanwhile, Glenn and Raymund decide to tour more of Danao by going in the hinterlands where the real underground gun-making shops are found. Mrs. Fine arrive and I help myself with glass after glass of a fresh gallon of tuba which tastes sweet. Amidst all that, Mrs. Fine's daughter help in starting a fire for the pork meat.

At exactly two in the afternoon, the duo returned and the meal is served, although late. Grilled pork, pork-ribs-and-cabbage soup and raw fish with spiced-vinegar-and-coconut-milk mix were the viands and everyone help themselves including neighbors who, by chance, have business with Mr. Fine.

The coconut wine served its purpose well as it helped in digesting the food and added more animation to the conversation. Camp Red[1] is a repository of country lore and the more we collect, the more it will give value to our existence when the SHTF[2] time comes.

After a couple hours of talk, we decide that we have to go back to the big city. We take a short walk to the highway and ride a mini-bus coming from Carmen town for Cebu. We arrive at our destination at 5:30 PM whereby Raymund decide to walk to SM City while Glenn and I ride a jitney for the downtown area.

It is another good and productive day for Camp Red and a good boding for Mr. and Mrs. Fine. Happy New Year, my dear readers!

Trailhawk

Thursday, March 15, 2012

"Wallet" A La Tomahawk



Another project I worked on up in the woods, was making a small case for my ID,etc. from a plastic zip lock bag and digicam duct tape,that I salvage from the dumpster. I have always hated the conventional wallet for its bulk and annoyance and have been making this type of "wallet" for about 30 years.

Tomahawk - Scouts Out!

3 Projects in the woods




I spent the night in the woods last night. And today I came back down because my friend Matthew's mom needs some help cleaning up some property in the White Mountains about 4 hours north of here.

anyhoo, I worked on 4 projects while up in the woods (3 pictured here). I made a bag for my binoculars out of a dumpster dived digicam pillow case. To it I added my British Army Pathfinder patch , compliments of Munki Man on FB - thanks bro!

To my sewing kit bag I added a patch with Tomahawk written in Thai, given to me by the Mam monster, and finally, I added my sew on "Bush pilot" wings to the folding boonie cap Matt's dad gave me.

Here is the pic of said projects.

Tomahawk - Scouts Out!

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Books Ive read over the past month

As of Thursday I will have been back in the USA for 1 month. Time flies. It seems like I was just in Bangkok and the Philippines enjoying myself. I just wanted to share the selection with you wilderness wanderers out there to give you a few ideas for your own Libraries.

Tomahawk – Scouts Out!

Anyhoo, over the past month I have read 21 hard copy books and 5 Ebooks to include;

(Ebooks)
1. Survivors by J.W. Rawles
2. Guns of the south by Harry Turtledove
3. Master of the girl pat by Dod Osborne
4. 1910 Army Mule packing Manual by H. M. Daly
5. Counter insurgency warfare by General George Crook

The Hard copies include:
1.One man in the world – Barlow
2.Contact - Segan
3.Pirate Latitudes – Crighton
4.Reading the enemy's mind – Smith
5.One second after – Forstchen
6.When all hell breaks loose – Lundin
7.Beyond survival – Coffee
8.Undaunted Courage – Ambrose
9.Shadows in the Jungle – Alexander(reread)
10.Cowboy Culture – Dary
11.Paganism and the Occult – Logan
12.How to survive TEOTWAWKI – Rawles
13.Ghost soldiers – Sides
14.Aftermath – Axler
15.Year of the tiger – Higgins
16.Sitka – La mour
17.The first mountain man – Johnstone
18.Kilkeny – La mour
19.At play in the fields of the lord – Mathessin(reread)
20.The eagle has landed – Higgins
21. A survival “Book” by Cantleberry – used as fire starter and toilet paper.(N0t pictured)

Review - “Reading The Enemy's Mind” by: Paul H. Smith


Review - “Reading The Enemy's Mind”
by: Paul H. Smith

OK, first, I have to say that I really like this book. I like the cover,the content and the style it is written in, Moreover, I like the Historic and Nostalgic appeal this book has for me. Apparently the Author; Paul H. Smith and I were in Army Basic Training at exactly the same time at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri in 1976, and we were also in Germany at the same time working with SF. He also makes several references to good Ol' Fort Huachuca , where I currently am.

Small world.

But, I have to say that Mr. Smith seems to me to be a bit of a wiener and is extremely “Pussy whipped”.
As I read the story it seems like all of the Decisions he mad in regard to his Military career were “Ideas” his(1st)wife had. Like Joining the Army to begin with(as a linguist), Air assault school, Officer Candidate school, Jump school, Blah,Blah, Damn!

(**NOTE: I was contacted by Dr. Smith and was informed that he is NO LONGER Married to his 1st wife). Good Man!

If you can get past the wieny, PW, overtones of this book it is a good read and on Tomahawks recommended reading list for all of you “Operators” out there.

Anyhoo, before you spend money on it see if its in the library.

Tomahawk – scouts Out!

Poem by Jim Carr - "Getting lost with a knife and some wood"


Getting lost with a knife and some wood.

Out for a while what seems a short time
turns into hours,
Goes by so fast don't realize the time spent
What enjoyable way to waste the day.

Knives axes some wood
Slice here split there time to see What I find
Break away bit by bit.

Slowly emerges a bowl or spoon
Maybe something else,

Chisel away a bit more today
Hmmm let's see what this piece holds today
Time to go out waste a few minutes maybe hours
Play with my knives axes and some wood.

Tomahawks "Grey Man" Gear




Folks been messaging / emailing me asking what i carry with me most days, and what my "Grey man" stuff consists of. Here it is for the most part.I also had/have in my pockets a match safe filled with strike anywhere matches and a large bandana.

I purchased Most of My stuff from SERE Pick and Truly Tactical. Some of my stuff I have been packing around for years.Not Pictured is my compass - I simply forgot to add it and was too lazy to do another picture.

Tomahawk - Scouts Out!

1. my "vintage" fossil sunglasses w/ case
2. lanyard with my 1976 vintage P-38 and a hand cuff key....distractor for my plastic one.
3. 2 hand cuff shims
4.meerschaum pipe - for the "commander mcbrag" look. Sorry, no weed or tobacco.
5. folding razor knife and hack saw
6. small ID case with cash, and some extra visa and Passport pics.
7. Pathfinder challenge coin
8. Kevlar string, great for sawing through flex cuffs and other things
9. plastic hand cuff key
10. Diamond steel bar for cutting metal
11. Russian made spy glass - very good optics
12. Buck "Bos" 860S30V knife
13. chap stick - to keep the lips supple
14. small zipper pouch i got from Guns Beltran Pestaño in Cebu - PI
15. Swiss Army knife
16. case for spy glass

Guyot design "Splash guard"


Ok, so, I went to the Goodwill store the other day and found 2 slightly used Nalgene water bottles for less than a buck each. One was kinda cool , it had a “coffee press” style water filter in it, which I will put to good use. But the other had a removable “Splash guard” mouth piece, by Guyot design.

What a useless and unnecessary piece of junk. If you are such a klutz that you need a guard to drink out of a wide mouth bottle , OR you are such a “Gear Queer” that you are willing to spend almost 4 bucks on a useless piece of junk, PLEASE stay out of the wilds.

Rant ended.

Tomahawk – scouts out!

Sunday, March 11, 2012

www.samexplores.com - My friend Sam's new blog


I just wanted to announce the new blog of my friend Sam. You can view it at;

www.samexplores.com

He just started this blog but stay tuned for more action and adventures over the summer. Sam will be coming to Arizona in late March for a little Desert and Mountain survival/adventure training.

Tomahawk - Scouts Out!

Here is a copy and paste of Sam's 1st blog post announcing his AZ trip;


On March 27th I will be boarding a plane to Tucson, Arizona for a survival expedition in the Huachuca Mountains. During this expedition I will have a daily journal to keep track of everything that goes on, and to turn it into a day by day blog once I return.

I’m excited about this trip mostly because I’ve always wanted to go to an extremely testing environment to test my survival skills. The desert of Arizona will do just that. In the desert almost every plant wants to stick you, the arachnids (especially scorpions), the reptiles (especially rattle snakes), and mammals are all capable of killing you with little difficulty. It’s populations of black bears, and mountain lions have recently been joined by a budding population of jaguars (yes, those jaguars). If the predators aren’t enough the groups of troublesome javelina also roam southern Arizona. They don’t attack humans often, unless they are accompanied by their pets.

On top of the animals there’s the challenge of water. It’s still early spring in the southwest so the temperatures will be very mild. I’m expecting 60s during the day and mid to high 30s during the night, depending on the elevation. This will help, since I won’t dehydrate as fast. However, it will still be a challenge to find water in this arid environment.

Another concern is definitely going to be the border. Though Arizona isn’t seeing nearly the violence as other border states the mountains remain a highway for illegals to slip into the United States undetected. However, I don’t see the illegals as being much of a threat. I’ll also be able to communicate with any Spanish speaker that I may come across, since I will be accompanied by a bush bum who speaks the language fluently, and isn’t too bad for company in general.

Tom Moore (also known as “Wiskey Jack,” and “Tomahawk”) is the reason I’m able to go to AZ in the first place. He’s lived in the state since his college days and when I sent him an email asking what the best way to go about learning some desert survival was, he responded by inviting me out for an expedition in his favorite playground, the Huachucas. I met Tom last July while at a professional guide training school in Aroostook County, Maine. I’ll give you more info on him a bit later.

I’m thrilled to be going into one of America’s most amazing wild places, and I will surely be humbled when I return home. I will post more information about the expedition, getting there, and the great adventure that it will surely hold later. For now, I hope you’ll follow me in my journey to the Huachucas!

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Cooking pot Modifications



I had some time to kill today while waiting for my friend Matt do all of his errands etc. So I was wandering around in His "pre positioned Post Apocalyptic World" (PAW) stock pile and unearthed a small semi rusty pot.

Next I rooted around a bit more and dug up some sand paper, a spindle from an old kitchen chair, some telegraph wire (found on Ft. Huachuca), 2 wood screws,a 16 penny nail, a beer bottle cap (Miller), and a screw driver, oh! and a cheap pair of Chinese made pliers.

So, I sat on the tail gate of Matt's truck and started sanding the rust spots off the inside and outside of the lid and Pot.

Next, I removed the wire handle on the lid, removed the old pot handle fitting (with the cheap pliers),I took the 16 penny nail, using the pliers as a hammer, and punched a hole on each side of the pot large enough to accommodate the telegraph wire. I added the bail and cut the pieces to fit.

Next, using the saw on my Swiss Army knife, I cut a small knob from the chair spindle to use as a lid handle. Using one of the wood screws I found, and a Miller beer cap as a washer, I screwed the wood knob to the lid.

Presto, completed cooking pot. Its' kinda cool and I plan to use it next week in the woods.


Tomahawk - Scouts Out!

Thursday, March 8, 2012

BRS-3 Stove


I bought this little stove on ebay at the same time I purchased some other useable /practical gear. I like the light weight and simplicity of this stove, and will add it to my permanent gear for the long haul.

http://www.worthpoint.com/worthopedia/brs-camp-camping-backpacking-stove-64007170

I have been using this stove over the past 3 weeks and like its functionality.

Tomahawk - scouts out!

Cuscus Backpack



I bought this backpack on ebay a while back and finally got around to using it over the past 3 weeks while hiking around the southern Arizona Mountains.

For the price , it is a pretty good pack and has a decent load capacity, is made from decent materials and was fairly cheap.

I kinda like it.

http://www.shopcuscus.com/servlet/the-Internal-Frame-Backpack/Categories

Tomahawk - Scouts Out!

Book Review (sort of) Canterryberry survival book


Bahhahahahahaha! Dont waste your money. this book is simply plagiarized info from other survival books from recorded history.

Tomahawk - scouts out!

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