Welcome guest, is this your first visit? Create Account now to join.
  • Login:

Welcome to the NZ Hunting and Shooting Forums.

If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed.

ZeroPak Ammo Direct


User Tag List

+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 15 of 41
Like Tree84Likes

Thread: Minimum pack contents

Hybrid View

  1. #1
    Member
    Join Date
    Apr 2022
    Location
    New Plymouth
    Posts
    3,852
    Quote Originally Posted by 25/08 IMP View Post
    So can you list your items I think I have what I need but I've never had to use them yet.

    Sent from my CPH2145 using Tapatalk
    I was a Mountain Safety Instructor for over 30 years and would never have pulled that stunt on anyone - I would have told him to get fucked and walked back inside
    Micky Duck and RugerM77 like this.

  2. #2
    Member
    Join Date
    Aug 2015
    Location
    West Auckland
    Posts
    1,132
    Quote Originally Posted by Barry the hunter View Post
    I was a Mountain Safety Instructor for over 30 years and would never have pulled that stunt on anyone - I would have told him to get fucked and walked back inside
    It was actually a very good teaching technique..the course participants were instructors who taught their "clients" about survival kits, but had never actually used one...how much credibility would they have? The fact that most of them decided they needed to change the contents of their survival kit when they got home proves the message was conveyed to them.
    I managed an instructor group for 22 years, and recruited people who had done the hard yards, had done dumb things in the bush and learned from them. I wanted course participants to be able learn from the instructor's experience. I had a favourite mantra: Good judgement comes from experience; experience comes from poor judgement. One of my instructors, a former Urewera culler, had developed hypothermia as a 20 year old and nearly died, 30 metres from a hut. He would tell the clients on a course the story of his near miss, sitting in the bush, leaning back against a tree, and have the whole group spellbound by the saga. So here was a man who had mana, that you knew you should listen to. Compare him to a bushcraft instructor I saw who took a session on hypothermia by reading aloud the contents of a pamphlet on the subject. Who had the most credibility?
    Barry the hunter: if you had stormed off and gone back to the camp...the doors were locked! The course organiser had covered that! He was the legendary Bob Badland, MSC Firearms Programme Manager for ages, and one of the best hunters I ever came across.
    yeah_na_missed and Zedrex like this.

  3. #3
    Member
    Join Date
    Apr 2022
    Location
    New Plymouth
    Posts
    3,852
    Quote Originally Posted by Ranger 888 View Post
    It was actually a very good teaching technique..the course participants were instructors who taught their "clients" about survival kits, but had never actually used one...how much credibility would they have? The fact that most of them decided they needed to change the contents of their survival kit when they got home proves the message was conveyed to them.
    I managed an instructor group for 22 years, and recruited people who had done the hard yards, had done dumb things in the bush and learned from them. I wanted course participants to be able learn from the instructor's experience. I had a favourite mantra: Good judgement comes from experience; experience comes from poor judgement. One of my instructors, a former Urewera culler, had developed hypothermia as a 20 year old and nearly died, 30 metres from a hut. He would tell the clients on a course the story of his near miss, sitting in the bush, leaning back against a tree, and have the whole group spellbound by the saga. So here was a man who had mana, that you knew you should listen to. Compare him to a bushcraft instructor I saw who took a session on hypothermia by reading aloud the contents of a pamphlet on the subject. Who had the most credibility?
    Barry the hunter: if you had stormed off and gone back to the camp...the doors were locked! The course organiser had covered that! He was the legendary Bob Badland, MSC Firearms Programme Manager for ages, and one of the best hunters I ever came across.
    Bob Badland now theres a blast from the past - had quite a bit to do with him - but still would not have expected people to camp out overnight on any course I ever ran - just me - to much could go wrong and quickly - but then so many of the groups I took were school age - bit young to chuck in deep end - I used to spend a lot of time getting them to get a fire going and what would burn and what would not
    Micky Duck likes this.

  4. #4
    Member
    Join Date
    Aug 2015
    Location
    West Auckland
    Posts
    1,132
    Quote Originally Posted by Barry the hunter View Post
    Bob Badland now theres a blast from the past - had quite a bit to do with him - but still would not have expected people to camp out overnight on any course I ever ran - just me - to much could go wrong and quickly - but then so many of the groups I took were school age - bit young to chuck in deep end - I used to spend a lot of time getting them to get a fire going and what would burn and what would not
    We used to run a series of 3 weekend courses, spread out over several months: Basic Bushcraft, which involved the "classroom" content, e.g. first aid, food and cooking, pack contents, tents and bivvies, firelighting, navigation, etc, but with plenty of outdoor teaching around the residential camp we used (the best place to teach outdoor skills is outdoors); Intermediate Bushcraft, which was a 2 night 2 day expedition and involved camping out, putting all the first course learnings into practice; then a survival course, also 2 nights 2 days, teaching how to cope if you had not put the other stuff into practice properly. That course started with a night tramp off track into a hut (which did not exist(!), we would simulate a disagreement between instructors on how to reach the hut in thick bush, which resulted in the lead instructor departing in a tantrum, with the remaining group needing to set up bivvies for the night with the polythene sheet they were issued with. This resulted in members feeling disoriented, frustrated and uneasy. The idea was to lower their morale on the first night (just how you would feel when you have had an injury accident or are lost) and then build it up, along with their confidence, over the next 2 days by teaching them that you CAN build a rainproof bivvy, and that you will not die by not eating for 2 days. Each member was given a sealed ration pack the first night, but could not use it without the permission of the instructors. They learned that if you have a hot brew when you feel hungry, it will satisfy your food cravings (we didn't move around much, so energy levels were maintained, and teaching was done at the same spot. They were encouraged to spend a lot of time alone in their bivvies, because loneliness is an issue in a survival situation. Those courses produced well trained, confident trampers and hunters, able to cope with anything the outdoors could throw at them.

  5. #5
    Member
    Join Date
    Apr 2022
    Location
    New Plymouth
    Posts
    3,852
    Quote Originally Posted by Ranger 888 View Post
    We used to run a series of 3 weekend courses, spread out over several months: Basic Bushcraft, which involved the "classroom" content, e.g. first aid, food and cooking, pack contents, tents and bivvies, firelighting, navigation, etc, but with plenty of outdoor teaching around the residential camp we used (the best place to teach outdoor skills is outdoors); Intermediate Bushcraft, which was a 2 night 2 day expedition and involved camping out, putting all the first course learnings into practice; then a survival course, also 2 nights 2 days, teaching how to cope if you had not put the other stuff into practice properly. That course started with a night tramp off track into a hut (which did not exist(!), we would simulate a disagreement between instructors on how to reach the hut in thick bush, which resulted in the lead instructor departing in a tantrum, with the remaining group needing to set up bivvies for the night with the polythene sheet they were issued with. This resulted in members feeling disoriented, frustrated and uneasy. The idea was to lower their morale on the first night (just how you would feel when you have had an injury accident or are lost) and then build it up, along with their confidence, over the next 2 days by teaching them that you CAN build a rainproof bivvy, and that you will not die by not eating for 2 days. Each member was given a sealed ration pack the first night, but could not use it without the permission of the instructors. They learned that if you have a hot brew when you feel hungry, it will satisfy your food cravings (we didn't move around much, so energy levels were maintained, and teaching was done at the same spot. They were encouraged to spend a lot of time alone in their bivvies, because loneliness is an issue in a survival situation. Those courses produced well trained, confident trampers and hunters, able to cope with anything the outdoors could throw at them.
    Bob Badland - is he still with us - remember him fondly - he got me thru as a Firearm's instructor so many years ago - when I was at Kaitaia he got me to go around a lot of the local Maraes and do safety talks - lot of fun- had many shady types sidle up after the talk hey I have this at home and yup something in the firearm line they were not supposed to have
    Micky Duck likes this.

  6. #6
    Member
    Join Date
    Aug 2015
    Location
    West Auckland
    Posts
    1,132
    Quote Originally Posted by Barry the hunter View Post
    Bob Badland - is he still with us - remember him fondly - he got me thru as a Firearm's instructor so many years ago - when I was at Kaitaia he got me to go around a lot of the local Maraes and do safety talks - lot of fun- had many shady types sidle up after the talk hey I have this at home and yup something in the firearm line they were not supposed to have
    Not sure if he is....yeah, he had a lot of knowledge for sure.

 

 

Similar Threads

  1. Add, Subtract or Upgrade my daypack contents
    By JRW87 in forum Gear and Equipment
    Replies: 60
    Last Post: 11-03-2015, 09:53 PM

Tags for this Thread

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
Welcome to NZ Hunting and Shooting Forums! We see you're new here, or arn't logged in. Create an account, and Login for full access including our FREE BUY and SELL section Register NOW!!