Tactical walking tips for bugging in or out

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Silent Earth

A True Doomsday Prepper
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Tactical walking tips for bugging in or out


BEFORE SETTING OFF

Try on your Rucksack and Jacket, Jump up and down on the spot, if your kit rattles or bangs re-pack rucksack until its silent.


Ensure shiny items like watches, ear rings, earphones, belt buckles are covered up or taped over.

Make sure your specs and shades are the dull, matt coloured frames, not the shiny ones.


Do NOT take hand luggage, you must keep both hands free for climbing, roping, using tools etc


Keep your EDC essentials on your person not in your rucksack (Knife, Compass, Lighter, Flashlight, Multi Tool, Bandana, Hats, Gloves, Watch, Shades etc) should you have to abandon your rucksack.


Daytime departure, take a look out the windows from well within the room moving to the right of the room to look left down the street, and vice versa. Do not stand in the window and silhouette yourself. Ensure as best possible departure will go unnoticed.


Nightime departure, extinguish all lights and fires before looking out of the windows, move slowly at night as human eyes detect movement more than detail in the dark. Ensure as best possible departure will go unnoticed.


Turn off cell phones, pagers etc before leaving.


Use simple hand signals to relay information to other family members, raised arm means stop, raised arm and a crouching stance means stop and take cover, arm extended to left means move towards the left, arm extended to right means move to right. Keep the signals few in number and very simple.

READY TO GO


Turn out lights if it is dark, open door or window PARTIALLY and LISTEN for threats.

Send out one person to scan the immediate area for concealed threats.


If area good to go rest of group to follow, silently and at least 3 to 4 ft apart (6 to 8 feet if tactical situation demands more defensive stance).

WALKING


Walk where possible in the shadows, look up for hazards in surrounding buildings, Look down to avoid items that may make noise like twigs, gravel or broken glass.


Pause frequently to listen, you generally will identify more threats by sound than vision, breaking glass, raised voices, gun shots, vehicle engines, running feet, barking dogs etc


Watch what nature does, if you see a flock of birds, or a rabbit, or deer for example suddenly take flight that tells you something has frightened it, and it may NOT have been your party.


Look left and right SLOWLY in a steady scanning motion, Human eyes detect motion more than shapes when its dark and you have more detector rods and cones in the sides of your eyes than you do at the back. Scanning side to side as you walk you will detect MOVEMENT before shape.


The last man in the group needs to keep stopping and quietly observing the rear to see if you are being followed.


Avoid using flashlights to navigate with, rely on your own night visions, Human eyes take 35 minutes to adapt to the dark but only seconds to lose night vision if a fool turns on a flashlight. Not to mention the risk of advertising your position to the whole area if you do use a flashlight.


Where possible avoid public places and spaces where cops, troops or thugs may gather, try and stay in the shadows.


Avoid districts where scavengers may good looking for food, loot etc


When passing through hilly neighbourhoods never walk along hilltops or ridgelines, stay under the ridgeline and don’t silhouette your self.


If faced with an obstacle such as a hedgerow or wall try always to go round or under it, not over the top or through a gate because again you are just exposing your position.


In the short term most highway and rail bridges are really places to avoid, both official check points and predators WILL target them. Look for alternatives.


RESTING & EATING

No cooking fires during the day unless you can guarantee you wont create any smoke.


When cooking at night site the cooker in a hollow or hole so it does not give off light giving away your position, Beware of the odour of cooking food also giving away your position.


If in a group ONE PERSON COOKS, the others spread out and keep watch for approaching scavengers, Silence is golden as you will hear them approaching long before you see them.


You need to remember the cook will probably lose his night vision so if you have to bug out someone will need to help him until his eyes adjust.


Ideally eat in shifts, half eating half keeping watch, pack away camp cooker etc BEFORE eating incase you have to bug out in a hurry.


Take every scrap of rubbish with you or bury it, fill in your cooking hole / fire pit, leave no clue to your passing through.

SLEEPING


We all need rest and the young and elderly need more rest than healthy adults, you all must sleep when possible. Human biorythms run in two hour cycles, so to get the full benefit of sleep people need to be fully asleep in two hour sections. This really means in a stressed situation after a days bugging out each member will need three hours in his sleeping bag, and hour to wind down / distress and two hours sleep. So whilst at least one person stands watch, the others should rest in three hour sections. All gear must remain packed in rucksacks and boots etc kept close to hand in case you have to make a swift and stealthy exit from your campsite.
 
Personally, on my trek home (assuming the SHTF while I'm at work, 40 miles away from home), I'm walking mostly at night, early morning and sleeping while hidden during the day. (and taking a route away from most of my fellow humans)

For one thing, it's usually hot here. Much cooler at night. For another, too easy to be seen during the day. Finally, I'll use less water during the evening, and less energy.

As for flashlights, a small roll of light repair tape (red) works great for preserving night vision...though I wouldn't even think of turning on a flashlight unless really needed, and I was sure I was alone and hidden.

During the day, load up on insect repellent, into the bushes, and then camouflaging myself. Just before that, so basic trip wires to rattle some cans, to give me a little advanced warning.

At night, emerge, and keep heading home.

Try and avoid walking on fenced in property. Chances are, the owner is a fellow redneck, and in a SHTF scenario especially, is more likely to blow your head off (especially at night).

Ditches and woods along the Interstate will be my friend.
 
"Ditches and woods along the Interstate will be my friend."

Over here a common doctrine is to parallel a road or river or rail line, and never to walk along it, EG Walk parallel to the road, power line, river, canal, rail line just keeping it in eye range to use it only as a navigation aid. This leaves the roads and paths to the Sheeple / Refugees / Bad guys / Cops / Troops

Fortunately for us in the UK we don't have many armed Rednecks, Gaitors or Burmese Pythons to contend with just the odd Were-Bunny ? :)
 
All a matter of circumstance, of course. By "along the interstate", that's pretty much what I mean, within eyesight of it, but certainly not right along it.

I'd prefer to avoid it entirely, but just isn't feasible up to a certain location. Once I can start on backroads, much better option (and a lot more shade). Most of the way though, I'll have to be within about 100' of the road. Again though, I'm only traveling at night, so out there, at night, would be pretty damn hard for any passing vehicle to spot me. Plus I'd hear/see them way before they got to me.

Obviously though, if a bunch of others on foot, I'll have to pick a different route, but I do have a few alternates (just will take longer time).

The real challenge is the bridge. I have to cross it, pretty much. No real choice. If I have to ditch the vehicle, I've got an inflatable raft, oars, and a powered pump to inflate the raft behind the back seat, so I can just use it to get across the bay, and avoid it if really needed, but man, that would really suck.
 
I've always thought traveling at night was wise for security, and as gazorak stated, it also is easier on the body as it's cooler. Also, by hiding in a good cover during the day you could get the much needed rest to help make it thru the tough walking all night. Most of us aren't in as good of shape as we would like to be, so conserving as much energy as possible could be the little extra to help get you out of a tough spot.
 
good post. brings me back to my national service days... lol ... sounds like individual field craft 101 all over again
 
parallel a road or river or rail line, and never to walk along it
Yep, use the feature as what is known as a "handrail", but never walk directly on it.

Great post NR.
 
Brent wrote " Most of us aren't in as good of shape as we would like to be, so conserving as much energy as possible could be the little extra to help get you out of a tough spot."

Sir you are Sooooooo right on that issue it should really be a thread of its own. A group of survivalist families in the United States of Haliburton around 1990 ish did abug out exercise on foot,mums, dads, kids, grannies, dogs and the whole shebang. First they drove out of town to some rural area, cross a river using ropes and canoes then all set out on foot for their group BOL, they as a family group(s) averaged only 3 to 4 miles a DAY.................... Load weight, age and size of family members, avoiding detection etc 3 to 4 miles in a DAY. I think it proved way back then that only fit single young Rambo types could move much faster.

Just remembered it was in a part of Oklahoma that has trees and rivers ?? I seem to remember asking my friend from Kansas is this article for real cos they mentioned the Canadian river , but apparently that's in OK ?.
 
great post,thanks.
must begin to make my hikes longer again and/or add more wight to my back-pack
 
No cooking fires during the day unless you can guarantee you wont create any smoke..pluse if your sure there's no possible threats..
gazrok.might try a hand pump seeing how their quieter.instead of a powered pump seeing how they make noise..


there is a lot of good points here
 
did once calculate tthat it would take me 35-45 min to walk home if needed,this time is under the ideal circumstances but when/if I have to get to my supplies I have 3 different routs to choose from which are fairly quick, the 4 option would take around 120 mins, it's longer but offers more cover
 
I have a foot pump for the raft too...but if able...I'll use the powered one. Takes forever the manual way.

3 to 4 miles a day? What the heck were they doing all day? I could casually walk a mile in 20 minutes...so that is 3 miles just in an hour.
 
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it seems very slow, that pace means a lot of breaks,way to many
 
I have a foot pump for the raft too...but if able...I'll use the powered one. Takes forever the manual way.

3 to 4 miles a day? What the heck were they doing all day? I could casually walk a mile in 20 minutes...so that is 3 miles just in an hour.
I agree, I could crawl more than that with a broken leg!
 
thats real great.im viewing the field across the street from me..and its very acurite to the point,where i can count the amount of bails of hay still in that field..
 
I'll be 49 in a couple of months and I can still cover alot of ground in a few hours . Gear weighs me down more than it used to . But if being quite and unseen I have averaged 100 yards a hour . It all depends on what I am trying to acomplish or where I need to get to . Just get out in the Great Outdoors with your gear and pratice and train . Use a compass and map even if you know the area and pack in set up a camp fix lunch and make a day of it . Fun practice .
 
worse times to make emergency trek in washington is spring and winter heavy rains, snow and hungry animals
we have bears, wolf packs, coyotes, cougars and lynx, I have problems with coyotes and lynx all year long. Hmm you never seen a lynx?

Washington-Lynx-1-778x1024.jpg
 

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