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#11
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![]() RomeoMike wrote: I have no jungle experience but have plenty in the canyons, including narrow ones, of Utah and Arizona. Also in Ponderosa pine forests.I've yet to be in a place where the SAT phone wouldn't work. Just my personal experience. Is it possible that Les was dramatizing his situation for the show? I'm not familiar with it. You need an unobstructed view of the sky for a sat phone to work reliably. Foliage absorbs microwaves - as others have pointed out. The solution, if you are under a canopy, is to find a clearing - if you can. |
#12
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I personally prefer the survival show that has the ex SAS guy. Unlike "Les"
, he does not suddenly find an old motorcycle laying on the ground. The ep. with the ex SAS guy and the suspected bear was excellent. B2Z "B A R R Y" wrote in message et... RomeoMike wrote: Is it possible that Les was dramatizing his situation for the show? Possibly. However, he rarely talks about the backup plan during the show, except when it seems to be not as usable as he expected. G In another episode (Adrift), he was pointing out how the radio he expected to use to communicate with his "babysitter" boat failed, and they were unable to make contact on the open seas. His solid backup plans are described on his web site. The episode where he mentioned the sat phone issues took plane in the Costa Rican jungle, with high, heavy foliage coverage. He pointed out the the phone was plenty usable on the coast and in rare clearings. The issue came up when he was in an area with solid square miles of canopy, pointing out the lack of signal on the phone and the inability of an airborne rescue crew to find him if he was injured. He didn't mention having any kind of ELT, and he doesn't normally hide such things. Part of the show's purpose is to demonstrate survival techniques available when you've got very little. It's less of "Isn't Les great and amazing" and more of "You could do this if you had to", and "You will die if you DON'T do THIS." He usually carries only a few very basic and likely to be carried items, like a Leatherman tool, and is allowed to use whatever the situation might normally include. One of the episodes was an Arctic plane crash, where he used broken airplane parts, wiring, and small quantities of fuel to survive in winter Arctic wilderness. While the show includes _some_ drama, as it _is_ TeeVee G, I've still found every show genuinely interesting from an outdoorsman's perspective. Someone with military survival training might find it silly. And again, I'd personally still carry the phone... G |
#13
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Bravo Two Zero wrote:
I personally prefer the survival show that has the ex SAS guy. Unlike "Les" , he does not suddenly find an old motorcycle laying on the ground. The ep. with the ex SAS guy and the suspected bear was excellent. Do you remember the name of the show? I'd like to set my TiVo to keep an eye out for it. FWIW, Les doesn't "find" anything. The stuff used in each scenario is how he got there. G For instance, the motorcycle was supposed to be what he was riding in the desert, not planning to be out there or equipped for more than a few hours, and it broke down. Think about it... When suddenly stuck in a remote area, anything we have with us, including what's left of the aircraft, (or car, motorcycle, boat, horse...) is fair game. |
#14
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B A R R Y wrote:
Someone with military survival training might find it silly. G On the contrary, I find it anything but silly. Both shows are well done and offer excellent survival tips. Of the two, I'm slightly more impressed by the ex-SAS guy because he purposely risks his life to demonstrate survival techniques such as the time he jumped into icy water, extricated himself, and dried his only clothes. His only concession was he started a fire beforehand (still had only embers to get it going again after he was in the water). The shock of entering freezing water literally can kill you. He's also parachuted into trees and jumped off a cliff into water a long ways down. The guy is crazy (or ex-SAS)! |
#15
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150flivver wrote:
Both shows are well done and offer excellent survival tips. Of the two, I'm slightly more impressed by the ex-SAS guy because he purposely risks his life to demonstrate survival techniques such as the time he jumped into icy water, extricated himself, and dried his only clothes. Can you recall the name of the show? |
#16
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150flivver writes:
The guy is crazy (or ex-SAS)! Scandanavia must be very rigorous in its pilot training. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#17
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Not the SAS you are thinking of.
Mxsmanic wrote: The guy is crazy (or ex-SAS)! Scandanavia must be very rigorous in its pilot training. |
#18
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Man vs Wild
http://dsc.discovery.com/fansites/ma...out/about.html "B A R R Y" wrote in message t... 150flivver wrote: Both shows are well done and offer excellent survival tips. Of the two, I'm slightly more impressed by the ex-SAS guy because he purposely risks his life to demonstrate survival techniques such as the time he jumped into icy water, extricated himself, and dried his only clothes. Can you recall the name of the show? |
#19
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Bravo Two Zero wrote:
Man vs Wild http://dsc.discovery.com/fansites/ma...out/about.html Thanks! I'll sic my TiVo on it. |
#20
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150flivver wrote:
B A R R Y wrote: Someone with military survival training might find it silly. G On the contrary, I find it anything but silly. Both shows are well done and offer excellent survival tips. Of the two, I'm slightly more impressed by the ex-SAS guy because he purposely risks his life to demonstrate survival techniques such as the time he jumped into icy water, extricated himself, and dried his only clothes. His only concession was he started a fire beforehand (still had only embers to get it going again after he was in the water). The shock of entering freezing water literally can kill you. He's also parachuted into trees and jumped off a cliff into water a long ways down. The guy is crazy (or ex-SAS)! Bear Grylls' show is Man v Wild. The credits list someone else as the "survival expert". I find the comment that he's ex-SAS a bit too much to believe. Based on his age, and his bio, he would have been in his late teens while in the SAS. I thought the SAS only accepted currently enlisted army who've been in a fair amount of time. Plus, the way the bio is worded .. "served with the SAS" rather than "served in the SAS". Personally, I prefer Les' attitude of avoiding a situation where you might get into trouble. |
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