>>61271Me here again. After the minimalist post, I thought that my post might not be as helpfull as it could.
I was trained by my grandfather and my father, and the things that were taught to me might be irrelevant in your enviroment.. My training comes from the lakeside arctic scandinavia and my trainers were born here. That aside, and to the point.
Conserve your energy, learn orienteering. You will save calories... It is not the distance, it is the terrain that you are trying to go over that will eat your energy.
Learn the by hard the edible plants that are abundant in your region. Learn to recognise them in any circumstances, dusk, dawn, or under snow.
Hunting animals will give out your position, if you do not find a way for them to perish in total silence. At peacetime, you will give out your position to other game animals.
If you can hear yourself moving, so can any game you are going after.
When you want to walk alone, walk, with the wind. When you want to see other beings, walk against it.
You can survive without food(untill the SAR comes and collects your sorry ass), you cannot survive without fire.
Foods to take with you for a hard hunt of self sufficient camping(nature reserves, no hunting groungs etc.):. dried beans with high protein content. Uncomparable weight-uselfullness ratio. If you take a handfull of dried beans or peas and toss them in a thermos with hot water it the morning, they will be ready by the time you want to camp for the night. ( dried foods in general are the choice for trips that take longer than 3 days, so add you favourite dried food material here. )
rice. The vietcong might have a few recipes.
Dried jerky( dried meat ). After 4 days in the snowy forest, even the vegans will love it.
damn, irl situation, gotta go. fuck, I dont even have the time to corr, typos,ffffuuuuu