stoneramhunter
FNG
I have spent many years in the back country hunting sheep and over the years I've become confident in my survival skills. And to that point I like to pass on one tip that may save your life or someone else's.
Of course we all know that we should have basic survival skills when venturing into the back country how to treat a wound or deal with blood loss perhaps hypothermia and dehydration. My tip is that all hunters in the back country should know how to do CPR your hunting partner may have hypothermia or cardiac arrest or or trauma that stopped their heart knowing CPR may save their lives in fact it might be yours whose life is saved. Take a short course and learn it anyone can do it. As a note the survival rate from cardiac arrest is quite low without medical intervention (defribrillator } but a few have been revived using CPR. It just might be enough to save a life maybe even yours . you have nothing to lose
I also have posts under elk and sheep re- tips on hunting in grizzly country
Of course we all know that we should have basic survival skills when venturing into the back country how to treat a wound or deal with blood loss perhaps hypothermia and dehydration. My tip is that all hunters in the back country should know how to do CPR your hunting partner may have hypothermia or cardiac arrest or or trauma that stopped their heart knowing CPR may save their lives in fact it might be yours whose life is saved. Take a short course and learn it anyone can do it. As a note the survival rate from cardiac arrest is quite low without medical intervention (defribrillator } but a few have been revived using CPR. It just might be enough to save a life maybe even yours . you have nothing to lose
I also have posts under elk and sheep re- tips on hunting in grizzly country
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