How To Stay Safe in the Wild

Follow these tips to avoid common dangers while backpacking and hiking.

One of Thomas Coyne’s scariest incidents happened while on a day hike with friends in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada. After climbing up to the top of a flat boulder with cracks in a number of places, “I heard what sounded like 100 rattlesnakes,” says Coyne, who’d accidentally climbed onto a rattlesnake nest.

“I had to stay as calm as I could. I took high steps and ninja walked over the rest of the cracks as I slowly backed off the rock.” Luckily, he didn’t get bitten. “But I was so freaked out that when I got to the trail, I sprinted for 100 yards.”

As a professional survival instructor, Coyne, the founder and chief instructor of Coyne Survival Schools in California, has trained many military operators on wilderness survival – from U.S. Navy Search and Rescue personnel to U.S. Marine Corps Mountain Warfare Training Center Marines – so he knew how to respond in a way that de-escalated the danger.

My experience with rattlesnakes, thankfully, has been more limited. I’ve hiked Caprock Canyons State Park in west Texas, where rattlesnakes are plentiful among the colorful canyons and steep bluffs. On one occasion, my aunt and I had to back away and take another path when a rattlesnake was spotted on the trail.

Like Coyne, I’ve learned that a day hike can pose more risks than an extended journey simply because it’s easier to head out unprepared when you assume you’ll be back to civilization in a few hours.

Continue reading ways ti stay prepared in the wild, written by Dawn Reiss here.

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Experienced Reporter and Writer
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HI, I'M DAWN.

Think of me as a Swiss Army knife.

I'm an award-winning multimedia journalist based in Chicago with two decades of experience. I'm known for breaking news, writing travel stories, in-depth features and business profiles, but throw any subject at me and I'll make sure it's accurate, interesting and relevant.  

I've written for more than 40 media outlets including The Washington Post, The New York Times, TIME, U.S. News & World Report, USA Today, Reuters, The Atlantic, AFAR, Fortune.com,  Civil Eats, Travel + Leisure, Chicago magazine, Fortune, The Saturday Evening Post, Chicago Tribune, Crain's Chicago Business, Shondaland and American Way.

미디어 언급

Sawyer’s picaridin lotion lasts a long time, stores well in survival kits and cars, and doesn’t have the laundry-list poison control label like DEET sprays.

Sean Gold
Founder & Lead Writer

미디어 언급

Secure a small loop of cord to a trekking pole to create a convenient place to hang a water bladder and filter water.

Nathan Pipenberg
작가

미디어 언급

It contains 20 percent picaridin, a powerful insect repellent that will make nights around the campfire much more enjoyable.

Liz Provencher
Freelane Writer