The kids were playing and the adults were sitting in the shade just doing what people do. When I was a kid, a several families were having a cook out. You should also carry a medical identification card or wear a medical identification bracelet that tells others about your allergies. Obviously, any condition that threatens breathing (or the blood’s ability to circulate Oxygen) is an immediate survival situation and anyone that has asthma or allergic reactions has to be alert and constantly prepared and never go anywhere without an inhaler or emergency epinephrine or anything else your doctor has prescribed. You Can Only Survive for Three Minutes Without Air Lets look at the first two situations (3 minutes without air and 3 hours without shelter), which are the two most common survival situations people can encounter because they require immediate attention and because time is limited, you may not be able to count on anyone to rescue you in time. If you are alone, you may have only about three hours to live. And make no mistake, if you are shivering and can’t get dry and warm, you may not able to function after three hours. There is no need to think about food if the main threat to your survival is hypothermia because your clothes are wet. I am mainly thinking about survival in an outdoor/wilderness context, but a survival situation is a survival situation no matter when or where it occurs and these rules/points/priorities are still applicable. The main point of the Rules of 3 that we have to concentrate on the most immediate problem first. You can survive for 3 Weeks without food (if you have water and shelter).You can survive for 3 Days without water (if sheltered from a harsh environment).You can survive for 3 Hours without shelter in a harsh environment (unless in icy water).You can survive for 3 Minutes without air (oxygen) or in icy water.How could someone really get the priorities for survival so wrong? Survival Rule of 3 and Survival Prioritiesįor real survival situations it is better to remember and prioritize by the four levels of the Survival Rules of 3: Sure, calories in the belly will help generate heat, but you can’t eat enough to stay warm if you aren’t sheltered from the cold. They assured me they were not joking and that some of these people were really concerned about dying from hypothermia at night if they didn’t eat. Knowing how attached horse people are to their horses, I laughed when I heard this and assumed my friend was joking. The part of the story I found most interesting was that some people were talking about killing and eating a horse the first night. They didn’t have extra food, most didn’t have clothes for night time temperatures and not a single person had a flashlight.Īs I remember the story, one guy had plenty of beer stuffed in his saddle bags, several guys had hand guns and several more had cigarettes, but more importantly, they had cigarette lighters. They were guilty of making the assumption that they would get back to civilization before dark and only planned accordingly. They were not prepared to spend the night, so they were tired, miserable and hungry. But the Summer weather was forgiving, so as long as they had water, as long as nobody was missing critical medications and nobody got injured, they were never in any real danger.Ī common theme to survival situations is that people find themselves in a place and at a time they didn’t expect, and that is exactly what happened to these ill-prepared trail riders. They were only lost for a short time, but could not get back to the trail head before dark, so they had to spend the night on the trail. Those who venture into the great outdoors should, at a bare minimum, know the survival rules of three.Ī friend told me a story about getting lost with a dozen people and horses on a horseback trip in the Appalachian mountains. Scared, unprepared trail riders actually thought they would need to eat their horse on their 1st survival night!