Deadly Wilderness Mistakes to Avoid at All Costs

hiking in the wilderness

lost wilderness man

Not Knowing the Area

When bugging out to your new home location, the prepared plans must include where to find food and water that is safe to consume. There should be one or two good hunters also trained in tracking in the group.

This includes evaluating animals present by tracks and knowing which ones are too big or dangerous for the party to handle.

Can you imagine not only having to survive but getting lost because you weren't prepared to bug out or survive in the area you're stuck in? Always know your surroundings or at least have a good map on hand. Wandering around in the wilderness while you're trying to build shelter and find food does not always equal a good combination. The best thing is to build shelter and then get your bearings.

Speaking of finding food, keep reading to discover an important thing a person should never do that could cost them their meal and potentially their life if they need the food badly enough on the next slide. 

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26 Comments

  1. Thomas Whitten said:

    Everyone should get to know these mistakes and how to avoid them for sure. Most prepares will already know them but it’s the people just starting out that need to study them.

  2. Sunny Long Weller said:

    This article is good. It could use a bit more detail on ways to purify water or ways to preserve food. Maybe a sister article with a link????

  3. Justin said:

    This page is such a joke–sorry I liked it when suggested. Clickbait and poorly written.

  4. George Kolankowski said:

    lol…..sounds like the Island with Bear Grylls…..lazy and stuck in a rut for 30 days . Great choice of characters , he picked , for the show…..generation X at it’s finest and their siblings .

  5. Josh Coyle said:

    i have to disagree with some of these. 1: if you are lost in the wilderness, energy is all-important. Use only what is necessary of your energy, expend no more than that. outside of creating a shelter and foraging for food and water ( within a short distance) ,and while staying out of a rut IS important, laziness is KEY. SAVE that energy for moments when you MUST move fast to escape predator or enemy, need to move sites, or have to travel farther than roughly 3/4 mile to forage. 2: knowing your area is key, yes, but in true survival situations, you may need to delve into uncharted territory or areas your map does not show in greater detail. This is where careful observation through exploration of surrounding locals is highly important, but remember to take it easy and slow, save that energy. You may not be able to replenish it all later that day. You just cannot always know exactly what will be in your surrounding area, especially if you must leave yours for a new spot. 3: yes, stalking is very good to use to hunt prey…. but unless you are a crack shot, one hit kills are very difficult. Besides, you may not always have a gun, and in fact in many true survival situations you are unlikely to have one on hand at all times. This is where learning to build snares and traps becomes very vital. and if you DO have a projectile weapon (gun, bow, crossbow, spear, etc.) and are unsure of a one shot kill, go for a crippling shot: legs, spine, abdomen ( hard to move quickly when abdominal muscles are damaged).

  6. T Richard Wilamowski said:

    A whole lot of fluff. No meat. Written by someone who’s read others’ work , took some high level points and wrote an article; yet has never gotten out from behind his desk and been outdoors.

  7. Donald Geary said:

    You got to do what you got to do. You know what else will kill you? Fear

  8. Brendon Frawley said:

    Can we get more then a little paragraph per page scrolling 15 pages is a turn off.

  9. Charles Torello said:

    Yup, this article SUCKS. But most of your posts are to induce people to click on mediocre articles with a ridiculous amount of ads.

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