Here Are Some Incredibly Smart Ways to Use a Mylar Blanket for Doomsday

mylar-blanket

Most preppers, whether they are a beginner or have been doing this for years have seen a Mylar blanket before. You may even have one in your supplies. However, you may only know one or two things at most that it can be used for.

Well, it turns out a Mylar blanket has many uses, and if used properly it can become one of the essential survival items you own. It is that incredible!

Here Are Twelve Things You Can & Can Not Do With Your Emergency Mylar Blanket…

To use a mylar blanket or sleeping bag properly: squat, then wrap it around you!

This will minimize the cold you will feel from the ground. While a mylar blanket can be good as a ground covering, it has no insulation on its own, and this could even make you even more cold in an extreme survival situation.

If you must sleep in your mylar, the best way to use a mylar blanket is to use two of them: one as a ground covering and the other to retain your heat. Also be sure to add a layer between you and the ground, such as dry leaves.

IMPORTANT SURVIVAL NOTATION: Never pull a mylar blanket over your head!

If you do, your breath will release condensation and effectively this will lower

your body temperature. You may even freeze to death!

Mylar Use #1: Carryall.

With mylar or any blanket, you can carry items in a horsehoe pack or hobo pack.

Roll all your items into the mylar blanket, tie with cordage and sling over a shoulder.

Horseshoe pack: Here’s how to build a horse-shoe pack.

Hobo pack: Also called a bindle, hobos were famous for carrying stuff on a

stick. Bandannas work too. To make a carryall from mylar, cut some cordage

from the mylar, then sling some berries, apples or gear in the center of the

mylar bag tying the bag with the mylar cordage onto a stick. Now you can

swing the stick over your shoulder and be on your way.

Milkmaid’s yoke. If you have two space blankets you can craft a carrying

pole to leverage the weight of your luggage onto your shoulders. This is the

classic look you’ve seen women in China use to carry wares on a stick. In the

United States women in Chinatown use them to carry bundles of recyclables

they collect in urban environments.

Mylar Use #2: Chicken Coup insulation.

Have some hens? Mylar will help you keep your girls cool in the summer and warmer

in the winter. Reflect the heat and cool the interior of a chicken coup with mylar

blankets. Now that’s one way to avoid frying your egg-laying chickens!

Mylar Use #3: Cordage.

Hopefully your bugout bag include paracord, but if not, you can rely on mylar as

cordage if you cut it into strips. Because mylar tears so easily, you can use this

cordage.

How can you use mylar as cordage to help you survive? Cordage is always useful

for first aid.

Catching food. Making fishing lines, trap triggers, and snares

Lashing shelter. Cut into strips you can use the cordage to tie shelter

together.

Improvising a Leg gaiter. Tie a pant leg as a gaiter to avoid ticks or wick

away water from pant legs or use in combination with duct tape.

Using as a Territory marker or path marker. As a way to mark your path

from camp to a hunt and back again.

Mylar Use #4. Dry your camping laundry more quickly.

How can mylar help you do your camp laundry? Wash laundry as you would

ordinarily, drip dry it, then as a final touch, place your garment directly atop the

mylar blanket to dry. The sun will dry it faster than on a clothes line. Try it! You may

need to flip the garment.

Mylar Use #5: EMP protection.

Mylar alone will not help protect your electronics from an ElectroMagnetic Pulse

(EMP), but it does provide a layer of protection for your electronic equipment. You’ll

need to use mylar bags and place your gear also into insulated metal containers (a

Faraday cage). Even then you’ll have to pray, because it’s unproven as to whether

a Faraday cage will withstand the immense magnitude of Electromagnetic

destruction a solar flare can produce.

Mylar Use #6: Evading thermal imaging.

If one day you’re a prepper evading drones, you can remember this handy trick

about using mylar to evade detection: mylar will make you invisible! Avoid thermal

imaging is a drone’s primary source of detecting people.

Mylar Use #7: Fire Starter.

With a bit of ingenuity and a hot day, you can use your mylar as a reflective fire

starter. Dig a hole and place mylar reflective side up. Now place dry tinder

materials, which will act like a sun oven onto the tinder. With time you should have

a smoldering start of a fire with which to feed into larger fire.

Mylar Use #8: First aid.

Obviously, a mylar blanket will help a hypothermia victim retain heat, but mylar has many first aid purposes too:

compress wounds to bandage (for example paired with a feminine napkin, it can helps stop the blood).

Mylar Use #9: Fishing lure.

Craft a makeshift fishing lure with mylar (or enhance the one you have). Fisherman

often use prism tape to dress up spoons, crank baits, spinners and other lures. See

the mylar skirt lure, pictured immediate left. To make a mylar skirt lure, you’ll need

to cut the mylar into fringe.

Mylar Use #10: Heat reflection.

As previously mentioned, mylar can help you avoid thermal imaging of drones. Mylar

actually works better as a sunshade than it does as a blanket for the elements.A

Mylar space blanket can provide you with sun protection. It reflects heat to keep

you cool. Place it shiny side up to create shade.

Sunshade for your vehicle. As a sunshade, mylar works incredibly well. Mylar

deflects heat to help in extremely hot climates, particularly if you are trying to

stay cool and don’t have any air conditioning.

Mylar Use #11: Heat retention.

The primary use of mylar blanket is to prevent heat-loss. It’s intended to help you

retain 90% of your body heat in a survival situation or in the event of trauma shock

where you’ll need to keep body temperature stable. In other words, a mylar

blanket keeps what body heat you have, so that you don’t loose more. Here are

more ways mylar can help with heat retention:

Keep warmer near a fire. To keep warmer near a fire, out a mylar blanket

behind your back on a camp chair or behind your backpack, so that the heat

reflects back towards your body.

Windbreaker: Mylar can act as a wind shield to cut the chill.

Prevent frost bite. In extreme conditions, you can cut the mylar and line your

boots and gloves to help avoid frost bite. Be sure to allow moisture to wick

away however, so as to avoid hypothermia.

Mylar Use #12 Hydroponics.

Pictured immediate left, a 50 foot roll of reflective mylar film can give your plants an

extra boost of light without using any more electricity for your hydro farm.

It turns out that a Mylar blanket has many more uses than most people realize. It can protect you against the cold. It can help start a fire in a pinch, and it can also help if you have a severe wound that is bleeding. This versatile blanket has so many uses; you'll be happy that you packed a few for SHTF!

To find out additional ways Mylar blankets can be utilized, visit Happy Preppers.

Featured Image via MSC 


3 Comments

  1. Benjamin Wetherill said:

    Them blankets are life savers even though there paper thin but worth to carry just in case

  2. Anonymous said:

    You can make a solar oven with it but good luck trying to start a fire you can make a tent or lean-to out of it or put it under your tent to reflect your body heat back from the ground but I dare anyone to go out In the middle of winter in the snow or in the desert at night with just this yeah right I did in the Army training at Fort Irwin California the desert gets DAM COLD at night I guess this thing got me through it but no matter what I would put on I was freezing NEVER AGAIN they weigh almost nothing and are smart to have

  3. Robert Aubin Jr. said:

    They are paper thin but a little harder to rip than aluminum foil. I have mine gorilla taped to 4 mil thick 5×6 cut open clear plastic leaf bag with 3 other bags opened for my super shelter.

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