Of course the best way to stay on course in the wilderness
is with a compass, but you may be in a circumstance where you need to travel
through the wilderness and you don't have a compass. You would think that traveling in a straight
line would be an easy thing, but it is not.
It is very common for people who are lost in the wilderness to walk in
circles. If you think this would not
apply to you, try the following experiment:
1. Go out into a large field, parking lot, or other
unobstructed area. It's a really good
idea to have a friend with you to stop you from running into something or
walking out into the street.
2. Take a sighting on an object or landmark on the opposite
side of the field.
3. Put on a blindfold and walk in a straight line toward
your landmark.
4. When you take the blindfold off, I guarantee that you
will be nowhere near your goal.
You see everyone has one leg that is a little shorter than
the other, and everyone has one leg that is a little stronger than the
other. The difference in the stride of
your right leg and your left leg may be tiny, but over the course of thousands
of steps it is enough to cause you to move in a curved path. Eventually you will curve all the way around
and end up back where you started.
The only way to stay on a straight course without a compass
is to use landmarks. You need to begin
your journey from a recognizable landmark, sight on a distant landmark, and
walk toward it. Turn back on a regular
basis and note the location of your starting landmark. When you reach your goal, look back to the
landmark that you started from, then turn to the front and select another
landmark that will keep you moving in the same direction. This method will work over long distances if
the country is fairly open.
If you are in dense forest you can use the same method on a
much smaller scale, sighting from tree to tree in a straight line. It is time consuming, but not as time
consuming as walking for two days only to end up back where you started from.
Legend has it that the early Spanish explorers could only
cross the vast, treeless plains of North Texas
by driving stakes in the ground and sighting from stake to stake in order to
keep a straight course. This is
supposedly where the name of this region, the "Staked Plains", came
from. I doubt if this legend is true
because compasses were widely used by this time, and I can't imagine a large
expedition that would be without one; but it makes a good story, and it would
be a very practical way to cross an area with no natural landmarks.
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