30 September 2008

I made some who watch Spike TV and Ultimate Fighting very angry over the death of their hero Evan Tanner (see my last post) . I was at the local pub with a friend for a pint and the discussion turned to Evan Tanner's demise in the Palo Verde Mountain area. I was accused of being cold and heartless with my views towards Mr. Tanners untimely demise in the desert where he could have been easily rescued. Very well, since you demand an apology you shall have it.

I apologize if I upset your attitudes towards fear and death. I apologize if the thought of Evan Tanner answering a challenge and dying for his efforts is more than you can cope with. I am saddened by every death in the desert whether it was done by accident, incident or stupidity. Yet it is the latter, stupidity, that seems to be the cause of most fatalities followed by a lack of common sense and thought. So instead of reviling me for his death take a lesson from it. Be a part of what happens here and never challenge the desert.

Look for the adventure, not the challenge.

28 September 2008

The Darwin Award goes to Evan Tanner

In his blog Utimate Fighting Champion Evan Tanner wrote "I'm hoping that very soon I'll be sitting out in the quiet of the desert beneath a deep blue midnight sky, listening to the calm desert breeze. The idea going into the desert came to me soon after I moved to Oceanside. It was motivated by my friend Sara's talk of treasure hunting and lost gold, and my own insatiable appetite for adventure and exploration. I began to imagine what might be found in the deep reaches of the untracked desert. It became an obsession of sorts".

What he found was death. His obsession became suicide by stupidity. Fox News Article The Imperial County sheriff says his death was by exposure which in their language means dehydration and heat stress. His body was found about 2 miles from his camp where his motorcycle was found with no gas in it. What happened? He probably ran out of water and tried to walk out in 115F temps. After hearing about this I found his blogs learned something about Evan Tanner. A sporting champion he had everything going for him with one exception, at least when it came to the desert; attitude. You can't challenge the desert, nor can you be obsessive. Passionate, yes. Obsessive certainly not. You could say his new found obsession drove him to his death.

It takes me an hour to prepare for a trip into the deep desert, out of cell phone and two-way radio range. Tanner took a month and a half to prepare for the desert by "reading books, studying the land, and researching gear", then presumed he would be all right. He was also in cell phone range. You cannot presume anything in the desert. What went wrong? I'm not going to try to answer that, Tanner fans would only get pissed off and while it's a shame that he died at 37 it's more of a shame that he did it to himself and in that I hope this points out how easy it is for things to go horribly wrong for you. After all Darwin does not reward stupidity and foolishness.

http://www.spike.com/profile/Evan_Tanner

Life is when you make plans.

Survival is when those plans change unexpectedly.

I wonder if a Desert Bandanna would have helped him?

24 September 2008

Desert Bandanna eStore now online.



Blatant Advertising.


The Desert Bandanna is an extra large (26"x26" 66x66cm) nature and survival guide printed in HiDef black on high quality unbleached muslin. Covering everything from Attitude to Zoology it is the knowledge that gives you the edge when things go wrong.

Handmade in the USA Desert Bandannas are machine and river washable for years of use. Buy your's today.

[/End of advertising]

Two years in development and production. The Desert Bandannas are here and we are now open for business. It has been a long time, lot's of people have said they want one. Now we find out.




Riley Coyote says

Leave no trace behind and never feed, touch or disturb wildlife.

14 September 2008

It always starts with a challenge.

After a day of playing in the desert and ensconced over a brew at the now defunct Beatnik Cafe in Joshua Tree, a City-zen who had joined us for the morning asked, "Can you do what the guys on TV can?" "Like what?", I ask. The response; "Eat a raw dead zebra, make water...; and now I know this guys has been watching too much TV. So let's expose Man vs Wild and Survivorman as it has to do with us. Which is??? Nothing; meaning while everything they do is true, eating lizards and bugs, collect water and making shelter it's not a big deal. It is nothing more than proper training from military survival schools, various classes offered for the outdoors or even natural to someone who grew up hunting and fishing. Add to that there are number of excellent books on the subject including one of which was written by yours truly.

Now trying to explain to my new friend that what is manufactured entertainment for TV is not what I'm trying to teach. Start with Man vs Wild out on the African veldt. With a recently (presumably predator) killed zebra our host cuts off a piece, takes a bite then makes a comment while asking whether you would do this or not. Hell no! I'm not going to eat a piece of raw dead zebra or any other type of kill, predator or road. The main reason is there are not going to be a lot of fresh reasonable kills left behind in the desert. Desert predators and scavengers make sure of that in very short order. Another thing, he's got a knife to cut a piece of zebra off. Both of us have knives and are skilled in the outdoors. Shouldn't he be able to make a nice fire to cook that piece of zebra. Why eat raw meat unless you like sushi or steak tartar? That''s my preference BBQ'd snake, lizard or whatever.

Survivorman was even more rigged. He found (placed) himself in the desert where he easily found water and food. It wasn't until the second commercial that I realized he placed himself in the Mojave Desert near the western mountains in winter so he could find food and water. Let's move him to the Black Rock Desert in NV, or put him on top of Black Mesa in AZ during the summer and see how he fares. My point is don't expect to find food, water or shelter most desert environments. You are better being prepared with the proper gear in your car or day pack rather than trying to use a bunch of survival tricks meant for experts.

Myths Exposed: Solar Stills. I've always loved the theory of the solar still. Easy to build and they do work. Dig a pit about 2-3ft across and the same deep keeping the sides as verticle as possible. Fill the bottom 1/3-1/2 of the pit with fresh crushed green brush placing a catch container into the center of the brush. Broad leafed plants are best for this; not something you find in a desert. Cover the pit with a sheet of plastic and put a rock in the center so it is over the cup. As moisture evaporates from the plants it gathers on the plastic then drips down into the cup. Yield: ~4-8oz (120-240Ml) in ~8 hours. Energy expended to get that cup of water? Over a liter and getting heat stressed. The best place to conserve water is in your body. The best place to find water is in your car.

See ya.

10 September 2008

Updated the website today to improve the flow and look of things. The only thing left is to work out the pay pal integration. For those of you who have never messed with web programming let me say that WYSIWYG web page editors aren't and the best way is still to write in old fashion HTML. Wanna see what it looks like. Just right click on most web pages and select View Source.




But this blog is supposed to be about the desert and what happens here. Being in a drought for pretty much the last ten years has brought more and more animals, particularly predators, down from the mountains. Lately in the news there's been lot of talk about "A coyote just came up and ate my Fifi" or "That creature attacked my child" There are two reasons for those attacks. First brother coyote's hungry and has little ones to feed. Fifi being about the size of a large rat makes a nice meal for a critter that usually lives on rodents and anything else he can get. As for attacking your child, most coyote attacks on people come from either a little one wanting to feed the cute doggie a biscuit or people leaving food out where it can be found. Even the raccoons now found in our area are smart enough to come in a dog door and have done so. Never heard of a coyote doing that but raccoons habituate to people easier than "cute doggies do" Nonetheless keeping an eye pets and food inside along with teaching your children not to feed the animals is a key point in preventing animal attacks.

Did you know that owls eat cats? Since owls can't digest fur and bones the spit up what are known as owl pellets. A number of years ago I found more than a few in my backyard where a great horned owl perched from time to time. Breaking one of them open revealed the remains of a cat.

"Never try to kill a snake. It's a tough to do and all you do is piss 'em off". - The Desert Bandanna

04 September 2008

Something about shipping

Desert Bandanna Stuff


The final art proof is in my hands and I approved it's printing today. Delivery date I hope before 20 Sept.

You can always check here for the latest information on weird things like actually buying more than one or having it sent overseas or even to Canada or Mexico. This is one of those DIY web sites projects and that also means DIY integrating with Paypal and the post office. Which means learning a lot of stuff I don't know anything about coupled with the inability of Paypal to do what I actually want to do vis-a-vis shipping rates.

Here's how it's supposed to work. Priority mail 2-3 day delivery for a flat rate. Off the top of my head, $4.80US, $9.85US Canada, Mexico, and ~$13.00US everywhere else. Add in 40.65US for tracking. This covers a 4lb(<2kg) If you're confused or have any questions please feel free to email me and we can arrange something with payment through Paypal.

FAQ I suppose these shall be the first ones answered.

  • How well does the printing hold up; does it wash off? There are Desert Bandannas ten years old that are still readable.
  • How do I care for my bandanna? The Desert Bandanna is machine and river washable.
  • Is it Bandanna or Bandana. The Merriam-Webster (US) and the Concise Oxford (UK) dictionaries say both spellings are correct.



  • RANT: I remember as a teen all of the popular SciFi depicting two kinds of worlds. One where no one had any pockets in their clothes. No way to carry stuff. Everything was clean, neat, pretty and at their command, sort of like Star Trek. I guess this represented the 21st Century as seen from the early sixties. The other world is one seen frm the 70's. One of pockets and dirt where everything you need is carried with you. In the pulp fiction of the that time this included rayguns and light sabers, an assortment of futuristic tools,and credit crystals which are akin to todays swipe and gripe cards and the ever present and required ID card. This is more reminicesnt of a utilitarian world like Star Wars or Blade Runner. A place where we have to be prepared for whatever. A place where if you don't wear a badge saying who you are then you are nobody. In the late 70s there was a saying, "If you don't get an education you'll wind up wearing your name on badge at McDonalds" In buying new uniforms for the upcoming tour season I found my self with a pair of pants having ten pockets and a shirt having five along with a place for my name badge. What does that say? Do we all now work at McDonalds?

    Uncorrected. That means I didn't spell check or grammar check it.