Survival UK Forums
Good blog article on " Lone Wolf Survivalists" - Printable Version

+- Survival UK Forums (http://forum.survivaluk.net)
+-- Forum: Discussion Area (http://forum.survivaluk.net/forumdisplay.php?fid=13)
+--- Forum: An Open Box (http://forum.survivaluk.net/forumdisplay.php?fid=78)
+--- Thread: Good blog article on " Lone Wolf Survivalists" (/showthread.php?tid=1126)

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7


Good blog article on " Lone Wolf Survivalists" - NorthernRaider - 19 February 2012

http://frankeschein.blogspot.com/2012/01/survival-perspective-lonewolf.html?z#!/2012/01/survival-perspective-lonewolf.html


RE: Good blog article on " Lone Wolf Survivalists" - Scythe13 - 19 February 2012

That's exactly why we're meeting in Bristol. It's the first step towards building a team.

Great find NR.


RE: Good blog article on " Lone Wolf Survivalists" - mikebratcher69 - 19 February 2012

lone wolfs just have to adopt a different approach. move and do everything at night unless in a secure hidden location. adopt the sniper type role when moving about. like the infamous raul mote
if he can do it so can you.


RE: Good blog article on " Lone Wolf Survivalists" - Scythe13 - 19 February 2012

(19 February 2012, 22:06)mikebratcher69 Wrote: lone wolfs just have to adopt a different approach. move and do everything at night unless in a secure hidden location. adopt the sniper type role when moving about. like the infamous raul mote
if he can do it so can you.

Snipers still work in pairs, and Mote didn't last long.

Not sure I'm keen on the lone wolf idea.


RE: Good blog article on " Lone Wolf Survivalists" - NorthernRaider - 19 February 2012

There used to be some good further reading on the concept of Forcemen Survivalists, they were published in the American Survival Guide, basically it explained that in the short term immediately after TSHTF a forcemen survivalist could get by on his own quite nicely, but as time went by and long term fatigue and a need to settle down most forcemen accept a need to team up with others.

If you ignore total losers like Mote and look at more represtative example like Barry Prudham ex Special forces who went off the rails he lasted on his own for some long weeks before the cops brought in Eddie Mcgee and some other SAS types to track him down. Once Prudham was faced with multiple opponants of similar skill to him he was basically buggered, He died on Norton High Street about 50 ft away from me, drove his car into the wall of the local chippy.


RE: Good blog article on " Lone Wolf Survivalists" - Reality Jones - 19 February 2012

(19 February 2012, 22:28)NorthernRaider Wrote: , He died on Norton High Street about 50 ft away from me, drove his car into the wall of the local chippy.

Maybe he would have lived longer if he had phoned for a take away?


RE: Good blog article on " Lone Wolf Survivalists" - NorthernRaider - 19 February 2012

Try again he crashed his car on Norton High St about 50 ft away from me, he died near Malton when cornered and shot himself in the head


RE: Good blog article on " Lone Wolf Survivalists" - mikebratcher69 - 19 February 2012

well he probably gave up on the take away... they do take ages to deliver.
Each to his own on the subject of lone wolves, I think a skilled prepper/survivalist can get by on his/her own enphasis on skilled.
Yes groups are good for some things but so are lone wolves. Like N.R. said when you come accross people of a similar calibre to yourself, your up sh*t creek no matter how many of you there are, its usually first to pull the trigger wins...
Safety in numbers is one way, but individuals can also be ignored or overlooked where a big group may not.


RE: Good blog article on " Lone Wolf Survivalists" - NorthernRaider - 19 February 2012

Safety in numbers cooperating in mutual support is good, any form of cooperative socialism will be fatal.


RE: Good blog article on " Lone Wolf Survivalists" - mikebratcher69 - 19 February 2012

Its hard when putting your trust in a group of individuals.
In the army as N.R. knows it was easy to trust everybody to do their job and do it well because you were all trained together and you knew each other could and would do the job needed. People "say one thing" but under pressure do another. Having a survival prepping group to rely on during shtf would indeed be a bonus and much needed support. People "say their willing to do anything to survive" but are they?
Thats one thing you dont need to find out post shtf.
People tend to blag a lot, how'd you tell if your groups got an unreliable blagger in it?
You just need to look at the way criminal types dob each other in if they get caught, now I'm not comparing us to crims BUT just because people talk the talk doesnt mean they walk the walk.