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MAPPING & ROUTE PLANNING
8 January 2012, 21:26,
#1
MAPPING & ROUTE PLANNING
MAPPING & ROUTE PLANNING

When preparing to move to a RETREAT or even on EXPEDITION TRAINING you must make careful notes of certain important factors in planning your journey, Also when in location at your base or retreat you need to record for future use some vital information.
Listed below are some of the most important items that should be included on your maps.
1 Primary access route to and from your home or retreat.
2 Secondary route’s to your destination.
3 Escape paths and alternate routes along your route to avoid hazards/ambushes/checkpoints/bad weather etc. etc.
4 Water and possible food supplies /and pre-arranged caches along your routes.
5 Water supplies around your retreat are they likely to remain that way are they pure? (potable).
6 Escape routes from the retreat in case of extreme weather or overwhelming opposition.
7 Natural hazards, bogs, rivers, marshland, large forests, old mine workings, rock faces etc.
8 Manmade hazards, bomb sites, fallout zones, mine fields, militarised zones, refugee camps, check points, known patrol routes, telecoms sites, (TELECOMS SITES =communication sites EG radio masts, communications/radio / microwave relay towers and broadcasting masts, telecommunications facilities, military network communications masts, broadcasting stations both civil/military and commercial etc. etc.)
Towns with populations exceeding available resources for self-reliance, etc.
9 Strategic targets, Bridges, factories, refineries, garrisons, police stations, airports, chemical and steel plants, reservoirs, road and rail junctions, marshalling yards, power stations, etc.
10 Climatic hazards depending on time of year.
11 Opposition, police, military both foreign and domestic, paramilitaries, refugees, renegades, looters.
12 Allies, Red Cross, civil defence groups, other survival groups that are friendly.
Resources, Food stores, supermarkets, fuel dumps, grain stores, petrol stations and POL dumps, (Pol dumps = Petrol Oil and Lubricating dumps = fuel storage and distribution facilities, civil and military, petrol stations, oil storage facilities, refineries and crackers, wagon depots, rail refuelling depots, gas storage and distribution facilities, methane generator facilities (pig farms and ground fill sites), camping gas suppliers,butane / propane/map gas (Calor, Gaz, Coleman,Taymar etc)

Water supplies, tool stores, gun and sports shops, armouries, builders merchants, isolated shelters, farms, caves, tunnels, underpasses, fish farms, rivers and streams, colonies of cattle / small and large game etc.

A warning about Supplies.

Do ensure that when you approach sources of supplies that they are not already under someone else’s control, do not take unnecessary risks if necessary go elsewhere or try again another day.
Avoid confrontation and unnecessary contact until things get as normal as possible, be prepared to barter for supplies.


RECORDING USEFUL RESOURCES

Identify and keep records of any useful resources that may be useful to your group or family after the disaster.

Some materials like coal or building materials can frequently be left in place and they are unlikely to come to any harm, unless of course such materials are going to be in short supply.

Identify the following in your area

Recoverable sources of Firewood, Coal & Coke, Peat, Heating and fuel oil, Bottled Gas (butane and propane). Check coal yards, railway sidings, gas bottled refilling centers etc.
Petroleum Products, Petrol, Diesel, Avgas, Paraffin (Kerosene), Hypoid, Lubricants.
(Most petroleum products will need treating with preservatives) Petrol stations, refineries, transport depots.
Building materials, lumber, bricks, cement, and aggregates etc. Builder’s yards, DIY centers, quarries, building sites etc
Water Supplies, Tanks, ponds, reservoirs, streams, wells (including capped ones) artesian and aquifer supplies,
Water filtration and purification equipment and stockists.
Identify locations of fast flowing or fast falling water that could be used to turn generators, mills, etc.
Food stores, supermarkets, distribution centers, regional warehouses, grain stores, etc
Free range herds of cattle, sheep, chickens, deer etc
Rabbit farms, Rabbit warrens, Fish farms, angling clubs.
Tool stores, engineering suppliers, plant hire agencies, camping, caravanning and outdoor stores, sports shops, gun shops, gun smiths, boat yards, marinas, ships chandlers preserved railways etc

Remote housing that is conducive to self-reliance, IE has things like functioning large chimneys and fire places, ultra insulated, double/ triple glazed, multi-fuel heating and cooking facilities, has a well or other clean water supply, solar panels, wind turbines, methane digesters, local supplies of fuel, defendable etc other facilities like outdoor residential centers, outward bound centers, alternative technology centers, camping hostels, retreats etc are worth considering.

Check out footpaths, bridle ways, navigable water ways, rail lines, broadcasting masts, radio masts, wind farms, etc.

Please remember that in survival INFORMATION is not only power, but a lifesaver as well.

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13 April 2012, 10:43,
#2
RE: MAPPING & ROUTE PLANNING
i've been going over routes to my primary BOL, planning which way to go, originally its was footpaths and (very) minor roads, but thinking about it even minor roads have houses on them which will take time to either check out or avoiding by detouring around them, so i have decided to use a river as a landmark as this goes nearly all the way to my BOL, not actually travelling IN the river but travelling parallel to it over land, there are also woods on this route i can use to shelter in on the way, this way i should be able to avoid most of the houses, then leave the river and go over 2 bits of moorland arriving at my BOL by the back door as it where! comments please!
Some people that prefer to be alone arent anti-social they just have no time for drama, stupidity and false people.
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13 April 2012, 10:48,
#3
RE: MAPPING & ROUTE PLANNING
I'v done that myself Paul, Although just using a google satelite map at the moment to check the features of the land i will be travelling over, woods, reservoirs, rivers etc. I need to get a OS map as well TBH so i can check the topography as well, so i can use the natural contours of the landscape to help keep me hidden.
“Subtle and insubstantial, the expert leaves no trace; divinely mysterious, he is inaudible. Thus he is master of his enemy's fate.” Sun Tzu
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13 April 2012, 11:22,
#4
RE: MAPPING & ROUTE PLANNING
i have been using an OS map to check the route Stokey, that how i know there are houses on my original route-which is why i changed it to the river one, havent done the google map yet, will try later not sure how to do that, have only used it for specific postcodes before, i'm very new to this computer lark!
Some people that prefer to be alone arent anti-social they just have no time for drama, stupidity and false people.
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13 April 2012, 11:29,
#5
RE: MAPPING & ROUTE PLANNING
Just type in your postcode, click maps, then click satelite overylay on the top right, gives and awesome picture, zoom in as much as you like, guess you could even see what houses have rabitt hutches in thier yards;-)
“Subtle and insubstantial, the expert leaves no trace; divinely mysterious, he is inaudible. Thus he is master of his enemy's fate.” Sun Tzu
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13 April 2012, 13:16,
#6
RE: MAPPING & ROUTE PLANNING
I used Google maps to identify some areas that are difficult to get to and can't be seen from the road. Found a couple of large gardens at the back of some terraced houses off the main road. I've marked them on a local map and at some stage I will laminate it.
Skean Dhude
-------------------------------
It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent that survives. It is the one that is the most adaptable to change. - Charles Darwin
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13 April 2012, 13:53,
#7
RE: MAPPING & ROUTE PLANNING
dosent show the rivers very well, OS maps are better for that, but it does prove to me what a rural area i am living in and how easy it would be to getting away from the roads and into the woods.
Some people that prefer to be alone arent anti-social they just have no time for drama, stupidity and false people.
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13 April 2012, 15:05,
#8
RE: MAPPING & ROUTE PLANNING
Don't forget though you don't want to go along the roads or rivers, you want to go parallel to them and thus approach traps from the side rather than be in the trap. So when planning your routes take the terrain into consideration, crossing points, hidden ravines etc.
Skean Dhude
-------------------------------
It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent that survives. It is the one that is the most adaptable to change. - Charles Darwin
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13 April 2012, 15:11,
#9
RE: MAPPING & ROUTE PLANNING
(13 April 2012, 15:05)Skean Dhude Wrote: Don't forget though you don't want to go along the roads or rivers, you want to go parallel to them and thus approach traps from the side rather than be in the trap. So when planning your routes take the terrain into consideration, crossing points, hidden ravines etc.

yes, that was my idea, PARALLEL to the river rather than actually in the river itself.
Some people that prefer to be alone arent anti-social they just have no time for drama, stupidity and false people.
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