![]() ![]() ![]() Best Wild Edible Plants: The Forager’s Harvest: A Guide to Identifying, Harvesting, and Preparing Edible Wild Plants.Best Primitive Survival: Bradford Angier’s How to Stay Alive in the Woods.Best Bushcraft: Tom Brown’s Field Guide to Wilderness Survival.To make this task easier for you, I interviewed three survival experts to learn a bit more about their specific fields and get their recommendations on what they consider to be the best survival books. I know, this example seems a bit extreme, but it’s helpful to know what type of survival best applies to situations you could potentially encounter. A book that helps you build the perfect doomsday shelter won’t do you much good if you’re stranded in the desert with low food and water supplies. While survival books can encapsulate many of these terms and practices, they tend to focus specifically on just one of these topics and for good reason. ![]() Of course, “Survival” has become an umbrella term that most people use interchangeably with topics such as, bushcraft, disaster-readiness, building a bug-out bag, harvesting wild edible plants, and lest we forget, doomsday prepping. If you spend your weekends and vacations outdoors, especially for extensive periods of time and in distant or backcountry locations, survival books aren’t only useful, they might just save your life. ![]()
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