Life and Death MattersIntroduction | The Right Shelter | Use Your Ponchos | Use Your Tepees | Use Your Lean-To, Swamp Beds and Natural Shelter | Use Your Debris Hut and Tree-Pit Snow Shelter | Use Your Beach Shade Shelter and Desert Shelters | Beach Shade Shelter This shelter protects you from the sun, wind, rain and heat. It is easy to make using natural materials. To make this shelter — Find and collect driftwood or other natural material to use as support beams and as a digging tool. * Scrape or dig out a trench running north to south so that it receives the least amount of sunlight. Make the trench long and wide enough for you to lie down comfortably. Desert Shelters In an arid environment, consider the time, effort and material needed to make a shelter. If you have material such as a poncho, canvas or a parachute, use it along with such terrain features as rock outcroppings, mounds of sand or a depression between dunes or rocks to make your shelter. Using rock outcroppings — * Anchor one end of your poncho (canvas, parachute or other material) on the edge of the outcrop using rocks or other weights. In a sandy area — * Build a mound of sand or use the side of a sand dune for one side of the shelter. To make this shelter — * Find a low spot or depression between dunes or rocks. If necessary, dig a trench 45 to 60 centimeters deep and long and wide enough for you to lie in comfortably. If you have extra material, you can further decrease the midday temperature in the trench by securing the material 30 to 45 centimeters above the other cover. This layering of the material will reduce the inside temperature 11 to 22 degrees C (20 to 40 degrees F). Another type of belowground shade shelter is of similar construction, except all sides are open to air currents and circulation. For maximum protection, you need a minimum of two layers of parachute material. White is the best color to reflect heat; the innermost layer should be of darker material. |
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