Brady M. | April 11, 2024

The Go Bag (Comeback) Edition

On Altoid tins, headlamps, and prayers.

Chris P. (CP) and Brady M. (BJM) are WITI contributors and former Special Forces soldiers: Brady was an Officer (18A MOS) and Chris was a Weapons Sergeant (18B MOS). Their real-life deployments put them in some unfriendly places, and in 2020 we asked them to write about what average people should be thinking about when it comes to disaster preparation. This week, we asked them if anything has changed. 

Brady here. Four years ago, Chris P. and I talked about the Go Bag—why it’s valuable, and what we recommend you put in one.

Why is this interesting?

We didn’t know there was a global pandemic just around the corner, that was just good timing, I guess. But that pandemic and its aftershocks have affected the way we all work and live, and also modified how I approach preparedness. 

To quickly remind everyone: The purpose of a Go Bag is to keep you alive long enough to where you can get to relative safety. I travel for work, and having one ready at a static location is only useful when I’m near it. So, what I’ve done to mitigate risk is to have a mini Go Bag on me at all times. A go-pouch, if you will. 

Principles for the go-pouch are:

  • Keep it small: my pouch is 5x7x2 inches

  • Keep it light: my pouch weighs 13oz

  • Keep it useful: Contents should help keep you warm, dry, hydrated, fed, and sheltered for as long as possible 

  • Keep it practical: Nothing that’s unnecessary

  • Keep it ready: Make sure everything that needs a charge or maintenance gets it on a regular basis

I use a Medium Dyneema Composite Fabric Zip Pouch, $13.00 from Mountain Laurel Designs.

Inside the pouch, major items include:

  • Mini Bic Lighter

  • Kindling (couple small fatwood pieces)

  • Trick birthday candle

  • Dyneema cord

  • Pinch light

  • Another compass

  • Mini tweezers

  • P-38 can opener (handy) 

  • Gerber shard tool, which includes a Pry Bar, Flathead Driver, Wire Stripper Puller, Bottle Opener, Cross Driver, and is Airline-safe

  • Water purification tabs

  • RE Factor Survival Card, sadly discontinued

  • Hand saw

  • Elastics

  • Something to write on and something to write with 

  • Stimulants: Zyns (containing motivation and focus) and an ammonium salts tab. 

  • Prayer: If you’re using this kit to survive, you will need spiritual guidance and providence. My favorites for situations like these are Prayer to St. Michael the Archangel and Psalm 91.

Wrapped round the Altoid kit and the space blanket is a neon-orange Aviator’s Survival Panel Marker. I have no idea where I got it so if anyone can help me find where I can buy a back-up online, I’d appreciate it. It’s a silky synthetic material and has multiple purposes, but mostly it’s for signaling to people (including those on rescue teams) who are far away. 

Having a go-pouch with me provides some peace of mind that I won’t be a liability in a handful of emergency situations. It’s also handy to have all of these things with me in plenty of less intense situations at times - I just have to remember to put items back after I use them, and keep things like the headlamp charged. (BJM)

Thanks for reading,

Noah (NRB) & Colin (CJN) & Brady (BJM)

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