The 2.5-mile hike to Taft Point Overlook and the Fissures offers a lot of incredible scenery away from the crowds, all for a small effort. After hiking through lush forest, you arrive at the fissures; massive gashes cut into the granite cliffs. And from there, it’s a short walk to Taft Point, which offers sweeping views into the Yosemite Valley. The hike is downhill to Taft Point, and then has a mild uphill back to the start on Glacier Point Road. Do yourself a favor, get away from the crowds along the road and enjoy the pristine wilderness on this hike. You won’t be disappointed.
The ShotStop Green Tip (GT) plates weigh 4.6 lb for a standard 10 x 12 cut. They will stop everything up to Green Tip M855 (including M193). The difference between them and the ShotStop Level IV HS is the IV will stop the M2 AP.
The plates are made out of a combination of a metal alloy strike face and a Duritium backer. They are not at risk of cracking like ceramic, nor are they damaged by heat in a vehicle. The M855 Green Tip round is extremely common and bought in bulk. As is the M193. The M855 is kryptonite to most level III plates that are not rated for it. Similarly, many steel plates will not stop M855, or worse, M193 is kryptonite to the steel. Probably if your dyneema plate floats, it’s not rated!
It’s nuts to wear body armor that will not stop the most common rounds out there!
There are other ‘Green Tip’ plates out there. I have had some. One huge difference is the width. The ShotStop GT plates are only 0.5″ thick. Compared to other plates at around 1″, this makes a huge difference to comfort and conceal-ability. They simply sit snugger to your body, and feel like they weigh less.
I have a set in my standard overt plate carrier. I also wore them in a Low Visibility Plate Carrier (LVOP) under my jacket to the recent 2A Rally in Richmond. No printing. A very snug fit to the body.
ShotStop just did something amazing: they cut the weight of the Level IV HS plate down to 5.3 lb. Width from 1.1″ to 0.9″. This is the plate that will stop everything, including the M2 AP round. You have to make a decision for yourself: 4.6 lb and 0.5″ thick for the GT plate. Or 5.3 lb and 0.9″ thick for the level 4, which stops the M2 AP. Sounds like a personal risk assessment! I know I’m sticking with my GT plates!
Need some Monday Morning Motivation? Here’s some photos from our father-son trip to Ruka in Lapland, where we found lots of snow!
Disclosure: This journey was supported by the local tourism bureau and partners, but I did not get paid to write about this trip. As you know: I’m keepin’ it real and tell you how it is – I maintain full editorial control of the content published on Hiking in Finland. Read the Transparency Disclaimer for more information on blogger transparency and affiliate links.
The skiing season 2020 started in Ruka for me, and I was really happy to have my 8-year old son along. These kind of trips are great to bond with the kids, learn more about them, and of course also share my passion for the outdoors with them. Plenty of hot chocolates where consumed, Pokemons were caught, and of course we also had a lot of fun on the slopes of the Ruka Ski Resort!
Besides skiing the slopes every day, we also had a few activities planned. Ice climbing with Outdoor Passion Finland for example.
And we were pretty lucky that the Polar Night Light Festival kicked off while we were there – it’s on till the 1st of February if you wanna see it yourself!
There also was some Nordic XC Skiing, eating tasty food, and relaxing in the Sauna at our flat. That and more I’ll tell you about in my article, which comes in the end of January!
If you enjoyed this teaser support me on Patreonand get some useful rewards (like hanging out on Discord with me, and Discount codes for kit from partners!) or buy me a coffee – I work Full-Time on Hiking in Finland to bring you inspiring trip reports, in-depth gear reviews and the latest news from the outdoors. You also could subscribe to the rarer-than-ever Newsletter and follow along on Instagram, Twitter, Facebook and Youtube for more outdoorsy updates!
Without force or vetted respect, one man cannot tell another man to do anything and expect acquiescence PERIOD, FULL STOP! If a man (or woman) has been elected or appointed to make decisions for his constituents, that person can make decisions for those he represents, but can only use the authority and force to back […]
If you’re bugging out, then on your way to your safe haven, you may need to stop and make camp. That is the topic of this video by Reality Survival. #urbansurvivalsite #bugout #buggingout #bugoutcamp #shtf
Camouflage is a skill and art that is often thought to go hand-in-hand with prepping and survival. If we are trying to survive or run away from some disaster that might see our societal norms and rule of law collapsed, it makes sense we want to avoid detection by other people as much as possible, unless of course we want to be noticed but that’s another story.
Whatever your purpose, whatever your reasons, if you want to remain undetected, you cannot wing it: you need to know what you’re doing. If you don’t, you don’t want to make the situation worse, and make yourself even more visible, or at least no less visible than you were at the outset.
Considering that you might be the prey, and some other malicious human might be the hunter, the stakes could be high. Your very survival may depend on remaining undetected and unseen.
Camouflage is an ancient art and one that has been continually refined since time immemorial all the way through today. In today’s article, we’ll be giving you all the info on camouflage theory, application and practice.
Why Camouflage?
There are two “whys” to camouflage. The first is the answer to the question: you use camouflage when you want to remain unseen. Considering that the primary sense of human beings is vision, camouflage is your first and best option for remaining undetected by other humans, at least at any kind of distance.
Humans lack almost entirely the keen sense of smell that other animals, particularly predators, use for discerning what is around them and for tracking potential prey animals.
The second “why” is you use camouflage because without it you are terribly easy to spot? Everything about the average person, on the average day is easy to detect against the backdrop of nature or a cityscape.
From easy to pick out shapes to brightly colored reflective surfaces your usual wardrobe has not a drop of guile to it. What that means is that if your situation changes from everyday life to one where remaining undetected is a key component for attaining a positive outcome you might have a problem.
In kind times or bad ones, there are activities that call for camouflage to ensure success even if you wouldn’t normally employ it. One such activity that everyone understands is hunting.
Animals of all kinds, especially common prey animals, have very sharp senses and will easily detect and elude a sloppy, bumbling hunter. Another activity requiring camo might be discreet observation, an activity where detection may spoil your surreptitious intelligence gathering.
The more you think about it, the more times you’ll discover where camouflage may make the difference between success and failure.
Camo: The Art and Science
Camouflage is big business, and that means big money. Millions upon millions of dollars are funneled into camouflage research every year by both commercial and governmental interests.
Hunters are always on the lookout for that next best pattern so they can get the drop on their quarry the military, obviously, has a huge interest and camouflage performance for increasing the safety of their forces and thereby helping to ensure mission success.
Even a 10% increase in camouflage effectiveness may net a significant improvement in survivability.
But for the vast fortunes that get poured into its development camouflage are still more art than science, though the science helps.
To understand camouflage performance is to understand the science of vision and beneath that umbrella experts in biophysics, optics, hyperspectrometry, visual neurophysiology, signal detection theory, chemicals, textiles and biomechanics all grab a seat at the table, put their doctorates together and try to crack the code on the next big camouflage breakthrough.
Despite all that, and despite the gulf in prestige and formal education, it is entirely possible that nearly flawless camouflage offering almost perfect concealment could be cooked up and applied using nothing more than cheap spray paint, natural foliage, burlap and a discerning eye by a young man living in the foothills of eastern Tennessee, his craft refined by long experience tramping in the backwoods in pursuit of deer and rabbits.
That is because camouflage is a theory in its purest form: it is a set of principles, a set of ideas that are describe and must be interpreted by an individual, in a certain environment, in pursuit of a certain objective.
They’re all guides, not rules. You’ll never be guaranteed success by following them to the letter. What works in one environment may not work in another, or may have the opposite effect.
The only thing that matters with camouflage is results. A camouflage pattern you purchase or a camouflage pattern you apply yourself is only judged on merit and nothing else.
In that way, a DIY-savvy prepper like you may be afforded just as much performance from your $10 homebrew camo job as the latest artificial intelligence-designed, multimillion-dollar think tank camo cranked out by DARPA.
You can do it. And the way you’ll do it is by understanding the principles of camouflage. Specifically, what visual signatures you are employing the camouflage to mitigate or manage.
Understanding Visual Signature
If you’re unfamiliar with camouflage theory, you might think that someone is camouflaged or they’re not. Either or, like a uniform. Basically you’ll either see them- “aha! There they are!”- Or you won’t. It doesn’t quite work that way.
Without delving too deeply into the neuroscience that would make up a series of articles all its own your brain will rarely discern an object, be it an animal or a person, and its entirety in one swoop.
Instead, it uses a sort of shorthand to speed up processing looking for “tells” that are characteristic of an identified with the object you’re looking for and expecting to see.
Ask any hunter and they’ll tell you: if you look for the deer, you’ll miss it. If you look for a part of the deer, you’ll see it. Many will regale you with stories of seeing not the deer all at once, but the flicker of a white tail or the movement of a majestic set of antlers. Then they saw the deer in toto.
This is a good lesson in understanding a few parts of visual signature together, specifically color, movement and shadow. We’ll get into those and more right now
Shape
This ties right in with our analogy above. The brain of our valiant hunter above is not looking for a deer, the concept, the animal; it is looking for the shape of a deer amidst all the other objects in the field of vision.
One of the simplest and most fundamental aspects of camouflage is breaking up the shape of an object so that it will not be recognized immediately as the object it is.
You should know that the human form as one of the easiest shapes to recognize out in the world, and people are very adept at picking other people out of the background.
Disrupting the shape of an object can be done through a variety of means: you can use obstructions, or even local vegetation to disrupt your shape at a distance. Boldly contrasting large form shapes painted over another object can confuse or distort its shape.
Silhouette
Silhouette is closely linked to shape, and is the outline of an object against a background. One common and iconic example is skylining, or the shadow outline of a figure against a much darker sky.
Great way to get seen for miles away and also a great way to get shot. You can also silhouette yourself against a contrasting background, be it a wall, a dense bank of foliage or the broad and grassy expanse of a hillside.
Even if you’re covered from head to toe in camouflage, the silhouette of the camouflage blob moving against the background will say “human.”
An obvious silhouette is a common camouflage mechanic failure; you can do a lot of other things right, but if you don’t account for your silhouette against the surrounding environment you are sure to be spotted.
Color
Color is perhaps the most fundamental element of camouflage and the one people think of immediately when the topic comes up. If you’re in the woods, you want to be in browns.
If you’re in the snow, white and perhaps some black is your best bet. A desert environment dictates any variety of tan or ochre depending on the locale. And if you are in the jungle of course you better be wearing green.
An entirely inappropriate color for camouflage can spoil all other efforts. The human eye is inclined towards recognizing bright primary colors, and less sensitive towards dull earth tones.
There’s a reason why so many safety cones and traffic signs are either that eye-melting yellow-green color or construction site-orange; they are both very easily perceived by the eye!
Now consider the case of our dear up above; that dusky tan color makes deer effectively invisible if they aren’t moving. As it turns out there are far more tans, browns and grays in nature than any other color, including black.
if you do nothing else but cover up, or get rid of, bright obnoxious colors on your outfit and your gear you’ll have gone a long way towards hiding yourself from observation.
Keep in mind that a solid color, chosen well, may serve as adequate camouflage in a specific environment but rarely is anything in nature of any size a flat, solid expanse of a single color. Going to add a few related colors to the mix, to achieve maximum concealment.
Shine
Certain colors are one thing that will unduly attract the attention of the human eye, another thing is light. Since a certain amount of light is necessary for the eye to work at maximum performance, we are keenly attracted to its presence.
What can spoil your camouflage is light reflecting off any shiny surface. Anything metal is a common culprit, as are glossy plastics. Human skin, even those gifted with an abundance of melanin, are also glossy compared to the environment around them.
You want to cover exposed skin with something that is not reflective, like mud or dirt, or camouflage greasepaint to tone down any shine.
Also pay attention to lenses on scopes and other optics, and flashlights that may be inadvertently left on inside a pouch or pocket even something as innocuous as paper or sweat-soaked fabrics. All can reflect light, moonlight or sunlight, unnaturally and get you detected by the bad guys.
Movement
Movement is the last “hot button” for the human eye, any unnatural movement, especially fast, jerky movement, will lock eyes on to you like heat-seeking missiles. Everyone sees the deer that takes off running.
A person that stands up and bolts out of a restaurant will instantly have all eyes on them. At longer distances reaching up to brush away a fly, wipe away a bead of sweat or scratch your nose could be noticed.
If someone has optics at their disposal- telescope, binoculars, and rifle scope, whatever- even small movements are far more likely to be noticed a much greater distance.
Now, moving isn’t everything when it comes to camouflage, but your granddad knew one thing about hunting, specifically about not being noticed.
If you sit still, real still, deer and man alike will walk right past you and never know you’re there. And he went out hunting in a red plaid jacket more likely than not! Something to think about.
Camouflage also makes a difference when you’re moving. Sound bizarre? It’s true. While it is almost always temporary, a proper camo job may confuse the eye of the observer as to your direction while you are moving.
Are you moving towards them or away from them? And how big are you exactly? Presently, there is no Predator-style camo that will cloak you while you are moving, but camo can still make a little difference.
Shadow
Shadow can be used both for and against your camouflage efforts. You can take advantage of actual shadows, or simulated shadows using paint and darker colors in your palette, to blend in seamlessly to an environment among the interplay of light and dark.
But beware! Shadow can work against you, both the shadows you cast and the shadows cast by other things in your surroundings.
Failing to account for the shadow you cast can get you noticed very quickly even among an otherwise cluttered background when using good color and pattern selection.
Likewise interrupting the play of shadow cast by something near you can stick out to the eye, and draw attention. With attention comes scrutiny and with scrutiny often comes… detection.
Learning to work with and not against natural and simulated shadows is one of the more difficult elements of mastering camouflage theory, but masters it you must if you want to be successful.
Your Simulated Survival Situation
Now, if you are otherwise prepared for a major disaster, complete with bug-out kit, a repertoire of skills to help you survive in an austere environment, and high overall fitness levels I’m not going to knock you if your gear is all off-the-shelf stuff in a variety of bright and cheery colors suitable for camping.
You are still more prepared than 99% of people in America. That being said, it would be untruthful for me to tell you that your colorful getup is not a liability in certain circumstances. That’s because it absolutely is.
Consider this theoretical scenario: it is two months after The Big Crash, a black swan event consisting of a massive economic depression and all that attends in conjunction with the assassination of the President of United States.
Historians will later say it did not turn into a Second Civil War so much as it did absolute pandemonium from coast to coast. Life in society as you know it has ceased to exist.
Armed partisan groups are conducting ideological purges even now. Police and military forces have been given a long leash to restore order and have been on edge for the duration.
You must also contend with flocks of the downtrodden, the starving, the crazy and the desperate, all are people who want what you have. Tell me this and answer truthfully: do you want to be more or less noticeable to any and all of those groups named above?
If you have a functioning brain, you probably answered “less visible”. Think of it this way, there’s nothing to be gained by remaining less noticeable than the people that potentially want to detain you, hurt you, steal from you or even kill you.
You can always make yourself more noticeable should you need to be and is a far sight easier than making yourself less noticeable.
So, it’s time to reduce your profile. You’ll have a lot to do. You’ll need to camouflage yourself, your gear, your vehicle (if you’re using one) and potentially your shelter. Where do we start?
Your Camouflage Options
All the principles of camouflage above will combine to form one of several techniques for camo application. There’s more than one way to skin the cat, and there’s more than one way to camouflage something effectively in a given environment.
Some options work better in certain environments than others. Some work equally well, so long as you pay attention to the principles, in any environment. And still others are highly environmentally specific.
Blending
Blending is a camouflage option that defeats and counteracts silhouettes and the outlines of shape. Great examples of blending in nature are stick bugs, and the rocky, mottled skin of certain species of octopi that blend in with the rocky floor of the oceans and coral reefs.
Blending also has a strong dependency on color: the most seamless match of outline in shape will not sell if the colors are wrong. You might blend into a forest floor by relying on the same fallen leaves all around you to mask your own shape and color.
men, material and vehicles can be blended by using a combination of foliage and other natural materials from the environment around them as well as man-made camouflage options like camouflage netting and mesh. Texture is also an important component of blending, so make sure to take that into account when devising your camouflage solution.
Countershading
Countershading is a process by which camouflage defeats the shadow signature of an object against another background, encouraging the eye to ignore it or slide past it. Countershading is an easily done and popular form of camouflage, and examples abound in nature and among the technologies of mankind.
Remember the deer from our example above? Deer along with many other animals are countershaded. Their tan back and flanks taper to a creamy taupe color on the belly and hind quarters.
You can see the same effect on squirrels, which have a dusky tan or gray upper coat of fur that transitions to white on the underside. Reflect for just a moment on how hard to spot these animals are in their natural environment unless they are moving! That is the power of countershading.
Countershading is also a popular camouflage pattern for military vehicles, especially aircraft. Helicopters and airplanes often have an earth tone topside and a gray, white or even sky-blue belly; the intended affect on those observing the aircraft from above, other aircraft, will miss the craft as it flies along the similar colors of the ground below them.
Those observing it from below, men and vehicles, will not be able to detect it as it blends into the sky they are gazing up into.
Mimicry
Mimicry is camouflage by way of looking like something else, anything else other than what you are. Mimicry can be extremely technical, or very simple.
Hunters use duck blinds with their appearance of reeds printed on them and synthetic reeds attached all around them to fool waterfowl into ignoring them while they fly into shotgun range.
Military vehicles are commonly camouflaged to resemble something else other than what they are to fool observers. Primitive hunters once use the pelts of animals they were hunting along with crawling on all fours to crudely mimic their prey, allowing them to get closer before springing upon them.
Mimicry, done right, is one of the best available forms of camouflage. You could flex your mimicry skills by setting up a blind entrance to your shelter that appears to be just a pile of logs or even a boulder.
Something as innocuous as a dumpster or shipping container can be converted into a discrete observation site, or even a shelter. On a personal level, you can make use of mimicry on your clothing and gear.
Camouflage that is hunting specific often mimics foliage, like tree bark and other flora, in exquisite detail to fool the keen eyesight of animals.
Be warned: mimicry done poorly will attract attention, not evade it. As an extreme example, a trash can in the middle of a field, or conspicuously parked car looks exactly like what they are- suspicious.
Ruption
Ruption is an odd word that simply means to break up the shape of something. Think “rupture”. Ruption is most commonly observed in the mottled skins of reptiles, and many classic camouflage patterns have odds swirls and shapes of interlocking and contrasting colors due to adherence to this technique.
The effect, at a modest distance, busts up the human shape. Ruption can also be applied to vehicles by using the same techniques on a larger scale.
A great example of ruption specific camo is the classic U.S. Army Woodland camouflage pattern. This greatly beloved classic pattern is so great, and so beloved, because it works well on a small scale or large-scale.
Chances are the last time you saw a military parade, or watched any military documentary you noticed the same pattern, more or less, was applied to vehicles as it was on the uniforms of troopers, just scaled-up.
The net result was the same: at a distance, the man or tank looks less like a man or tank. Ruption is also one of the simplest camouflage concepts to apply in the field using improvised methods.
Camouflaging Your Body and Clothing
Camouflage starts with your person. Changing your clothing to something suitably low profile is the first step towards attaining camouflage, but it’s not the last.
The simplest thing you can do is buy a set of camouflage clothing consisting of jacket or shirt and trousers there are specific to the environment and season you’re in.
Don’t forget to take care of any underwear that may be revealed, specifically your t-shirt and socks. a bright white fruit of the loom shirt peeking out from under your digital camouflage button down shirt is not only a bad look, but it’s a great target indicator.
Next consider your footwear. There are not too many camouflage pattern boots out there, or similarly camouflaged shoes. Your smartest decision probably is just to get a set that is a low profile matching color for the environment you are in, either black or tan, though brown is acceptable.
Most any environment you’re walking through will see you pick up some dirt, grit, mud and other natural debris on your footwear that willl help to camouflage it. Whatever you do, don’t wear sneakers or trail shoes that have those damned reflectors on them. Talk about built-in shine, and not the good kind!
Next you’ll have to address exposed skin. The simplest options are gloves for your hands, and a lightweight or heavyweight gaiter (depending on weather) for your face and neck. Any kind of hat will work for covering up the bulk of your head, though the less rigid in shape it is, the better.
One option for covering exposed skin with a high degree of fidelity is camouflage greasepaint, so depending on your objective and how serious the consequences are for detection you might skip this step since it is messy and requires constant touch up and reapplication.
If you’re in doubt about a camouflage pattern for your environment you can fall back on single-color drab clothing; tan is always best in most environments but dark gray-greens can work, too.
Take the time to add some contrast with generous hand-rubbed applications of the local dirt, dust and a little bit of mud. Alternately you can lightly dust the clothing randomly with lightly contrasting spray paint to get the same effect.
If you’re going to be in one place for a long period of time, say on guard or observation duty, you might consider a ghillie suit. Long seen as sort of the crown jewel of personal camouflage, a ghillie suit is actually a specific-application tool best employed from a fixed hide or observation site.
Ghillie suits are often heavy, hot and bulky, and they become very heavy when soaked with water or sweat, so you probably don’t want to be wearing one as your general purpose Prepper Tuxedo!
Ghillie suits are likened to a jumper, cape or web-like body suit that has all kinds of shape and outline-busting materials woven in to it. One dons a ghillie over their clothing like an outer garment when it is needed.
A proper ghillie suit is always handcrafted, and often uses real vegetation and other materials from the surrounding area to ensure 100% fidelity with the environment.
The creation of a ghillie suit is another article entirely and requires a considerable amount of study and practice to do it well. One thing I can tell you though, is you should never rely on an off-the-shelf ghillie suit.
One-size-fits-all doesn’t when it comes to camouflage and these floppy, Chewbacca-looking commercial suits will rarely work well in any environment. Save your money!
Camouflaging Your Gear
You need to camouflage your gear the same way you do your body. The most expedient method is just by purchasing gear that comes already camouflaged in some pattern suitable will for your environment, or by choosing a generic single or two color combo that does not draw attention to itself.
One quick note about black: black is often thought of as a sneaky color, and especially good for nighttime use. This is actually not true as black appears very, very rarely in nature except as deep shadow.
Even at night, black clothing and gear can also appear darker than the darkness around it, leading to a sort of “black hole effect” that makes you even more visible at night then you would be otherwise!
Compared to clothing it’s a little easier to camo gear that is not suitable for low profile use. Web gear made from cordura and other heavy duty nylons can easily be painted with spray paint or other fabric specific paints to imbue camouflage properties.
Backpacks, even ones that are otherwise brightly-colored, can be stuffed inside camouflage rain flies for water resistance and reduction of observable profile.
A simple way to camouflage your backpack is to rattle can it with a muted tan, and then attach some general purpose surplus military camo netting over and around it. This will take care of color, shape and outline in one fell swoop.
Any gear that is hand-carried should likewise be camouflaged. Firearms are the most obvious items that spring to mind, as a man carrying a rifle is an extraordinary high-profile object to the human eye, being comprised of the easily-recognized human form married to a sharply contoured long object that is similarly recognizable.
You can spend a fortune having your firearms dipped, Cerakote’d or otherwise professionally camo’d, or you can spend about $10 on spray paint and a few hours in an afternoon to camouflage them yourself.
Considering that firearms that are used hard and regularly will often see their finish worn away no matter what, I would rather spend more money on practice and ammunition than fancy-pants professional coatings. I personally spray paint all of my firearms with homebrew camo patterns.
Remember that metal and lenses are two of your biggest violators when it comes to shine and light reflection. Any exposed metal that can glint in the light can be seen from a long way away, so make sure you stow it or finish it in anti-reflective coating.
Camouflaging your Vehicle
Camouflaging a vehicle is obviously a much larger undertaking than camouflaging yourself and all your gear. You can use many of the same techniques, but they must be scaled up significantly to work on vehicles.
Additionally, a vehicle’s greater size and surface area mean techniques must be modified and you can only expect to camouflage it effectively when is viewed from a greater distance.
If a vehicle is not screened by proper line of sight-blocking concealment, anyone that is really looking for it will likely see it. Keep that in mind.
The fundamental way to camouflage your vehicle is by applying camouflage paint specific to the environment. The simplest variation on this technique is a single color coat of tan or green. Advancing on this basic technique, you can get in to two-, three- and even four-color camouflage patterns.
Be advised: camo patterns that have small, repeating elements don’t work as well for vehicle camouflage because their greater surface area makes the pattern more conspicuous to the eye, not less, thus defeating the purpose of the camouflage. Large-scale, simple, macro pattern camo works best on vehicles.
Another way to conceal your vehicle is by using natural vegetation again: branches, leaves, vines and similar materials may be attached to a vehicle to break up its outline or laid on it and near it when it is parked to prevent observation.
As with personnel-size camo solutions, camouflage netting, mesh and tarps can be used to good effect for the same purpose and have the advantage of completely covering the vehicle in very short order.
Camouflaging a Shelter
The effectiveness of camouflaging a shelter depends entirely on what kind of shelter you’re talking about. A tent or lean-to won’t be much of a problem. Fixed structures are another story.
Something small like a cabin or shed is doable. Larger proper homes will probably only really be camouflaged from aerial observation, if that, or observation from extreme distances.
For anything on the very small-scale like a tent, you can use techniques that you would for yourself. The same rules for pattern and color apply, as do those for making use of local vegetation to break up the silhouette of the tent.
If your tent is made from a synthetic material that has a reflective index you might want to spray it down with something that will damp the shine, or just smear a thin veneer of dirt or mud on it.
It will be expensive, but for larger structures you can do what the military does and make extensive use of that shredded-looking camo netting, along with painting any exposed surface a low profile color.
The only way to achieve total concealment for a structure is to bury it so you only need camouflage a much smaller entrance, or disguise it as something else entirely through mimicry.
A Note on Urban vs. “Wilderness” Camo
A common question when discussing camouflage theory and application is what you should do about camouflage if you live in or will be moving through an urban environment verses in more rural or wilderness setting.
After all, you don’t get much different than those two environments! Broadway looks a lot different than the middle of the woods! The principles, though, remain the same, and you might be more surprised that the colors are not much different either.
Generally in an urban setting a dark gray-green is your best bet. If that is not an option, a dusty sepia colored tan is workable. You definitely don’t want to go with the all-too-common white, gray and black “urban” camos so widely available.
Why not? Isn’t that the most common pattern you see advertised for urban operations? Yes, indeed it is, but these patterns are marketed to the unwary or people who just like how it looks.
White is only ever a good idea when snow is the predominant ground-covering. Black we have discussed above, and it is too dark to be much good when it’s used in abundance. gray can be a good camouflage color for an urban setting but the ones found in advertised urban camo are usually far too light.
If you’re ever in doubt about urban camo anywhere in Europe or North America (barring desert environments) you really cannot go wrong with classic OD green or a darker gray green similar to World War II-era German feldgrau.
Frankly, urban environments offer challenges for all kinds of camouflage. With a huge variety in both color and texture among all the high-contrast backgrounds we call buildings, your camouflage can literally be good one block and bad the next.
Most urban camouflage technology has derived from vehicle camouflage research, and you’ve probably seen those on the internet; large, blocky, pixilated, so-called “dazzle” patterns.
While they work okay for making the type of vehicle hard to identify at a distance, those patterns are often worse than useless on a human scale. Avoid them!
Improvising Camouflage Solutions
You won’t always have access to purpose made camouflage gear, be it clothing, paint or netting. In keeping with the prepper M.O., being able to improvise what you need to get the job done is essential for success, and that definitely holds true for camo.
Luckily, good camo can be easily achieved with a good eye for color and careful assessment of the environment you are moving through or hiding in. Below I’ll provide some of my favorite tips and tricks for DIY camo solutions for home or field use.
You don’t have to spend a fortune on camo uppers and lowers for yourself: a cheap camo jacket and waders, either from the discount rack at a sporting goods store or a military surplus store can work fine.
In a pinch, you can paint your clothing with camo-specific fabric paint or spray paint. Don’t be wearing your clothes while you do this!
Alternately, if you are in a big hurry, you can smear soil, mud or clay on your clothing in a thin layer for locale-specific color camouflage. This can even get you a nice two tone effect if your base clothing color contrasts well.
A similar technique as above works on vehicles: a thin veneer of dirt or dust will reduce glare on windows and windshields as well as chrome or metal trim. Make sure you can still see out of them before setting off!
You can make large masking material out of many things, including old carboard, sheets, blankets and coarse fabric like burlap.
Small masks can be cut from paper or cardboard, or made from butcher paper.
Improvised camouflage netting is easily made from canvas tarps for large-scale requirements, or cheap mesh laundry bags dyed a drab color for small scale purposes. Either is a great, quick way to bust up the profile of yourself or your gear while adding attachment points for vegetation.
Field Expedient Paint
Sure, camo paint is cheap and plentiful now, but what will you do if you have an urgent need of paint to make your neon green Jeep disappear, pronto, but every shop and store in 50 miles has either been burned, ransacked or is sold out? Simple: make your own!
Paint is one of those things that most people never stop to think that they can make themselves, but you surely can, and you can make some pretty good paint at that!
Now, it probably won’t win any awards from Southern Living or Home & Garden, but for making a vehicle or other piece of equipment disappear in a hurry these are just the ticket. Best of all, all of them use extremely common and plentiful materials.
Below are three recipes for improvised camo paint taken directly from the U.S. Army’s Camouflage and Concealment Field Manual (FM20-3).
WARNING: You must use caution when employing any paint made with motor oil or other flammable materials. Take care to keep it off your skin and neither the author nor this website make any assertion’s as to this techniques safety when correctly or incorrectly employed.
Recipe #1 – Flat Gray Drab
Ingredients: Soil, bar soap, water, soot, paraffin.
Directions: Combine soot and paraffin. Combine appx. 8 gallons of water with 2 bars of soap. Add soot/paraffin mixture to soap and water. Mix well, then slowly stir in soil.
Recipe #2 – Metal Gloss Paint (Color varies based on color of clay and soil)
Ingredients: Motor oil, clay, water, gasoline, soil
Directions: Combine 2 gallons of water with 1 gallon of oil and 2 gallons of clay. Add earth. Mix. Thin mixture with gasoline or water.
Recipe #3 – Dull Paint (Color varies based in color of clay and soil)
Ingredients: Oil, clay, bar soap, water, soil
Directions: Combine 1 bar of soap with 3 gallons of water. Add one gallon of oil. Stir. Add clay. Stir. Add in soil and clay in various amounts to altar.
That’s all there is to it. You will also be interested to know that the U.S. Army advises you can use canned milk or powdered eggs in any of these recipes to increase the binding properties of the paints.
Perfect for tricky to coat surfaces. You can also add in fine gravel or sand to increase texture to better suit your specific environment.
Using Vegetation to Your Advantage
Throughout this article, I have repeatedly talked about making use of vegetation in various forms to aid your camouflage efforts, either on your person, your gear or your vehicles.
It works well, that’s why militaries around the world employ the technique. But there is more to know about it if you want to do it right beyond sticking some fresh cut branches in your headband.
The type of vegetation makes a big difference as does the condition of the surrounding vegetation where you are. It might make you laugh, but these rapidly-wilting pieces of plants require care and maintenance, too, lest they actually raise your visual signature.
I have assembled a crash course on the subject below:
Making Use of Living Vegetation: You can get living plants in most climates and biomes, and its combination of locally appropriate color and “live” texture makes it a great choice for blending.
But living vegetation begins to die as soon as you cut it or pull it up and it will need replacement. Take care when orienting vegetation on your person or gear so it matches its normal growing orientation.
Making Use of Dead Vegetation: Dead plants, things like dry grass, fallen branches, dead leaves, hay, straw, etc. Work great for texturing and can work well for blending if the surrounding environment is also similarly dead. Dead vegetation can save you work since it isn’t going to “die harder” and it will require only infrequent replacement.
A few more tips on selecting and employing vegetation:
Choose healthy branches from living vegetation if that is what you need. Branches free from disease, injury and insect infestation will not wilt as rapidly.
Any vegetation taken from a plant that grows in direct sunlight will be tougher and last longer than shade-dwelling plants.
Try to choose plants with leaves that feel tough and coarse to the touch; these are another plant that you can rely on to stay fresh longer.
Try to gather your live foliage during high moisture periods- at night, during rainy periods, during foggy periods, early morning when dew is present, etc.- as, you guessed it, they will last longer.
If at all possible, choose plants that are coniferous as opposed to deciduous.
Conclusion
Good camouflage seems to be a work of wizardry, making someone disappear into the background with almost no effort. While it is an art, it is not an arcane one, and it is one you can learn.
Considering all the other threats will be facing in a SHTF situation you’ll be wise to learn camouflage theory, technique and application.
Shooting at long distance is part art, part science, and part magic.
But you can make it a lot easier if you just science the hell out of it.
Weather meters sound super boring, I know–but they are actually one of the most important pieces of equipment that a shooter can own.
All of the tested Kestrel Weather meters
With one tool you can gather an incredible amount of science, add a little magic, and predict the future… of where your shot will go.
Sounds awesome, right?
It’s time to demystify weather meters, so let’s take a look at the whole range of Kestrel Meters and look at how the right one can change your shooting life.
Table of Contents
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What Is A Kestrel Weather Meter?
Put simply, a Kestrel is a tool that (depending on the model) can gather data on the local weather and runs software that lets it use that data to give you critical information that you need as a shooter to tell how your bullet travels to the target.
He isn’t looking for a signal, he’s checking the weather!
I literally cannot list all of the data points that the proper Kestrel will gather for you, but here are some of the big ones:
Wind speed
Wind direction
Humidity
Dew point
Temperature
Altitude
Get a powerful enough model and you’ll also get some very fancy software for ballistics.
Software that can take your data points and give you exact drop curves, tell you how much to dial in MOA or MILs for both elevation and windage, and a whole lot more.
And Why Do I Need This?
There is a lot of factors that come to play when you take a shot.
Most of these factors don’t make a large single impact on the bullet, but add them together and multiply them by the distance you’re shooting and these small factors can cause huge changes.
Conditions might look calm, but if you want to reach out to 1,000 yards you’ll need good data!
Without knowing the exact conditions you’re shooting in, you can miss by feet at long enough range.
If you’re only shooting 100 yards or less, chances are you don’t really need something like a weather meter.
But if you’re commonly looking to take shots at 400, 500, 1,000, 1,500 yards or more–then you really need a weather meter.
I Don’t Need Skynet Telling Me How To Shoot!
Sure, you can make accurate hits without a weather meter. People have been doing it for a long time and people still do it today.
But like any good technology, a weather meter makes it a lot easier, a lot more predictable, and a lot more repeatable.
A good weather meter, accurate data on your rifle and cartridge, and you can make first-round long-range hits anywhere in the world. Try doing that with just a finger in the wind.
Best Kestrels for Shooting & Hunting
Kestrel was kind enough to send us a whole range of weather meters designed for shooters.
I’ve gotten to play with them for a few months now and I’m totally blown away with how useful and awesome they really are.
Wait, what do you mean accuracy bonuses don’t stack?
I’ll go over each one, and I’ll give you my recommendations on what you might want to choose depending on what kind of shooter you are, but first let’s go over some general information that was common across all of the models.
General Information
All of the Kestrel weather meters are durable.
I’ve dropped them from chest height onto concrete multiple times and none of them showed more wear than a mild scratch to the outer casing.
Kestrel 5700 taping a nap in the grass and sun after being dropped a couple of times.
All of them come with simplistic packaging, but they include an Energizer Lithium-Ion battery ready to be installed–a huge win in my book when a brand doesn’t cheap out on the battery they send you!
All of these units are well made.
They each feel solid in the hand, have good firm controls, are well sealed, and exude quality when you use them.
The displays are easy to read, the controls take a little getting used to but aren’t bad, the buttons are firm and positive.
I really don’t have any complaints about any of them. Nothing happened to make me dislike them, just some models have features that make me like it more than its friends.
Now the one-by-one, in order of price low to high.
1. Kestrel Drop D3 Ballistics
Maybe I’m not the market for the Drop D3, but I honestly don’t know who is the market.
Kestrel Drop D3
The Kestrel Drop D3 is the smallest and cheapest units offered from Kestrel for shooters, it is a passive tracker that takes snapshots of the weather around it… but it only tracks a few data points
Temperature
Relative Humidity
Dew Point Temp.
Heat Stress Index
Station Pressure
Density Altitude
It has no display, so to access the information you need the Kestrel app on your phone or you can export the data to an excel type program.
While some of these data points are useful, some of them aren’t (for shooters), and it is missing the most critical: wind.
The wind is the second most impactful force on your bullet, the first being gravity–but since gravity is constant it’s easy to account for.
This dude can tell you a thing or two about wind
Temperature and humidity will change your ballistics, but they are fairly minor forces. Running the numbers in a ballistic calculator, even using extreme spreads, the changes are minor at best inside of say 700 yards.
Station pressure is a bit more important and when combined with extreme spreads in temp and humidity can make a major change in ballistics.
However, if you know what altitude you’re going to be shooting at or at least know roughly, you can make a decent guess at this without the Drop D3.
Kestrel Drop D3
Of course, you can still use the Drop D3 with a ballistic app to give you a firing solution–but that requires having your phone with you and that kind of defeats the point of having the lightest model… right?
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Thankfully, the next level up in price gives us a lot more options and some really nice added features while also not costing that much more.
2. Kestrel 2700 Ballistics Weather Meter
If you’re a hunter or just getting your feet wet in long range shooting or maybe you’re just on a tight budget, the Kestrel 2700 is my top pick.
Comes with a cool protective sleeve thing also, handy!
It has the core of what you need most but keeps the price down by omitting the fancy stuff.
Data gathered:
Station Pressure (Absolute Pressure)
Temperature
Wind Direction
Wind Speed/Air Speed
Less data than the Drop D3, but much more useful. This model feels really built for shooting now!
Kestrel 2700, a little small in the hand but good display and easy to use.
These environmental data points give you the stuff you really need and the 2700 can interface with Kestrel’s ballistic app, this lets you do a LOT such as setting up a custom profile, G1 and G7 ballistics solver, and more.
Feed it all of the information, and it will tell you what adjustments you need to make to hit your target.
Limitations
This is the base model so it doesn’t come with all the bells. First, you’re limited to one gun profile.
And there is no backlighting.
And likely the biggest of all: you’re limited in range. Roughly 800 meters.
Missing on the 2700 are things like spindrift correction, Coriolis correction, muzzle velocity-temperature correction, zero hight/zero offset, and some more finer points of magic that make predictions past 800 much more accurate.
I never found the lack of backlighting to be an issue, but if you plan on using it at night or very low light twilight then you might miss it.
You can still hit things further than 800 meters, but it won’t be as accurate as with some of the better Kestrel models.
If you’re shooting to fill a freezer, close enough might be fine–but if you’re shooting for points, these missing features could matter a lot.
What’s your take on the Kestrel 2700?
Readers’ Ratings
4.64/5 (14)
Your Rating?
3. Kestrel 5700 Ballistics Weather Meter
Now we’re into the money and looking at a tool that is some meat on it!
Looking at the hardware, the 5700 is the same as the 5700 Elite, the difference is purely software.
A huge plus is that Kestrel will let you upgrade the base model 5700 to the Elite model by just paying the difference.
The 5700 gives you everything the 2700 did but it also gives you those finer points I mentioned that makes things more accurate past 800 meters. It also comes with a backlight, a huge plus in low-light or deep shadow.
Kestrel 5700 feels better in the hand than the 2700, but both have been very durable.
Packing on more features you now get 3 gun/bullet profiles instead of 1, a basic ballistics data table, and full environmental data (heat index, dewpoint, etc.)
If you’re using a MIL scope, it can also do the math for you to estimate your range to target–this isn’t as good as a proper laser range finder, but it’s handy in a pinch.
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If you want to shoot further than 800 meters regularly or want the best hardware while saving money before making the jump to the Elite software, this model is great.
4. Kestrel 5700 with Hornady 4DOF
This and the Elite are tricky beasts.
Again, this version of the 5700 has all the hardware of the base model. What it brings extra to the table is the Hornady 4DOF software.
I like the colors of this Kestrel best, looking good matters!
Hornady 4DOF is a proprietary ballistic calculator developed by Hornady and is designed to kick major long-range ass.
Hornady put a huge amount of work and continues to put a huge amount of work into the 4DOF software. The super technical information is too long for me to write here, but there are two major highlights.
Hornady 4DOF App Main Screen
First, this was the first publicly available calculator to determine the vertical shift of a bullet in a crosswind. But the huge talking point is their shift away from using a Ballistic Coefficient to using a Drag Coefficient.
Kestrel 5700 using Hornady 4DOF
Basically, using Doppler radar and a LOT of math, Hornady has calculated the exact drag versus velocity curve for every projectile in the 4DOF library (a huge selection of bullets).
What they’ve done is honestly a huge amount of work… and they’ve found a way to package it in an easy to use, easy to understand manner that really delivers a lot to you.
I’ve found their software to be intuitive, useful, and pleasing. It isn’t as complete as the Elite software, but it covers a huge range of bullets and cartridges while also simplifying the process a little to make it much faster and easier to set up.
Hornady 4DOF App
Plus, since I shoot a lot of Hornady factory ammo and use a lot of Hornady bullets for handloading, having their super awesome software is handy since they know their bullets better than anyone.
A gold standard by which all others are judged. Hardware, it’s the same 5700 as before. But the software is nuclear space magic.
Before we talk Kestrel, we need to talk Applied Ballistics. If you haven’t heard of them, they are sort of the NASA of bullets. Or really, more like Space-X of bullets.
A huge amount of the science that long-range shooters have about ballistics, bullets, drag, and more comes from the work that AB has done. They are an R&D company, a software developer, an ammo manufacturer, and lab coats crunching numbers.
They are also the brains behind a host of groundbreaking and impressive products such as Sig Sauer’s BDX app, L3 STORM SLXE app, and multiple collaborations with DARPA.
We have a full review of the Sig BDX system — very cool!
A Kestrel Elite 5700 loaded with the Applied Ballistics software is the most powerful handheld ballistic weather tool you can own.
Besides powerful software, it also gives you access to a few more features like the Applied Ballistics Litz Custom Drag Model, 30 gun/bullet profiles, expanded ballistics data table, ability to make target cards, and Drop Scale Factor Calibration.
But… it all comes at a cost. First, this model isn’t cheap. Second, while the AB software is very powerful it is also very complex.
Setting your rifle profile takes a minute…
If you’re a newer long-range shooter, this can be incredibly intimidating and simply too many choices and too much science thrown at you at once.
This is one of the reasons why getting the base 5700 and then upgrading later is such an attractive option.
But, if you’re a major shooter or looking to become one–this is the weather meter for you.
Kestrel Recommendations For You
Still on the fence what model to get? It’s okay, I know this is a lot to wade through (try reading 5 owner’s manuals for weather meters…). Based on my experience, here are my recommendations for you.
Mid to Long Range Hunter / Casual Plinker: Kestrel 2700.
If you’re only shooting inside of 1,000 meters for plinking and 800 or less for hunting, then this has 99% of what you need. It isn’t perfect, but it’s affordable and very useful.
You’re a long-range shooter that wants to take your game up a notch, maybe you shoot a few competitions and want to do more, maybe you just really like going out to long-range once a month or so and want to get the most out of it. Or maybe you just want to cheat a little.
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The 5700 gives you room to grow and is really the model I would recommend for most people. You can always turn this into the Elite down the road, but for now it gives you the tools you need to learn on without getting you too deep into the weeds.
Serious Competitor / Long Range Master: Kestrel 5700 Elite
If you want to “buy once, cry once” just get it over with and get the Elite.
If you’re looking to compete often or you enjoy trying a wide range of cartridges and loads, the Elite has the software and database to really let you do anything.
For me, the big selling point is the 30 profiles–getting to set up that many different loads mean I can have a hunting, long-range, plinking, and match profile for each of my 3 or 4 main rifles all at the same time.
What About The Other Two?
The Drop D3 just doesn’t have the chops.
MFW I look at the Drop D3
For an extra $50ish bucks, the 2700 is way more useful. Wind meter, not needing your phone with you, and just easier to use–the Kestrel 2700 beats the Drop D3 in every way possible for a tiny bump in price.
The 5700 with Hornady 4DOF, I don’t dislike it. In fact, I really like it and it’s normally the one I grab when I hit the range. But it has a couple of major limitations.
The lack of profiles hurts, only 3 Vs. the Elite’s 30. It’s also about $100 more than the base 5700 but can’t be upgraded to the Elite.
Kestrel 5700 Elite is really the top dog.
So with that in mind, why do I like it? Because it is easy.
And I shoot a lot of Hornady. Hornady Black, Hornady Match using ELD-M bullets, and Hornady American Gunner literally make up about 90% of my long-range ammo and so the 4DOF is perfect for my needs.
Coupled with the fact that it is just a bit easier and faster to use, and it works for me. But unless you find yourself in the same niche, I don’t think I would recommend it over the base 5700 or the 5700 Elite.
Conclusion
Any weather meter (even the Drop) is better than none. But the right one for you just depends on your shooting and how much you want to spend.
There are other models of Kestrel out there, some are discontinued and some are still in production.
But these cover the vast majority of what you will find on the market.
If you don’t have one, get one! Even if it is just the 2700, it will really help out.
What kind of long-range shooter are you? Are you going to “Buy Once, Cry Once”? Let us know in the comments! Another bit of kit you’ll need to shoot long range is a good spotting scope so make sure to take a look at the Best Spotting Scopes!
Security overload leads to apathy. How often do you hear a car alarm go off and roll your eyes hoping the owner would disable the blasted thing before the incoming headache comes a knocking? The primary objection I have to such systems is they work too well. Every week I hear an alarm being triggered […]
When I was about 10 years old, my Grandfather made my brother and I each a gift – a wooden maul for splitting wood. It’s made from a large 8″ diameter x 4-foot hickory log. I remember when I could barely lift it. It was a practical gift and a true working man’s tool. While I didn’t appreciate the work that went into carving it at the time, it was the perfect tool for crushing the enemies of my favorite GI Joe and He-Man warriors. Almost 35 years later, I still have that maul. It’s as good now as the day I received it. It’s stained and a little beat up, but it’s a great tool that reminds me that all gifts don’t have to be bought. Some of the best ones are made.
So today, my gift to you is to show you how to make a wooden mallet or maul of your own or for a gift.
My 33-year-old hickory maul that my Grandpa made for me.
From driving in tent stakes to pounding a wedge for splitting wood, a solid wooden hand mallet has countless uses around base camp. Not only is it useful, it’s a really fun project. Besides, having a mallet on hand is always a good idea and packing in a hammer isn’t fun. You can make your own in just a few minutes, while the bread is rising in the dutch oven. While these can be made as large as you’d want, the tutorial below shows one that is a perfect size for light duty pounding.
Start with a solid, seasoned log that is approximately 3-4″ in diameter x 12-15″ long. The first step is to saw in what’s called a “stop cut” to form the head of the mallet. Saw all the way around the log and leave the center of the log untouched. This untouched area will ultimately form the handle of the mallet. The excess will be trimmed or batoned away in the following steps. Remember, you can always make the stop cut deeper but you can never put wood back in. Start by making the stop cut a little more shallow than you think you will need, especially if this is your first mallet.
4″ x 12″ log with stop cut all the way around.
Next, begin to trim away the excess wood from the handle portion of the mallet. The stop cut will prevent you from accidentally splitting off the head portion of the mallet.
Using a knife to split away excess wood from around handle.
Continue to split and carve away wood from around the handle until it’s the desired diameter.
Once the handle is close to the diameter you’re wanting, simply finish it off by carving away any rough edges or splinters. A final coat of linseed oil or beeswax will protect the wood and keep your mallet in working order for years to come.
What uses can you think of for a wooden maul or mallet in the woods?