Whats Your Most Underrated Survival Skill?

OrbitJazz21

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May 6, 2025
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Whats Your Most Underrated Survival Skill?

Everyone talks about fire starting and water filtration, but honestly, I think being able to really troubleshoot and repair basic electronics is way underrated. Solar setups, radios, even LED lights—they all break eventually. If you can fix a busted charge controller or spot a bad solder joint, that's gold off-grid. Curious if others have skills that seem overlooked but
 
Knowing how to stay calm and manage stress gets overlooked all the time. People can have all the gear and skills, but if panic sets in, it goes sideways real fast. Learning simple breathing techniques or even basic first aid under pressure makes a huge difference. Anyone else notice how folks freeze up in real emergencies, even when they know what to do?
 
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Totally agree about keeping your cool. You can have the best gear and plans, but if you freeze or lose your head, it's not gonna matter. I always tell folks during radio drills—practice like it's real, with a bit of pressure, so you know how you’ll react. Anyone here ever tried running a mock scenario under stress? Curious how it went.
 
Navigation skills get overlooked a lot, especially now with everyone glued to their phone GPS. Reading a map and using a compass feels “old school,” but it’s saved me more than once after storms knocked out power and cell service. You’d be amazed how many folks can’t orient themselves without electronics. Do you think basic land nav should be taught alongside first aid as a core skill?
 
Running a mock emergency, especially with a bit of pressure, is honestly one of the best ways to get a real sense of what you’ll actually do when things go sideways. Back when I helped organize community preparedness workshops, we’d throw in surprise scenarios—like a “missing” map or a sudden “injury” to one team member—and it was wild how quickly people’s priorities and clear thinking could
 
Food preservation gets brushed aside way too much, if you ask me. It’s not flashy, but being able to can, dehydrate, or ferment what you grow or forage means you can eat well way after the shelves run empty. Canning especially is simple but keeps things safe for months or even years. Anyone else notice how quickly people forget this stuff until winter storms or outages hit?