
Resources
Outdoor Skills
106 bite-size wilderness tutorials — the kind of things you want in your head before you need them. Each skill is one screen: three to six steps, a tip, and any real warnings.
13 skills

Navigation
15 minFind north with a stick and shadow
A shadow moves west to east through the day — that gives you a true east-west line.
- Push a straight stick vertically into flat, level ground in the sun.
- Mark the tip of the shadow with a small stone. Wait 15-20 minutes.
- Mark the new tip of the shadow with a second stone.
- The line between the two stones runs west-to-east; first stone is west.
- Stand with the first stone at your left foot and the second at your right — you're facing north.
Tip: Longer wait, more accurate line. This works anywhere the sun casts a shadow.
AlfieAesthetics — The Primitive Compass

Navigation
5 minRead a topo map in one minute
Contour lines tell you shape and steepness — the whole map is in the spacing.
- Close-spaced lines = steep. Wide-spaced = gentle.
- V's pointing uphill = drainage or creek. V's pointing downhill = ridgeline.
- Circles inside circles = a summit; hachured circles = a depression.
- Blue = water, green = vegetation, white = open/rock/snow, brown = elevation.
- Check the contour interval in the legend before guessing elevation.
REI — How to Read a Topo Map

Navigation
10 minNavigate by handrails and catching features
Two habits that keep you found without a GPS: follow a handrail, aim past a catch.
- Pick a linear feature parallel to your route — a river, ridge, road, or valley. That's your handrail.
- Walk keeping the handrail on the same side, checking it visually every few minutes.
- Choose a catching feature past your destination — a river, cliff, or trail perpendicular to your route.
- If you hit the catching feature, you've overshot — turn back along the handrail.
- Aim off deliberately: bias 5-10° left or right of the target so you always know which way to turn at the catch.
Mowser — Essential Hiking Navigation

Navigation
10 minMeasure distance with a pace count
Knowing your pace count over 100 m tells you how far you've walked without a GPS.
- Measure or step off 100 meters on flat, open ground.
- Walk it at a natural pace, counting every time your left foot lands. That's your pace count.
- Typical adult: 60-70 paces per 100 m.
- In broken ground, up hills, or with a heavy pack, add 20-30% to your count.
- Track distance with pebbles or knots — one per 100 m walked.
SF Actual — Basic Land Navigation

Navigation
5 minUse moss and stars for rough direction
Moss and star tricks are approximate but useful when you have no compass and no sun.
- In the Northern Hemisphere, look for Polaris — find the two 'pointer' stars at the end of the Big Dipper's cup and follow them to the moderately bright star at the end of the Little Dipper's handle.
- Polaris marks true north within about 1°; face it and your right shoulder points east, your left shoulder points west.
- By day, in dense old-growth woods, moss tends to be heavier on the shaded, damper side of trees — in temperate northern forests that's usually the north side, but check multiple trees.
- Confirm with a second cue (sun, wind, water flow) before committing to a direction.
- Draw an arrow on the ground pointing to your chosen bearing before you move, so you don't lose it.
Warning: Moss grows on the wettest side, not necessarily the north side. Never rely on one tree — sample many and average.

Navigation
5 minUse an analog watch as a compass
In sun, an analog watch face gives you a rough bearing accurate enough to hold a straight line.
- Hold the watch flat, face up.
- In the Northern Hemisphere, point the hour hand at the sun.
- Bisect the angle between the hour hand and 12 o'clock — that midpoint line points south.
- In the Southern Hemisphere, point 12 at the sun instead and bisect toward the hour hand — that midpoint points north.
- Adjust one hour back during daylight saving time so the calculation uses solar time.
Tip: This is a rough method — accurate within 10–20° depending on latitude and season. Use it to hold direction, not to pinpoint locations.

Navigation
10 minNavigate to a linear feature with aiming off
Deliberately steering left or right of your target guarantees you know which way to turn when you hit a road, river, or ridge.
- Identify a linear feature (road, river, powerline, coast) that runs across your line of travel and passes through or near your destination.
- Instead of aiming directly at the destination, choose a bearing 5–10° to one side.
- Travel that bearing until you hit the linear feature.
- You now know with certainty whether the destination lies to your left or right along that feature.
- Turn and follow the feature until you reach the destination.
Tip: This trades a small amount of extra walking for total certainty about which way to turn. It's especially valuable in poor visibility.

Navigation
10 minWalk a straight line without a compass
Humans drift in circles without external references — line up landmarks in advance to stay straight.
- Pick a distinctive landmark in your direction of travel — a tall tree, boulder, or notch on a ridge.
- Line up a second landmark between you and the first, closer to you.
- Walk toward the closer landmark, keeping the far one behind it in line.
- When you reach the near landmark, pick a new landmark beyond the far one and repeat.
- If visibility drops, use sound direction (a stream, wind on a slope) or send a companion ahead to serve as a moving landmark.
Tip: In featureless terrain, plant a stick every 50 paces and line up the last two — you can see your line by looking back.

Navigation
10 minRead a specific slope from topographic contours
Contour lines encode slope steepness, direction, and specific landforms if you know how to read them.
- Check the map's contour interval (usually 20, 40, or 100 feet) — every line represents that much elevation change.
- Close-packed lines mean steep terrain; widely spaced lines mean gentle terrain.
- V-shapes pointing uphill are drainages and streams; V-shapes pointing downhill are ridges.
- Concentric closed loops mean summits; loops with tick marks pointing inward mean depressions or basins.
- Estimate slope steepness: contours a millimeter apart on a 1:24,000 map with 40-foot intervals mean roughly a 45° slope — near the limit of walkable.
Tip: Trace a proposed route with your finger and count contour crossings — every crossing is one contour interval of climb or descent.

Navigation
15 minNavigate by dead reckoning
Dead reckoning combines bearing and distance to estimate your position without landmarks or GPS.
- Note your start point exactly — grid coordinate, prominent landmark, or known location.
- Record the bearing you're traveling on with a compass — write it down, don't trust memory.
- Track distance by pace count or estimated time × speed as you move.
- Whenever you change bearing, log the new heading and reset your distance count.
- At any point, you can plot the current estimated position on the map by drawing each leg in sequence from the start.
Tip: Dead reckoning accumulates error. Confirm and reset your position at every known feature (a river crossing, trail junction, distinct peak) you pass.

Navigation
10 minAdjust a compass for declination
Magnetic north and true north are not the same. Declination is the correction that keeps you on the map.
- Find the declination value for your area on your map's declination diagram or at magnetic-declination.com.
- Determine whether the declination is east or west of true north.
- On an adjustable compass, turn the declination screw until the orienting arrow matches the printed declination offset.
- If your compass is not adjustable, add east declination to your magnetic bearing or subtract west declination.
- Double-check by orienting the map: the compass needle should align with the map's north-south grid when the map is rotated correctly.
Tip: Declination changes slowly over years and sharply across regions. Always use a current value for the exact area you're in.
Andrew Skurka — Adjust for Declination & Orient a Map

Navigation
20 minBuild a stick-and-shadow sun compass
A shadow stick gives you a full compass rose anywhere the sun is shining and you have 20 minutes to wait.
- Push a straight stick into flat ground in full sun.
- Mark the tip of the shadow with a stone. Wait 15–20 minutes and mark the new tip.
- Draw a straight line through both marks — this is your east-west line, with the first mark to the west.
- Stand with the west mark at your left toe and the east mark at your right toe; you are facing north.
- Mark north, south, east, and west on the ground so you can travel without re-checking.
Tip: For a traveling compass, draw the cross at camp and sight along the north line to a distant landmark before you move.
BattlBox — Stick and Shadow Survival Compass

Navigation
5 minRead trail markers and cairns
Blazes, cairns, and markers keep you on route — but only if you read them the way the trail builders intended.
- Paint blazes: a single blaze means continue straight; a double blaze with the top left means turn left, top right means turn right.
- Three blazes in a row often warn of a junction, hazard, or trail end.
- Cairns are piles of rocks marking routes above treeline or across slickrock — follow the line of cairns, not just one.
- A single rock placed on a cairn may mean 'this is the route'; rocks scattered beside it may mean 'wrong way'.
- When in doubt, confirm with a map and compass. Markers can be moved or missing.
Tip: In some regions, building new cairns is illegal because it confuses other hikers. Add rocks only to existing route cairns.
SystemRichie — Waymarking, Guidebook & Stage Planning
Educational reference only. Wilderness conditions change fast — practice in low-stakes settings, take a certified wilderness first-aid course, and confirm regional regulations (fire, fishing, foraging, snaring) before you rely on any of these skills in the field.

