⸻ KNF7 LIVE BROADCAST ⸻ Loading...
PLAY
↗ Open

Root Cellar

Emergency Preparedness & Survival Protocols

Home First Aid Field Rations DIY Schematics Grid Down

FIRST AID

Emergency trauma care when help isn’t coming. How to stop bleeding, treat burns, stabilize fractures, and keep someone alive until real medical care arrives. These aren’t gentle remedies – these are life-saving protocols.

FIRST AID

WOUND PACKING

A tourniquet stops limb bleeding. Wound packing stops bleeding everywhere else — the neck, the groin, the armpit, the torso. These are the junctional wounds that a tourniquet cannot reach and that kill faster than almost any other injury. Packing a wound correctly buys time. Done wrong, it provides false reassurance while the patient bleeds

WOUND PACKING Read Post »

FIRST AID

INFECTION MANAGEMENT

In normal circumstances, wound infections are an inconvenience. In a grid-down scenario without access to prescription antibiotics or medical care, a wound infection can become a limb-threatening or life-threatening event within days. This is not a hypothetical — infected wounds killed more soldiers in every pre-antibiotic war than combat did. The knowledge that prevents that

INFECTION MANAGEMENT Read Post »

FIRST AID

HYPOTHERMIA

Hypothermia kills in every season, not just winter. A person who falls into a 60°F lake in summer can be hypothermic within an hour. Wet clothing in 50°F weather with wind strips heat faster than many people believe possible. The mechanism is simple: the body is losing heat faster than it is generating it, and

HYPOTHERMIA Read Post »

FIRST AID

HEAT STROKE

Heat stroke kills healthy adults in hours. It kills faster in grid-down scenarios where cooling resources are unavailable, where physical labor is unavoidable, and where people push through warning signs because stopping feels like failure. The difference between heat exhaustion — recoverable with rest and fluids — and heat stroke — a medical emergency with

HEAT STROKE Read Post »

FIRST AID

PRESSURE POINTS

Pressure points are specific anatomical locations where a major artery runs close enough to the surface — or against a bony structure — that external pressure can significantly reduce or stop blood flow to a distal wound. They are not a replacement for tourniquets or wound packing. They are a bridge — a way to

PRESSURE POINTS Read Post »

FIRST AID

IMPROVISED STRETCHER

Moving an injured person is one of the highest-risk moments in field trauma management. Done wrong, it converts a survivable injury into a fatal one — a spinal fracture becomes a cord transection, a controlled bleed reopens, a shock patient deteriorates from the exertion. Done right, it gets someone who cannot save themselves to a

IMPROVISED STRETCHER Read Post »

FIRST AID

TOURNIQUET

Stop the Bleed Tourniquets are the emergency tool that can turn a fatal bleed into a survivable situation. In survival scenarios – accidents in the wild, car crashes, or any trauma where blood is pumping out fast – a tourniquet steps in when nothing else works. It’s a simple concept: squeeze the limb hard enough

TOURNIQUET Read Post »

Scroll to Top