Hydration is an important health
issue.
We do not give it a lot of
thought as long as we are close to a faucet or can grab a bottle out of the
cooler at the grab it and go store. Get away from the settlements and
established parks and drinking water has to be either hauled on your back or
processed from whatever sources you happen upon.
We need water to stay hydrated.
We need water to flush toxins and other junk out of our systems. Without water
we can be dried-out dead in 72 hours.
We become debilitated before we
become dead.
My canteen holds a quart of
water.
On a normal day I need to drink
at least three canteens to keep hydrated. Let the summer heat come on like it
does, along with sweat running out my pores like water through a sieve, and I
need to increase that amount. Easy to do when I can turn on a faucet. Not so easy
to do when there are no faucets and every source of water needs to be
considered with suspicion as potentially dangerous.
I really like the Stanley cook pots we carry. They
are great for stewing up a small meal or boiling some water for tea or coffee. 20
ounces though is way short of the quart that it takes to fill my canteen. It is
also a bit small for boiling a grown squirrel that would be too tough to chew
if cooked on a stick over an open fire.
So I have been pondering the
cook-pot dilemma for some time now and have looked at some of the bush pot
offerings that can be had. Nice pots but that thrifty side of me balked like a
mule at the price they go for.
I was in Walmart a few days ago
picking up some things and found what I considered to be the perfect pot for my
purpose. Stainless steel with a lid. Holds a little shy of half a gallon. It
was not in the pots and pans section. It was, of all places, in the pet section
and made to hold dog treats.
$6.00.
My thrifty side latched onto it
and brought it home.
The lid had a rubber gasket on it
that I pulled off and threw away as soon as the pot entered the house. Two
little holes drilled, a piece of metal coat hanger bent to fit, and the bail was attached. Ready to go to the woods and get blackened over a fire.
A stainless cup with folding
handles sits in the bottom of the dog biscuit pot. The Stanley pot sits inside the cup leaving room
for stuff like a dish rag or pot holder. The downside is that the lid will not
fit on the pot when the other items are in it. Not a problem. The lid does not occupy
much space. There is room in my kit for it tag along.
The pot comes with some stamped
embossing around it. Dog tracks.
I told Shirli that I thought
about hammering out the embossing. She told me those were bear tracks and to
leave them alone.
Yep.
Bear tracks. That's what they are.
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