There are innumerable  uses for paracord, and a length of it goes in all my survival kits. Here’s how to keep it from becoming an unmanageable tangle.

by Leon Pantenburg

My wife, Debbie, and I had intended to combine a picnic with an afternoon deer hunt. We were going to stop at a cabin on a friend’s land, and Deb intended to sit on the porch and read a good book while I stillhunted the surrounding woods.Coffee

Have different lengths of paracord ready to go, and you can grab however much you think might be needed. I always carry a minimum of 25 feet, and usually carry about 150 feet.

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Long story short, I didn’t need to go anywhere. As we were discussing the afternoon plans, a herd of deer passed on the nearby ridge. When an eight-point buck edged into the clearing, I dropped him in his tracks with a 145-grain bullet from my 7mm-08 Remington 700. The gear I had along was minimal: a hunting knife, firestarting kit, garbage bag and about 20 feet of paracord.

I cut a gambrel  from an oak stick, and used that, with the paracord, to hang the buck from a nearby tree. It didn’t take long to gut and skin the buck, then the carcass was quartered and the meat was packed out to the road in the garbage bag. Since then, I’ve field dressed a lot of big game animals, and there is always a use for paracord.

I carry a minimum of 25 feet, but am more likely to take along about 150 feet when hiking or hunting. Over the years, I have used paracord for everything, from hanging meat, to making an emergency shelter, to improvising a trotline to tying up a dog. Ten feet of the cord is worth a day of your time if the option is making cordage out of natural materials.

However much paracord you take along,  though, needs to be neatly bundled so it doesn’t take up too much room.

Here is a good way to do that.

  • Extend your hand, and start wrapping the cord in a figure-eight pattern around your thumb and little finger. Leave about a foot on the tag end of the cord.
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    Wrap the paracord around your hand in a figure-eight pattern.

  • When all the cord is wrapped, twist the end of the cord around the loop.
  • Do the same thing with the other end, only loop the cord in the other direction. Tie the two ends together in a square knot.

I have several bundles ready to go. Then, all you need to do before heading out is decide figure much paracord you want to take along. I color code different lengths with duct tape, so if I need 25, 50 or 100 feet, it is easy to differentiate. Pieces 10 feet long are incredibly useful, too. The idea is to have the cord you need without having to cut any of them.

 

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