I wish he (Les) would show more what to do rather then "hype" the show. Tens of Thousands of kids throughout the US and Canada have been taught the Hug-A-Tree program (I forget what it is call in Canada). It teaches to "hug" a tree (stay put) and other easy survival skills.
When the kids that have seen this program are lost hear or see a aircraft they should lay down and form an X with their arms and lags (spread eagle). NOT WAVE as Les did.
Think about it if you are in a aircraft and looking down someone standing up you only see him from the top down (unless it is early or late in the day where shadows make him/her bigger). Waving is not a good way to signal the searcher. Waving at a helicopter is a signal for danger - don't land etc. There have been cases where a search helicopter has not responded to a subject waving thinking that he was a searcher.
In a major study in AZ some years ago test were done in mountains and deserts of AZ by the Air Force and SAR volunteers from southern AZ. In the test 60% of volunteers were standing and waving were spotted by the aircraft. 81% were spotted "lying spread eagle".
When your search from the air you look for something that is not natural to the terrain. Obviously if you see anything that is X shaped you are going to investigate it. By the way the pilots found more subject then observers.
I saw in the program he was using a gridded signal mirror. I think it would have been much more beneficial to use another type of reflector (compass mirror, knife blade, CD, etc.) Explaining that you hold the reflector close to your eye put your arm out and shine the sun spot on your thumb. Once you see the reflection on your thumb then you put your thumb (keeping the reflection on it) in line with the search aircraft.
Other simple survival tools the kids are taught is to always have a whistle with them when out in the woods - he also could have used it to signal the SAR team.
Rick-SAR
www.SearchAndRescueTraining.com



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