🌍 Climate & Regional Survival
Survival strategy is climate strategy. What kills you in the UK (wet-cold) is irrelevant in the Sahara (dehydration at dawn). This section gives you zone-by-zone cheat sheets — with a deep focus on the United Kingdom, including a seasonal foraging calendar and wild edibles field guide.
1. Survival by Climate Zone
Select your climate zone to see zone-specific priorities. The UK sits in the Temperate Maritime zone — selected by default.
2. United Kingdom — Field Guide
Seasonal Foraging Calendar
Click any month on the wheel to see what's available. Rings show: leaves/greens, flowers, berries & fruit, nuts, and fungi.
Select a month
Click any segment on the wheel to see what's in season across the UK.
UK Water Sources
| Source | Quality | Treatment needed |
|---|---|---|
| Chalk streams (S. England) | Excellent — natural filtration through chalk | Boil or filter as precaution |
| Moorland streams (peat-stained) | Good — brown colour is tannin, not contamination | Filter + boil; brown comes out |
| Lowland rivers (Thames, Severn) | Fair — agriculture runoff, urban pollution | Filter + purify; avoid near farms |
| Rainwater (roof or tarp collection) | Excellent — UK averages 885mm/year | First-flush rule (discard first 5 min) |
| Coastal springs | Good — test for salt intrusion | Taste test; avoid if salty |
| Dew (grass, leaves) | Clean | None required; collection rate low |
UK Shelter Priorities
- Windbreak first. Wet + wind = fast hypothermia even at 10°C. A windbreak drops effective temperature dramatically.
- Woodland over open ground. Broadleaf woodland (oak, beech, hazel) provides natural shelter, fuel, and food.
- Debris hut construction. Ridge pole between two trees + bracken/leaf litter insulation. Dry bracken is excellent — it traps air. Aim for 1m of dry leaf insulation on all sides.
- Dry stone walls. Common in upland areas (Yorkshire Dales, Dartmoor, Brecon Beacons). A wall provides an immediate windbreak and the basis of a lean-to.
- Never on low ground near water. UK rivers flood quickly and without much warning. Sleep on raised ground.
UK Fire Starting
- Birch bark: The most reliable UK tinder. The white outer bark contains oils that burn even when damp. Peel back to dry inner layers.
- Dead bracken: Dry, crinkled fronds (look inside the mass for dry centres). Burns fast — use as kindling, not tinder.
- Elder pith: The spongy centre of elder stems. Light, dry inside even in rain. Excellent char cloth substitute.
- Jute twine / fatwood: Carry commercial fire starters as backup. Pine resin (look for sticky wounds on Scots pine) makes excellent firestarters.
- Inside fallen logs: Split a dead log — the interior wood is often completely dry even after weeks of rain.
- Feather sticks: Shave dry inner wood into curls with a knife. Creates a high-surface-area tinder bundle that catches easily.
UK Navigation Notes
- Ordnance Survey (OS) maps: The UK has the world's most detailed publicly available topographic maps. Download OsmAnd or OS Maps for offline use before an emergency.
- Rights of Way: England and Wales have over 140,000 miles of public footpaths. Scotland has right to roam. These create natural movement corridors.
- Hedgerows as nav aids: Hedgerows mark ancient field boundaries and parish lines. Follow them to find settlements.
- Church towers: Historically visible from most of the English countryside. If you can see a church, follow the highest ground toward it.
- Downhill = civilization (usually): Follow water downhill. In the UK, all rivers eventually reach an inhabited valley.
3. UK Wild Edibles — Illustrated Guide
Each sketch highlights the single most important identification feature. Study the leaf shape — it's what you see in the field before flowers or fruit appear. The final card shows the UK's most dangerous lookalike — know it before you forage.
Stinging Nettle Urtica dioica
- Leaves in opposite pairs, deeply serrated/toothed
- Square stem with visible stinging hairs
- Heart-shaped leaf base; tip pointed
- Boil or blanch for 30 sec — removes sting completely
Wild Garlic Allium ursinum
- Single broad oval leaf — smooth edges, NO teeth
- Parallel veins running length of leaf (not branching)
- Crushed leaf must smell strongly of garlic — this is your safety check
- Lookalikes (lily of valley, lords & ladies) have no smell
Blackberry Rubus fruticosus
- Compound leaf with 3–5 oval leaflets, serrated edges
- Arching canes with curved/hooked thorns — unmistakable
- Berries ripen green → red → black (Aug–Oct)
- No dangerous lookalikes — one of the safest UK forage plants
Elder Sambucus nigra
- Pinnate leaf with 5–7 leaflets
- Flowers: flat-topped cream umbel (not domed)
- Berries droop in clusters; deep purple-black when ripe
- Raw berries cause vomiting — always cook or strain
Rosehip Rosa canina
- Red oval berry with 5 pointed sepal remnants at the top
- On thorny rose stems with pinnate leaves
- Best after first frost — softens and sweetens
- 20× vitamin C of oranges — critical for long-term nutrition; seeds have irritant hairs, always strain
Dandelion Taraxacum officinale
- Deeply lobed leaves (cuts reach almost to midrib)
- Single hollow stem with milky white sap — no other stem leaves
- Yellow composite flower. Root roasted = coffee substitute
- Available every month — the UK's best all-year survival plant
Chanterelle Cantharellus cibarius
- Golden-amber funnel/vase shape
- Forking ridges run from cap edge down to stem — NOT true gills
- Smells faintly of apricots; fruity
- ⚠️ False chanterelle has true separate gills and is toxic — learn this in person first
Hemlock Water Dropwort Oenanthe crocata
- White umbel flowers (carrot/parsley family look)
- Hollow stem with purple-violet blotches — the key danger sign
- Smells faintly of parsley/carrot — never eat near water by smell alone
- UK's most toxic plant. Can kill in hours. Found in ditches, river margins, wet meadows
Free Reference Resources for UK Foraging & Survival
The best UK foraging books (Food for Free by Richard Mabey, Roger Phillips' Mushrooms) are paid — but widely available at UK libraries free of charge via the library card. The following are genuinely freely accessible:
| Resource | Where to find it | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| A Modern Herbal — Mrs. M. Grieve (1931) | botanical.com — full text free online |
Public domain. Comprehensive UK plant medicinal & edible properties. Excellent for wild garlic, elder, rosehip, nettle. |
| Woodland Trust Foraging Guides | woodlandtrust.org.uk/trees-woods-and-wildlife/plants/wild-flowers/ |
Free seasonal guides. Especially good for berries, fungi, and hedgerow plants. Printable. |
| Plantlife UK Wildflower ID | plantlife.org.uk → Learn → Identify |
Free species guides and county wildflower surveys. Good photography reference. |
| BSBI (Botanical Society of Britain & Ireland) | bsbi.org → Identification |
Free plant identification keys and guides. Professional standard. Good for resolving lookalike confusion. |
| Plants for a Future (PFAF) | pfaf.org |
Free searchable database of 7,000+ edible and medicinal plants with UK suitability ratings, growing info, and uses. |
| US Army FM 21-76 "Survival" | archive.org → search "FM 21-76" |
Public domain. General survival skills, plant edibility test, water sourcing, signalling, navigation. US-centric but universally applicable. |
| Wild Food UK (identification guides) | wildfooduk.com |
Free online ID guides with good photography. UK-focused. Seasonal calendars and recipes. |
| First Aid Manual (St John Ambulance) | Free PDF sample chapters: sja.org.uk |
Full edition ~£15 but widely available in UK libraries. Essential survival reference — covers wound care, fractures, burns, cardiac. |
| Natural Resources Wales / Natural England | Gov.uk / naturalresourceswales.gov.uk | Free hedgerow and wildflower survey guides. Useful for habitat identification to guide foraging location. |
| Nuclear War Survival Skills — Cresson Kearny | archive.org → search "Nuclear War Survival Skills OISM" |
Public domain (OISM). Radiation protection, expedient shelters, food production post-event. Highly relevant to NBC section. |
| Hesperian Health Guides — "Where There Is No Doctor" | hesperian.org → Free Download |
CC licensed. Medical care without professional resources. Used by NGOs worldwide. Free PDF download. |
| Roger Phillips' Mushroom Guide (library) | UK public library — free with library card | Not a free PDF, but Mushrooms (Roger Phillips) is the definitive UK fungi ID guide and available at virtually every UK library. Do not forage fungi without it. |
UK Wild Edibles — Detailed Reference Table
| Plant | Edible Parts | Season | Habitat | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stinging Nettle SafeUrtica dioica | Young leaves (top 4), seeds (Aug–Sep), roots | Mar–Jun best |
Disturbed ground, riverbanks, woodland edges | Boil or blanch to remove sting. Very high iron and vitamin C. One of the best UK survival plants. |
| Wild Garlic SafeAllium ursinum | Leaves, flowers, bulbs, seed pods | Mar–May |
Damp deciduous woodland, often carpets forest floor | ⚠️ Confirm by smell — leaves look similar to lily of the valley (toxic) and lords & ladies (toxic). Crushed leaf must smell strongly of garlic. |
| Blackberry SafeRubus fruticosus | Fruit, young shoot tips (spring), leaves (tea) | Jul–Oct |
Hedgerows, woodland edges, waste ground — ubiquitous UK | One of Britain's most reliable and calorie-dense wild foods. Old folk rule: don't pick after Michaelmas Day (29 Sep) — quality declines but food safety is fine. |
| Elder Flowers safe; berries cook firstSambucus nigra | Flowers (fritters, cordial), berries (cooked), bark (medicinal) | Flowers May–Jun; berries Aug–Sep |
Hedgerows, woodland margins, disturbed ground — very common | ⚠️ Raw berries cause vomiting — always cook. Flowers safe raw. Seeds mildly toxic — strain cordial. The pith of dried elder twigs is excellent fire tinder. |
| Rosehip SafeRosa canina | Fruit (flesh only — remove hairy seeds) | Aug–Nov (best after first frost) |
Hedgerows, scrub, roadsides — UK's most common rose | Contains ~20× the vitamin C of oranges. Critical for scurvy prevention in a long-term scenario. ⚠️ The seed hairs are a skin irritant (itching powder) — strain all preparations. |
| Hawthorn SafeCrataegus monogyna | Young leaves ("bread & cheese"), flowers, berries (haws), seeds | Leaves Apr–May; haws Sep–Oct |
Hedgerows everywhere — one of UK's most common trees | Young spring leaves are nutty and mild — a traditional UK snack ("bread and cheese"). Haws are mealy — cook in stews. High in antioxidants. |
| Hazel SafeCorylus avellana | Nuts (hazelnuts), catkins (pollen, eaten raw) | Aug–Oct |
Woodland understorey, hedgerows, especially clay soils | High in fat and calories — critical survival food. Squirrels harvest first — look from mid-Aug. Coppiced hazel rods are excellent for shelter frames and snare construction. |
| Sloe Berry Caution — very astringent rawPrunus spinosa | Berries (best after frost), flowers | Sep–Dec |
Hedgerows, scrub, chalk downland | Raw sloes are extremely astringent (puckers the mouth severely) but edible. Frost breaks them down — cook in water with rosehips to make jelly. Good caloric value. |
| Crab Apple SafeMalus sylvestris | Fruit (best cooked) | Aug–Oct |
Hedgerows, ancient woodland, orchards (feral) | Very tart raw — excellent cooked. High in pectin (natural preservative/thickener). Juice ferments easily. An overlooked survival calorie source. |
| Sweet Chestnut SafeCastanea sativa | Nuts | Sep–Nov |
Woodland, parkland, especially SE England | ⚠️ Not to be confused with horse chestnut (conkers) — horse chestnuts are toxic. Sweet chestnut husks have long soft spines; horse chestnut has short thick spines. High carbohydrate, can be roasted or boiled. |
| Dandelion SafeTaraxacum officinale | Leaves, flowers, roots (roasted as coffee substitute) | Year round |
Grassland, roadsides, garden lawns — ubiquitous | Every part edible. Young spring leaves least bitter. High in vitamins A, C, K. Roots roasted at 200°C make a caffeine-free coffee substitute. Flowers make wine/fritters. |
| Wood Sorrel Small quantitiesOxalis acetosella | Leaves, flowers | Mar–Jun |
Shaded woodland floor — especially under beech | Heart-shaped leaves with lemony taste. ⚠️ Contains oxalic acid — fine as a trail snack or salad addition but do not eat large quantities (kidney stone risk with chronic overconsumption). |
| Watercress Requires treatmentNasturtium officinale | Leaves, stems | Year round except midsummer heat |
Shallow clean streams, chalk springs | ⚠️ Always cook or thoroughly wash. Raw watercress from slow water can carry liver fluke (Fasciola hepatica), a serious parasite from grazing livestock upstream. Chalk stream watercress is lowest risk. Peppery, high in iron. |
| Rock Samphire SafeCoastalCrithmum maritimum | Leaves, stems | May–Sep |
Sea cliffs, rocky shores — SW England, Wales, Ireland | Aromatic, slightly anise-flavoured. Excellent raw or blanched. Good salt substitute if dried. High in vitamins. Historical UK foraging food — mentioned in King Lear. |
| Sea Purslane SafeCoastalAtriplex portulacoides | Leaves, young shoots | May–Oct |
Salt marshes, tidal mudflats around UK coast | Salty, succulent leaves. Blanch briefly to reduce saltiness. High in omega-3. Provides electrolytes. Available from most UK coastal salt marshes. |
| Chanterelle Safe — with IDCantharellus cibarius | Whole fruiting body | Jun–Oct |
Deciduous woodland (oak, beech), often near moss | Golden-orange, egg-yolk colour. Ridges (not gills) run down the stem. Apricot smell. ⚠️ False chanterelle (Hygrophoropsis aurantiaca) is toxic — has true gills and deeper orange. Learn in person before foraging alone. |
| Cep / Porcini Safe — with IDBoletus edulis | Cap, stem | Aug–Oct |
Pine and mixed woodland, Scotland especially productive | White/cream sponge pores (not gills). Brown cap. Reticulate stem pattern. ⚠️ Some boletes have red pores and are toxic (Satan's bolete). Rule: if it has red pores or turns blue when cut — do not eat. |
4. UK-Specific Hazards
UK Emergency Contacts & Frequencies
| Service | Contact | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Emergency (all services) | 999 | UK standard emergency number |
| Emergency (EU / roaming) | 112 | Works from most mobile networks including when out of credit |
| Mountain Rescue | 999 → ask for Police → Mountain Rescue | Volunteer service, free to call; also coordinated by police |
| Coastguard (sea/cliff) | 999 or VHF Ch 16 | HM Coastguard monitors VHF Ch 16 at all times |
| RNLI (lifeboat) | 999 → ask for Coastguard | Free service; world-class volunteers |
| NHS non-emergency | 111 | Medical advice; for non-life-threatening situations |
| Marine VHF distress | Channel 16 (156.800 MHz) | International distress frequency |
| UK PMR446 (walkie-talkie) | 446.00625–446.19375 MHz | No licence required; short range (~2–5km) |
5. Plant Identification Safety Rules
- Hemlock Water Dropwort (Oenanthe crocata) — white umbel flowers, near water, smells faintly of parsley. Most toxic plant in UK. Can kill in hours.
- Fool's Watercress (Apium nodiflorum) — looks identical to watercress in similar habitat. Not as toxic but dangerous at scale.
- Lily of the Valley (Convallaria majalis) — white bell flowers, looks like young wild garlic leaves. No garlic smell.
- Lords and Ladies (Arum maculatum) — arrow-shaped leaves in spring, looks like young wild garlic. Berries brilliant red, extremely toxic.
- Deadly Nightshade (Atropa belladonna) — shiny black berries, bell-shaped purple flowers. 3 berries can kill a child.
The Rule of Fives (foraging safety protocol)
- Positive ID with at least 2 features. Leaf shape + smell, or flower + habitat. Never rely on one feature alone.
- Check all 5 parts: leaves, stem, flowers/fruits, roots, and smell.
- Cross-reference 2 sources. A single field guide can be wrong or misprint a photo.
- Start small. Even a correctly identified plant may cause a personal allergic reaction. Try a small amount first and wait 30 minutes.
- When in doubt, do without. No food is worth dying for. In the UK, there is almost always something safely identifiable nearby instead.
Universal Edibility Test (last resort)
If you cannot identify a plant and must test it:
- Separate the plant into parts: leaves, stem, root, seeds, flowers.
- Test only one part at a time. Fast for 8 hours before testing.
- Rub on inner wrist for 15 min. Wait 8 hours — stop if reaction.
- Touch a small piece to outer lip. Wait 3 min — stop if burning/itching.
- Chew a small piece without swallowing. Wait 15 min — stop if reaction.
- Swallow a teaspoon. Wait 8 hours. If no reaction — proceed cautiously.
⚠️ This test does NOT work for mushrooms. Do not apply the universal edibility test to fungi — some lethal species (death cap) cause no immediate reaction but destroy the liver over 24–72 hours.