 Tech Sergeant Dave Corp. I'm one of the Sears Specialists here on Nellis Air Force Base. I work out of the OSS. I am also part of Red Flag, so we kind of do both. September is disaster preparedness month. So we're just going to talk to you about being prepared for disasters at home, out and about, if you're out, you know, enjoying all of the beautiful nature that Southern Nevada, Southern Utah has to offer, so like mountain biking, hiking, kayaking, rafting, doing any of those sort of things. How to be prepared, whether disaster strikes, you have to stay out in the desert longer than you thought you might need to. Monsoon rolls in, you know, whatever the case may be. So just kind of start out. We'll talk about philosophy of how not to die. So in Sear, which is survival evasion, resistance and escape, we teach whole myriad of things, but the survival portion that we teach, kind of applying it to, you know, that civilian aspect, not like I'm a shot down pilot, but I'm a mountain biker who crashed and now has to walk, you know, out of the bush. So think about our five basic needs. So those five basic needs start off with medical, so that's physical and mental health. Mental health shouldn't really be an aspect. Hopefully you get rescued in, you know, an afternoon or a day you're not surviving for days and days and days on end. Physical health, you know, thinking about first aid kits, things of that nature, which we'll talk about here in a second. Moving on from there, we'll talk about personal protection, which is four subparts. So we've got clothing, equipment, fire and shelter. And we'll talk about finding those things, making those things, and then utilizing the equipment that you have for, you know, maximum effect. Moving on from there, we have sustenance, so food and water, water being priority, not only because it's the desert, because it will kill you far sooner than food will. Next is going to be navigation. We'll talk about knowing where you're at, staying found. And then how to, you know, find your location and move throughout the desert. And the last one's going to be communication. So what we teach to aircrew is, you know, using radios, using your signals to get rescued to your location. Thinking the same thing, thinking cell phone, or radium devices, things of that nature that you may want to have if you're out and about or in the home.