The video presents 10 tips and tricks for survival in emergency situations. Some of the tips include:
1. Starting a fire using a phone battery: by piercing a lithium battery, a chemical reaction occurs, producing a fire.
2. Escaping from a crocodile: run in a straight line, as crocodiles tire quickly, and most adults and teenagers can outrun them.
3. Treating jellyfish burns: rinse the wound with salt water (not fresh water), and clean the area with apple cider vinegar, ammonia, or alcohol.
4. Using natural remedies: oak tree bark tea for stomach pain, willow bark as a natural antipyretic, and dandelion sap for insect bites.
5. Closing wounds with super glue: in extreme situations, super glue can be used to close small wounds, but it's not recommended for home use.
6. Not eating snow to quench thirst: as it can cool the body and require extra energy to warm up.
7. Putting out a pan fire: by turning off the stove, covering the pan with a metal lid, or using baking soda.
8. Treating deep cuts: not removing the object from the wound, as it can cause significant blood loss, and calling for medical help.
9. Using coconut water as a substitute for blood plasma: in emergency situations, coconut water can be used intravenously, but it's not recommended as a regular practice.
10. Eating insects for survival: insects provide proteins and energy reserves, and are easier to distinguish from poisonous plants.
1. Crocodiles, Caymanians, and their relatives kill hundreds of people every year.
2. Most attacks by crocodiles occur in Africa and Asia.
3. Crocodiles are found in several places on the American continent, Oceania, and the southern United States.
4. Humans are not part of the crocodiles' diet.
5. Crocodiles can move on dry land at a speed of 17 kilometers per hour.
6. Virtually any teenager or adult can escape from a crocodile if they run straight away from it.
7. Running in a zigzag to escape from a crocodile is not effective.
8. Jellyfish can cause burns, sharp pain, redness of the skin, and potentially lead to shock, allergic reactions, and poisoning.
9. To treat a jellyfish burn, rinse the wound with salt water, not fresh water.
10. Oak tree bark tea can help with stomach pain.
11. Chewing willow bark can serve as a natural antipyretic.
12. The sap of dandelions or gol plant can treat insect bites.
13. Oak bark ashes, resin from coniferous trees, or blueberry leaves can help heal cuts and wounds.
14. Super glue can be used to close small wounds in emergency situations.
15. Super glue can reduce pain, quickly stop bleeding, and reduce possible scars.
16. Eating snow to quench thirst can cause a sore throat and cool the body, leading to hypothermia.
17. The body has to spend additional energy to warm up after consuming snow.
18. Baking soda can extinguish small fires due to its chemical composition, which absorbs oxygen and stops the combustion process.
19. In an emergency situation, coconut water can be used as a substitute for human blood plasma.
20. Coconut water was used intravenously to treat injured soldiers during World War II.
21. Insects such as caterpillars, crickets, grasshoppers, cicadas, and their larvae, as well as dragonflies, ants, and bee larvae, can be eaten for survival.
22. Hairy caterpillars, resources, and butterflies cannot be harvested for food.
23. Wild bees' honey can be eaten, but be careful not to get stung.