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SAS Guide to Tracking, New and Revised

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Former-SAS member Bob Carss shows how to track any moving thing, in any environment, and under nearly any circumstance.  Included are tips on:

 

The SAS Guide to Tracking is a remarkable guide to developing a new awareness of the outdoors and is the perfect companion for naturalists, outdoorspeople, hunters, wildlife photographers, search-and-rescue teams, and law enforcement.

 

With a Foreword by John “Lofty” Wiseman, author of The SAS Survival Handbook

352 pages, Paperback

First published March 1, 2000

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Bob Carss

3 books1 follower

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
119 reviews
June 20, 2020
There is lots of great information in here but as it is a training book, it is somewhat dry at times. The instructor is not surprisingly of a military background, and the with military experience will probably easily recognize the format and structure of the chapters. The author could have included a few more anecdotes for those reading along without a military interest in the subject, as the technical descriptions often insufficiently painted the picture of what was intended. Overall an interesting read, but more of a stepping off point.
Profile Image for CC.
39 reviews27 followers
October 14, 2020
There is an updated and revised edition.

The drawings are clear - if a bit crude. A novice will learn and enjoy just flipping through the book. It may take a few hours to digest everything crammed into a single chapter or even a few pages. Carss is a very good communicator, though, so this is an excellent tool for teaching and learning.
Profile Image for Krystina ..
9 reviews
August 13, 2018
Very informative and well structured layout for learning. At the end there is a training guide. I always find it most informational if i read the trainees guide of anything
Profile Image for Nathanael Coyne.
157 reviews56 followers
September 19, 2011
A well-written comprehensive and practical guide to the art of recreational hunting and military tracking. Covers how to divide up an area into foreground, middle ground and distance, high and low sign, looking through foliage instead of at it, looking for disturbances, analysing footprints, re-discovering a lost track, stalking and describing human quarry with an extensive visual vocabulary for facial features. Each chapter has a bullet point summary after it and at the end of the book is an aide-mémoire that summarises all the techniques. Fantastic read that helps you better appreciate the outdoors even if you don't hunt.
Profile Image for Jacqui.
Author 64 books227 followers
July 5, 2009
For one not in the field, this was clear, informative, put me in his shoes. I needed to know this stuff for a book I'm writing, and I have considerable confidence Mr. Bob Carss knows of which he talks.
Profile Image for Jay.
40 reviews1 follower
January 23, 2008
a little heavy on the military man-tracking side but that's no surprise. Good supplemental resource.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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