:QUOTE [quotetype:personal] A debris hut is a sleeping bag made from a forest. If you build it right, you will sweat. :INFO Why the Debris Hut Works A debris hut traps body heat in dead air space created by dry leaf litter. The debris acts as insulation — the same principle as down or synthetic fill in a sleeping bag, but made from surrounding materials in 1 to 3 hours. A well-built debris hut with 3 feet of dry debris insulation has been measured maintaining 50°F interior temperature when it is 20°F outside with no additional heat source other than the occupant's body. :COUNTER.half 3 Feet | :COUNTER.half 6 Inches Wider Than Your Shoulders :PATH Build the Ridgepole Frame Prop a long ridgepole from the ground to a fork in a standing tree or log. | :INFO Build the Ridgepole Frame Find or cut a ridgepole 9 to 12 feet long — long enough to extend well beyond your feet when you lie inside. Prop one end about 4 feet high (fork in a tree, forked sticks, a fallen log). The other end rests on the ground. The angle should be roughly 30 degrees. Lie under it and verify the interior height is just enough to roll over comfortably — no more. :PATH Add Ribbing and Cross Sticks Lean sticks along both sides of the ridgepole to form a lattice. | :INFO Add Ribbing and Cross Sticks Lean sticks along both sides of the ridgepole from the ground up to the ridge, evenly spaced. These ribs hold the debris off your body and create the lattice structure debris will pack into. Add smaller cross sticks weaving between the ribs to create a more solid lattice — this prevents debris from falling through into the sleeping area. :PATH Pile Debris to Three Feet Thick Pile leaves, duff, ferns, and bracken over the entire structure. | :INFO Pile Debris to Three Feet Thick Begin piling dry leaf litter, bracken, ferns, and fine forest duff (decomposed leaves) over the stick lattice, starting from the bottom and working upward. Pack densely. Aim for 3 feet of thickness on all surfaces. Test: reach your arm through from outside — you should not feel the lattice. More debris is almost always better than less. :PATH Stuff the Interior and Plug the Entrance Fill the sleeping space with debris and use a debris plug to close the door. | :INFO Stuff the Interior and Plug the Entrance Fill the sleeping cavity with dry, fine debris — this is your sleeping bag. Crawl in and pull debris around you. Prepare a debris plug: a pile of debris stuffed into a bag or shirt that blocks the entrance once you are inside. The entrance must be sealed — any opening is a heat loss point. :CHECKLIST Site Selection Criteria [ ] Dry forest floor with plentiful dry leaf litter nearby [ ] Level ground — no slope that causes you to slide during sleep [ ] No dead branches overhead (widow makers) [ ] Sheltered from prevailing wind direction [ ] Natural ridgepole support: forked stump, low branch fork :NOTE Dry Debris Is the Entire Structure's Value Wet or damp debris has dramatically lower insulation value. If it has rained recently, scrape the top layer of debris aside to find the dry material beneath. The layer touching the ground and the top-most layer are always the dampest. Your body heat will warm damp debris eventually, but a dry start is dramatically more comfortable. :QUOTE [quotetype:personal] A shelter you can build from what the forest dropped last autumn is the most reliable emergency tool you have. :LINK https://www.wildernesscollege.com/debris-hut.html Wilderness College — How to Build a Debris Hut Survival Shelter