英语听力:2012-01-08 穿越阿尔匹斯山 Alps-13(在线收听

 If he gets one, my plan is to chase him off the kill and take the meat myself. But he’s heard me. There will be no rabbit for dinner tonight, and I didn’t catch any trout either. But if you are luckier than me, my advice is just get stuck in. There’s nowhere I can make a fire on this and cook it, but these trout are just fine to eat raw if I get my finger in his gills here and bite into this. As soon as I bite into it, it’s gonna break its spinal cord and will kill it. 

 
I’m heading back to the tree line so I can show the best spot to build a shelter and get a fire going. This is old man’s beard, a climbing plant which attaches itself to trees. And this makes great tinder for fire and I want to be collecting some of this. And what it does, since it’s so dry and brittle, it catches spark very easily. So take some of that, keep that for later, dry it off in my pocket. And yet, look, here you go. This stuff is cool. It’s called sphagnum, sahagnum is what this is. And it’s like … it can act as an antiseptic. If you get a cut, you wipe the wound in it, and it will clean it. Now you’d want to find the right place to build your shelter. What makes the real difference when you are making shelter in these valleys is you try and pick these south-facing slopes. And because they see more of the sun, it means the trees and the rocks have retained 
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