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Aha Moments In The Hatchet

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Have you ever been lost in the Canadian Wilderness because your pilot had heart attack so he died, so you had to take over and crashed your Cessna 406 Bush Plane into to an “L” shaped lake? The answer is probably going to be no but you might have been lost in the wilderness before? The character from the book, Hatchet by Gary Paulsen, Brian Robeson has experienced the first experience and the second experience except more of the first experience. He was trapped in the woods for 54 days with originally only starting with himself and his hatchet. Brian was able to do this with certain things called Aha Moments. These moments were when he realized what he needed to do, what his mistake was, and/or how to do something. Overall, I believe this is what allowed him to live so long without dying. …show more content…
The quote on chapter 14 state, “Early in the new time, he had learned the most important thing, the truly vital knowledge that drives all creatures in the forest-food is all.” This moments is one of the ones that drives him and allows him to live in the rest of the book. After that event, he learned that he needed to store his food somewhere safe and he did just that. He had stored his storable food where nothing could get them. Any water and ground animal couldn’t get them because it was either too high or they would suffocate if they went out of the water. Flying animals couldn’t get them either because they couldn’t bear the smoke coming from the fire. He also created a trap for fish so he could lure them and they couldn’t get out so he also learned how to store fish. From that Aha Moment, he was the most progressive that he had been in a long time. He gained food as fast as he could and stored the most as he

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