Ground-to-Air Signals: Essential Rescue Signaling Codes

There are a number of techniques that you can choose to use if you are in distress in the outdoors, depending upon your location and the severity of the situation. This can include shouting for help, calling for help using your phone or taking refuge on someone else’s property. However, if you are in the wilderness and a rescue party is expected to come and retrieve you, then there is a five-symbol standard ground-to-air emergency technique to signal various critical messages to the aircraft and rescue team.

These rescue codes will first and foremost alert the rescue aircraft about your precise location along with the information of any injured personnel requiring urgent help. The five ground-to-air emergency symbols are as follows:

V: Require Assistance

Afghan Air Force Life Support Personnel practice using signaling devices.
Photo Credits: NATO Training Mission-Afghanistan / Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Jared Walker/ RELEASED / Wikimedia Commons CC BY-SA 2.0
Photo Credits: NATO Training Mission-Afghanistan / Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Jared Walker/ RELEASED / Wikimedia Commons CC BY-SA 2.0

Making a V shape on the ground will clearly indicate that you are in distress and that you need assistance. However, ‘V’ means that although you need assistance as soon as possible, there is no health emergency or severe injury amongst those on the ground.

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X: Require Medical Assistance

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Photographer's Mate 2nd Class James Orosco and Aviation Structural Mechanic 3rd Marty Bullwinkel use parachute material to improvise a ground-to-air-signal to catch the attention of over-flying aircraft during desert survival training.
Photo Credits: U.S. Navy photo by All Hands Photographer's Mate 1st Class Michael Larson / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain
Photo Credits: U.S. Navy photo by All Hands Photographer's Mate 1st Class Michael Larson / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain
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You can use the code X to communicate to the rescue aircraft that you or someone in your group has been injured and is in need of urgent medical assistance. You should not be confusing the X with a V symbol since both indicate help but the message conveyed is different.

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N: No or Negative

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Man signaling No to aircraft.
Photo Credits: Nicola Vähätalo / Wikimedia Commons CC BY-SA 4.0
Photo Credits: Nicola Vähätalo / Wikimedia Commons CC BY-SA 4.0
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Often, depending on the individual situation, rescue personnel need to ask some specific information from you regarding the situation on the ground. Due to the elevation, it is not easy to convey the message by shouting, so you can draw a simple N on the ground or signal with your arms to give them an answer in the negative.

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Y: Yes or Affirmative

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Man signaling Yes using his arms.
Photo Credits: Nicola Vähätalo / Wikimedia Commons CC BY-SA 4.0
Photo Credits: Nicola Vähätalo / Wikimedia Commons CC BY-SA 4.0
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Just like N, you can use the symbol Y to answer affirmatively to the inquiry by the aircraft or the rescue organization. Be mindful of the fact that despite your urge to convey more details, a simple yes or no often suffices for the purposes of rescue. You can also signal with your arms.

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An Arrow sign: Proceed in this direction

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The eight bells with a large arrow mark a system of markings made from a large number of petrol drums, which were used to guide British aircraft as they landed in the Great Sand Sea during World War II.
Photo Credits: Drmrefaat / Wikimedia Commons CC BY-SA 4.0.
Photo Credits: Drmrefaat / Wikimedia Commons CC BY-SA 4.0.
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Place an arrow symbol on the ground, with its head pointing in the direction where you want the rescue party to be directed. More often than not, the arrow will come second or third during your communication with the rescue aircraft. They may need you to direct them to your base where other members of your group are taking refuge, or a safe location to land a helicopter to airlift you out of the wilderness. Be as specific as you can, as every minute in the air is crucial and if you hurriedly point them in the wrong direction it will cost the emergency team time and resources to come back to the actual location.

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Other important tips to remember

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A pair of stranded mariners signal for help by writing
Photo Credits: Commander, U.S. Pacific Fleet / U.S. Navy photo / Released / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain
Photo Credits: Commander, U.S. Pacific Fleet / U.S. Navy photo / Released / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain
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Try to control the desire to express excitement and joy once you see a rescue helicopter. Keep focused, and use the five-symbol signal system to communicate your location and condition as clearly as possible to ensure a safe rescue. Also, keep in mind the following points while communicating with the rescue crew:

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-Always choose an open and preferably large area to signal your message via symbols.

-Select the highest and flattest terrain to place your symbol, even if it's a little distance from your location, as you can always direct them to your refuge using the arrow symbol.

-Be mindful of the color of the terrain, and use contrasting objects to convey your message – this will make things easier for the crew to correctly identify the code.

-Make the symbols as big as possible, in as little time as possible. Use rocks, sticks or other debris to write clearly and make sure its big enough and thick enough and is readable from a considerable height.