WOLF MED | LONDON
Meet Arsène.
Tactical Combat Casualty Care certified user affiliated with @tacticaid
Conscripted combat medic in the Swiss Armed Forces.
Since 2022, actively supporting Ukrainian civilians and the military through humanitarian convoys and vehicles for fighters.
In modern cities like London, critical incidents don’t announce themselves.
They happen fast. Without warning. In everyday places.
WOLF MED
A trauma response system built from real operational experience — adapted to urban civilian environments.
This is not theory.
This is what you rely on when control disappears.
When something goes wrong, the first minutes decide everything — before help arrives.
You will learn how to act when it actually matters:
• how to treat yourself and others after an attack
• how to stop catastrophic bleeding under pressure
• how to manage stab wounds in real-time conditions
• how to build your own EDC IFAK
• what to do in the first critical minutes when hesitation costs time
Training environment matters.
Not a classroom.
Underground parking. Low visibility. Real-world stress environment.
Small group — maximum 10 participants.
Direct instruction. Individual focus.
This is not designed only for “fighters”.
It is designed for people who understand responsibility — in the street, on the road, or at home.
These skills are not about aggression.
They are about survival and control when seconds matter.
📅 16–17 May 2026 (two identical sessions)
📍 London, Islington (exact location shared only with participants)
💰 Price: £85
📲 Secure your place: 07472889788 or DM
Limited capacity. Once full, registration closes.
#WolfPackLondon #UrbanSurvivalLondon #SelfDefenceLondon #urbanfirstaid #tccc
STOP THE BLEED ❌
Last week we delivered our first training with newly formed @tacticaid group, in the form of a combined introduction to Survival/Basic First Aid.
On 16-17 May we will bring our knowledge to London for two intensive Basic First Aid/Stop the Bleed trainings with @wolf_pack_ldn
Why train even though we are not professionals? Because we believe it is our responsibility to do so. In light of everlasting geopolitical instability, natural disasters and social distress, building resilient communities and societies is a necessity. Basic First Aid skills are scarce among people and we want to change that by passing on our knowledge to the widest audience possible.
I'm proud to join my friends and colleagues @maxvonmad
& @egor_xgohx_ in this daring adventure.
Don't wait any further - join our Discord community and contact us to organise a training.
Keep yourself and your community safe 🖤
Let us know which Guerrilla Tactical holster models you would like to see in the first batch coming to Europe.
DM us so we adjust the order accordingly
#holster
#kydex
onward to the new venture
⚓️Tactic Aid is setting sails for Europe, holds full of @guerrilla_tactical quality holsters. Ensure yours is among the first batch. Head on to Guerrilla Tactical website, choose your holster and shoot us DM for a quote. No matter big or small orders we will make sure you're covered. Aye!
REAL LIFE SCENARIO
Our crew arrived at pictured scene and made sure, anafilactic patient is stabilized until ambulance arrival.
Patient temporarily lost conciousness and dropped to the ground as an outcome of possible allergy reaction. Stable, yet with volatile conciousness, faint breath and rash on the extremities. Before our crew arrived, patient's partner with help of bystanders put her in recovery position and called an ambulance. We made sure that the verbal contact is established and monitored along with breathing and that patient's partner is in constant contact with EMS service. Then we made sure she has termal comfort by putting her on a blanket and using another blanket roll as a pillow, finally covering her by emergency blanket.
All above could be done by any passer by and minimum to none equipment was required.
What I would like to discuss here is how our crew member, added additional layer of safety for the patient by utilising comprehensive medical backpack from his car. He prepared breathing devices that he was comfortable using both legally and from the knowledge perspective: face mask with ambu bag and nasal tube. Later one of the passersby claimed that he is a doctor and asked if our crew had adrenaline in the backpack. After verifying his MD license there were adrenaline ampules made ready along with syringe. Due to patient's stable state and prompt arrival of ambulance adrenaline was not applied. Apart from aformentioned equipment being on standby at the scene there was also more serious available in the backpack: cric and intubation sets. We are lucky to have 2 combat medics at the crew and possibility of consulting experienced aenesthesiologist.
Why I'm mentioning this availability of equipment that was above the skills or legal limits of use of our crew member ?He only has BLS and Stop the Bleed courses under his belt.
Very common opinion is that civilian or first aid practioner shouldn't carry the equipment that can't be used by this person. This situation and many more show that equipment readiness above the competencies of responder can be vital for patient's survivability
If you'd like to know more join our discord server