A man who fell on his knife while hunting came close to death, even texting his wife goodbye.
The man was hunting deer near Kawhia on Saturday when he slipping and fell on his hunting knife.
Using knowledge he learnt from watching Bear Grylls he made a tourniquet which slowed the bleeding, he told Fairfax.
Making it to a nearby river, the man moved to a position where he could be seen and activated his personal locator beacon.
The Waikato Westpac Rescue Helicopter responded just before 10pm on Saturday carrying a winch-trained paramedic and a police search and rescue officer.
When they found the man he was hypothermic.
After being treated at the scene, he was winched off the bank and flown to Waikato Hospital for further treatment.
The man, who was hunting by himself, told Fairfax he feared for his life.
"I knew I was in trouble, I knew I was going to [activate] my locator beacon and I knew the best chances of me getting help is if I'm visible from the air."
The man had stalked and killed a deer in rough terrain when he slipped and stabbed himself while cutting the deer up.
"I got up, pulled the knife out and then I felt a really warm sensation going through my body which I thought [was] a bit weird and then I looked down and blood was just pouring out," he told Fairfax.
Thoughts of his wife and four children quickly flooded into his mind.
Tying a tourniquet around his leg he found his way to a nearby river where he set off the emergency beacon.
"I got myself in a comfortable position because I was dizzy already and my heart was going 100 miles an hour and then I activated the beacon.
"I thought first things first, I need to stop the bleeding and calm the heart rate down.
"[I thought] if I cool down my leg, then the vein would hopefully cool down and shrink and the blood would start clotting," he told Fairfax.
Taking out a strobe light and torch, the man set an alarm for every seven minutes where he would loosen the tourniquet to release blood and take a bite of his muesli bar and a sip of water.
He was on the verge of losing consciousness when he heard the rescue helicopter approaching.
"I can't thank them enough - they were amazing."
The man was released from hospital on Sunday morning, with doctors telling him that if the blade had sunk one centimetre further it would have cut a main artery and killed him.
He told Fairfax he wanted his tale of survival to encourage other hunters like himself to take safety seriously.
"Personally, I think the most important thing to have is a beacon - accidents do happen. You're not invincible.
"She'll actually not be okay. Be prepared, your life is worth spending a few dollars protecting."