Lukas Eddy. Montana, USA. The more this channel grows, the better the adventures will be! SUBSCRIBE please, and thanks for watching! See www.LukasEddy.com
Nope. No. I don't go underground, or in caves, and I don't go into the air, and I don't go under water or go to high, steep places. And I like it like that a LOT.
You guys are in Jaguar territory, show some respect as guest in my country! If I was the jaguar I would’ve dealt accordingly cause you clearly don’t know how to behave in true nature.
hey if you are courageous enough, you should try the European jungles of France or Italy, that's the real deal, with my crew we were not able, we turned on the GPS raider and waited for the rescues to arrive, in all the world there was not such place as what we saw there, predators roaming in those lands you can't imagine, but you kind of clickbait crap us with the jaguar thing, come on you could almost pet it right ?
Exploring caves, something I would love to do, but will probably never get too deep into. Two reasons; I'm too big and to be honest, I don't think I could handle the constant dark and tight spaces not knowing what's beyond. For now I'll have to stick to show caves and the one time I did a spelunking tour at Wind Cave in the Black Hills. Kudos to those who do this.
Very cool. Reverse mountain climbing has always been an interest to this old spelunker. The bad air must be nitrogen and carbon dioxide from the decaying organic debris, which is seen in the video, even in the lower passages. Harmful gasses are especially concentrating in the dry sections isolated by sumps, and in the lowest, poorest breathing sections of the cave. I would be careful using a lighter as a testing device. Methane could be present, methane being a highly flammable gas also produced in the process of the decay of organic matter. I am so pleased this dangerous expedition produced no extreme drama and all returned safely to the surface, a credit to your planning. Kudos to that small Italian team as well. Were there even LED lamps and lithium batteries 30 years ago? I remember when we used acetylene miners' lamps in the late 1960's.
Hi. Which Packrafts did you use? Would you take it again or choose another.. My wife and me are WW-Paddlers (Kajak) We paddle about class3 to 4. I think this will work fine. What do you think? Kind Regards from Germany … Chris
Hi Chris, for this trip we used Alpacka Classic packrafts. We got them with the cargo fly and with drainholes, and they worked great. They are great at Class III. Only problem was that when we camped in sand or silt, the sand could get in the zipper for the cargo fly when packing, and prevent it from closing properly. The only solution is to clean the zipper very well, which can take a while. Otherwise, these rafts were perfect for our ten-day trip!
Yes! If you break a disc brake in a remote country, it's gonna be tough or impossible to find the right parts to repair it. For this reason alone I'd stay away from the disc trucker for most types of touring.
Wow that is amazing. Btw try to explore the cave in Sagada Philippines there are 33 caves but only 3-5 caves are open to tourists and some of the areas of that caves are still unexplored.