Welcome to the channel dedicated to hiking, bushcraft, survival. Here you will immerse yourself in the wild world of northern nature, virgin forests, lakes, rivers. Here you will find many diverse stories, adventures, far from cities, the noise of cars, secluded with wild nature. Perhaps here you will learn something new about bushcraft and it will be useful to you.
Seu esforço para lidar com o frio extremo é louvavel, porem sua culinaria é péssima tanto no preparo como em seu valor nutricional,. Valeu pelo esforço! Aderlan, Brasil
Vejo seu vídeo amigo do Brasil 🇧🇷. Excelente o seu conteúdo adorei meus parabéns, eu já postei no whatsapp o teu vídeo no meu grupo de amigos pra assistir! 👏👏
Friends, who is interested in the topic of survival in critical situations, how to act in case of fires, floods, riots, how to save yourself and your family, here is my Facebook group - facebook.com/groups/7648112715245157/
Another great video friend ! Yes just a few little things that everyone should know if you like to venture out in the woods :) Pretty awesome sandwich by the fire warming your toe's, You have lots of snow but not to cold" When i was trapping i skidoo & i went through the ice on a creek i was wet to the armpits 15miles from my cabin, was a little scary at -25c but out of the water & rolled around in the snow to create an ice layer on my clothes then it was fire lots of wood shelter as i had a big tarp with me all the time, I never froze a thing I'm Still here :))
dormire così? col culo all’aria? a disposizione del primo orso o del primo lupo affamati? beh, capisco che si amino gli animali, ma offrirgli il proprio culo mentre si dorme, è troppo!
you'll need a fire IMMEDIATELY if you've soaked more than one foot. There's no time to build a shelter. barely time to build a fire and then only if you've got back up clothing/bivy, etc, to keep you somewhat warm as you build the fire. The 2GoSystems Trifecta XL bivy, its plastic envelope, and a net hammock, are my "shelter' sleep set up. The two 1/4 lb each Amazon bugnet 'suits" and their two 'cut leaf" 1/2 lb each camo nets can be worn as longjohns, and the net hammock can be wrapped around me, holding dry debris as insulation around me . So I dont have to lug around a lot of heavy, bulky sleep/shelter gear or winter clothing. This saves me at least 8 lbs and a lot of bulk. I use both a buttpack and a day pack. I empty out the packs, stuff them with debris and use them as sleeping pads, normally up in the hammock. I had to add a much stiffer, wider belt to the butt pack. the sleep/shelter clothing is lashed to the top of the buttpack, and then the daypack rides on the gear. If I dont have the camo nets as padding for the hip belt and shoulder straps, i use my spare socks and underwear as padding.
all too often, there's no snow, no toboggan to sled the weight and you can also need snowshoes and not have any. You better have one helluva good reason to be "out there" in the cold, cause the risks are very high. and you need a lot of food/energy to keep going. that food/energy is VERY hard to come by in cold weather. The fish are under the ice and near-dormant. Animals have migrated or holed-up to hibernate. they have no fat on their bodies. and lean meat/fish will not suffice to keep you from losing a lb per day if you are hiking. in bad conditions. You can't carry enough food to amount to anything. The Innuit knew to be FAT and to say on the sea shore, where they could hunt seals. A 200-500 lb seal has a lot of fat calories on it. In the woods, the only fat animals in winter are porcupines and THEY have no fat left after about February. It wont be spring before mid April. in the North Country.
this is one reason why I have water sandals, a reflective tyvek bivy (worn as clothing) I wear Wiggy's net long johns under my cammies. I have a plastic "envelope" around the bivy. My milsurp polypro longjohns are in a drum liner inside of my pack, with my spare socks, shemagh t shirt and boxer shorts. So I can shed my wet clothing, shake the water off of the bivy and its envelope, dry off with my shemagh. don the longjohns and water sandals, and get inside of the bivy and its envelope. Then I can wring out the wet clothing and either build a fire right there, or move to where I CAN do so. The fire and hot rocks will suffice to dry out my clothing. If it's not super cold, or even if it IS and the wet-crossing is a short term thing, I remove my foot wear and don the sandals, removing or rolling up my pants. Better to be able to dry off and don dry clothing and foot wear, after getting wet/cold feet, then to have to wear wet clothing and footwear all day for the rest of the hike! THAT means blisters, trench-foot, etc.
Friends, who is interested in the topic of survival in critical situations, how to act in case of fires, floods, riots, how to save yourself and your family, here is my Facebook group - facebook.com/groups/7648112715245157/
nice adventure🏕🔥❄️👌fairytale white landscape forest. and I read a lot of strange comments too. it can be seen that you love nature and the forest🌲❄️🌳🌲 and sleeping in the mountains🏕👌me too 🤝🗻❄️
Friends, who is interested in the topic of survival in critical situations, how to act in case of fires, floods, riots, how to save yourself and your family, here is my Facebook group - facebook.com/groups/7648112715245157/
Friends, who is interested in the topic of survival in critical situations, how to act in case of fires, floods, riots, how to save yourself and your family, here is my Facebook group - facebook.com/groups/7648112715245157/
Friends, who is interested in the topic of survival in critical situations, how to act in case of fires, floods, riots, how to save yourself and your family, here is my Facebook group - facebook.com/groups/7648112715245157/
Friends, who is interested in the topic of survival in critical situations, how to act in case of fires, floods, riots, how to save yourself and your family, here is my Facebook group - facebook.com/groups/7648112715245157/