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I have found that the Blizzard 3 layer survivial bag is worth the money and the space it takes up. From Blizzard survival. I keep 4 of them in my vehicle in the winter when the real possibility of getting stuck in traffic during snow storms, or mass accidents or what ever in those colder times of the year.
Hard to beat Maxpedition gear. I have the larger version of that pack and it is set up as an emergency medical bag that stays in the car. I have had to utilizet two times in the past 6 or so years arriving upon auto accidents on the road and rendering medical aid. Also have several back packs and one of the early original shoulder bags that was designed for a left handed person - no longer made.
1. Sharp things 2. Water things 3. Filter things 4. Fire things 5. Multi things 6. Rainproof things 7. Saw things 8. Calorie things 9. Zippy things 10. Stringy things 11. Salty things 12. Lighty things 13. Ifac things 14. Noisey things 15. Compass things 16. Signal things 17. Tapey things 18. Lampy things 19. Battery things 20.
This is like my ‘OLOK psk’ (One Litre, One Kilo) but 2 to 3 times the size and weight. The OLOK is a ‘stuck outdoors overnight in bad weather here in Montreal, Canada’ survival kit which I EDC (off person) most of the time, nothing for water purifying except a couple of tablets and a one litre ziploc bag. I can start a fire and wrap myself in a SOL mylar blanket, have some first aid, not a big kit but I am happy to have it.
As odd as it may sound, but a small folding solar panel that you can hang off of the pack using carabiners, would come in handy. I carry a small solar panel with me every day. ✌️
Good bag ideas. I always carry a small vial of Tincture of Iodine. Great for cuts but also useful for water. Works like Bleach but tastes a bit better. Leukotape instead of Moleskin, holds better even applied wet.
Yep. There are some good items to pack if people looked outside their echo chamber once in a while. As a quasi-prepper, hunter, and backpacker, I've built my packs from the best of all aspects. You can get some great ideas and good knowledge from thru-hiker channels.
Zip Ties are great , I use them to secure my Fishing Yoyo's to tree branches and my Game Keep Perimeter Mines for camp security to poles , branches and doors for Urban Exploring overnighters . 😁😁😁
Nice kit. Very well planned. I have one very similar in a sling pack. A couple of things I include are spare glasses (reader cheaters), and a mini toiletry kit, collapseable tooothbrush, toothpaste, wet wipes, comb, Kleenex. Thanks for sharing. Keep up the great work.
😂 yup this could be a 5 minute video. He talks so slow and drones on and on about the obvious. Dude... just lay your stuff out and point it out.... Im wondering exactly how many folks have actually trained and practiced to catch fish with those tin can fishing kits...!
Id make fresh char cloth and then put it in a ziplock in your tin. Just sitting bare in that tin, its absorbing moisture from the air over time. Ohio can be just as humid as we are down here in the south.
I like the items in your kit. Several items I have. The zip ties are very useful. My kit is a military waist pack. The way I have it set up some of those items I can carry in my cargo pants. I carry a military canteen and cup on the belt. Belt knife on my person, small backup knife in pack. Mostly I have the 5c and my pocket edc , I do have first aid. Got some ideas from your kit
Nice video. Easy to put together kit. I might add a little esbit stove and a few solid fuel tabs just to trick it out a bit more. That bag is a nice one for sure.
I would suggest a police style whistle for the loudness those plastic whistles are not very robust. A member of our hunting group once got disoriented and he had the plastic style it took awhile to find him because we couldn't hear the whistle from any great distance even though he said he could hear the ones that were using the police style. And in an emergency time is of the essence.
A bivy is simply an emergency sleeping bag, seems like a reflective mylar poncho is a better option as it will keep you warm and dry while you work on a natural shelter like a debris hut or lean to. You can't move around and work once in a bivy bag. It's certainly a trade off, so carrying both may be the way to go.
So, We have some variation on a kit’ enough for 2-3 days until rescue. Why won’t the online community mention the one item that can turn rescue into 2-3 hours?! A Personal Locator Beacon costs less than half the knives and firearms we love to pack. Chris K
@@akbychoice Way to miss the point. If you go backpacking or you have a severe storm heading your way, sure, pay for the sub for a month. It's absurd to just pay for it all year for no reason.
Thank you for the video. Could you possibly weigh this kit? I'm a small framed woman so what a gentleman your size calls light might be very heavy for me.
Why does nobody ever suggest using a kite for signaling? They have frameless parafoil kites these days they call pocket kites. I am surprised there is no internationally recognized emergency kites at this stage of modernization. Thats a product you should be selling
@@ThePreparedWanderer No signal system is perfect for all conditions...Easy enough to find a clear spot somewhere, but more importantly it can be seen from far away from above the tree line, A small stobe could even be attached to increase visibility from far away at night.
If you don't like it as a waist bag, throw a shoulder strap on those D rings that he showed. I have the Proteus bag in black and that's what I did. It's a small but great little bag that I can carry cross-body or as a shoulder pack. That's an easy fix!
Please Hit the LIKE and SUBSCRIBE BUTTONS as well as the NOTIFICATION BELL. Feel Free to Check out my Amazon Influencer Page and Follow Me on Instagram, and Facebook. Thanks For Watching! www.preparedwanderer.com
I have found that the Blizzard 3 layer survivial bag is worth the money and the space it takes up.
From Blizzard survival. I keep 4 of them in my vehicle in the winter when the real possibility of getting stuck in traffic during snow storms, or mass accidents or what ever in those colder times of the year.
Hard to beat Maxpedition gear. I have the larger version of that pack and it is set up as an emergency medical bag that stays in the car. I have had to utilizet two times in the past 6 or so years arriving upon auto accidents on the road and rendering medical aid.
Also have several back packs and one of the early original shoulder bags that was designed for a left handed person - no longer made.
1. Sharp things
2. Water things
3. Filter things
4. Fire things
5. Multi things
6. Rainproof things
7. Saw things
8. Calorie things
9. Zippy things
10. Stringy things
11. Salty things
12. Lighty things
13. Ifac things
14. Noisey things
15. Compass things
16. Signal things
17. Tapey things
18. Lampy things
19. Battery things
20.
Or IFAK
20. Pew things
This is like my ‘OLOK psk’ (One Litre, One Kilo) but 2 to 3 times the size and weight.
The OLOK is a ‘stuck outdoors overnight in bad weather here in Montreal, Canada’ survival kit which I EDC (off person) most of the time, nothing for water purifying except a couple of tablets and a one litre ziploc bag. I can start a fire and wrap myself in a SOL mylar blanket, have some first aid, not a big kit but I am happy to have it.
As odd as it may sound, but a small folding solar panel that you can hang off of the pack using carabiners, would come in handy. I carry a small solar panel with me every day. ✌️
Good bag ideas. I always carry a small vial of Tincture of Iodine. Great for cuts but also useful for water. Works like Bleach but tastes a bit better. Leukotape instead of Moleskin, holds better even applied wet.
Yep. There are some good items to pack if people looked outside their echo chamber once in a while. As a quasi-prepper, hunter, and backpacker, I've built my packs from the best of all aspects. You can get some great ideas and good knowledge from thru-hiker channels.
Zip Ties are great , I use them to secure my Fishing Yoyo's to tree branches and my Game Keep Perimeter Mines for camp security to poles , branches and doors for Urban Exploring overnighters . 😁😁😁
Nice kit. Very well planned. I have one very similar in a sling pack. A couple of things I include are spare glasses (reader cheaters), and a mini toiletry kit, collapseable tooothbrush, toothpaste, wet wipes, comb, Kleenex. Thanks for sharing. Keep up the great work.
Play at 2x speed. You’re welcome.
😂 yup this could be a 5 minute video.
He talks so slow and drones on and on about the obvious.
Dude... just lay your stuff out and point it out.... Im wondering exactly how many folks have actually trained and practiced to catch fish with those tin can fishing kits...!
Id make fresh char cloth and then put it in a ziplock in your tin. Just sitting bare in that tin, its absorbing moisture from the air over time. Ohio can be just as humid as we are down here in the south.
May I suggest adding a Milbank bag to your kit ?
I like the items in your kit. Several items I have. The zip ties are very useful. My kit is a military waist pack. The way I have it set up some of those items I can carry in my cargo pants. I carry a military canteen and cup on the belt. Belt knife on my person, small backup knife in pack. Mostly I have the 5c and my pocket edc , I do have first aid. Got some ideas from your kit
Thanks, very interesting. I'm surprised you didn't have matches and another blanket
When its getting colder. I would put in the Blizzard Survival 3 layer bag . It's an incredible product tough and resusable.
Very good information and ideas. OUTSTANDING.
Coffee filters are a must, cheap, light small. Can be used as fire starter, cleaning items, obviously filtering, to quiet things in the pack.
Nice video. Easy to put together kit. I might add a little esbit stove and a few solid fuel tabs just to trick it out a bit more. That bag is a nice one for sure.
Good morning! Great stuff as always Sir! Thanks for sharing!
Nice little kit. You've got your based covered!
I would add lifeboat matches and a couple chem lights. I have this pack, great inspiration for a kit
I would suggest a police style whistle for the loudness those plastic whistles are not very robust. A member of our hunting group once got disoriented and he had the plastic style it took awhile to find him because we couldn't hear the whistle from any great distance even though he said he could hear the ones that were using the police style. And in an emergency time is of the essence.
Loved this one. Great pack.
Check out the Maxpedition Mongo messenger/shoulder bag, under different names, it’s a family of similar bags.
Had one did not care for it. Became very heavy very quickly
I'm gonna add coffee filters to my pack
Hello 👋 my outdoors friend, thank you for sharing this informative video. I appreciate this one. Stay safe out there. 😊
Good kit I would add one item a CAT. Tourniquet
Great Video, On A
Great Topic...
U r ingenious😊
I like the concept
A bivy is simply an emergency sleeping bag, seems like a reflective mylar poncho is a better option as it will keep you warm and dry while you work on a natural shelter like a debris hut or lean to. You can't move around and work once in a bivy bag. It's certainly a trade off, so carrying both may be the way to go.
Maybe i missed it, but did you have a flat plate bio mass stove in there ?
Love the map edition but I just priced it on eBay and the cheapest is $135 plus postage.
another nice video THANKS
So, We have some variation on a kit’ enough for 2-3 days until rescue. Why won’t the online community mention the one item that can turn rescue into 2-3 hours?! A Personal Locator Beacon costs less than half the knives and firearms we love to pack.
Chris K
Don't you have to pay a monthly service fee for that? It adds up.
@@Swearengen1980cheaper than a funeral
@@akbychoice Way to miss the point. If you go backpacking or you have a severe storm heading your way, sure, pay for the sub for a month. It's absurd to just pay for it all year for no reason.
Good video, thanks for sharing, YAH bless !
Sounds better than bug out bag
3 or 4 1/4" eye screws could be added to your fishing tin, next to no weight.
Good idea
I've carried tea candles in my kit forever. A very unmentioned/unthought of item. Light, and you can buy 100 of them for 1$.
Did i miss the water filter? I see you have the platypus....just to store water then after aqua tabs?
Aqua tabs will purify the water. Just takes time
Condor deployment bag is pretty much the same as the maxpedition proteus for about half the price, and frankly just as quality a piece.
No belt is the issue
It’s good to have if you have the money to buy something like that
Thank you for the video. Could you possibly weigh this kit? I'm a small framed woman so what a gentleman your size calls light might be very heavy for me.
Just under 5 lbs
I’m adding waterproof matches or a lighter. Work smarter, not harder.
He had a lighter in there.
You're not going to live long if all you know is to have a survival/bugout bag, even if you know how to use it.
What comes after the calamity?
😂
100%
Survival kit with a skeleton in the background. Looks like he could have used one
Why does nobody ever suggest using a kite for signaling? They have frameless parafoil kites these days they call pocket kites. I am surprised there is no internationally recognized emergency kites at this stage of modernization. Thats a product you should be selling
Not much good in dense forest
@@ThePreparedWanderer No signal system is perfect for all conditions...Easy enough to find a clear spot somewhere, but more importantly it can be seen from far away from above the tree line, A small stobe could even be attached to increase visibility from far away at night.
More like a budget kit. At least if you want to splurge on something, I'd pick a better knife.
😂
I don't like waist bags
@@lawrenceagnew3972 Then your items in a different bag/pack 😉😊
I have a red rock black sling bag. My day hike go to
@@lawrenceagnew3972 He reviewed the Helcon Tex bushcraft satchel. Works great if you don’t overload it. Best man purse I’ve ever had.
If you don't like it as a waist bag, throw a shoulder strap on those D rings that he showed. I have the Proteus bag in black and that's what I did. It's a small but great little bag that I can carry cross-body or as a shoulder pack. That's an easy fix!
What is the largest sling bag you can buy? I am talking like 50 liters or so. Go ahead and laugh. Just looking for the largest sling bag out there.
I wouldn’t want to a carry a 50l sling pack. Very uncomfortable get a backpack
@@ThePreparedWanderer My chiropractor highly recommends sling bags.....keeps him in business😀