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When I served in the Canadian Forces, we went to Igloolik island to learn from the Inuit ... an incredible experience I will never forget ... so much respect for the Inuit people
I was in the army in Spain (during the compulsory period that no longer exists), in a high mountain engineering brigade (skiing, climbing, survival, shelter building...) and during the ski course one of the practices consisted of building an igloo and sleeping in it. I remember it as a unique experience, so satisfying, so useful. Unfortunately we were not as well equipped as the Inuit and I was freezing cold. Greetings from Spain.
Interesting video. Back in 1977 I took a class studying the Inuit's. The class covered an amazing amount of information. Building igloo's and ceremonial igloo's was one of the topics covered in great detail. It was probably one of my favorite classes ever.
I worked at the North Pole off shore drilling rigs for 5 years. The snow is dry like white sand. You don't even leave a footprint. We took a survival course and we learned about the environment and how deadly it is. We were taught how to build a igloo. And long saw like knife you just cut blocks of snow. But you cut the blocks from the area you are building. So your living area is below the surface and it's a dome above you. Your entrance goes down into the icey warm shelter. You want to know how to survive a polar bear encounter. It can be done if you have the will to live
@@CoffeeFiend1 woooow race baiter in real life spottet😂no way you real??? please cannyou elaborate and show me how victim mindset works, I never had the chance, wow wow it real, let go! please tell me more😂😂😂
@ To be fair your comment was pretty funny and knee-jerky though. See something impressive.. "yeah well X and Y places do it better" okay then, but we're not talking about them are we? Nor are we disputing that other people in other places aren't clever and also build impressive stuff. Like I said it was pretty strange.
My father learned how to make these for winter camping adventures in Vermont and NH. He taught us all how to make them in case we ever needed an emergency shelter in winter. In the ones he taught us, the first set of blocks go down as a ring but then you cut the top edge of the ring to form a gradual ramp that way, the first block of the second level is butted next to the last block of the first level. The blocks thus spiral up and are not concentric rings of blocks. This created more of the interlocking geometry using all the blocks. Once, when we made our camping igloo near a lake, which was frozen, we used a saw to cut out a “window” which was placed in the wall to let sunlight in. They are very warm for camping. Much nicer than a tent.
When I was a kid we used big cardboard boxes and set them up like a fort with separate rooms and long vacuum cleaner tubes sticking out for ventilation, soaked them to freeze them in place then covered them with snow, froze that layer, cover with another layer of snow, freeze that until it looked more or less like a pile of ice and snow at the far end of a mall parking lot. They were darker inside than a normal igloo, more like a cave and needed a flashlight to see clearly, but still pretty warm compared to outside, couldn't sleep in them though.
@@marcmelvin3010 There's an unwritten rule regarding building an ice fort, the builders don't necessarily get dibs on ownership. If it's built in a public place like a field it's open for anyone who challenges for it, you have snowball fights, winners get the fort. There were usually 2 or 3 of them in my neighbourhood. Kids today are like "You played outside in the cold in the 20th Century? That's so old fashioned". We built outdoor ice rinks too, kids today are lazy.
My dad built an igloo in our driveway in the 1945 in Wisconsin. It had the exact dimensions of an igloo but smaller. We played in it under supervision. So much fun. We were the envy of the neighborhood.
As a backcountry skier, touring skier and climber, I have slept many times in the snow. Because we cannot always find the right consistency of snow, we usually resort to digging snow caves in a large snowdrift. The last time we did it was at 3000m altitude in the Swiss Alps, it was +5 degrees Celsius inside and -30 outside. It took us about 3 hs to dig. The trick is to make the floor higher than the entrance. We also closed the door with our rucksacks and gear. We used a plastic tarpaulin to cover the floor and held it in place with 4 ski poles (if not, it just slides around). Smooth the ceiling with rubber washing up gloves to make a dome. Any irregularity will cause a drip. Also, bring a change of clothes (long johns, T shirt, thermal shirt ), you sweat a lot digging and that sweat will then make you cold. If ever caught in a real bad storm and things are going south quickly, dig a trench, cover with skis, poles and thermal blanket/plastic tarpaulin (always pack these in your bag) and shovel snow on top. You can build an emergency shelter in 30mn. It is not optimal but when time is critical, it can save your life. Snow is an excellent insulator and in high wind, putting up a tent can become impossible. And tents dont keep you warm, they just protect you from the wind.
Well delivered dissertation for under 15 minutes. Not a common or comfortable subject of a quiet people in a brutal landscape. Incredible to think of the willingness to continue this lifestyle, let alone embrace it.
I lived in Anchorage for 4 years. When I was 10 we moved to Ohio . There were kids who asked if we lived in an igloo . They also asked , if we ate whale meat . We lived in the suburbs. Although our winters were a lot more fun .
Sounded like a fairly ordinary English voice to me, with characteristic deadpan humour. Better than the standardised wild emoting and overdrawn dramatics one gets on some channels, to my taste anyway. But then I'm British, so... The narrator could do with pausing for breath sometimes, though - galloping on too quickly is a classic sign of an inexperienced presenter.
The Inuit, used to have a tradition, where visiting Inuit male, staying in the igloo, would be offered the wife by the man. They also have a delicacy, of rotted fish, which they all love. However, if you were to eat it, you'd be very, very ill. They wean their babies onto it, and they receive initial immunity from mother's milk.
Impressive for sure. But, to be clear, the reason all the footage is old and grainy is because they don’t do this anymore. Modern technology has nullified igloos. I’m Alaskan and have been to more villages throughout Alaska than I care to recount. From Utquiagvik, to Tuntutuliak, to Kipsuk, they’re using tents. They just don’t use igloos anymore. But it was a nice video.
The further east you go into Canada’s Arctic and on to Greenland…it is still used and is encouraged to ensure survival if ever caught in bad weather, lost or stuck.
I am in Canada and yes, igloos are still being constructed when needed. The construction of quinzees (a cross between an igloo and a snow fort) is also a skill that many children, hunters, skiers/snowboarders, and winter campers are taught throughout Canada.
I live in the Canadian Arctic. Igloos are almost universally restricted to extreme emergency situations, or for some ceremonial/celebratory/cultural/tourism role. Tents, typically canvas, are universally preferred because they can be set up far faster and anywhere, you carry them with you, you can set up a stove inside to heat them, and they can be used all year round. There's a few hardcore hunters who insist on building igloos because they're traditional (we'll ignore the Arctic Cats they're using to go out to hunt with, of course).
@ haha. Thank you. The Inupiat still go on traditional bow whale hunts, which I really have no real issue with. They eat the whole damn thing so, whatever. But they do so with twin 500 Yamahas in a Hewes craft and high powered harpoon guns and modern GPS technology….just like their ancestors did. 🙄
Many people in the North make Igloos.there are many different types of Igloos, fro different purposes, such as quik overnight Igloos, and long term usage Igloos. I worked with Inuit, for many years, and was taught how to make an Igloo. Number one, you have to have the right kind of snow, the right snow is not found in the south. The best Igloo builder I knew was a helicopter pilot. In the event he was forced down, he would build an Igloo and wait for help. You always start with the door.
So the King Block is essentially a Keystone that works in all angles, not just two. It has to keep not just one arch in place, but a whole dome of arches. Very cool. Didn't know that before.
Im waiting to hear someone say that the Inuit werent smart enough to figure this out for themselves so they must have learned it centuries ago from aliens. Faacinating. Wonderful people.
Seal/whale oil, the blubber can be scraped for liquid oil that does not solidify in cold. It's basically an open alladin type lamp with liquid oil and a wick traditionally made from moss or lichen but usually paper towel now. The wick is laid flat lengthwise and the leading edge is kept just out of the oil and the flame adjusted by moving the wick with a small piece of driftwood, bone or antler. I saw a fascinating documentary on the subject as well as some beautiful ulus, the topic was on the tools used by Inuit women.
A small controled fire. They used whale blubber or seal. It burned slow and hot but big enough to cook. But that small amount of heat quickly warmed the igloo. Besides wood isn't available. Unless it washed up on shore
You know, it's sad that our education system shows a lack now that it didn't have when I was in school. The only information this vid gave me my education in the lower mainland of BC didn't was how to tell if you have the right snow to build with. Literally everything else about building an iglu I was taught in school in the 1970s
We think of Inuits and other nature people as primitive. But the truth is, we are the primitive ones. Nature people have thousands of years of inherited knowledge about how to survive in nature. We just know how to type on our mobile phones and how to use a plastic card in shops..
The opening scene in this kills me. Inuit building an igloo in a forest. There are no trees in the arctic. Wood is so rare in the arctic that the Hudson's Bay company used to distribute wooden coins when trading with the Inuit. Igloos are not built in a spiral. They are built up in rings of blocks one on top of one another. The last block is called the Keystone block, not the King block. Next time get someone who has actually been to arctic to do the narration.
"stronger than concrete of the same thickness". What a complete crock! If it was "stronger than concrete of the same thickness" I guarantee you they wouldn't be cutting it with a wooden stick. 🙄
Why is the entrance so huge. I thought it was made just big enough for a human to crawl through not walk upright through. Allowing way too much cold and wind to enter with that huge doorway. Now you need an actual door added.
a block of ice as a keystone that could break if you sneeze too hard?? thought you said it was stronger than concrete five minutes ago…. 🙄 verbal nonsense..
I often think are the Inuits literally the closest descendants of last race of Humans to actually have experienced living through the last Ice age? This is the kind of knowledge that I am so glad that has been given to us...we may potentially have to rely on if we are to continue existing on this planet.
An Igloo in a forest with a fire in front of it and a great entrance ? Are You for real ?? They used to live in a below surface snow cave with a snow dome on top.
And what about protection from polar bears? I believe they have no problem knocking down an igloo. If bears break through the ice to hunt seals, then snow is no problem for them. Why is this never talked about?
@@chrisallen2005 How does this look to you: th-cam.com/users/shortsFSnoFj0qTF4?si=cP_yWONEmcLQeUCo I'm not talking nonsense, there are many documentaries that show polar bears breaking through ice.
What is with the forest shots? As far as I remember from school there are no forests of trees in the Arctic where the Inuit live. The only igloos they construct anymore are for the tourists to photograph. The Caucasian guy in the forest is making a quinzhee not an igloo.
My Cat would have a hard time looking for a corner to Pee in. Speaking of which. How is waste handled is such a cramped shared space and No privacy? It would be a lot of work to add on a wing for just that.
This video is interesting like watching a National Geographic video, but irritating like having a nail in your seat. The analogies are prevalent, like fleas on a dog’s back and the voice over weak, like standing on wet carboard…
Hi everyone,
We are uploading content relating to the inuits and are trying our very best to deliver the highest quality videos with the resources we have. Please consider subscribing if you like the inuits, its free :)
Outstanding video and Subscribed.
I noticed that too. It's rather annoying.
Excellent video clips and editing. Good pace. Plenty here for the eyes!
Hey, AI Guy: It's "Inuit," no 's'. Thanks.
Engineers do not call that a “positive angle of attack “. What is your source for this in misinformation ???????
When I served in the Canadian Forces, we went to Igloolik island to learn from the Inuit ... an incredible experience I will never forget ... so much respect for the Inuit people
The iglooskills will be important soon when Trumpet tries to invade
Why do you enjoy savages?
I was in the army in Spain (during the compulsory period that no longer exists), in a high mountain engineering brigade (skiing, climbing, survival, shelter building...) and during the ski course one of the practices consisted of building an igloo and sleeping in it. I remember it as a unique experience, so satisfying, so useful. Unfortunately we were not as well equipped as the Inuit and I was freezing cold. Greetings from Spain.
Polar bears love igloos. Because they are crunchy on the outside and chewy in the center.
Interesting video. Back in 1977 I took a class studying the Inuit's. The class covered an amazing amount of information. Building igloo's and ceremonial igloo's was one of the topics covered in great detail. It was probably one of my favorite classes ever.
I worked at the North Pole off shore drilling rigs for 5 years. The snow is dry like white sand. You don't even leave a footprint. We took a survival course and we learned about the environment and how deadly it is. We were taught how to build a igloo. And long saw like knife you just cut blocks of snow. But you cut the blocks from the area you are building. So your living area is below the surface and it's a dome above you. Your entrance goes down into the icey warm shelter. You want to know how to survive a polar bear encounter. It can be done if you have the will to live
A real masterpiece of architecture
of human mind without sophisticated
tools and blueprints.
please look some jungle/forest/mud hadmade etc video before commet like this😂
@@theoteddy9665 Nice spot of rebuttal based racism there. Both are very impressive.
@@CoffeeFiend1 woooow race baiter in real life spottet😂no way you real??? please cannyou elaborate and show me how victim mindset works, I never had the chance, wow wow it real, let go! please tell me more😂😂😂
@ To be fair your comment was pretty funny and knee-jerky though. See something impressive.. "yeah well X and Y places do it better" okay then, but we're not talking about them are we? Nor are we disputing that other people in other places aren't clever and also build impressive stuff. Like I said it was pretty strange.
My father learned how to make these for winter camping adventures in Vermont and NH. He taught us all how to make them in case we ever needed an emergency shelter in winter. In the ones he taught us, the first set of blocks go down as a ring but then you cut the top edge of the ring to form a gradual ramp that way, the first block of the second level is butted next to the last block of the first level. The blocks thus spiral up and are not concentric rings of blocks. This created more of the interlocking geometry using all the blocks. Once, when we made our camping igloo near a lake, which was frozen, we used a saw to cut out a “window” which was placed in the wall to let sunlight in. They are very warm for camping. Much nicer than a tent.
I worked on the Alaskan pipeline. I enjoyed the Inuit. Learned a few things.
When I was a kid we used big cardboard boxes and set them up like a fort with separate rooms and long vacuum cleaner tubes sticking out for ventilation, soaked them to freeze them in place then covered them with snow, froze that layer, cover with another layer of snow, freeze that until it looked more or less like a pile of ice and snow at the far end of a mall parking lot. They were darker inside than a normal igloo, more like a cave and needed a flashlight to see clearly, but still pretty warm compared to outside, couldn't sleep in them though.
I gotta try this.
@@marcmelvin3010 There's an unwritten rule regarding building an ice fort, the builders don't necessarily get dibs on ownership. If it's built in a public place like a field it's open for anyone who challenges for it, you have snowball fights, winners get the fort. There were usually 2 or 3 of them in my neighbourhood. Kids today are like "You played outside in the cold in the 20th Century? That's so old fashioned". We built outdoor ice rinks too, kids today are lazy.
My dad built an igloo in our driveway in the 1945 in Wisconsin. It had the exact dimensions of an igloo but smaller. We played in it under supervision. So much fun. We were the envy of the neighborhood.
These metaphors are outrageous
As a backcountry skier, touring skier and climber, I have slept many times in the snow. Because we cannot always find the right consistency of snow, we usually resort to digging snow caves in a large snowdrift. The last time we did it was at 3000m altitude in the Swiss Alps, it was +5 degrees Celsius inside and -30 outside. It took us about 3 hs to dig. The trick is to make the floor higher than the entrance. We also closed the door with our rucksacks and gear. We used a plastic tarpaulin to cover the floor and held it in place with 4 ski poles (if not, it just slides around). Smooth the ceiling with rubber washing up gloves to make a dome. Any irregularity will cause a drip. Also, bring a change of clothes (long johns, T shirt, thermal shirt ), you sweat a lot digging and that sweat will then make you cold. If ever caught in a real bad storm and things are going south quickly, dig a trench, cover with skis, poles and thermal blanket/plastic tarpaulin (always pack these in your bag) and shovel snow on top. You can build an emergency shelter in 30mn. It is not optimal but when time is critical, it can save your life. Snow is an excellent insulator and in high wind, putting up a tent can become impossible. And tents dont keep you warm, they just protect you from the wind.
God bless these people living in such a harsh weather 😂❤❤❤
Nowadays Inuits don't live like that anymore. They have warm houses and four-wheel drive vehicles.
We should always admire & follow cultures that succeeded & are still following their own practises. This is how humans can & will survive.
Such a beautiful satisfying build.
prepping myself for the upcoming snow storm, thank u snowbros for this knowledge
"Pitching a tent in -40 degree weather" 😂
That's amazing, gotta give em props.
Didn't realize the actual physics behind an igloo, this is fascinating.
I thought at one time I wanted to be an Eskimo, but it turned out I just wasn't really Inuit.
You should meet an Inuit girl I know named Lulu. She really knows how to swing her Ulu
When I was younger I wanted to be an Electrician and found I conduit
😂😂
And they did this 1000's of years before science proved it would work.
Well delivered dissertation for under 15 minutes. Not a common or comfortable subject of a quiet people in a brutal landscape. Incredible to think of the willingness to continue this lifestyle, let alone embrace it.
friend of mine was half inuit. i gave a like in her memory. see ya on the other side karin.
Fabulous video. Thank you.
I lived in Anchorage for 4 years. When I was 10 we moved to Ohio . There were kids who asked if we lived in an igloo . They also asked , if we ate whale meat . We lived in the suburbs. Although our winters were a lot more fun .
The amount of analogies in this video…it’s like instead of getting paid per views, you get paid per igloo anology.
The AI generated voice and script are annoying. Turn down the lame jokes parameter.
What the hell is your problem
Jokes weren't all that bad but the AI's deadpan reading of them was one of the oddest things I've ever heard.
Seriously
Sounded like a fairly ordinary English voice to me, with characteristic deadpan humour.
Better than the standardised wild emoting and overdrawn dramatics one gets on some channels, to my taste anyway. But then I'm British, so...
The narrator could do with pausing for breath sometimes, though - galloping on too quickly is a classic sign of an inexperienced presenter.
Thanks for the comment. Now I don't have to waste my time listening to frigging AI!
You can harden your snow blocks by exposing them to the wind thus allowing you to work with them
One of these master builders should go to Califirnia to teach all the homeless how to build their own dwellings. Not of snow though.
We learn this in Antarctica for deep field trips and survival training.
The Inuit, used to have a tradition, where visiting Inuit male, staying in the igloo, would be offered the wife by the man.
They also have a delicacy, of rotted fish, which they all love. However, if you were to eat it, you'd be very, very ill. They wean their babies onto it, and they receive initial immunity from mother's milk.
Impressive for sure. But, to be clear, the reason all the footage is old and grainy is because they don’t do this anymore. Modern technology has nullified igloos.
I’m Alaskan and have been to more villages throughout Alaska than I care to recount. From Utquiagvik, to Tuntutuliak, to Kipsuk, they’re using tents.
They just don’t use igloos anymore. But it was a nice video.
The further east you go into Canada’s Arctic and on to Greenland…it is still used and is encouraged to ensure survival if ever caught in bad weather, lost or stuck.
I am in Canada and yes, igloos are still being constructed when needed.
The construction of quinzees (a cross between an igloo and a snow fort) is also a skill that many children, hunters, skiers/snowboarders, and winter campers are taught throughout Canada.
I live in the Canadian Arctic. Igloos are almost universally restricted to extreme emergency situations, or for some ceremonial/celebratory/cultural/tourism role. Tents, typically canvas, are universally preferred because they can be set up far faster and anywhere, you carry them with you, you can set up a stove inside to heat them, and they can be used all year round. There's a few hardcore hunters who insist on building igloos because they're traditional (we'll ignore the Arctic Cats they're using to go out to hunt with, of course).
@ haha. Thank you. The Inupiat still go on traditional bow whale hunts, which I really have no real issue with. They eat the whole damn thing so, whatever. But they do so with twin 500 Yamahas in a Hewes craft and high powered harpoon guns and modern GPS technology….just like their ancestors did. 🙄
Pardon the pun.. But that's pretty cool! Thank you.
The original expert survivalists.
Many people in the North make Igloos.there are many different types of Igloos, fro different purposes, such as quik overnight Igloos, and long term usage Igloos.
I worked with Inuit, for many years, and was taught how to make an Igloo.
Number one, you have to have the right kind of snow, the right snow is not found in the south.
The best Igloo builder I knew was a helicopter pilot.
In the event he was forced down, he would build an Igloo and wait for help.
You always start with the door.
There's no way I believe that's safe from a Polar bear
Colorful analogy ,!
Subscribe due to great narration and plus I like the Inuit people and we can learn a great deal from them.
Building this is more inuitive than I'd thought.
Very interesting I wonder what they put on the floor to keep off the ice !
Snow
Reindeer hides
Animal skin 😂
This is very interesting
All the metaphors. 'It's like touching yourself in a public place. Sure it feels good now, but cops are on the way.'
Narration: Innuit execute the build with remarkable precision.
Video: Dude's slapping together haphazardly.
In what direction do you place the opening?
So the King Block is essentially a Keystone that works in all angles, not just two. It has to keep not just one arch in place, but a whole dome of arches. Very cool. Didn't know that before.
you lost me at "stronger than concrete of the same thickness"
has this fella just learnt what a simile is
Interesting....your use of analogies
Im waiting to hear someone say that the Inuit werent smart enough to figure this out for themselves so they must have learned it centuries ago from aliens.
Faacinating. Wonderful people.
I'm watching this from Saudi Arabia and trying to figure out how to apply it to sand.
Q: Why didn't the Eskimo finish his igloo?
A: He wasn't really Inuit...
So inuit should build stone igloo houses,they will need wooden caskets I think for blocks.
where did they get wood to start fires if they built igloos in the middle of nowhere
Seal/whale oil, the blubber can be scraped for liquid oil that does not solidify in cold. It's basically an open alladin type lamp with liquid oil and a wick traditionally made from moss or lichen but usually paper towel now. The wick is laid flat lengthwise and the leading edge is kept just out of the oil and the flame adjusted by moving the wick with a small piece of driftwood, bone or antler. I saw a fascinating documentary on the subject as well as some beautiful ulus, the topic was on the tools used by Inuit women.
From the forest. There are plenty of shots of the forest in this video.
Funny and informative. Resist the essential oils!
I love how your thumbnail is nothing like a real igloo
whats the biggest igloo thats possible to make?
You could actually build a awesome house out of ice!!! I'd have a 4 bedroom 3 bathroom place!!!
How bullet proof can snow be
The igloos are cool, but those are bad aaazzz snow suits. They look warm af. Fur coat haters be damned.
Its an eskimo
A small controled fire. They used whale blubber or seal. It burned slow and hot but big enough to cook. But that small amount of heat quickly warmed the igloo. Besides wood isn't available. Unless it washed up on shore
I'd buy that for a dollar!
2 feet to meters? how to convert in real time?
Eskimo
“Stronger than concrete” I doubt that
Should have said "stronger than an equivalent weight of concrete"
the reason why every culture need to be preserved
You know, it's sad that our education system shows a lack now that it didn't have when I was in school. The only information this vid gave me my education in the lower mainland of BC didn't was how to tell if you have the right snow to build with. Literally everything else about building an iglu I was taught in school in the 1970s
Can the igloos withstand a Wampa attack?
I never understood why the Inuit don't say, we've had enough of snow, lets move south.
The Tundra is their homeland and where they have and will continue to thrive.
You had me at snow sword.
They make that from a walrus baculum.
@ I’m not going to pretend I know what that is.
whats geg togthere?
We think of Inuits and other nature people as primitive. But the truth is, we are the primitive ones. Nature people have thousands of years of inherited knowledge about how to survive in nature. We just know how to type on our mobile phones and how to use a plastic card in shops..
The igloo you show is not the way you build an entrance. It must be built below snow level to trap heat in
Oymyakon is the coldest, though....
So it takes longer than 2 hours because they have to poke around for 4 hours
The opening scene in this kills me. Inuit building an igloo in a forest. There are no trees in the arctic. Wood is so rare in the arctic that the Hudson's Bay company used to distribute wooden coins when trading with the Inuit. Igloos are not built in a spiral. They are built up in rings of blocks one on top of one another. The last block is called the Keystone block, not the King block. Next time get someone who has actually been to arctic to do the narration.
my soup melts
Just need to know everything I can B4 poop hits the fan hahaha
"stronger than concrete of the same thickness". What a complete crock! If it was "stronger than concrete of the same thickness" I guarantee you they wouldn't be cutting it with a wooden stick. 🙄
I thought this would be boring, but i really got "inuit".☃️😂
Why is the entrance so huge. I thought it was made just big enough for a human to crawl through not walk upright through. Allowing way too much cold and wind to enter with that huge doorway. Now you need an actual door added.
Can't get over how bleak and unforgiving it looks, meanwhile the locals are "chillin"
a block of ice as a keystone that could break if you sneeze too hard?? thought you said it was stronger than concrete five minutes ago…. 🙄 verbal nonsense..
Why not just live somewhere warmer?
Eskimo’s
Qujan 🇬🇱🇩🇰💪
Drink whenever he says the word "crucial"
I often think are the Inuits literally the closest descendants of last race of Humans to actually have experienced living through the last Ice age? This is the kind of knowledge that I am so glad that has been given to us...we may potentially have to rely on if we are to continue existing on this planet.
An Igloo in a forest with a fire in front of it and a great entrance ? Are You for real ?? They used to live in a below surface snow cave with a snow dome on top.
The script sounds like it was written on a napkin at an open mic, minus the laughs.
And what about protection from polar bears? I believe they have no problem knocking down an igloo.
If bears break through the ice to hunt seals, then snow is no problem for them.
Why is this never talked about?
Because the bears don't break through the ice to get at the seals.
@@chrisallen2005 They don't break the ice?
So what is this:
th-cam.com/video/LNQagW7Oaks/w-d-xo.html
@@josipmess Looks like a Polar Bear leaping into the breathing hole of a seal. Look up seal breathing hole and see what you come up witf.
@@chrisallen2005 How does this look to you:
th-cam.com/users/shortsFSnoFj0qTF4?si=cP_yWONEmcLQeUCo
I'm not talking nonsense, there are many documentaries that show polar bears breaking through ice.
King block=keystone
OMG Fahrenheit... how to convert to Celcius in real time???
Holy overuse of analogy Batman!
His mortgage was frozen for another year 😂
What is with the forest shots? As far as I remember from school there are no forests of trees in the Arctic where the Inuit live. The only igloos they construct anymore are for the tourists to photograph. The Caucasian guy in the forest is making a quinzhee not an igloo.
My Cat would have a hard time looking for a corner to Pee in. Speaking of which. How is waste handled is such a cramped shared space and No privacy? It would be a lot of work to add on a wing for just that.
This video is interesting like watching a National Geographic video, but irritating like having a nail in your seat. The analogies are prevalent, like fleas on a dog’s back and the voice over weak, like standing on wet carboard…
@0:02 you can't wear animal fur there without revereance. You can't tell whosehuman fur has been where.
And while I'm being poetic, you're not responsible for recognizing pen pals.
2:05 how to find a wife 😂
Couple hundred years from now theyll say alien built it 😑