No space in the cook pot/tube for a spork? Why did you use the water pouch, when you had snow available? Put warm rocks in the boots to dry them? Need trash bags to fill with pine/leaves for bedding/pillow. Will you bury the pipe somewhere? Spray glue on the pipe, roll it in the appropriate landscape. Natural camo!
Pineneedles burn really well and you had a bunch of those right next to your shelter and fire, would’ve helped get your initial fire going a lot easier. Maybe tuck your shirt in? The exposed skin probably not helping you keep warm.
I'm going to say that you put the video together very well.. that said. That system would lead you to hypothermia. On top of the fact that your face would be frozen to the side of your boots. Mors has some videos that would benefit you greatly. He created what is called the super shelter. He also had a survival kit that he packed inside of a small pot and at one time they sold them. You should look up up the contents and the reason why he had them in the kit and how to use them.... Get rid of those water pouches and put a water filter and purification. Add a 16 x 16 thick clear painters drop cloth. Add a compass. Do away with cheap saw. Add two 18 inch saw blades and two 1/4 bolts three inch long with wing nuts. Do away with sleeping bag. That will kill u. Put two 55 gallon drum liners in it. The thickest you can find. Add cat T and ifak. One 100 percent wool socks hat and scarf gloves. 200 rounds of ammo.
A couple yards of baling wire won't eat up much space, but would be very useful. Or use some long steel fishing leaders. For cordage some heavy braided fishing line can be used.
👍 .. from reading reviews, I believe that the Corona Saw does the job. I have a 'Felco 600' Garden Pruning Saw that has given very good service. Being Switzerland, a little more than $17.00, but still reasonably priced .. and available including replacement blades (not that I have needed one yet) at my local 'Bau Centre'. One does not necessarily have to chase after 'brand products' touted by You Tubers to get gear that gets the job done and not at a price premium to boot.
Great vid, I was just out stayin in my get home bag shelter, I was trying to stay low key without a fire an I did an A frame out of grabber blankets an I opened up two 55 gallon drum liners to cap the ends and lite a sterno fuel can inside and it got to 60 degrees in there, while it was 33 outside. However they only last 2 hours but I did find some that are suppose to last 6 hours.
Good morning my friend, here in Brazil the preparations are increasing due to the instability in the country...beautiful videos and keep going. Big hug from your Brazilian follower and trainer
Good to hear from you my friend. Im so glad to hear you are taking care of yourself by preparing, very smart! I shall pray for you. Stay strong, stay safe, and stay prepared!
@@idahoprepper I'm glad you answered my friend, you're a good guy. May God bless you and your family. I had a channel and taught how to be prepared for difficult times... but here in Brazil it doesn't have much value and I ended the channel because it showed my equipment in general. I hope one day to shake hands.
Great idea. Cutting tools and pot, or can with lid, is a good idea. But I would skip the snacks and put white rice and a lot of salt which can stand freezing, and spices for acquired meat. I would also put snares for small animals and for deer. And I would put ammo and some birthday candles to help with fire starting. And I would also put a poncho, 55 gal drum liner, and a double sized SOL Mylar heat sheet for one half of the lean to shelter, some polyester cordage, gorilla tape, and a plastic drop cloth to go over the Mylar to create a Mors and Kelly Carlson super shelter. A rolled up woobie with a Sol Mylar blanket shiny side out safety pinned to it makes a very good blanket. Put a slit horizontally in the liner and Mylar to allow your head to go through it and it then can be worn with the poncho as a waterproof over coat. I reinforced the slit on the liner by sewing around it, and the Mylar corners and slit with clear packaging tape. I’ve used that poncho Mylar liner system for years. And You could tie that cache tube on the inside of one of those evergreen trees that you were passing by. You got me thinking. Thanks. I enjoyed the video.
I think you made a good choice conserving your cordage. I cringe when I see YT "preppers" cutting their cordage when they don't need to or wasting it in other ways. In addition to your reasoning, I might add that, a limb, used as a ridge line, might make a "widow maker" work harder for the win. Add a 99 cent clear shower curtain liner to your kit and you can build a "super shelter" that will let you use the "greenhouse effect" to stay even warmer.
All of that for 60$ is impressive! I love that you got out and tested it. With your family in mind… do you set several in one location or do you have an entirely different tube cache?
Very nice field test! Instead of the mylar bivvy, I'd recommend something a bit sturdier, such as the Escape or Escape Lite from SOL. Also a spoon. :) Thanks!
@@idahoprepper We just got home. Did the 8:30 cruise. It was snowy and windy, but at least it was above freezing. Standing in line to get on the boat reminded me of waiting in line at TSA. lol
I wonder if a 6" pvc might work better ? Being wider , means more space , gear would fit better , wouldnt have to be as tall . Wouldnt be any worse than a WW2 german gas mask canister .
Always seems a bit odd to me that preppers tend to live in the very coldest places. Humanity only survived previous population bottlenecks in places that were warm.
@@BeCatholicNotBogusOrdoheat strokes are a very real thing in combat, but cold makes it so hard to even wake up and throw that blanket off in the morning…
I loved the multi-use cache tube. Personally not fond of SOL, I never had a good experience with one. Sleeping with my clothes on has never served me well either. Not that you should strip on camera, NEVER. Loved the cache tube. That could easily work buried. I'm betting above ground in the right spot as well.
Have you tried sleeping one of those milar bags? I get one of those cotton or fleece liners to double down. Food and First aid wise, I'd suggest mulivitamins and a basic pocket pharmacy. (diarea meds, cold meds, vitamin c, electrolytes, and aspirin) aren't bad things to have.)
Great video with lots of great ideas! We’re up here in north Idaho, CDA area
Glad to have stumbled across your channel. Subscribed! 👍🏼
I appreciate your effort to make this vid. Enjoyed it, thanks.
It’s cool that such a small container full of supplies can turn a miserable situation into a comfortable one . Great video
Add some #36 bank line. Strong enough for building your shelter. Great video.
I love this show!!🍿🍿
Thank you, and Thanks for watching!
No space in the cook pot/tube for a spork?
Why did you use the water pouch, when you had snow available?
Put warm rocks in the boots to dry them?
Need trash bags to fill with pine/leaves for bedding/pillow.
Will you bury the pipe somewhere?
Spray glue on the pipe, roll it in the appropriate landscape. Natural camo!
Good advice! Thanks for watching!
Pineneedles burn really well and you had a bunch of those right next to your shelter and fire, would’ve helped get your initial fire going a lot easier.
Maybe tuck your shirt in? The exposed skin probably not helping you keep warm.
Are you worried the Datrex water pouches will freeze then burst, flooding the rest of the container?
I'm going to say that you put the video together very well.. that said. That system would lead you to hypothermia. On top of the fact that your face would be frozen to the side of your boots. Mors has some videos that would benefit you greatly. He created what is called the super shelter. He also had a survival kit that he packed inside of a small pot and at one time they sold them. You should look up up the contents and the reason why he had them in the kit and how to use them.... Get rid of those water pouches and put a water filter and purification. Add a 16 x 16 thick clear painters drop cloth. Add a compass. Do away with cheap saw. Add two 18 inch saw blades and two 1/4 bolts three inch long with wing nuts. Do away with sleeping bag. That will kill u. Put two 55 gallon drum liners in it. The thickest you can find. Add cat T and ifak. One 100 percent wool socks hat and scarf gloves. 200 rounds of ammo.
Camp looks great. Cool video.
A couple yards of baling wire won't eat up much space, but would be very useful. Or use some long steel fishing leaders. For cordage some heavy braided fishing line can be used.
This was fucking lit. Well done, love the concept.
If you are looking for a cheap and good cutting saw, corona saws are only 17 bucks and you can cut logs with it.
Good advice! Thanks for watching!
👍 .. from reading reviews, I believe that the Corona Saw does the job.
I have a 'Felco 600' Garden Pruning Saw that has given very good service. Being Switzerland, a little more than $17.00, but still reasonably priced .. and available including replacement blades (not that I have needed one yet) at my local 'Bau Centre'.
One does not necessarily have to chase after 'brand products' touted by You Tubers to get gear that gets the job done and not at a price premium to boot.
@@thomasmusso1147we have one and it’s fantastic
Just found your channel. It’s nice finding someone from idaho. I live in the CDA area where abouts are you?
Im in CDA as well! Thanks for watching!
Great vid, I was just out stayin in my get home bag shelter, I was trying to stay low key without a fire an I did an A frame out of grabber blankets an I opened up two 55 gallon drum liners to cap the ends and lite a sterno fuel can inside and it got to 60 degrees in there, while it was 33 outside. However they only last 2 hours but I did find some that are suppose to last 6 hours.
That’s awesome, you should have made a video of it! Thanks for watching!
lol unfortunately im not very video savy l@@idahoprepper
@@brenton1865 neither am I.. that’s what video editing software is for! 😆
Good morning my friend, here in Brazil the preparations are increasing due to the instability in the country...beautiful videos and keep going. Big hug from your Brazilian follower and trainer
Good to hear from you my friend. Im so glad to hear you are taking care of yourself by preparing, very smart! I shall pray for you. Stay strong, stay safe, and stay prepared!
@@idahoprepper I'm glad you answered my friend, you're a good guy. May God bless you and your family. I had a channel and taught how to be prepared for difficult times... but here in Brazil it doesn't have much value and I ended the channel because it showed my equipment in general. I hope one day to shake hands.
Great idea. Cutting tools and pot, or can with lid, is a good idea. But I would skip the snacks and put white rice and a lot of salt which can stand freezing, and spices for acquired meat. I would also put snares for small animals and for deer. And I would put ammo and some birthday candles to help with fire starting. And I would also put a poncho, 55 gal drum liner, and a double sized SOL Mylar heat sheet for one half of the lean to shelter, some polyester cordage, gorilla tape, and a plastic drop cloth to go over the Mylar to create a Mors and Kelly Carlson super shelter. A rolled up woobie with a Sol Mylar blanket shiny side out safety pinned to it makes a very good blanket. Put a slit horizontally in the liner and Mylar to allow your head to go through it and it then can be worn with the poncho as a waterproof over coat. I reinforced the slit on the liner by sewing around it, and the Mylar corners and slit with clear packaging tape. I’ve used that poncho Mylar liner system for years. And You could tie that cache tube on the inside of one of those evergreen trees that you were passing by. You got me thinking. Thanks. I enjoyed the video.
I think you made a good choice conserving your cordage. I cringe when I see YT "preppers" cutting their cordage when they don't need to or wasting it in other ways. In addition to your reasoning, I might add that, a limb, used as a ridge line, might make a "widow maker" work harder for the win.
Add a 99 cent clear shower curtain liner to your kit and you can build a "super shelter" that will let you use the "greenhouse effect" to stay even warmer.
Great advice, thanks for watching!
I've been asking and looking everywhere for someone to go on a week survival adventure and make it like a survival guide....(good content)
Great Video, thanks for sharing.
Thank you, and Thanks for watching!
This was a really cool video, man. I can't believe you got all that gear in that tube!! Can't wait for the next one 👊
You and me both! 😂 Thanks for watching man!
All of that for 60$ is impressive! I love that you got out and tested it. With your family in mind… do you set several in one location or do you have an entirely different tube cache?
Very nice field test! Instead of the mylar bivvy, I'd recommend something a bit sturdier, such as the Escape or Escape Lite from SOL. Also a spoon. :) Thanks!
I would add a spoon and fork to eat with.
Make more videos you’re awesome…
Thank you very much! I’m glad you enjoy them, thanks and for watching!
Going to Lake Coeur d'Alene tonight for the Christmas Cruise. Should be fun.
My family and I do that every year! Thanks for watching!
@@idahoprepper We just got home. Did the 8:30 cruise. It was snowy and windy, but at least it was above freezing. Standing in line to get on the boat reminded me of waiting in line at TSA. lol
Interesting videos, just found your channel and subscribed. From Moses Hole Washington
Thats awesome, thank you for the sub! and Thanks for watching!
won't the water inside freeze if I have it hidden somewhere in the forest?
I wonder if a 6" pvc might work better ? Being wider , means more space , gear would fit better , wouldnt have to be as tall . Wouldnt be any worse than a WW2 german gas mask canister .
I do suggest some other resource for procuring water ,, a sawyer filter or such ,, those 3 tiny bags of water aren’t going to be enough for 72 hrs
He can boil snow with the pot he has if need be.
Always seems a bit odd to me that preppers tend to live in the very coldest places. Humanity only survived previous population bottlenecks in places that were warm.
And the smartest populations have tended to be in the cold climates. They can’t have the luxury of being lazy much of the time like hot climates.
@@BeCatholicNotBogusOrdoheat strokes are a very real thing in combat, but cold makes it so hard to even wake up and throw that blanket off in the morning…
I loved the multi-use cache tube. Personally not fond of SOL, I never had a good experience with one. Sleeping with my clothes on has never served me well either. Not that you should strip on camera, NEVER. Loved the cache tube. That could easily work buried. I'm betting above ground in the right spot as well.
✌🏼🤠
Have you tried sleeping one of those milar bags? I get one of those cotton or fleece liners to double down.
Food and First aid wise, I'd suggest mulivitamins and a basic pocket pharmacy. (diarea meds, cold meds, vitamin c, electrolytes, and aspirin) aren't bad things to have.)
No I have not but that is great advice, Thanks for watching!
👍🐿️