🌲 5 trees Every survivalist should know these 🌳🦊Survival knowledge simply explained👌
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 9 ก.พ. 2025
- From which tree do you eat in a survival situation? Which tree seeds are edible? What can you use to build a collection basket and a fish trap? Which ones do you use firewood from and why?
In this video there is extensive, well-founded specialist knowledge, not only for the survival area!
All the best,
your Vanessa
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Your English is good. We understand your English well and we are very thankful that you do these video in English. We are learning a lot .
I actually really like the word she used earlier which is not a real word technically I guess in English but I'm going to use it because I think it's just awesome she's she's the word 'intelagant' which I am going to interpret as elegant intelligence I really like that phrase so I'm going to start using that word we'll see if it catches on
@@jeremiahjohnson9216
YES...I like your thinking...INTELAGANT it is from now on 😊 for elegant intelligence 👍
I loved your video it was very interesting
100%
☺️
Enchanting delivery at its best....rather rare.
I love trees Vanessa. They are my life because I’m a carpenter. The spruce, pine and fir are the most common trees for structures. They are soft wood or conifers, needles. The oak, beech and birch are used more for interior wood, cabinets, stairs, doors, or the wooden parts of windows. The are hardwood, broadleaf or deciduous. Your videos are very interesting.
Used to be a carpenter myself, Union you still have to work on World of course metal studs drywall God knows what else where is Carpenter is very adaptable doors hardware fancy North Shore type of work or just plain old commercial industrial kind of stuff. But I enjoyed your comment about understanding different varieties and grains in the wood
We call that mushroom the birch polypore mushroom here in Britain 13:32 . As you mentioned, it's also an excellent medicinal mushroom when you make a tea with it. When learning the difference between fir, pine and spruce trees in Britain we compare the needles, as you did, 21:28 then we memorise this phrase:
1] Fir is flat (i.e., fir tree needles are flat)
2] Spruce is square (spruce needles are square in shape)
3] Pine comes in pairs (the pine needles are joined at the bottom in pairs)
Fir is flat, spruce is square and pine comes in pairs :) . However, always remember, the deadly poisonous yew tree needles look very similar to fir tree needles. It's wise to learn how to identify that tree too. I'd like you to make the 'foraging in winter' video, please. Every bushcraft channel should teach this type of thing, it's literally crucial for survival, especially the way things are going now in our Western countries.
Yes we are in a spiritual war . Though it was won already by Christ . Just has to play out a little longer .
Most excellant information i got to learn. Treasures like that are worth paying attention to. Thank you
You are BRILLIANT. Thank you for sharing.
Very nicely done. Thank you. Please keep videos like this coming. More about trees please.
Good information, clearly communicated with a charming accent 😊
I think it's a German accent from Alemania. Again I can't spell very well.
I’m easily twice your age, an old Marine and someone who knows how to survive out in the wild, with minimal accessories, and I learned some interesting information in just this one short video. I’m a new subscriber and am looking forward to learning even more things from you. PS. Your English is perfectly fine and easily understandable, and the more you use it the more natural it will come. Bless you dear.
Thank you from Connecticut USA. Very informative
Your English is impressive, your information invaluable! Thank you!
I love your accent. You give very useful information, you’re very pretty also.🤗
Very interesting Vanessa. I would be interested in learning about winter foraging too.
Great information for survival. Loved your shepherd
I enjoy your videos. You said you are in Germany . I have Native American grandparents and German grandparents. I love learning about nature . Your videos are very good .
Thank you for the content Vanessa. You are the kind of person that should be teaching us these things. Your reverence for nature is epic. It is what we should all be doing. Nature's great resources must be preserved by mankind. Of course we will consume resources but if we replant the trees we take and preserve the Forrest, it can be done effectively. I know we don't do a good enough job of this in parts of the world but we can only hope we get better at it in the future.
I loved your video! I live on 55 acres in rural northeast Alabama and I'm an herbalist but just starting to learn trees. Your English is wonderful! My husband was from Germany,too!! (Rip Wilfred)
I'm from NE Alabama too. Country boy from the Southern end of Sand Mountain. I enjoy foraging, mushroom gathering, and squirrel hunting with my dogs. This video is both educational and entertaining.
Very informative ! Thank you for this wonderful lesson about these wonderful trees ! 🌲🪵🌱🍂
Awesome, thanks for sharing this video with us and let's keep it going ❤️
Enjoyed your video from America!! Would like to see more about the winter trees that are edible during this time
Personally I find her accent and demeanor easier to understand and quite calming and enjoyable. I prefer it over perfect English.
You provided a lot of good information on the trees, which I enjoyed. I think some winter videos would be great.
I agree. I would love videos about natural winter foods.
Aspirin was not taken from Willow but from Filipenda ulmaria. They both have salicílic acid but Bayer took it from the Ulmaria.
Aspirin does not use the natural acid but a sintetic, that's what acetil representa.
Good video, thank you for the information
I make acorn treats every thanksgiving. They're wonderful!
You are a great teacher with a beautiful personality.
Thank you for a very informative video. One thing to remember - In the pine family you want to avoid balsam fir, a very aromatic evergreen, the aromatic chemical is toxic. Its branches are used by country people to make wreaths for the holidays.
Being part Native American, I appreciate the knowledge that you share. I know you’ve had some had some hardships in the past. Im really happy to see you in front of the camera . ❤
Thank you! I enjoyed your video. I have made tea from the twigs of the black birch, which grows in the Appalachian mountains. The tea is sweet and fragrant. As you said, it is important not to take too much from one tree to prevent harm.
What a fascinating video. Thank you. Danke.
The indigenous peoples of North America also tell us much of the same information, and of course your compatriot Peter Wollheben has written and broadcast about trees, and more recently about the wider ecosphere. He and Suzanne Simard, once a forester and now a Professor of forestry in British Columbia, have taught us a great deal about both communication between trees.
You are clearly very involved with, and enthusiastic about this biome. Just wonderful. In a world with so many catastrophies you have cheered me up.
Don't apologise for your English, i understood you very well and thoroughly enjoyed your video. This is the first of your videos I've and i like the content so i have subscribed 😊 . Many thanks and keep up the great work 😊
Thanks I moved to wood's thirty-five years ago and quit job people need to learn old ways
This is also my dream or a cabin with bare basics
I hear ya brother, I moved to an off grid property 6 years ago and will never go back! I carry my water from the well, and firewood from the pile in -30, use the composting outhouse year round and have an outdoor shower that runs from a small solar panel that I can use 3 seasons of the year. For most people, this is their worst nightmare! For me, harvesting maple sap in the spring, and honey from the beehives in the field, and milling dead standing trees into lumber I can use to build with are a gift beyond compare. Hard work, but a good life that hums to the rhythm of nature!
@JuliusHeaths that sounds awesome and i agree the hard work pays off and gives you that sense of achievement unlike anything else, that and nature is just awesome 😄
Dear beautiful Vanessa, thank you for a very informative video, love and well wishes to you and your children ❤
Thank you very much for telling me about survival
brilliant , your explanation of trees in English is great I have tried speaking German from a cd but being a pensioner I find it hard and should have tried when I was younger you have done very well speaking English many thanks david
You can start a fire with birch bark in a thunderstorm it can be lit wet i live in the high desert no birches here lots of pinon though.this was great yr for pine nuts pinon seeds it is my favorite wood for the woodstove .thanks for all this great information glad i found you here.love and much light ✨️
Birch bark is a FANTASTIC fire starter, lights easily, burns hot and long. One of the go-to's.
The birch tree, I stopped there because I’m a kidney recipient and you said the leaves are good for flushing the kidneys. Now that was useful information. No one else said anything about what you shared.
nettle tea made from the young leaves at the top is also very good for kidneys as its a diuretic and has most vitamin that the body needs with the exception of d3 and and a couple of others i cannot remember. i used it when i was diagnosed with stage 3 ckd along with apple cider vinegar and bicarb of soda and i managed to reverse it obviously i also changed my diet and now go low carb with one good meal per day. nettles you can harvest and dry out in the sun or oven and store in a cotton pillow case in a cool dry room so you have a good all year supply, it also lowers blood pressure . tea made from the nettle root is reputed to be good for prostate cancer .
What are done with the stocks? Just cook and eat for nutrition. I heard they make strong cordage if I remember correctly.@@wichywoo
Is it true the Fir needles are flat making the needles like silkie and smooth as the fur of an animal? And spruce needles are square making it the opposite of for, making them less smooth but rough to pet like an animal?
The birch tree,Such a medicinal tree the sap can be harvested in the spring like a maple tree Also the yellow birch yields a mushroom called CHAGA witch can be made into tea .I am from northern Canada and i heard people say that it cured cancer.Have a great day
Thank you for sharing your knowledge with us. I admire your boldness in doing this video in English. I wouldn't try it in any of the languages I know... Again , thank you!
Great info on the birch tree, also don't forget the birch polypore that one can slice, dry and make an antiparasitic tea with it, a bit bitter so may want to add honey or star anis for flavour.
The memories of the Black Forest, and the woods south of Augsburg came to me as I watched this. Thank you, Vanessa for giving me a chance to relive a past memory. I did make willow bark tea whenever I went camping during the summers. Good times!
Phenomenal I can't wait for the next video you mentioned ♡
Beech leaves like a squirrels ear. My Gramma taught me are best for identifying, emergency eating, hot boiled beech nuts are a traditional treat!
Birch trees grow Chaga also. Chaga has amazing health benefits. You can also make birch Syurp by getting the sap in the spring and boiling it till it gets thick and sweet. I live in Northern Michigan USA and get CHAGA. Your knowledge is impressive.
I'm glad I clicked. I've learned a lot. Thank you.
Thank you thank you for this beautiful gift!!!! This is the first time I have watched your lesson, and look forward to learning from all your videos!! what a gift to the world!
Intelegent Vanessa - easy to learn from you. Many thank you for going out in the cold wind to teach us.
Thank You Very Much .!
MAGNIFICENT PRESENTATION!!! I learned some important information. Your English is great.
Thank you for sharing this, and especially for presenting it in English.
This video is also charming to watch.
The fungus you were speaking of is, I think, Piptiporus betulinas, or Birch polypore fungus. It has been used to help staunch wounds and cuts, as tinder (kept smouldering, in a tin with tiny holes in it), as a razor strop for keeping a keen edge on knives and razors, and for curing diarrhoea in both humans and cattle.
Fascinating video. Thanks again.
Great job! Even though English is not your first language, you did a great job communicating the information. Keep up the good work.
My very first time encountering You and amazing how my attention belong to you. Sharing your thoughts of knowledge with intent of education of your own interests. Seeing an excellent vlog and plan to gone your site.. Language was fine to me, because your doing it.. Creating with your passion was real and kept me focused with your thoughts. Don't be to hard on yourself,, if you feel lacking of doing well.. Just Know You were perfect as to a Great Job..😂
Very condensed information without labern. Thank you for your work 👍
Yes, I would love more of these videos. Most of edibles and medicinal plants and trees. And how to use them. Thanks so very much!
I just love hearing you speaking your voice is soothing to me... 😇👍🙏🫶🌹🩵
Hickory, slippery elm, wild cherry, some more trees you should know, here in the USA we have lots of trees that will sustain you. Birch beer, sasfrasas trees for root beer, I grew in the the woods,my father was seriously a old mountain man born in 1896, I learned what you would call the true lost ways.
Thank you. I loved your video and well done with your English. It may not be perfect but you still had the courage to make this video in English and I understood every word you said. I would never be able to speak your native language so you are very good to learn our language and to teach us what you know. Thank you again.
Thank you for sharing your knowledge about trees and the different uses .
Thank you so much for the lesson on the types of trees, I found this very interesting as I do bushcraft survival myself and your English is good and understood everything you was talking about, thank you again and I look forward to the next video 👍🙏
23:40 The word, sweet Woman of the Woods, is "masticate". An old Latin root, I believe.
You mentioned the birch, a tree with many qualities for the survivalist. The inner layer, the cambium, can be shredded into strips for soup, or just eaten raw. According to Bradford Angier, birch is also a good source of tea.
Thank you Vanessa - great information! I just subscribed.💚🌳💚
"your stomach will be very grumpy" lol. indeed. You can place shelled acorns in a mesh or permeable bag and leave them in a stream for a few days and it will wash the tannins away nicely.
Good stuff !!
Don't worry about the English, we understand :).
In other words, live in balance with nature.
The willowbark I used made a nice purple tea that definitely worked on headaches. Scrub it, peel it, shave it up fairly fine in long bits that will be easy to fish out of your teacup.
I enjoyed your video. Some very important information I've never heard.I especially enjoy parts of German history. I encourage you to create more of your pleasant videos. Please write your script in Deutsch first, then translate to English. 🌲🌿🌲🌳
Love tge accent . the nuts leach tanic acids you wanna cook it change water till its clear youll have to do this several times
The willow tree is associated with lots of spiritual activity such as ghost sightings and spirits. Its branch is often used to make a wand too! Guanyin is also associated with this tree as its bendy/watery/adaptive/regenerative qualities symbolize its yin qualities.
The acorn preparation is quite tedious. I actually bagged many lbs of it and put it in my toilet reservoir for months to let it automatically wash away the tannins. (This was when I lived in the city being the odd person collecting acorns at parks)
Thank you for sharing your knowledge!
You're not the only odd person you should know. I also love trees - my grandmother used to collect walnuts. She'd always have a couple buckets drying.
Trees are wonderful! This was very helpful!
That was well explained. Thank you.
Thank you for this educational video 👍
I’m from America, and your English is fine!
Thank you Vanessa I learnt so much, I especially liked the part about willow containing aspirin. Have a good Christmas & come back soon.
Watching this was and excellent 26:10 minute investment of my time. 😊 Very educational and you mentioned a few things that were actually new info for me. Thanks for taking the time to edit and post this. I Subscribed and I'll be checking out more of your videos!
Your explanation is very articulate. This video is so informative. Great stuff, thank you.
Good video, lots of good information and your English is fine . Hearing you talk is good !
🤍🤍🤍 The Ancestral Spirit is strong with this one. 😉 Beautiful. And a Great Dog 👍🏻👍🏻 Thank you for the information.
Keep up the awesome work!! I will watch!
What a wonderful video! We learned so much! Thank you Vanesa! 🙏⛪🕊
I love your accent and enjoy listening to your descriptions...
Just found your channel.... Really interesting and informative.... & a great style . Thank you.
Oak trees have tanic acid so you can chip it up soak and boil it with animal hides to make leather you can also do it with acorns and make them edible. when the water is a dark tea color you have enough to tan.
Thank you dear that was very informative. I had no idea is that the birch tree has so many medicinal purposes. The American Indians used the polis. I had a boil on my leg when I was very little. My stepfather put a potato polis on the boil and it drew all the poison out of it. I am fascinated at The healing arts. Thank you for your efforts and all your time. Great job dear!!!❤
Thank you. That is really good knowledge about trees which i never knew. Nature is perfect. Everything adds up as showed with the beechnuts
I really enjoyed that. Thankyou. Yes more bushcraft knowledge please.
fantastc video very interesting keep up the good work.
Thanks Vanessa for another great video it's always nice to learn about trees Stay happy stay safe 🦊🏆👍✨
Nice that you like it Logan! Have a nice day!
Can you please make a video on which mushrooms are good to eat, and which mushrooms are poisonous. I enjoyed watching your video. Thank you for sharing your knowledge.. God bless 🙏
Wonderful Vanessa very informative keep it coming!
Very well done ... thanks from Colorado USA ... I harvest whole trees for lumber but only ones that or sick or dieing ...
First time here, and subscribed __because you are a wealth of information that is important to know, even if one is just taking a walk/hike through the woods/forest. (I have a 'connection' with trees.🌳💖)
Thank you for doing videos in English. 😋
Love, Light, and Blessings. 🙏😇💫✨🌱🌿🌻🐝🌳🌎💖🙌😺
A charming discussion. Thank you - looking forward to more.
Bless your heart! Your efforts will help many in the near future as wars will be everywhere. God bless you and keep up the good work!
What a great video !!! Birch bark itself is a great fire starter !! So glad I found your channel !!!
Thank you so much for this great information! I really enjoyed your video.
God bless you and the children in the upcoming Christmas season. Very informative as always dear Vanessa. Small mention is harvesting bark from a Birch. You should never cut all the way around in gathering bark as this will kill the tree. I would say no more than 40percent.
Just gotta love this girl.
Yes, get more info abt acorn b4 start eating them. You need to flush out mist of the tannin from them b4 eating.
Very beautiful and knowledgeable. Thank you Vanessa. ❤
First time here; subscribed ❤
Loved your video!!! I learned so much. Hope to learn more from you 🌹.
Nice video, Vanessa. My first time watching you. Reminded me of how I was taught to tell the difference between pine, spruce and fir trees by their needles:
Pine- pointy and come in packages (of 2, 3, 4, etc.)
Spruce- Square and sharp
Fir- Flat, flexible and friendly
Looking forward to your next video!
Hello from Oregon USA. I enjoyed your class in the woods. Thank you for talking slow so we could get all the details. Very good knowledge to have, you teach well.
I absolutely love this video! Please share everything that you know. I am so interested in seeing more content like this.
Thanks for sharing the information, I really enjoyed your presentation.
I always loved and grew willow trees and never knew it was medicinal. Thank you for all the important knowledge. We never know everything and can always learn something new. Great video!
What can you do with that. I must have not saw.?
@@shelleypilcher3812 She was talking about how the willow has pain relief qualities, and the main ingredient is used to make aspirin.
@@shelleypilcher3812 the acetylsalicylic acid (active ingredient in aspirin) is found in the bark and can also be used as acne treatment or to kill ringworm. Also btw check out images for “living willow fences.” Absolutely beautiful.
I wondered about spruce and fir. Thank you.