@clayhayeshunter Sir , you're the the deal . .. This is thee most impressive and detailed ,hard core survival bushcraft I've ever seen . Thank you for sharing your phenomenal knowledge.
@Clark42EoC I'm not talking about a cedar strip and fiberglass canoe. I mean one with a birch bark skin , a split cedar inner frame, all sewn together with spruce roots. A traditional native canoe.
@@withoutfurtheradoforever I could only speak to a cedar strip canoe cause that's all I know about but I apologize...I did see you said birch bark but you also clearly knew what kind of canoe I meant when I spoke of strip price.
I know all about fish traps. I was making them with my little brother when I was 10. It's a great idea to bring this knowledge to others right now. Good idea for a video! We caught plenty of fish. But also quite a few turtles. Now, as a general rule, if God puts something in a hard to open shell, there's something good inside. I'll save you the trouble. Turtles are the exception. There's no reason to torture those poor little things looking for anything good to eat. It's just goo. Not proud of it, but I checked. Don't judge us, we really were hungry. Not the, "boy I could really go for chipotle, right now" kind of hungry. More the, "my God, I've eaten beans for the last 4 days in a row" kind of hungry. Bringing home a catfish makes you feel like a little hero.
A lot of time and effort went into this no doubt. I have made similar fish traps on survival exercises when staying away more than 3-4 days. Great work as usual fellow Clay.
This was another great video from you. It IS time consuming to make one of these BUT like you said it can really pay off. Plus, it's about survival so what else are you doing after building a shelter, gathering fire wood and setting passive traps for mammals? Once again, great video, thanks!
My mans caught some fish sticks without trying lol! Nah, seriously though that was an excellent display of craftsmanship. I'd use this video as a Boy Scout tutorial for damn sure.
Beautiful piece of work. Art, even. And effective. Pleased that you let the bebbe fish free. Nice tutorial. Bamboo seems so nice to work with. Thank you.
Absolute art. The removable door is smart and the craftsmanship is the kind of work you would see from primitive living peoples. For survival I would only say that the standard way of just tying one end closed in a taper with a pressure fitting cone in the entrance would save time and energy, but this is far superior and long lasting...but of course you know this lol. I love the entrance ramp as well, never seen that before. Thanks for another great video Clay and showing an old dog a new trick. All the best as always.
just_another_WFR The number of ways you are dead wrong and arrogant about it says all anyone needs to know. First off, the survival in my name refers to 20 years of fighting deadly health issues daily. Second, the design I spoke of is the same one used by many cultures for thousands of years. Third, I have made three of these traps over the decades. Made from whole saplings and tied together with much thinner strips that were quicker to tie. Catching fish in these traps isn't rocket science. In the time this took, a person could make three of quick ones compared to the nice once Clay made...more like have one in the water to catch bait for overnight promitory peg dead falls in the same amount of time. So yes, his is far more durable than a quick version so it will last a lot longer especially if you are packing it out as you travel. Fourth, you have no idea who you are talking to and to assume your masterful expertise over what I am saying and come at me like I'm an idiot is absurd. Who does that?. I had nothing but good things to say. In any real scenario you are the type to be first thrown out of the group so I hope you do know it all. I grew up in the mountains of NC in the 70s. We lived off the land and the farm before I added 40 years of experience to it. Hell, I barely wore shoes before about 9yo. We would go as kids and camp for days living on trout, rabbit and squirrels at the old family moonshine camps and that was normal life. Get a grip man, whatever this is that you are doing isn't it.
@just_another_WFR wow, you claim all of this experience but speak as if there is a simple answer and only yours is correct for all fishing all situations. You sound ridiculous saying you have done all these things in all of these countries yet you waste your time telling me how wrong I am. What you are saying doesn't even make sense. When you make the trap larger than Clays (about chest high) it has plenty of cage qualities to fit your claims as an expert of global fish psychology. Next, when you use them in small fast mountain streams you can funnel the fish into it and don't even use bait. Fish traps entirely depend on where, when, how and for what. Your blanket statement to try to be somebody and say my advice is deadly only shows more about what you are lacking is far more vast and personal than basic discussion about things I have proven work with my own hands...as well as endless other people throughout time. All of this is ignorant and seems more like a troll with no life than a world traveller. People that travel have respect and manners. Anyone that says "when yall with survival" (while being a complete asshole out of the gate) doesnt have the character to do much of anything real. I'm done here, this is obviously a waste of time.
Such an amazing video, and all done with just one knife! It's also amazing how hard it seems for the viewers to reach all the way over to that thumbs up icon on all their phone screens and touch it with a finger. Keep up the great work Clay.
Clay, I have a question for you, since you have experience in two totally different environments (Idaho and Florida) which do you think is the most conducive to outdoor survival and what are the biggest challenges of each area?
Very cool, I have seen many fish traps and this one is good. I am curious about something else I noticed, is your wedding ring made of wood? If so, did you make it, or can you direct me to someone else who makes them, preferrable in video format.
Very nice trap build mate, well done. Curious as to why you totally ring-barked that tree when it seemed there were others close by. When I go to an area and collect cordage material I generally take a strip from each tree until I have enough. That way the tree survives and I can take more again from the same place over the years. If I do ring-bark, it’s because I want the wood as well. Just an observation, keep up the good work
The cedar bark intrigued me. Black ash is kind of like that. I only know enough to be dangerous, lol. I'm working on a black ash basket. One tree would yeild quite a bit. I wonder if it's the same with cedar. We're losing our black ash to the emerald ash borer.
Yeah, it kills the tree. The inner layer of the bark is where the transport system of trees are situated called the xylem and phloem respectively. Water and nutrients cant move to the top of the tree anymore and it will die.
Hard to believe this is even classified bushcraft and not fine woodworking. You're an inspiration 100%.
Thanks 👍
@@clayhayeshunter lol nah that's my line...you're the one teaching me new things.
@clayhayeshunter
Sir , you're the the deal .
..
This is thee most impressive and detailed ,hard core survival bushcraft I've ever seen .
Thank you for sharing your phenomenal knowledge.
I see a birch bark canoe in your future, Clay. Just a hunch.
That would be so cool
Probably one of the few people who wouldn't go broke buying the strips...cause yeah he doesn't have to buy them.
@Clark42EoC I'm not talking about a cedar strip and fiberglass canoe. I mean one with a birch bark skin , a split cedar inner frame, all sewn together with spruce roots. A traditional native canoe.
@@withoutfurtheradoforever I could only speak to a cedar strip canoe cause that's all I know about but I apologize...I did see you said birch bark but you also clearly knew what kind of canoe I meant when I spoke of strip price.
That’s the best fish trap I’ve ever seen!
Beautiful work. Just a knife, a brain, and some very skilled hands. Thanks for sharing!
I know all about fish traps. I was making them with my little brother when I was 10.
It's a great idea to bring this knowledge to others right now. Good idea for a video!
We caught plenty of fish. But also quite a few turtles. Now, as a general rule, if God puts something in a hard to open shell, there's something good inside. I'll save you the trouble. Turtles are the exception. There's no reason to torture those poor little things looking for anything good to eat. It's just goo. Not proud of it, but I checked.
Don't judge us, we really were hungry. Not the, "boy I could really go for chipotle, right now" kind of hungry. More the, "my God, I've eaten beans for the last 4 days in a row" kind of hungry. Bringing home a catfish makes you feel like a little hero.
A lot of time and effort went into this no doubt. I have made similar fish traps on survival exercises when staying away more than 3-4 days. Great work as usual fellow Clay.
Many thanks!
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, you’re the best bushcrafter on TH-cam!
That is soo awesome!!! And beautiful!
Just like I used to build with my grandpa. Good times. Thanks for the video, Clay!
Glad you enjoyed it
He know what his doing…this guy will survive any situation ,even staying in the thick jungle like Malaysia, indonesia maybe Brunei jungle.
wow, awesome work. thank you for inspiration!!!
Thank you! Cheers!
It would be interesting to see you and John Plant do a colab
❤❤❤ You are a multi-talented person! I admire you so much!
TOP video and skill! Always. thanks for your useful videos, Clay!
Glad you like them!
This was another great video from you. It IS time consuming to make one of these BUT like you said it can really pay off. Plus, it's about survival so what else are you doing after building a shelter, gathering fire wood and setting passive traps for mammals? Once again, great video, thanks!
Omg the half lapped chair out of a stump. Bravo sir!
My mans caught some fish sticks without trying lol! Nah, seriously though that was an excellent display of craftsmanship. I'd use this video as a Boy Scout tutorial for damn sure.
I love adventures. Great!
Beautiful piece of work. Art, even. And effective. Pleased that you let the bebbe fish free. Nice tutorial. Bamboo seems so nice to work with. Thank you.
Thank you very much
Absolute art. The removable door is smart and the craftsmanship is the kind of work you would see from primitive living peoples. For survival I would only say that the standard way of just tying one end closed in a taper with a pressure fitting cone in the entrance would save time and energy, but this is far superior and long lasting...but of course you know this lol. I love the entrance ramp as well, never seen that before. Thanks for another great video Clay and showing an old dog a new trick. All the best as always.
@just_another_WFR lol ok.
just_another_WFR The number of ways you are dead wrong and arrogant about it says all anyone needs to know. First off, the survival in my name refers to 20 years of fighting deadly health issues daily. Second, the design I spoke of is the same one used by many cultures for thousands of years. Third, I have made three of these traps over the decades. Made from whole saplings and tied together with much thinner strips that were quicker to tie. Catching fish in these traps isn't rocket science. In the time this took, a person could make three of quick ones compared to the nice once Clay made...more like have one in the water to catch bait for overnight promitory peg dead falls in the same amount of time. So yes, his is far more durable than a quick version so it will last a lot longer especially if you are packing it out as you travel. Fourth, you have no idea who you are talking to and to assume your masterful expertise over what I am saying and come at me like I'm an idiot is absurd. Who does that?. I had nothing but good things to say. In any real scenario you are the type to be first thrown out of the group so I hope you do know it all. I grew up in the mountains of NC in the 70s. We lived off the land and the farm before I added 40 years of experience to it. Hell, I barely wore shoes before about 9yo. We would go as kids and camp for days living on trout, rabbit and squirrels at the old family moonshine camps and that was normal life. Get a grip man, whatever this is that you are doing isn't it.
@just_another_WFR wow, you claim all of this experience but speak as if there is a simple answer and only yours is correct for all fishing all situations. You sound ridiculous saying you have done all these things in all of these countries yet you waste your time telling me how wrong I am. What you are saying doesn't even make sense. When you make the trap larger than Clays (about chest high) it has plenty of cage qualities to fit your claims as an expert of global fish psychology. Next, when you use them in small fast mountain streams you can funnel the fish into it and don't even use bait. Fish traps entirely depend on where, when, how and for what. Your blanket statement to try to be somebody and say my advice is deadly only shows more about what you are lacking is far more vast and personal than basic discussion about things I have proven work with my own hands...as well as endless other people throughout time. All of this is ignorant and seems more like a troll with no life than a world traveller. People that travel have respect and manners. Anyone that says "when yall with survival" (while being a complete asshole out of the gate) doesnt have the character to do much of anything real. I'm done here, this is obviously a waste of time.
This man would definitely make it on Naked & Afraid!
It would be a vacation for him.
simple... yeah right 😃 🤘🏻
Mantap sobat survival nya
Great stuff as always Clay . You should check out the crazy bone yard I found deep in the mountains on my last 3 day outing . Pretty crazy stuff.
Incredible! You are truly amazing 👏
ALASKA HERE keep up all the great shareing
Thanks
Beautiful work and a nice catch and release.
One of your best videos! Great job Clay!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Damn fine trap sir!
Beautiful!
Thank you!
@@clayhayeshunter Why did you strip off some of the inner bamboo? Because it is less abrasive for working with?
you are very skillful👍
Amazing!! Good stuff!!
Glad you think so!
My favorite aspect of this was knife-only.
Work of art 👍🏻
😂i cant imagine this was recomended for in to another corner of the earth ! ❤from india
An art, an art of Clay Hayes!
faaa what enviable skill and super neat.👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
Very nicely done Clay....👏👏👏👏
Thank you kindly
Nice work. Beautifully crafted trap. Good for longterm use. ❤
Yes, thanks
Really cool! 👍
Echt gut geworden .👍🏻
Amazing ❤
I really like what you convey
Truly art!
Good trap man 😮
Cool trap, Jack, RI, USA
This man is amazing!!!
Best content on TH-cam. Bar none.
Very clever 😊
Super impressive, and very well built.
Thank you very much!
that was cool you had the camera inside
Your dog must be patient. Great video
Fantastic!
Many thanks!
So attractive, my friend❤❤
Damn good trap
Very cool!!
Such an amazing video, and all done with just one knife! It's also amazing how hard it seems for the viewers to reach all the way over to that thumbs up icon on all their phone screens and touch it with a finger. Keep up the great work Clay.
Many thanks 🙏
You're on fire man.
Very nice video.
Thanks for visiting
Holy crap I'm the first viewer!
I always eagerly wait for ur vedios sir🙏❤️
Clay, I have a question for you, since you have experience in two totally different environments (Idaho and Florida) which do you think is the most conducive to outdoor survival and what are the biggest challenges of each area?
Man, they would take an entire essay to answer. In short, they both have their significant challenges. I don’t think I could pick a winner.
Stout 🤙🏼
Looks so clean! In case there is no bamboo around, what would be your recommended substitute? Willow maybe?
Willow would work great
Very cool, I have seen many fish traps and this one is good. I am curious about something else I noticed, is your wedding ring made of wood? If so, did you make it, or can you direct me to someone else who makes them, preferrable in video format.
I wish I had your patience.👍
Very nice trap build mate, well done. Curious as to why you totally ring-barked that tree when it seemed there were others close by. When I go to an area and collect cordage material I generally take a strip from each tree until I have enough. That way the tree survives and I can take more again from the same place over the years. If I do ring-bark, it’s because I want the wood as well. Just an observation, keep up the good work
Because the forest of overstocked which you can see by the lack of understory plants.
@@clayhayeshunter Ah right, I’m in the top of Australia and was talking about native, unmanaged bush/woods/forest
The cedar bark intrigued me. Black ash is kind of like that. I only know enough to be dangerous, lol. I'm working on a black ash basket. One tree would yeild quite a bit. I wonder if it's the same with cedar. We're losing our black ash to the emerald ash borer.
Amazing skill! If you had a choice between a large knife or hatchet such as GB Wildlife what is more versatile for you doing bushcraft??
This man has changed me from a 13 year old sedentary gamer to a 14 year old survivalist.
❤
Panfish. Best tasting boogers, just wish they was bigger!!
Wow nice
Next you can build a house undergroud with nothing but a old mower blade and a straw hat.
I've always wanted to build a weir! Great skill to learn, thanks! Did you just completely ring that tree? So you meant to get rid of it?
That was cool. What plants would you use if you were in Idaho?
Cool
Cristo los AMA DE VERDAD Y ÉL YA VIENE BÚSQUENLO
❤❤❤
“I like your style, Dude” (heard in the voice of Sam Elliott).
😜
👍🇲🇾
I've never seen bamboo growing in any of the woods I have been in here in the States.
Clay you are a very patient man. 😂
Definitely takes a while
di daerah ku, tepatnya di sekadau, kalimantan barat, indonesia.
kami menyebutnya bubu
Same here in philippines. We also call it bubu
We call this in Indonesia, or more precisely in the southern Borneo area, we call it *serakap* or traditional fishing method.
Thanks for sharing
Just curious, won't stripping all that bark kill the tree??
Nice trap though, looks beautiful
Yeah, it kills the tree. The inner layer of the bark is where the transport system of trees are situated called the xylem and phloem respectively. Water and nutrients cant move to the top of the tree anymore and it will die.
Yes, but the trees are overstocked anyway so killing a few will benefit the rest.
Панда ест деревья тоже
Now that you’ve caught your bait fish, what will you use to catch your meal?
I thought after caching that lovely bait you'll go fishing... but it was just the trap this time...
Do you soak the cedar strips in water to make/keep them pliable?
Yep
Have you thought about doing a bamboo bow and arrow set?
I did last year and did some night time bow fishing with it.
that is called bubu or loca yes a loca loca loca😆
Hey Clay! Where’d you get the bamboo? I can’t imagine it’s growing naturally in Idaho 😂
We’re in Florida right now
Will it work without the camera inside?
I wondered this myself. Great question!
It will not work. Since the fish came in into the trap because they wanna take a selfie for the family album.
A question for Pandora
if i get stuck with this guy after a ship i am with him sank, i would be alive for a whole year in an island.
I wonder when that tree was copsed.
What knife were you using in this video?Thanks
Wondering the same , pretty sure it’s a Tops
made in Idaho
It’s the Marshal from Montana Knife Company
QUESTION:
Do you soak your cordage?
Yes
@@clayhayeshunter Thanks for the reply.
re. Answer: I thought you must have. Cheers
very cool that you let them go
Я бы их съел
🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
Where are you at to find all these different materials?