I see a lot of negative comments on this...I'll offer some positive ones. Bro had a small sled to allow him to easily bring extra gear. He used bark and small wood , easily gatherable by hand, to get original fire going. He had an axe and a saw, didn't need to baton 6"-8" logs using his bushcraft knife. Also used impact and leverage between fixed points to reduce long pieces to firewood length. Flat roof...?...could have made better design with same materials and techniques, or a tent. He edited video and sped it up to keep it interesting, without boring us with an extra 20 minutes. He didn't have a commercial for his favorite whiz-bang bushcraft invention available only on his website. And he didn't invite us to attend his (pay to attend) bushcraft academy in some far off land. He didn't tell us his scheduled upcoming personal appearances where he would be selling autographed pictures and overpriced merch. Don't think he even asked us to like, share, subscribe and turn on notifications. Seems he did this just for his enjoyment, and hopefully ours. Overall, I give him👍👍👍
I totally agree,I bet he will do the most important thing, SURVIVE,lol, quick and simple,but the hater's will hate,I thank this guy,for sharing,a video,that could, and would save lives,in bad ,or unexpected weather
Wenn ich das alles mit in den Wald schleppen soll, kann ich auch zu Hause bleiben und da in meiner Küche kochen. Im Wald geht es darum, aus dem Wald zu leben, was der hergibt. Und plastikfolie und alufolie im Wald macht für mich keinen Sinn. Wie lange will er da leben? Für wie lange wird das gebaut? Werden die umweltschädlichen Stoffe auch wieder mitgenommen? Hmmm
The beginning fire was well built. I like the hut build particularly because it can be reused again and again, although i do agree with other commenters in that a pitch on the roof would make sense, (and it would provide more headroom). To that extent, the frame in general can be as big or small as you'd like, with the available supplies, of course. The stove is a marvel!
He enjoyed what he was doing, Myself if it came to it I would just use a Tepee type structure and with no need of a stove, and make it a little bigger around the base, and have a fire in the center on the ground, It could be a lot simpler and just as comfortable, and with maybe less work But he did just fine and bless the mans sole for not having crappy music etc.
A person taking on this kind of cold weather gets my respect. If you screw up things can go irrevocably bad. Not exactly a Mors Kochanski super shelter but it addresses the cold and the wind. If it snows you'll be up all night keeping the roof from caving in.
....and believe it or not he can also feel the heat of the fire from that distance! My husband built a pile of wood/debris I was sitting away from the fire high upon the back porch and felt heat, it was pretty hot!
Best thing you can do your first night after getting up yor shelter is collect 3 times as much standing fire wood as you think youll need and get it back to camp, or even better camp where the dry deadwood is. You can cut it up by firelight if you have too but you dont want to be looking for drywood in the woods after dark or in the middle of a snowstorm or looking for your camp after dark if your light goes out. We re luckier than our forefathers. There are people everywhere and everyone has a cellphone. Makesure someone knows where you are going, when you should be back, and have a checkin time daily. Even the best woodsmen can get lost. Always have spare matches, c charged phone, spare light, spare dry gloves,socks,stocking hat in your pocket especially if you leave the tent after dark. All that spare stuff excluding the cell phone will fit it the stocking hat and in your jacket pocket and could save you life. Make sure you can see the campfire if you decide you must leave the camp after dark, though remember thats when most predators hunt, and they can see you a lot better than you can see them (and the know that.)
this is an interesting idea that I have never seen done before. My only critique is that it would only be doable in a forest with a lot of small dry wood available
a tyvek coverall holds-in a LOT of body heat when you draw the hood snugly. It can handle a bit of rain, but not much. It costs $15 or so at Lowe's, and weighs just a few ozs. Spray painting the coveral camo adds a couple more ozs. If you do a bit of arm waving, crunches, and knee rock back exercises inside of such a coverall, it will warm you up in just a few seconds. If you rig the hammock as a sling chair, with hot rocks and a UCO candle between your feet, you can dry out about 1 bushel of wet debris in one long, miserable night. That much debris suffices to get your sleeping temps down to 20F degrees. The bivy and envelope get you down to 40F degrees, in just cammies. The bugnet suits and camo nets, all used as longjohns, get you down to 30F. If overnight temps COULD get down to 20F, I'll have my wool puffy pants and jacket, which give me yet again 10 F more degrees of warmth. The US military says that at 10F, hostilties nearly cease, especially at night because such temps are so hard on batteries. So I feel ok about having an open fire at such temps, if need be, as long as I'm gone from that area by dawn. Sedatives, sleep mask, and earplugs, guys.
NO HAS ENTENDIDO EL MENSAJE DEL VIDEO..OBVIAMENTE HACE ESTO PARA QUIENES NO TENGAN A LA MANO EL MATERIAL ADECUADO..ES SOBREVIVENCIA MUCHACHO…ENTIENDES O TE EXPLICO CON PERAS Y MANZANAS ⁉️😎
I think the stretch rap is a good idea if you had nothing else or no other use for it but toss in a survival bag. If I was scavenging for survival materials and came across a roll I would use it. Have you admit thow it was different.
all you need is a net hammock, slung 6' off of the ground, with a 3x5 ft piece of Clear PEVA shower curtain, taped to a reflective tyvek bivy (2GoSystems Trifecta, XL ) I usually just envelope this bivy with a couple of taped-together 55 gallon drum liners, but If I use a Siberian fire lay and shape the shelter into a Kochanski supershelter, I slit open the drum liners to, so that the PEVA can be exposed to the radiant heat of the fire. The third drum liners that I always carry is also slit-open, making the membrane large enough to enclose my head and feet. Gorilla tape seals the structure once the supershelter has been assembled, taken down, folded and rolled up, it only takes about 10 minutes to re-deploy it and the hammock. Originally assembling it takes another 10 minutes. a small, soft plastic bottle of adhesive release-agent is all you need to make the tape let-go of the tyvek or plastic. Doing so takes a while, tho, maybe 20 minutes and of course, the tape lets me reassemble the membranes into bag configuration again.
The Siberian fire lay projects all of its heat in one direction, twice as far as a normal fire. That is helpful for not having flying embers burn holes in your PEVA. Also, the Siberian mostly burns on the ends of the protruding logs, up in the air, so there's not many popping embers to start with. Roll up the PEVA from the bottom, around a pole, but have that pole be INSIDE of your shelter, and have the PEVA taper away in such a fashion as to leave no surface for any embers to land on. A bit of clear packing tape sufices to patch the PEVA, without blocking any of the fire's radiant heat, which would be the case if you used the Gorilla tape. Pile dirt or snow around the bottom edges of your plastic shelter, so that none of your heat can escape the shelter. While you're awake, you need only one little hole for ventilation at the top of the shelter, near your head in the hammock. . If there's a risk of your falling asleep, it's a good idea to have another pinkie sized hole at the foot end of the shelter, down low. Dont let there be any convection currents so set up. All you want is to ensure that you dont smother in carbon dioxide. All of your heat is precious when it's cold, so dont waste any.
This is not a sales and marketing of a manufactured product, so keep your unnecessary negative comments to yourself. He had a nice night without freezing in the cold by making such an easy shelter with stretch. Watch and congratulate.
Добрый вечер! Это,классно! Ну,в таком желище,где тепло и уютно! Да,под такое жаркое из мяса! Грех не выпить Виски! Приятных Снов Дружище! С Уважением Сергей из Мурманска!😂
Oh my, he went grocery shopping for industrial saran wrap? I guess for window appearance? Hmmm....wrap the sides FIRST, then overlap the top tarp. Water will not track inside. Good grief! And he has packaging tape! Where is the packing foam for the bed?
Not much of an environmentalist here but seems like that much wasted plastic and nature just doesn’t mix for me. And if you had a shovel why not clear the snow from under your fire? Could have used that birch as a bed for falling embers. He is obviously fine without this comment but maybe for some beginners fire in the snow is not always easy
Obviously not that cold as he came hiking in with no gloves on and did a lot of crap with no gloves. Good thing there was a birch, they are not plentiful through out the forest. He did have a sled and brought none bush stuff like a cross cut hand saw rather than a buck saw
وصف رجل كل المحبه الى الان مؤثره عليك الطفوله وكاانك بحضن امك اي تخييم غير محصن هو طعم للوحوش قدوم كذلك الغابات تواجد الجن ان اتضح هناك ارهاق فهوتلبس الجن
How many matches to light a fire? He even wasted one to light the stove while the fire was burning outside. In a survival situation matches are at a premium.Tubey dud.
Just great, with how little money you can build yourself a nice little survival shelter. Please, don't worry about the Plastic, which is used. That's for times, where these things don't count anymore anyway.... Tom.
I see a lot of negative comments on this...I'll offer some positive ones. Bro had a small sled to allow him to easily bring extra gear. He used bark and small wood , easily gatherable by hand, to get original fire going. He had an axe and a saw, didn't need to baton 6"-8" logs using his bushcraft knife. Also used impact and leverage between fixed points to reduce long pieces to firewood length. Flat roof...?...could have made better design with same materials and techniques, or a tent. He edited video and sped it up to keep it interesting, without boring us with an extra 20 minutes. He didn't have a commercial for his favorite whiz-bang bushcraft invention available only on his website. And he didn't invite us to attend his (pay to attend) bushcraft academy in some far off land. He didn't tell us his scheduled upcoming personal appearances where he would be selling autographed pictures and overpriced merch. Don't think he even asked us to like, share, subscribe and turn on notifications. Seems he did this just for his enjoyment, and hopefully ours. Overall, I give him👍👍👍
Well spoken.
@@joewoodchuck3824 Thank you...
I totally agree,I bet he will do the most important thing, SURVIVE,lol, quick and simple,but the hater's will hate,I thank this guy,for sharing,a video,that could, and would save lives,in bad ,or unexpected weather
😮😮😮I😮😮
Wenn ich das alles mit in den Wald schleppen soll, kann ich auch zu Hause bleiben und da in meiner Küche kochen. Im Wald geht es darum, aus dem Wald zu leben, was der hergibt. Und plastikfolie und alufolie im Wald macht für mich keinen Sinn. Wie lange will er da leben? Für wie lange wird das gebaut? Werden die umweltschädlichen Stoffe auch wieder mitgenommen? Hmmm
Doesn't matter what you survival is made out of if it keeps you warm. Interesting hut construction and looked like it was warm inside... Thumbs Up!
Pretty creative and honestly Rain proof, Wind proof and seems affordable and effective.
No talking. Perfect!
Very cool! 👍🙏
The beginning fire was well built. I like the hut build particularly because it can be reused again and again, although i do agree with other commenters in that a pitch on the roof would make sense, (and it would provide more headroom).
To that extent, the frame in general can be as big or small as you'd like, with the available supplies, of course.
The stove is a marvel!
He enjoyed what he was doing,
Myself if it came to it
I would just use a Tepee type structure and with no need of a stove, and make it a little bigger around the base, and have a fire in the center on the ground,
It could be a lot simpler and just as comfortable, and with maybe less work
But he did just fine and bless the mans sole for not having crappy music etc.
Ingenius. As an interested beginner I learn so much. I moved into a camper last year. Now I want to learn to be even more self--sufficient.
Great video…..sped up and doesn’t drag you thru all the drama painstakingly
Smart way to start the fire first and then build the shelter.
This was interesting. I just happen to have clear plastic dropcloths for painting in my kit. A lot of uses.
I like it!
A person taking on this kind of cold weather gets my respect. If you screw up things can go irrevocably bad. Not exactly a Mors Kochanski super shelter but it addresses the cold and the wind. If it snows you'll be up all night keeping the roof from caving in.
Around 1978 or 1979 I took survival training from Mors Kochanski out around Hinton , Alberta.
Love from Pakistan ❤❤❤
How cool
Very impressive.
And don't forget to hang a frame "tent, sweet tent" 😅
هؤلاء هم الرجال الحقيقيين البدء من الصفر وتحدي الصعاب انا اعشق هكذا
Nice job ❤❤❤❤
Saw the thumbnail, had to watch, super fun!
Great video!!!
I can’t get enough of this. Love it!
....and believe it or not he can also feel the heat of the fire from that distance! My husband built a pile of wood/debris I was sitting away from the fire high upon the back porch and felt heat, it was pretty hot!
@@marilynpage5584 Fire is indeed hot!
Hold on! This guy has a sled, brought a table, and forgot his tent? Okay, I'll watch more.
Is this in Wales😉
Thanks. Pray to Jesus for guidance, miracles, PEACE USA, 🌍🌎 World
Best thing you can do your first night after getting up yor shelter is collect 3 times as much standing fire wood as you think youll need and get it back to camp, or even better camp where the dry deadwood is. You can cut it up by firelight if you have too but you dont want to be looking for drywood in the woods after dark or in the middle of a snowstorm or looking for your camp after dark if your light goes out. We re luckier than our forefathers. There are people everywhere and everyone has a cellphone. Makesure someone knows where you are going, when you should be back, and have a checkin time daily. Even the best woodsmen can get lost. Always have spare matches, c charged phone, spare light, spare dry gloves,socks,stocking hat in your pocket especially if you leave the tent after dark. All that spare stuff excluding the cell phone will fit it the stocking hat and in your jacket pocket and could save you life. Make sure you can see the campfire if you decide you must leave the camp after dark, though remember thats when most predators hunt, and they can see you a lot better than you can see them (and the know that.)
this is an interesting idea that I have never seen done before. My only critique is that it would only be doable in a forest with a lot of small dry wood available
Wow! Impressive!
Great video and idea!!!
Thank you!!
a tyvek coverall holds-in a LOT of body heat when you draw the hood snugly. It can handle a bit of rain, but not much. It costs $15 or so at Lowe's, and weighs just a few ozs. Spray painting the coveral camo adds a couple more ozs. If you do a bit of arm waving, crunches, and knee rock back exercises inside of such a coverall, it will warm you up in just a few seconds. If you rig the hammock as a sling chair, with hot rocks and a UCO candle between your feet, you can dry out about 1 bushel of wet debris in one long, miserable night. That much debris suffices to get your sleeping temps down to 20F degrees. The bivy and envelope get you down to 40F degrees, in just cammies. The bugnet suits and camo nets, all used as longjohns, get you down to 30F. If overnight temps COULD get down to 20F, I'll have my wool puffy pants and jacket, which give me yet again 10 F more degrees of warmth. The US military says that at 10F, hostilties nearly cease, especially at night because such temps are so hard on batteries. So I feel ok about having an open fire at such temps, if need be, as long as I'm gone from that area by dawn. Sedatives, sleep mask, and earplugs, guys.
A good house for my mother in law.😂
😅😅😅😅😅😅
😂😂😂😂😂😂
just far out in the woods
lol😂
LOCO 😂😂😂😂
He has a saw, but he chopped the wood? This is silliness.
Cover it with spray foam and you have a permanent dwelling 🙂
كل الشكر على الرد
ฉันชอบวีดีโอคุณ
Cool video, I hope you didn't leave any trash behind 😊
That is so fking cool!
well done, very interesting. wonder what the total weight of goods carried in was...
He got a bonus on the weight total by using a small sled...lot easier to pull that than carry the weight which it carries...
Who carries a roll of stretch wrap into the woods? Carry a tent or even a large tarp. Much lighter, easier to setup and reusable....
NO HAS ENTENDIDO EL MENSAJE DEL VIDEO..OBVIAMENTE HACE ESTO PARA QUIENES NO TENGAN A LA MANO EL MATERIAL ADECUADO..ES SOBREVIVENCIA MUCHACHO…ENTIENDES O TE EXPLICO CON PERAS Y MANZANAS ⁉️😎
I think the stretch rap is a good idea if you had nothing else or no other use for it but toss in a survival bag.
If I was scavenging for survival materials and came across a roll I would use it. Have you admit thow it was different.
It all makes sense now! If I am ever lost in the snowy wilderness, all I need to do is find a giant roll of plastic wrap!!!
Buy a tent ! Saving you time and better protection from the eliminates! 😂😂
We have to protect ourselves from eliminators now.
@@joewoodchuck3824 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Maybe the tent got lost or damaged, just enjoy and don't critique to much
Elements?
واقعاااا ایده عالی بود👍🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼 . تشکرررر 🙏🏻
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
❤❤❤عالی
Very nice
Thanks
If you had a second layer of film even if it's only an inch or two apart that Gap is a full R rating.
Походному Оптимисту, ура, ура, ура. 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
Дизлайк
Totally uealistic.
Unrealistic? More negative from people who probably never camp out. 😕
After all that hammering, digging and sawing, he doesn’t need a fire.
Camp video Jim Ross ATL
Impressive.
all you need is a net hammock, slung 6' off of the ground, with a 3x5 ft piece of Clear PEVA shower curtain, taped to a reflective tyvek bivy (2GoSystems Trifecta, XL ) I usually just envelope this bivy with a couple of taped-together 55 gallon drum liners, but If I use a Siberian fire lay and shape the shelter into a Kochanski supershelter, I slit open the drum liners to, so that the PEVA can be exposed to the radiant heat of the fire. The third drum liners that I always carry is also slit-open, making the membrane large enough to enclose my head and feet. Gorilla tape seals the structure once the supershelter has been assembled, taken down, folded and rolled up, it only takes about 10 minutes to re-deploy it and the hammock. Originally assembling it takes another 10 minutes. a small, soft plastic bottle of adhesive release-agent is all you need to make the tape let-go of the tyvek or plastic. Doing so takes a while, tho, maybe 20 minutes and of course, the tape lets me reassemble the membranes into bag configuration again.
The Siberian fire lay projects all of its heat in one direction, twice as far as a normal fire. That is helpful for not having flying embers burn holes in your PEVA. Also, the Siberian mostly burns on the ends of the protruding logs, up in the air, so there's not many popping embers to start with. Roll up the PEVA from the bottom, around a pole, but have that pole be INSIDE of your shelter, and have the PEVA taper away in such a fashion as to leave no surface for any embers to land on. A bit of clear packing tape sufices to patch the PEVA, without blocking any of the fire's radiant heat, which would be the case if you used the Gorilla tape. Pile dirt or snow around the bottom edges of your plastic shelter, so that none of your heat can escape the shelter. While you're awake, you need only one little hole for ventilation at the top of the shelter, near your head in the hammock. . If there's a risk of your falling asleep, it's a good idea to have another pinkie sized hole at the foot end of the shelter, down low. Dont let there be any convection currents so set up. All you want is to ensure that you dont smother in carbon dioxide. All of your heat is precious when it's cold, so dont waste any.
A tent would work better. A lot less work
This is not a sales and marketing of a manufactured product, so keep your unnecessary negative comments to yourself. He had a nice night without freezing in the cold by making such an easy shelter with stretch. Watch and congratulate.
He didnt haul all that gear in in a backpack. But still a very good camp to survive.
I believe he had a sled.
The stove is key
I'd be dead before my first meal!
The wind coming off a lake is brutal in the winter. I would like it to be further away from my hut.
I think a non-flat roof would be one of my design parameters particularly in snow…
Where is the toilet,shower, dining room,basement, mud room? I guess I was expecting more
The moral of this story: just bring a tent
Just happened to have this plastics stuff in my back pocket.
Where did the stove come from? Amazon drone?
On the sled.
Добрый вечер! Это,классно! Ну,в таком желище,где тепло и уютно! Да,под такое жаркое из мяса! Грех не выпить Виски! Приятных Снов Дружище! С Уважением Сергей из Мурманска!😂
Oh my, he went grocery shopping for industrial saran wrap? I guess for window appearance? Hmmm....wrap the sides FIRST, then overlap the top tarp. Water will not track inside. Good grief! And he has packaging tape! Where is the packing foam for the bed?
Nice
Hmm i never seen a pallet wrap shelter
A Kjik Ass Shelter setup😊😊😊😊😊😊😊
This guy is tanked up on caffeine, he's moving super fast.
Not much of an environmentalist here but seems like that much wasted plastic and nature just doesn’t mix for me. And if you had a shovel why not clear the snow from under your fire? Could have used that birch as a bed for falling embers. He is obviously fine without this comment but maybe for some beginners fire in the snow is not always easy
😍😍😍
So a snowy day hides in a hut? 🤔
Just wrap the 4 trees behind you.
겨울엔 불만 봐도 따뜻합니다
Couldn't watch this. Speeded up was a darg.
Bu bana riskli geldi. Kurt, ayı gibi hayvanları düşününce. 🇹🇷
And lions, and tigers...oh my!!!
Note to self: Bring saran wrap on my next survival outing in blizard conditions just in case ya can't build a snow cave or igloo. 😊
10 hours, 25+ trees. Think TENT or stay home!
Deveria ter limpado o gelo do chão dentro da tenda
Obviously not that cold as he came hiking in with no gloves on and did a lot of crap with no gloves. Good thing there was a birch, they are not plentiful through out the forest. He did have a sled and brought none bush stuff like a cross cut hand saw rather than a buck saw
But, everything worked...just like that!
وصف رجل كل المحبه الى الان مؤثره عليك الطفوله وكاانك بحضن امك اي تخييم غير محصن هو طعم للوحوش قدوم كذلك الغابات تواجد الجن ان اتضح هناك ارهاق فهوتلبس الجن
If you are so concerned about such possible fates, perhaps it is better that you remain at home in your Mother's arms...
Needs to work on his lashings, my cub scouts could teach him a thing or two 😂 ( I'm sure he could teach my scouts more than just a thing or two!!!)
That's just silly
Yes
But yet, it worked...
Seems hazardous, don’t try that at home kids
हमारे से तो सुखी जगह मे भी आग नही जलती और यहां बर्फ में भी जल जाती है
Is there also no earth, wind and water where you live?
Wot temp does it get to inside.
Watching in hot Cape Town thinking you are mad.
You would be surprised how easy it is to heat a tent or man made shelter like this. You can even use candles to heat or cook on.
Why would you even do that?
If you don't know the answer to your own question, why are you even here?
@@4ager505 Well that was a ridiculous question.
As an adventure. For fun. Better than sitting with a game boy all day.😊
Buy a tent 😂
Вы уже вернулись из Казахстана?
هذه الاعمده ماذا تتحمل تكسر عند مداهمه وحش ثلاحه تنتظر الاكل
Perhaps a tent would be sturdier in that event...
Is that space blankets he uses for cover?
no footprint on the planet there
لم تركن الى اربع شجرات متقاربه على مساحه تنفسك وراحتك وسور من الماده التي كونت منها ذلك الصندوق ماتبقى اعمده سور من الخشب المتبقي على الارض
Yes, wonderful example of using a resource which nature provided, those trees will now continue on their natural journey, to be recycled by nature...
Are you on your own land? Where do you poop? This is just flat out weird!
I think you’re the weird one.
@@Philobeddoe12 I don't give a rat's ass what you think! WEIRDO!!!
Whare did he park the truck?
No Best Western or Holiday Inn Express near by? I always wonder about the necessary 'potty call'????
WHERE THE HECK IS THIS??
How many matches to light a fire? He even wasted one to light the stove while the fire was burning outside. In a survival situation matches are at a premium.Tubey dud.
w h y
The pessimist asked WHY? The optimist replied WHY NOT?
Just great, with how little money you can build yourself a nice little survival shelter. Please, don't worry about the Plastic, which is used. That's for times, where these things don't count anymore anyway.... Tom.