I'm a former Force Reconnaissance Marine, USMC Jungle survival instructor, Special Operations African Savannah survival instructor, and Rhino poacher hunter. This video nails survival packs. Some things I will touch on: @5:53 - Mitch says he will not go over a 55-liter pack. He is a strong and fit man. I'm roughly the same size as him and I used to regularly patrol with rucks well over my own bodyweight. Like Mitch, I know how much of a toll it takes on your body. That's why I personally run a 40-liter pack. The smaller size requires me to limit the weight I can bring. I can always strap stuff to the outside if I need more space temporarily. I highly recommend people run a pack that can weigh absolutely no more than 20% of their body weight if you are fit, and 15% of your body weight if you are not. My 40L pack can weigh over 35 pounds with food and water. So, I know for a fact that I will break that weight limit with a bag any larger. I can live comfortably off my bag indefinitely with all the creature comforts. Mitch's recommendations for super glue can't be overstated. I cannot count the number of times I have used super glue to close surprisingly large wounds. They are great for emergency trauma care on moderate to small wounds. Just be sure to clean the wound thoroughly and stop any bleeding before use. I pack a version of all of these items in my 40 L pack, and there is no reason you can't too. These items never leave my pack, and don't change between the summer in the desert and the winter in Alaska. I regularly camp and hike for anything from day trips to weeks using these items to perfect my system and practice with my equipment. Essential items for your mini go-pack. This should be a small bag that you can grab while leaving the rest of your pack. It should contain both your most used items, and duplicates of your most important items. Mitch's was his pack's lid. Mine is a fanny pack. It seems like a lot, but this stuff is all very compact. - Poncho - rain protection, warming layer, shelter, water catchment, ground cover when sleeping, etc. Arcturus (Amazon) is great for the price/quality/weight. - Multitool - Great all-around tool. Essentials are pliers, scissors, knife, saw, awl, screwdrivers. Pick your favorite. Roxon (Amazon) S802 has killer scissors & is inexpensive. - Leather work gloves - warming layer, work gloves, and fire mitts. I like Wells Lamont (Amazon) gloves. - Shemagh/microfiber tower - warming layer, heat shade, drying, filter making, charcloth, etc. - Med kit - materials to cover every stage of M.A.R.C.H., booboos, and illnesses (constipation, diarrhea, pain, colds, allergies, infection, etc.) - LED keychain button light - Surprisingly bright and long lasting. They last about 5 years of regular moderate use. Unclife (Amazon) is what I use. - Fire kit - Ferro rod, lighter, charcloth tin, storm matches, etc. - Cordage - 550 cord, bank line, jute. - Collapsible water container - platypus, ziplock bags, crushed disposable water bottle, even trash bags will work. - Compact emergency water filtration system - Sawyer, Lifestraw, tablets, H2gO, etc. - Duct tape - compact roll for repairing gear, wound tape, fire starter. - Sharpening stone - sharp blades are safe blades. Fallkniven DC3 is great. - Compass - Suunto A30 is an industry standard that is cheap and light weight. Items for your Main pack. - Fixed blade knife - Scandi grind, 3.5-5 inches, full tang, high carbon steel. Strong enough baton but fine enough to whittle and fillet. Morakniv, Condor, BPS, hultafors are cheap and great. - Axe - 18-24 inch handle, 1.7-2.5 pound head. Gransfors Bruks, Council Tool, husqvarna, etc.. Mitch said, "5 pound axe head" That is a flub. Professional lumberjack's double blade felling axes have 3-4 pound heads. Bushcraft or survival needs a head around 2 pounds. He's talking unscripted and from memory, we can forgive him. - Saw - collapsable bow saw, Japanese folding saw, etc. Silky & Bahco are good. - 10'x10' tarp - Shelter, warming layer, ground cover, pack cover, etc. Gold Armor (Amazon) makes a good one for the money. Tarps can keep you warmer in the winter than tents when used in conjunction with a fire. - Sleeping pad - Insulation from the ground is important. SleepinGo (Amazon) is cheap, super compact, & has a great warrantee. - Sleeping bag or quilt - Highly recommend down as its warmer, lighter, and more compact. AegisMax (Amazon) is unbeatable for the price. You don't need to get a super low temp bag when used in conjunction with the other warming systems included. - Wool blanket - 2-4 pounds. Keeps you warm, and dry while still being breathable. - Rain/wind jacket - Something small and collapsable that acts as a warming layer, rain layer, etc. - Pack cover - comes with most bags, but are very compact. - Down jacket - Down is lighter, warmer, and compacts smaller - Decathlon Forclaz is unbeatable for the price. It's a straight rip-off of the Mountain Hardwear ghost whisperer. - Wool hat - Ears and head give off a ton of heat. - Micro wool gloves - Live in the pocket of your jacket. Wool is more durable, stays warm when wet, and dries faster. Forclaz merino gloves are unbeatable for the price. - Ranger Roll - Wool socks, and wool long underwear tops & bottoms rolled up together. Wool stays fresh longer and needs cleaned less often. - Dry bags - Used to compress and protect your warming layers and sleeping system. - Metal bottle with cup - Steel or titanium bottle and cup for making food, and boiling water. Gearland (Amazon) makes a great one for the price. - Filter bottle - OKO or Grayl style bottle that is rated to filter out viruses. This is the primary filter system for daily use. I have both and OKOs are unbeatable. - Cooking kit - 2 oz dutch oven, pan, pot, wok, etc - Collapsable cup - something to put food or liquid in so you can use your metal cup and pot at the same time. Surprisingly helpful. - Solar battery bank - to charge your headlamp, phone, gps, H2gO, etc. - Radio - Communications are paramount. Baofeng radios are hard to beat for the size, power, and price. - Fishing kit. - Backpack hobo reels are great. Compact and all inclusive. Ka-Bar makes a decent one. - Food kit - 4oz steel screw top tins are great. One each for coffee, oats, pancake mix, mass gainer, lentils, and bouillon powder will sustain you comfortably for weeks in conjunction with foraging, fishing, and hunting. - Camp chair - Not essential, but it fits in my bag, so why not. The REI Flexlite is pretty unbeatable. - Carabiners - tons of uses. Climbing, rappelling, bear bag system, bag hanging, etc. Make sure they are climbing rated. - Pocket knife - Quick grab item for simple cutting tasks. - Rechargeable headlamp - with red and white light.
Love this list thx. One thought. Lots of small stuff in both his and your packs. He uses some dry bags, and other small bags for specific items such as first aid. But, I could see using modular color coded packing bags for a lot of the stuff so it's easily sorted and accessed.
Just to clarify; Sodium chloride is not bleach (bleach is a generic name for a cleaning/bleaching product). Sodium chloride (NaCl) is Table Salt (Salt). The H2go global takes that table salt and water mixture (Salt Water) and turns it into Chlorine (Cl). Chlorine (Cl) can be an active agent in bleach and it is this "Chlorine" that is made by the H2go and used to purify water.
I run a pool service and that's exactly where h2go stole their idea from. Salt cellls, in a regular salt cell there are platelets that energize the salt water turning it into a soft chlorine.
I taught my self to sew many years ago when I was homeless. Had to fix my clothes and pack from time to time. I always used dental floss. It's strong there's hundreds of feet on a roll and it's usually always waxed so it holds up well. I still use dental floss for repairs that have to be durable.
28:50 Water bottle trick from someone stationed in interior Alaska for 4 winters: flip water bottles upside down, so that if they freeze partially, you can still drink from it. The frozen portion will be at the bottom of the bottle when you flip it back up.
It's very cool to see the H2gO being featured. I was part of the development team at Aqua Research (a very small, boot-strapped team of about 4 people) and I designed the H2gO electronics and firmware 10+ years ago. They've been used all over the world by NGOs for disaster relief, but it's cool to see them show up more at home, and great to see that guys like Mitch are using them!
I grew up in the Aussie bush and have spent the last 16 years trekking and camping in the woods and mountains of Norway so I am not an expert, just somewhat experienced. Here is my feedback on improving the kit as I have much the same gear but maybe a little more refined. 1. I understand his concern with overpacking his bag, however larger volume bags tend to have heavier duty hardware designed to take more weight, making it more robust. In my experience, you are better off using a 100 liter bag but cinching it in with compression straps. This way you have extra space and can use the bag to transport things like firewood or even larger game back to camp if necessary. I use a Norrøna Recon 125 liter pack, which without the side pockets attached is 100 liters. 2. I too use water bags however I have replaced all the bags with small opening to bigger opening bags. This makes cleaning and filling easier. I have given up on screw on water filters. The slightest mineral content and the filter blocks up and no matter what you do (vinegar, distilled water, bleach, etc.) nothing seems to restore the flow. I now boil or chemically purify the water exclusively after nearly dying of heatstroke up on a Hardangavidda during an especially hot summer when my filter wouldn't work and the streams were full of dead lemmings. 3. I like his handy little kit with alcohol wipes, anti-diarrhea, water purifying tabs etc.. You can easily make your own with Immodium, alcohol wipes etc. in a ziplock back for likely far less money. 4. I just carry a small bottle of bleach for water purification. It's lighter and there is nothing to go wrong. If I run out of bleach, I just boil the water. As far as bleach going bad, there are various types of bleach but in general the shelf life is 6 months once opened and it degrades by 20% potency each year even if stored in an unopened container. 5. I have a similar repair kit with needle and thread, but I also have a small tube of high-strength, flexible glue. If I'm going for an extended period, I may take a small bicycle tube repair kit as it can be used to patch a water bag, shoe or sleeping bag/mattress if needed. 6. Depending on where you are planning to go, a leatherman may be a little heavy. When I am trekking over the mountains, I take a small Opinel folding knife with me that's cheap, sharpens easy and is super light plus strikes a ferro rod really well. 7. Don't take a compass if you don't know navigation - stick to areas you know and have rehearsed travelling through. I was involved in search and rescue while employed as a firefighter and many times people got lost because they didn't know how to use a compass and map and wondered in the wrong direction. 8. The pad at 24:05 can be switched out with a closed foam mat that is 15*15 inch. This works as an insulated seat on cold days and a mat to lay things out onto. It also weighs nearly nothing and can be used under your hip on a cold night so you don't get the cold up through the ground. 9. The battery bank and solar panel is what I would call mission specific. If you only have a phone to charge, a small battery bank will be sufficient. A solar panel should be at least 28 Watts to take advantage of quick charging. This is useful in places where it's often cloudy since a larger panel will gather more energy and take advantage of any sunshine available quickly. 10. Sleep kit is important. It's worth the extra weight to have a good quality sleeping bag, mattress and pillow - especially in very cold climates where a sudden turn in the weather can kill you. Good sleep is crucial especially in high stress situations. 11. The emergency bag with the woolens and down jacket is perfect. I have the same in my kit : ) I have a woolen buff and wind-proof beanie also. 12. I don't use a hypothermia bag but I do carry a couple thermal emergency blankets. 13. I'm a huge fan of dry bags. I store my clothes, food and sleep kit in light-weight dry bags. 14. I love his first aid kit. I was a firefighter/emergency tech and EMT and I generally just make my own little generic kits. 15. I take a Silky Gomboy saw instead of an axe. The axe is a bit too dangerous if I'm a week away from anyone so I don't take the risk. The saw is also lighter. 16. Depending on where I'm going, I will take generic dried food - pasta, porridge, rice etc. rather than ration packs. They are just too rich for me. If there are lakes around, I take a small, telescoping fishing pole and small tackle kit to catch fish (they're plentiful in Norway). He didn't speak about shoes and clothes but you better make sure you know what you're doing with shoe selection. Long treks with bad shoes will wreck your feet and the wrong clothes will get you killed. If in doubt, choose wool. If you made it to the end of this comment, then I hope you found it interesting. This is my kit break-down: th-cam.com/video/B_camOp3OBs/w-d-xo.html&t
Walked up and down the North Cape for over ten months and never used a filter. Good water although the taste in Finland was more 'moorish'. Anyway one of the many adventures.
I used an arcteryx 90 or 95 liters for years leaving it half filled. Though a few times have transported very large game animal hind legs in a 5 gallon bucket in the pack hiking a few hours. Handy.
throw in a nylofume liner too. Weighs nothing and adds a second layer of protection to the stuff in your bag that absolutely cannot get wet (clothes, sleeping gear, etc).
@@snuffyingwhen military hears rubber ducky we think of something totally different, which is even funnier then your comment, because it would be absurd to carry one in your pack😂
Sewing is a skill I learned in Scouts and have used thousands of times in my life since. From patching packs and making my gear to repairing holes in socks and fixing broken zippers, it’s a skill you’ll use way more often than you think.
@@M.R.T.V.Videos Along with all the ‘tactical’ and outdoors applications, I also made the bridesmaids and flower girl dresses for my wedding. It surprises me that more men don’t have this skill. When a woman gets a hole in a piece of clothing, they buy a new one. Men just deal with the holes or rip till whatever clothing item it is falls apart and becomes unusable. Come on, guys. A couple pennies worth of string and a needle can add years, or even decades, to almost any fabric item.
@@KyleKalevra I can see patches and holes well enough, but I haven't learned how to fix or replace a zipper yet. Ally sewing is manual and the only machine I have is a 1960's Singer.
Great video! One thing I've added to my backpacking gear recently (idea came from the TA Outdoors channel) is a small pencil sharpener with a compartment for catching shavings. You can sharpen a small stick and use the shavings as tinder. The compartment is really good for protecting the tinder in windy or super wet conditions, and I also put some stick matches in there so I don't have to just use a fero rod all the time.
Smith's, the company that makes ok knife sharpeners, has a product they call the tinder maker that is much like you're describing: it's a fine grater as though for cheese with an attached box. Not too bad
Some advice from an old man that has spent a LOT of time in the ( Ga. etc) woods.: A TINY bottle of dry chemical "Pool Shock" can make hundreds of gallons of clean water ( instant bleach), keep a LONG time, and cost very little. ( more than you will ever use for $5)... 2 items that are cheap, versatile, and can be a life saver. (1) heavy duty black trash bags. I have used them for pack covers to raincoat. (2) Shower curtains. They are very small, cheap and light weight and come in clear, tinted and fabric. The fabric ones make great ground cloths. I started carrying a small Silnylon pack in my large pack MANY years ago from experience. Especially camping Georgia barrier Islands ( Cumberland). You need to leave your heavy pack behind and just carry short distance essentials - such as one thing you left out.... Binoculars ( or at leas a monocular). 10 power is best.
One difference between SERE operators and backpackers is backpackers don't generally get shot at. Multiple dry bags reduce the chances of everything getting ruined if you happen to get a hole poked through your kit.
I use a bag for a liner, and then i wrap extrasensitive stuff in there. When i used to use the iodine tablets, after opening, they suck water up like crazy even in a ziplock. That slowed down a lot after using a liner and then wrapping it again. Also the pack did float. That was a cool accident to learn.
went thru Air Force SERE in 1975, we made our pack/sleeping gear out of the components of a parachute (MC1-1 if my memory is correct) and the only other thing I recall that we were issued was a small flexible plastic water container and some water purification tablets. We were out in the mountains a couple days and had to make some designated checkpoints each day using map and compass. We were divided into three-person teams, all the while we had an 'aggressors' who chased us trying to capture us. Only food available to gather were small strawberries.
My unit went through SERE at Ft Bragg run by the 5th SFG. Same setup. Aggressors chasing us. We had no kit. Boots, trousers and Top only. 1982 82nd ABN.
That's what I was thinking about this video... it's great and of great quality, but it seems to be all about survival. SERE stands for Survive, Evade, Resist, and finally Escape. The survival part of my SERE training in Ft. Rucker as a pilot is after a crash, I had to survive with what I have on me and what I can salvage behind enemy line. There's no "choice" of what I can have... I'm not sure the term SERE is used in the same context of what we went through.
@@derekmei6585They’re not saying that this is a “SERE Loadout,” just that a notable former SERE instructor has his recommendations for a pack setup! Can definitely understand that though.
Got it. Good info in the video. I would've loved to pack some of these items in my flight bag back in the day for shtf situations. Now I incorporate some of this in my go bag in my car. @@rooknado
One note: Having a steel water container is great, but if you get an insulated (double-walled) container like the one shown in the video, you cannot use it to boil water over a fire; it will burst. This makes single-walled steel containers multi-purpose, as you can sanitize water through boiling if your other water purification/sanitization options fail or are exhausted. Further, if it's so cold that you are worried about your water freezing, you want to keep that water close to your body anyway. This is for two reasons: 1) when you heat your water, you can put it against your body to help keep you warm; 2) aside from preventing the water from freezing, the water will stay warmer against your body, so when you drink it you won't lower your core temperature as much in an already cold environment.
Also Regarding the waxed canvas, you can buy a cheap canvas drop cloth, a large double toilet wax ring, and boiled linseed oil, melt the toilet wax ring and add certain amount of boiled linseed oil then apply to canvas drop cloth, making it waxed canvas.
Tyvek house wrap is also great for this use. Very durable and light weight. Can be put in the dryer to make it more supple without ruining the waterproofing ability.
I keep tyvek coveralls in my pack. Sometimes you just need a clean set of clothes or pajamas, or an extra layer of wind proof. A few ounces, but so useful/@@CalThompson-oj2kk
I’ve watched more hours of pack videos than I’d like to admit but every minute of this one was of value. Mitch is brilliant at his craft. The hypothermia bag really hit hard that’s a must have for me now in the truck
Yeah... I have it in the truck, but I'm putting one of the microfiber towels in the hunting pack after this video. Had everything else, thought ahead on changes and spares... but having a quick dry off solution at almost no cost on the weight is a smart decision and I just hadn't thought about it.
@@Dantick09they would not need to find him I think his offspring would be right next to him every step besides I don’t think Mrs big foot would take him to court like who else would he breed with
I got news for you buddy...it will never play out this way...people will be attacking others any chance they get..You will not have a chance to frolic in the woods like rambo..wake up.
Retired Navy SERE Instructor, I run a 65 liter Kifaru pack(the Navigator) It is a panel load style pack and all my gear is in water proof modules that are marked. I also have modules I switch out or add to what is in the pack depending on the environment I'm going into and the season. Being Navy, I do have a dedicated fishing kit in my bag as well as a tarp, not just a poncho. The reason being if I use my poncho as a shelter and need to go out in the rain to check my traps and snares, gather water, firewood etc. I'm going to get wet unless I tear down my shelter. I also prefer a hydration bladder(3 liters) and a steel Nalgene bottle for mixing up electrolyte drinks. I like water filters and I've rigged my up to pump filtered water directly into my hydration bladder. I also prefer freeze-dried foods to MREs and keep a titanium ember lit stove and pot in my kit.
@@anthonybevers6066 The Navigator is a panel load pack. I like it because I lay the pack on the shoulder straps open the panel and all my modules are right there for me to pull straight out, no digging around for the items I need.
I'm convinced Mike just sends a mass text out to everyone in his friend group that also does TH-cam any time he does a new video to see how many dudes will also do a video to help provide more knowledge. Great video gents!
Also merino wool socks are my daily wear, also saved me when I broke through a stream in -20 degree temps on Mt Lafayette. Merino wool is amazing and keeps you warm even when wet.
Great video, really appreciate the wealth of knowledge. Added suggestion here from a long-distance backpacker; weight is a critical consideration for any more than a day hike (prevent injuries, conserve energy, resources, etc.) so I trim weight wherever I can. One thing that has helped me in this is a 6' x 6' (or whatever size fits your needs) piece of Tyvek (house-wrap / vapor barrier). No, its not "tacticool", but you can do a lot with it: - Weighs just a few ounces and folds up extremely small so I can keep it on me even when I leave my pack at camp. - Costs next to nothing (can probably ask for a piece of scrap from a construction site if you're really in a pinch) - Works as the changing mat / ground cover mentioned in this video; great for layout of gear, getting dressed, etc. - I roll a bit of duck-tape around a black sharpie (for emergency tape), and keep that with this for writing in any condition, making signs, plotting, dank memes, etc. - Easily seen from the air as a signal or cut into strips to mark a trail - Footprint for a shelter - Emergency shelter / lean-to / poncho. Can use the duck-tape on the sharpie to seal holes in it or fashion something out of the Tyvek. - Rain-water catchment - Additional sleeping-bag insulation (outside of bag) - Sun-shade There are more but those are off the top of my head. Hope its worth something to someone, thanks again for the great video.
I work in a large water treatment plant and just wanted to remind people that using chlorine alone won’t necessarily make water safe to drink. Things like cryptosporidium or giardia (aka beaver fever) can survive chlorination. You really want to use a fine filter (ideally 1 micron or less) and then add the chlorine to it to make sure it’s safe. Some of the Sawyer filters are very fine (0.1 micron) so also consider that if your water source is turbid (e.g. Mississippi or a turquoise lake in the rockies) that filter could clog pretty quickly and become useless (so pack a 2nd method or use a system with replacement filter components). Some uv systems can disinfect crypto and giardia without filtration (as long as the water is perfectly clear to the eye - no fine particles larger than 5micron - which is basically any that you discern by naked eye). Boiling 5 mins at a rolling boil for questionable water is also tried and true if you’re ever in doubt. You really want to avoid parasitic infections because they can last for weeks and cause crippling dehydration. Hopefully then you’ll be leaving the anti diarrhea meds right in your pack!
Aqua Mira has been shown to be perfectly effective against giardia for years without filtration. You just have to wait the allotted time for purification. Hell the military studied this too and showed clo2 was perfectly suitable.
@WYrfcook He's not wrong. This is direct copy and paste from National Institute of Health "In addition, pathogens of concern to the water industry, such as Giardia lamblia and especially Cryptosporidium parvum, are known to be resistant to chlorine at concentrations typically applied for water treatment" Even the CDC says chlorine dioxide is a low to moderate effectiveness against giardia. Iodine works a bit better than chlorine b boiling or a good filter is the way to go. Especially for Cryptosporidium. Which is harder to kill than giardia.
@@scottpiper654Because the beauty of this water filtration system is that you *make* bleach. As stated in the video, bleach has a certain shelf-life. This is great long-term
I agree this is the first I've heard of it also! I knew about the bleach, but having something the size of a handheld gps that is the equivalent to a pool salt generator is amazing!!
Thank you for this excellent presentation. In several instances, I have found others who became slightly dehydrated, and then immediately fell victim to hypothermia or hyperthermia. I stopped to help them. It took a great deal of effort to bring them back from the brink. You are absolutely correct: Once the metabolism begins that slide into hyper-or hypothermia, bringing them back is almighty difficult. Also, either state---hypothermia or hyperthermia---will not only make the victim much more susceptible to another bout but will also make the victim much more susceptible to falling into the other state. If one's urine is not copious, clear, and light yellow, one is not sufficiently hydrated. Again, thank you for this valuable, informative, and interesting video.
A helpful tidbit when storing ANY BATTERY OPERATED DEVICE. I always place a small piece of plastic between one of the battery-Ends to keep it from touching the base that it sits in. And when I need the device to work. I just remove the plastic barrier. This helps to prevent the situation where you try to use (let's say), a headlamp that has had batteries in it for a year. And it doesn't work. You open the battery compartment and what do you see? Blue/Green Corrosion everywhere. Never keep your devices 'fully connected' to the batteries that you store inside them. Use a barrier of some kind to prevent one of the battery-end from engaging. This acts as though you were storing your batteries in a separate container.
The question around 35:05 about putting seasonal gear in and out was gold. In AZ we have different needs for different seasons. For example, we can have 120 something days and 3 months later it can be below freezing and we need to cover the tomatoes.
This was spectacular content. Thank you, gentlemen! Back in 2001 as a 16 year old in the Air Force Auxiliary in San Diego, I had the honor of going to the Navy’s SERE facility in Warner Springs to spend a week learning the S.E. (Survival Evasion) components from the school. While a good chunk of that knowledge is still stored away in my skull, this video really worked magic to not only pull a lot of that back to the front of my mind but it inspired me to freshly engage in developing this skill set and gear. As a full time educator, I truly appreciate the way Mitch presented this content as systems with focus on principles, not just methods. This knowledge is priceless and I pray you are blessed for the equipping you are providing 🙏🏻
The best part is that almost everyone down in the comments is an outdoor expert S.E.R.E instructor who lives in the woods and gives advice to an actual instructor😂😂.. He just gives us some ideas guys and packs what works for him..
Me and my battle were manning a LP/OP during an FTX, we started at it during the day, just moving there we got soaked from our own sweat (South Carolina Summer heat), we get into position and night comes, we are still wet, a little wind comes and I wanna say by 23/2400 we were starting to go hypothermic. We had no sleeping bags, bivy's or woobies with us. Luckily this was a training exercise and we were able to be brought to a place to get warmed up and dry. The cold kills, the heat kills. Just because its hot when you leave doesn't mean those conditions don't change.
5:47 This is the single most important tip from this video. Limit your capacity and you will thank yourself later. Another god-tier tip my friend gave me is once you think you're packed pull everything out and stuff a full size bath towel in the bottom of your pack then pack again. It's just enough to force you to find more efficient ways to pack your things.
I saw Gerald Thumb’s recent SERE video and was saying “it’s good to know these techniques, but what gear should I have?”, and then this video arrived that perfectly answered my question.
Grand Thumb also has a vid on that. I recommend the U.S. RSOG packing list instead. It’s free on their website along with pretty much the rest of their field manual in tab format.
I used to be a husquvarna dealer and personal did some research on their Axes, they are great and by traditionally blacksmith by one of the oldest smithy's in sweden (i believe sweden) common shape and style like the Granfors Burk but way cheaper not sacrificing the quality!
As someone who is relatively new to backpacking, I have to say that this vodeo was immensely useful. The depth of knowledge and experience from Mitch is world class
My husband had a military style Eberlystock pack, and it was terribly heavy! I agree that it wrecked his spine. He has moved to an Oprey pack now and it is much lighter and comfortable with heavy weight in it.
Because it is. There are many things the military, bushcraft, and backpacking communities can learn from each other. But after ul backpacking, I will never go back to carrying those unnecessarily heavy military loads i used to carry. These are not combat loadouts with ammo, weapons, and comms. Work smarter not harder. You can have all of the same capability at half the weight.
Was in a car accident and had one of those splints in my first aid kit. Reset my arm and splinted it before paramedics arrived! Adrenaline is one hell of a drug
I like a lot of what he has going on. I'm also a combat vet and have been lucky enough to have several SERE instructor friends. I grew up a scout on Army bases. I have spent, and still spend, a lot of time outdoors. I'm absolutely, in no way, claiming to be the ultimate authority on all things outside, but I've done a lot of learning (often painful) over the years. I suppose that's the price of experience. There's still so much to learn... I made a video which dovetails nicely with his theories; you'll see many of them repeated. I would say that there are many items he's carrying that really fall more into the bushcraft camp rather than employing better, lighter, stronger, more versatile options that are readily available, like using Dyneema blended line over paracord. It doesn't stretch, it isn't nearly as bulky, it is significantly stronger, and it can be used to stitch with smaller needles (this is important in many instances) as well as for fire starting, etc. I like cord from a company called GO! Outfitters because they blend polyester into it and it holds a knot really well, and it is cheap. Unfortunately it is yellow with reflective tape run through it (which is nice 99% of the time) but there would need to be some covering/color changing desired for clandestine operations. I've made changes to the pack in this video, however the theory and general loadout is similar (at least as far as the type/category of item inside). It is scalable for whatever adventure, but keeping it small and light is paramount. Weight is calories, and calories make or break your fatigue point, and your fatigue point correlates directly with your ability to make sound decisions. I'll opt for a shelter over a tarp every single time. For my GHB (or whatever variant) I employ a Six Moon Designs Gatewood Cape/Serenity Net Tent combination. It's a poncho which will cover your backpack, and pairs with the mesh inner with a bathtub floor to reduce condensation issues and keep critters out. In their dark green, it is absolutely invisible from dusk to dawn. A Lunar Solo by the same company, in the same color, is similarly invisible and a bit roomier. They both pack incredibly small and are under 2lb. They need a pole of some sort (they are designed to use A trekking pole, however they do sell poles that are smaller lighter, and you can always tie off to an overhead point or use a stick in place of the poles). On down: 1. Never leave it compressed. This is also true for synthetics. It damages it's ability to 'loft' which is what provides the insulation 2. Down is much more compressible and is significantly warmer per ounce/gram compared to synthetics. It does cost more though, however there are some really good cost-effective down options available if you look for them. I absolutely recommend quilts 3. *maybe* synthetics do a slightly better job of retaining heat when wet, but at that point all bets are off and you're within millimeters of eachother on the hypothermia scale. IMO you're better getting a good DWR treated down which does a REALLY good job mimicking the synthetic properties, and conserving the weight (which translates to calories) and space by going with down. th-cam.com/video/6PISsWxXbnI/w-d-xo.html
@@amoledor nope, if you look at the channel you'll see that I'm in no way doing videos for anything like a career move. I just occasionally make one for use for training for my local group. Two seconds of research and you'd clearly have seen that. Your post, however, reeks of Karen tribalism, and it's pathetic.
Good advice all down the line. I mentally ticked most of the boxes pertaining to my own Rucksack whilst watching and took a couple of tips along the way. The Monkey tail was one of them. Thanks Guys (Y) 🤟
dry bags aren't just great at keeping water out, they can also keep water in. when water is scarce and you find a source, fill em up quick by dunking it. you can purify it later using a filter or iodine
Dude same here! Been trying to figure out something just like this pack but not $700 but also not cheap as shit. It’s tough because I’m debating on like. 50L but I feel like that’s too small and might need a framed out like 65L pack
@@aml8444 true I think I’m going to go with this Tasmanian tiger Raid pack mk 3. It’s a 48 liter pack for $250. Good tip though I do need to acquire all the stuff for it first
Granite Gear makes the best lightweight, multi-day packs for the money. The Crown series 60L pack is the sweet spot, in my opinion. Osprey and Gregory are nice, but going to cost you more money and don't save weight. They are usually fussy with too many straps and pockets. All three are better than REI house brand, but if you're on a budget, that's not a bad choice.
Very good video. Hybrid bushcraft and backpacking. All to often people try to put these two separate camps when the skill really do overlap more often than not.
Super episode....wish i could have your guest here for a tropical survival/ bushcraft training experience for serious guys! ..Expat American prepper salutes from crazy Venezuela!
Stumbled onto you guys a couple weeks ago and have been loving it! Western hunting and specifically backpack/backcountry hunting has a ton of overlap with this sort of gear and mountain navigation/dwelling skill sets. Definitely worth the time to dig into something like the hunt backcountry podcast to pick up some useful mountain skill and gear philosophies and recommendations.
I got soaked in a storm in New Mexico in July 2017, temp dropped to 43, by the time I made it back to camp my fingers could barely grasp a match to start my camp stove
For sleeping bags. Above 20 degrees I like a synthetic quilt. Synthetic because it handles moisture better and a quilt because its more comfortable and can be vented. Below 20 degrees I like a down mummy bag. Down because it lighter and more compact and there's less moisture issues because everything's frozen and a mummy because you don't want any venting when it's that cold.
Same here, Enlightened Equipment for both. I also throw in a silk liner, gives another 3-5 degrees of insulation, plus it really helps keep the quilt/bag clean.
Vacuum sealed double wall bottles are great util you need to boil water. Something I feel like is super important to clarify. Also, I’ve ditched the 550 and started carrying #36 bankline. 440 lb tensile strength and 1 lb of it it just under 500 ft
Desert specialist here. Packing is always about the environment your packing too things ive learned along the way are. 1. Water&salts 💧 is your economy 2. Carry less and be uncomfortable will do more than carrying more and being comfortable. The distance you can cover before diminishing returns or injury begins is fixed to the weight you bring. More gear/ weight can extend your trip at the cost of covering less distance equalling the same covered should you have packed less. That being said more gear can pseudo break equality to cover more distance at the cost of injury which ultimately will set you back eventually. 3. Cover all your skin always. 4. Light Flat shoes, never boots , never heavy, bring extra socks. 5. Infections & insects are worse monsters than wild animals & people.
When he is talking about the Hypothermic bag at around 36:16 he isn’t joking about the crazy weather shifts. We had it go from 88 Tuesday to 30 the following night and stay that way here in Southeastern Wisconsin. I like that he emphasized this and made sure to emphasize keeping that kit all the time.
Tennessee here... The Appalachian Mountain temps can vary by 10-20 degrees certain times of the year... Simply due to tree coverage, altitude, mountain wind and rain... I always say that the mountains are their own climate... It hit home after the second time of getting caught with my pants down (unprepared)... You are not joking!
@@DontLookBehindYou1 Pennsylvania here, People dont believe me when I say there might be days I cant make it into work because itll be snowing at my house, but be fine down at the shop. Then it happens, and Ill send a picture and theyre like, "holy shit". Theres been a few times where when I was going to school, the bus couldnt make it to our houses because the snow wasnt plowed yet, but down the mountain only got a light dusting that melted by 9am.
Cette chaîne est incroyable en terme de contenu, on rigole, on voit des personnes de qualité et surtout on apprend des tonnes de choses. Beavo à vous les gars 👌
Super interesting. I'm a vagabond spendong lots of tine in the bush. I go with much less gear, emphasize being on not getting hurt and being able to walk great distances. A mix between a survical enthusiast and a thru hiker if you will. Still, all the gear I carry you'll find in his pack. Tweezer, muktitool, big blade, ferrorod, steel bottle, pad, tarp and so on
The H2GO is a game changer. It’s essentially a free chlorine generator, like a pocket public water treatment device, as regulated public water has to have a certain residual chlorine for sanitary reasons.
I did walk the Camino 800+ km. Learned a lot!! Had to by a knew bagpack and get rid of things so I came down to 10% of my body weight. I was an eye opener. When I was at home in my sweet sofa it was easy to plan. Really hit me in the face after 200 km 😅
Great to see Mt Nanda Devi(नंदा देवी)written on the bag it is situated in Uttrakhand my state😁❤️. Mt nanda devi is a sacred mountain in Hindu religion just the look of mt nanda devi brings lot of peace and spirituality to one's mind USA C.I.A and Indian RAW planted a nuclear device on this mountain to track Chinese now it is prohibited to ascent the mountain due to security, environmental and religious region Indian army and USA army do regular joint military excercise here in uttrakhand, overall great video sir
Back in my day...Showing my age, Dana Design Astralplane was my favorite pack. It was a little bigger than I needed, but for 9 or 10 day on the Ozark Highland Trail, it was the most comfortable. Of course, that was in the 90's. Not even sure if Dana is still around.
Lol...me too. Dana was good. I used Osprey packs before they moved to overseas production. I even went to the "factory" in Colorado once. I still have Wilderness Experience pack i bought in 1983..... yeah showing our age... i have all the packs i have bought over the years. hahah
I see a lot of Dana's design cues in this pack. They really boosted the load carrying abilities of internal frame packs. We joked you could put an unconscious person in there and carry them all day.
I have used packs from 3 of the big manufacturers in the western hunting/backpacking space and I'm totally sold on EXO Mountain Gear's K4. It carries weight perfectly and allowed me to bring a few extra creature comfort items on my recent mule deer trip.
Great video. That H2O Go thing is totally boss. That 30 days before bleach becomes useless is crap though. It does degrade but 3-6 months untill it's not peak effective.
My uncle had the privilege to meet Colonel James N "Nick" Rowe then a Major, on a tour of the UK, lecturing in survival, Colonel Rowe was the founder with Sergeant Major Dan Pitzer, of the original SERE school. He also helped design the original SERE folder knife made by Al Mar. I mention this as a tribute to a superb soldier, a great survivor "Five Years to Freedom" was his book, a pioneer and innovator, and as my uncle said "a very nice gentleman". God speed and a salute to Colonel Rowe, Dan Pitzer, and remembering Rocky Versace. Great video. We also have SERE courses in the UK Survival Evasion Rescue Extraction.
Excellent setup. The only thing I would add to the pack if it is intended for more than 3 days is emergency antibiotics. Infections are a death sentence in these situations if allowed to continue for too long. Especially since you can get an actual prescription for them for emergency purposes online, and get emergency supplies of any non narcotic meds you take on a daily basis like insulin or blood pressure meds, or even epi pens.
I’m a backpacker who has done hundreds of miles at a time and I can tell you that that pack and gear probably weighs close to 50+lbs. That alone is going to stop you from getting anywhere and kill your feet, back, and shoulders. 2 weeks you don’t need an axe ever you’re not homesteading. Get a decent knife and small multi tool. The less electronics the better. Should just be your phone a head lamp and small battery bank. It’s all fine to have a tarp but get a light weight 1p backpacking tent that instantly gives you 360 protection from wind and rain. Then light as possible pad and sleeping bag for the climate. The bleach maker is cool but you will never catch anyone who does extended stays outdoors using one. Get a sawyer filter good for 100,000 gallons and used daily all over the planet and is small and lighter. About the only useful thing here is the proper base layer you keep separate and dry. You will get wet and cold no matter where you are. Trying not to rant but almost everything here is only good if you are staying in one place near your vehicle.
I keep braided 10lb fish line in my sewing kit, much better then reg thread. Also , i like to replace the thread on any of my clothing buttens with said braided line...reduces the chance of loosing any buttens. Really good video..
Finally, someone has an axe. I carry the Council Tools Camping axe. An advantage it has over your axe is better steel and the butt (flat part away from the bit) is harden for striking. For those who are unfamiliar with axes, you really need to practice with one before you need it. A shorter axe, such as the one he has and mine, are actually more dangerous, as a miss can hit your leg. Longer axes will hit the ground and an errant swing. Hatchets can hit your body. You do not want to be in the woods a long time without an axe, and you don't want to learn how to use an axe under stress.
Im not a SERE expert but i have done my share of backpacking across the states, hitchhiking, train hopping, walking... he is definitely right about the ruk and weight
@csolivais1979 It was called school of survival. Maybe that's why I'm not going to question a 30-year retired Sere instructor The third night, I was feeling pretty weak and didn't know if I'd make it out of the mountains. Thankfully, the olè boy in his shelter up from me had a copperhead crawl up in with him while he was sleeping. He jumped up and pinned him with a stick, n I got up n cut it's head off. In an instant, we had a fire going the copperhead skinned and gutted, and cut up in about 6" chunks We had gallon greenbean cans, added some water, so no sticking, and I watched for the largest chunk The next morning, when we went down the mountain, I was like a banshee coming out of the woods. That small amount of protein was amazing My point in doing these trips is for my family. To be able to pull off the side of the road and get out of the car and walk off in the woods, and survive Be safe
@1:10... love how Mitch is holding back the laugh as he hears about the "blow up.... mattress"... Great video guys! New to your channel and am thoroughly appreciating your content!
As an old 75th Ranger and 82d Abn Troop I can say listen to many such reviews. I learned more in three months on the AT hiking in my late 40’z than all my time earning Eagle in Scouts and as a soldier. Experience is a teacher of lessons you never forget. Yes, you can learn from videos, but an expert is truly defined as Ex= has been Spert= a drip under pressure. Live it, learn it, pass it on RLTW
I worked with Zach recently after knowing him since 2014. Got me squared away with his Decon kits, those Aqua to go chlorine generators and his AR 1 water pump. I had my water decon pretty well good to go, but we got a nice rounded system here now for going full sustainment from our on site springs and creeks to sustain us for the duration of SHTF.
Hard to beat a bic lighter, stays in you pocket quick and easy, fixed blade knife 4 to 5 in blade, silky saw or equivalent safer than an axe more precise.
I walked across the United States In 2011. by the time I made it to Oregon (from Florida) I learned most of this out of necessity..also, I started with a crappy Jansport backpack and upgraded after dozens of trial and error packs to an osprey Atmos 65. now I live out of my jeep FULLTIME in Arizona and I have all of this and more and always ready to toss it into the pack just in case.
14:55 I always thought sodium chloride (NaCl) was just table salt although he says that's what bleach is. I googled it and I think he meant sodium hypochlorite (NaClO).
Again, thank you for this excellent presentation. My fire-kit includes a 30-minute road flare because if you really need a fire, seconds count. You may already be going hypothermic and losing your fine motor skills. A road flare is about the easiest fire you can start and takes zero fine motor skills. Spend five minutes thawing your hands, then get some wood on that flare. You can cut the flare into three pieces for multiple uses when you may not be cold but have no tinder and do not want to waste time. They will start easily with a Bic lighter or ferro rod. Always have at least two Bic lighters.
You guys make great content. I love the video but I really hope no one goes out and buys an axe with a 5 pound head and takes it out the in the woods. That looks more like 2 pound head and would be considered a boy’s axe. It’s a great size and generally what I take in the woods!
Great tips for some small adjustments to my hiking setup next time I am on the AT. I really liked that water treatment setup, I might have to use that as a backup.
I'm a section hiker, usually ultralight. Don't bother with his water treatment nonsense. Katadyn BeFree and two or three SmartWater bottles is sufficient. Fill the BeFree from the source, squeeze into the SW bottles. Fast, light, reliable.
I'm a former Force Reconnaissance Marine, USMC Jungle survival instructor, Special Operations African Savannah survival instructor, and Rhino poacher hunter. This video nails survival packs. Some things I will touch on:
@5:53 - Mitch says he will not go over a 55-liter pack. He is a strong and fit man. I'm roughly the same size as him and I used to regularly patrol with rucks well over my own bodyweight. Like Mitch, I know how much of a toll it takes on your body. That's why I personally run a 40-liter pack. The smaller size requires me to limit the weight I can bring. I can always strap stuff to the outside if I need more space temporarily. I highly recommend people run a pack that can weigh absolutely no more than 20% of their body weight if you are fit, and 15% of your body weight if you are not. My 40L pack can weigh over 35 pounds with food and water. So, I know for a fact that I will break that weight limit with a bag any larger. I can live comfortably off my bag indefinitely with all the creature comforts.
Mitch's recommendations for super glue can't be overstated. I cannot count the number of times I have used super glue to close surprisingly large wounds. They are great for emergency trauma care on moderate to small wounds. Just be sure to clean the wound thoroughly and stop any bleeding before use.
I pack a version of all of these items in my 40 L pack, and there is no reason you can't too. These items never leave my pack, and don't change between the summer in the desert and the winter in Alaska. I regularly camp and hike for anything from day trips to weeks using these items to perfect my system and practice with my equipment.
Essential items for your mini go-pack. This should be a small bag that you can grab while leaving the rest of your pack. It should contain both your most used items, and duplicates of your most important items. Mitch's was his pack's lid. Mine is a fanny pack. It seems like a lot, but this stuff is all very compact.
- Poncho - rain protection, warming layer, shelter, water catchment, ground cover when sleeping, etc. Arcturus (Amazon) is great for the price/quality/weight.
- Multitool - Great all-around tool. Essentials are pliers, scissors, knife, saw, awl, screwdrivers. Pick your favorite. Roxon (Amazon) S802 has killer scissors & is inexpensive.
- Leather work gloves - warming layer, work gloves, and fire mitts. I like Wells Lamont (Amazon) gloves.
- Shemagh/microfiber tower - warming layer, heat shade, drying, filter making, charcloth, etc.
- Med kit - materials to cover every stage of M.A.R.C.H., booboos, and illnesses (constipation, diarrhea, pain, colds, allergies, infection, etc.)
- LED keychain button light - Surprisingly bright and long lasting. They last about 5 years of regular moderate use. Unclife (Amazon) is what I use.
- Fire kit - Ferro rod, lighter, charcloth tin, storm matches, etc.
- Cordage - 550 cord, bank line, jute.
- Collapsible water container - platypus, ziplock bags, crushed disposable water bottle, even trash bags will work.
- Compact emergency water filtration system - Sawyer, Lifestraw, tablets, H2gO, etc.
- Duct tape - compact roll for repairing gear, wound tape, fire starter.
- Sharpening stone - sharp blades are safe blades. Fallkniven DC3 is great.
- Compass - Suunto A30 is an industry standard that is cheap and light weight.
Items for your Main pack.
- Fixed blade knife - Scandi grind, 3.5-5 inches, full tang, high carbon steel. Strong enough baton but fine enough to whittle and fillet. Morakniv, Condor, BPS, hultafors are cheap and great.
- Axe - 18-24 inch handle, 1.7-2.5 pound head. Gransfors Bruks, Council Tool, husqvarna, etc.. Mitch said, "5 pound axe head" That is a flub. Professional lumberjack's double blade felling axes have 3-4 pound heads. Bushcraft or survival needs a head around 2 pounds. He's talking unscripted and from memory, we can forgive him.
- Saw - collapsable bow saw, Japanese folding saw, etc. Silky & Bahco are good.
- 10'x10' tarp - Shelter, warming layer, ground cover, pack cover, etc. Gold Armor (Amazon) makes a good one for the money. Tarps can keep you warmer in the winter than tents when used in conjunction with a fire.
- Sleeping pad - Insulation from the ground is important. SleepinGo (Amazon) is cheap, super compact, & has a great warrantee.
- Sleeping bag or quilt - Highly recommend down as its warmer, lighter, and more compact. AegisMax (Amazon) is unbeatable for the price. You don't need to get a super low temp bag when used in conjunction with the other warming systems included.
- Wool blanket - 2-4 pounds. Keeps you warm, and dry while still being breathable.
- Rain/wind jacket - Something small and collapsable that acts as a warming layer, rain layer, etc.
- Pack cover - comes with most bags, but are very compact.
- Down jacket - Down is lighter, warmer, and compacts smaller - Decathlon Forclaz is unbeatable for the price. It's a straight rip-off of the Mountain Hardwear ghost whisperer.
- Wool hat - Ears and head give off a ton of heat.
- Micro wool gloves - Live in the pocket of your jacket. Wool is more durable, stays warm when wet, and dries faster. Forclaz merino gloves are unbeatable for the price.
- Ranger Roll - Wool socks, and wool long underwear tops & bottoms rolled up together. Wool stays fresh longer and needs cleaned less often.
- Dry bags - Used to compress and protect your warming layers and sleeping system.
- Metal bottle with cup - Steel or titanium bottle and cup for making food, and boiling water. Gearland (Amazon) makes a great one for the price.
- Filter bottle - OKO or Grayl style bottle that is rated to filter out viruses. This is the primary filter system for daily use. I have both and OKOs are unbeatable.
- Cooking kit - 2 oz dutch oven, pan, pot, wok, etc
- Collapsable cup - something to put food or liquid in so you can use your metal cup and pot at the same time. Surprisingly helpful.
- Solar battery bank - to charge your headlamp, phone, gps, H2gO, etc.
- Radio - Communications are paramount. Baofeng radios are hard to beat for the size, power, and price.
- Fishing kit. - Backpack hobo reels are great. Compact and all inclusive. Ka-Bar makes a decent one.
- Food kit - 4oz steel screw top tins are great. One each for coffee, oats, pancake mix, mass gainer, lentils, and bouillon powder will sustain you comfortably for weeks in conjunction with foraging, fishing, and hunting.
- Camp chair - Not essential, but it fits in my bag, so why not. The REI Flexlite is pretty unbeatable.
- Carabiners - tons of uses. Climbing, rappelling, bear bag system, bag hanging, etc. Make sure they are climbing rated.
- Pocket knife - Quick grab item for simple cutting tasks.
- Rechargeable headlamp - with red and white light.
Thank you!
Thanks for the great info here!
Thank you for a great list. Gives me a good starting point for sure
Great stuff!
Love this list thx. One thought. Lots of small stuff in both his and your packs. He uses some dry bags, and other small bags for specific items such as first aid. But, I could see using modular color coded packing bags for a lot of the stuff so it's easily sorted and accessed.
Just to clarify; Sodium chloride is not bleach (bleach is a generic name for a cleaning/bleaching product). Sodium chloride (NaCl) is Table Salt (Salt). The H2go global takes that table salt and water mixture (Salt Water) and turns it into Chlorine (Cl). Chlorine (Cl) can be an active agent in bleach and it is this "Chlorine" that is made by the H2go and used to purify water.
My man. Cool to see a little portable salt cell, like that. Only ever seen them installed on pools.
Is it Salt specific?table salt or sea salt. Or any salt.
H2O2 is a bleaching agent. Rocket fuel. At light doses it's an anti septic.
Sodium hypochlorite is bleach not just pure chlorine but you are right about sodium cloride being table salt though.
I run a pool service and that's exactly where h2go stole their idea from. Salt cellls, in a regular salt cell there are platelets that energize the salt water turning it into a soft chlorine.
I taught my self to sew many years ago when I was homeless. Had to fix my clothes and pack from time to time. I always used dental floss. It's strong there's hundreds of feet on a roll and it's usually always waxed so it holds up well. I still use dental floss for repairs that have to be durable.
Just said the same thing. Then I see your comment.
Same. Dental floss is extremely strong for stitching. Heating up a needle with a lighter and poking pilot holes through nylon webbing helps a ton.
28:50 Water bottle trick from someone stationed in interior Alaska for 4 winters: flip water bottles upside down, so that if they freeze partially, you can still drink from it. The frozen portion will be at the bottom of the bottle when you flip it back up.
Yup! Learned that one stationed in Vicenza training in Folgeria!
As a Canadian i completely agree
It's very cool to see the H2gO being featured. I was part of the development team at Aqua Research (a very small, boot-strapped team of about 4 people) and I designed the H2gO electronics and firmware 10+ years ago. They've been used all over the world by NGOs for disaster relief, but it's cool to see them show up more at home, and great to see that guys like Mitch are using them!
That's awesome dude!
Very cool! I’m definitely buying a couple when we get back to the US
This guy was my sere instructor when I went through in 2016!! Holy cow, small world
@@kanekadn5533 You we’re in the Navy?
I’d hate to paint it though
@@KyleKalevrayou don’t have to be in the navy to go
Every branch does sere
@@IronSharpensIron127 every branch has their own version of sere. But I am specifically talking about SV-80A that I did in the Air Force
I was Army. Had an alice pack. I wasn't born with scoliosis, but I have it now, as well as a herniated L4/L5. Not service connected, of course.
I grew up in the Aussie bush and have spent the last 16 years trekking and camping in the woods and mountains of Norway so I am not an expert, just somewhat experienced. Here is my feedback on improving the kit as I have much the same gear but maybe a little more refined.
1. I understand his concern with overpacking his bag, however larger volume bags tend to have heavier duty hardware designed to take more weight, making it more robust. In my experience, you are better off using a 100 liter bag but cinching it in with compression straps. This way you have extra space and can use the bag to transport things like firewood or even larger game back to camp if necessary. I use a Norrøna Recon 125 liter pack, which without the side pockets attached is 100 liters.
2. I too use water bags however I have replaced all the bags with small opening to bigger opening bags. This makes cleaning and filling easier. I have given up on screw on water filters. The slightest mineral content and the filter blocks up and no matter what you do (vinegar, distilled water, bleach, etc.) nothing seems to restore the flow. I now boil or chemically purify the water exclusively after nearly dying of heatstroke up on a Hardangavidda during an especially hot summer when my filter wouldn't work and the streams were full of dead lemmings.
3. I like his handy little kit with alcohol wipes, anti-diarrhea, water purifying tabs etc.. You can easily make your own with Immodium, alcohol wipes etc. in a ziplock back for likely far less money.
4. I just carry a small bottle of bleach for water purification. It's lighter and there is nothing to go wrong. If I run out of bleach, I just boil the water. As far as bleach going bad, there are various types of bleach but in general the shelf life is 6 months once opened and it degrades by 20% potency each year even if stored in an unopened container.
5. I have a similar repair kit with needle and thread, but I also have a small tube of high-strength, flexible glue. If I'm going for an extended period, I may take a small bicycle tube repair kit as it can be used to patch a water bag, shoe or sleeping bag/mattress if needed.
6. Depending on where you are planning to go, a leatherman may be a little heavy. When I am trekking over the mountains, I take a small Opinel folding knife with me that's cheap, sharpens easy and is super light plus strikes a ferro rod really well.
7. Don't take a compass if you don't know navigation - stick to areas you know and have rehearsed travelling through. I was involved in search and rescue while employed as a firefighter and many times people got lost because they didn't know how to use a compass and map and wondered in the wrong direction.
8. The pad at 24:05 can be switched out with a closed foam mat that is 15*15 inch. This works as an insulated seat on cold days and a mat to lay things out onto. It also weighs nearly nothing and can be used under your hip on a cold night so you don't get the cold up through the ground.
9. The battery bank and solar panel is what I would call mission specific. If you only have a phone to charge, a small battery bank will be sufficient. A solar panel should be at least 28 Watts to take advantage of quick charging. This is useful in places where it's often cloudy since a larger panel will gather more energy and take advantage of any sunshine available quickly.
10. Sleep kit is important. It's worth the extra weight to have a good quality sleeping bag, mattress and pillow - especially in very cold climates where a sudden turn in the weather can kill you. Good sleep is crucial especially in high stress situations.
11. The emergency bag with the woolens and down jacket is perfect. I have the same in my kit : ) I have a woolen buff and wind-proof beanie also.
12. I don't use a hypothermia bag but I do carry a couple thermal emergency blankets.
13. I'm a huge fan of dry bags. I store my clothes, food and sleep kit in light-weight dry bags.
14. I love his first aid kit. I was a firefighter/emergency tech and EMT and I generally just make my own little generic kits.
15. I take a Silky Gomboy saw instead of an axe. The axe is a bit too dangerous if I'm a week away from anyone so I don't take the risk. The saw is also lighter.
16. Depending on where I'm going, I will take generic dried food - pasta, porridge, rice etc. rather than ration packs. They are just too rich for me. If there are lakes around, I take a small, telescoping fishing pole and small tackle kit to catch fish (they're plentiful in Norway).
He didn't speak about shoes and clothes but you better make sure you know what you're doing with shoe selection. Long treks with bad shoes will wreck your feet and the wrong clothes will get you killed. If in doubt, choose wool. If you made it to the end of this comment, then I hope you found it interesting. This is my kit break-down:
th-cam.com/video/B_camOp3OBs/w-d-xo.html&t
Walked up and down the North Cape for over ten months and never used a filter. Good water although the taste in Finland was more 'moorish'. Anyway one of the many adventures.
@@kayakcobber524 More inland in Norway, Sweden and Finland and the water can have a lot of tannins but in general if it's running it's ok.
@@kickinthegob never had problems, they call it 'colonisation resistance'... building up your immune system. Enjoy the outdoors!!!
I used an arcteryx 90 or 95 liters for years leaving it half filled. Though a few times have transported very large game animal hind legs in a 5 gallon bucket in the pack hiking a few hours. Handy.
Thanks for addressing the larger pack advantage , i agree.
Always use dry bags in your pack. Fun fact: if you water proof your stuff in your pack, your pack will float, and can be used as a floatation device.
throw in a nylofume liner too. Weighs nothing and adds a second layer of protection to the stuff in your bag that absolutely cannot get wet (clothes, sleeping gear, etc).
Great tip so often overlooked
@@diversie509 might as well add a rubber ducky. helps keeps things happy and if you ever fall in a lake you can play around with it.
@@snuffying The rubber ducky is worn weight.
@@snuffyingwhen military hears rubber ducky we think of something totally different, which is even funnier then your comment, because it would be absurd to carry one in your pack😂
Sewing is a skill I learned in Scouts and have used thousands of times in my life since. From patching packs and making my gear to repairing holes in socks and fixing broken zippers, it’s a skill you’ll use way more often than you think.
Most underrated : all forms of wilderness, all forms of travel skill but I am an expert at it 😂
@@M.R.T.V.Videos Along with all the ‘tactical’ and outdoors applications, I also made the bridesmaids and flower girl dresses for my wedding. It surprises me that more men don’t have this skill. When a woman gets a hole in a piece of clothing, they buy a new one. Men just deal with the holes or rip till whatever clothing item it is falls apart and becomes unusable. Come on, guys. A couple pennies worth of string and a needle can add years, or even decades, to almost any fabric item.
@@KyleKalevra I can see patches and holes well enough, but I haven't learned how to fix or replace a zipper yet. Ally sewing is manual and the only machine I have is a 1960's Singer.
A skill I learned when my Drill Sgt would cut off my buttons because I forgot to button a pocket.
Good video!
Great video! One thing I've added to my backpacking gear recently (idea came from the TA Outdoors channel) is a small pencil sharpener with a compartment for catching shavings. You can sharpen a small stick and use the shavings as tinder. The compartment is really good for protecting the tinder in windy or super wet conditions, and I also put some stick matches in there so I don't have to just use a fero rod all the time.
Smith's, the company that makes ok knife sharpeners, has a product they call the tinder maker that is much like you're describing: it's a fine grater as though for cheese with an attached box. Not too bad
@@STS767 Nice, and not too expensive. I'll have to try it out. I'm guessing the grated shavings might catch a spark better than pencil shavings.
great idea! And I'd say just the sharpener alone is no weight/space at all such that everyone should have one!
Good idea. I’ve always carried a pill container filled with cotton balls saturated in petroleum jelly to start fires.
Some advice from an old man that has spent a LOT of time in the ( Ga. etc) woods.: A TINY bottle of dry chemical "Pool Shock" can make hundreds of gallons of clean water ( instant bleach), keep a LONG time, and cost very little. ( more than you will ever use for $5)... 2 items that are cheap, versatile, and can be a life saver. (1) heavy duty black trash bags. I have used them for pack covers to raincoat. (2) Shower curtains. They are very small, cheap and light weight and come in clear, tinted and fabric. The fabric ones make great ground cloths. I started carrying a small Silnylon pack in my large pack MANY years ago from experience. Especially camping Georgia barrier Islands ( Cumberland). You need to leave your heavy pack behind and just carry short distance essentials - such as one thing you left out.... Binoculars ( or at leas a monocular). 10 power is best.
Hi Kerry. Please may you expand on that info. How much POOLSHOCK do you use...say, per 5L container?
Thank you Kerry. Pool shock, noted. As I was watching this I was wondering if he'd mention binos. experience wins over BS every time.
A little back packing tip: put a contractor garbage bag in your pack before you put anything in. Boom everything is in a dry bag.
It's funny how SOF dudes took basically everything from alpinists and through hikers, but either didn't learn or forgot the details.
One difference between SERE operators and backpackers is backpackers don't generally get shot at. Multiple dry bags reduce the chances of everything getting ruined if you happen to get a hole poked through your kit.
@@gcvrsa you have bigger problems then the wet contents of your pack if you're getting shot at so it's irrelevant
I use a bag for a liner, and then i wrap extrasensitive stuff in there. When i used to use the iodine tablets, after opening, they suck water up like crazy even in a ziplock. That slowed down a lot after using a liner and then wrapping it again. Also the pack did float. That was a cool accident to learn.
went thru Air Force SERE in 1975, we made our pack/sleeping gear out of the components of a parachute (MC1-1 if my memory is correct) and the only other thing I recall that we were issued was a small flexible plastic water container and some water purification tablets. We were out in the mountains a couple days and had to make some designated checkpoints each day using map and compass. We were divided into three-person teams, all the while we had an 'aggressors' who chased us trying to capture us. Only food available to gather were small strawberries.
My unit went through SERE at Ft Bragg run by the 5th SFG. Same setup. Aggressors chasing us. We had no kit. Boots, trousers and Top only. 1982 82nd ABN.
That's what I was thinking about this video... it's great and of great quality, but it seems to be all about survival. SERE stands for Survive, Evade, Resist, and finally Escape. The survival part of my SERE training in Ft. Rucker as a pilot is after a crash, I had to survive with what I have on me and what I can salvage behind enemy line. There's no "choice" of what I can have... I'm not sure the term SERE is used in the same context of what we went through.
@@derekmei6585They’re not saying that this is a “SERE Loadout,” just that a notable former SERE instructor has his recommendations for a pack setup! Can definitely understand that though.
let it go bro...time to stop living in the past.
Got it. Good info in the video. I would've loved to pack some of these items in my flight bag back in the day for shtf situations. Now I incorporate some of this in my go bag in my car. @@rooknado
This channel should make a Netflix series from the quality it has.
It's better than garand thumb that's for sure.
@@aniya8759I like them but they copy Mike hard
@@aniya8759nah
Ehh, i don't know about that. Hard to beat Micah and those gorgeous Idaho landscapes!
@@dirty-civilianok 👌
One note:
Having a steel water container is great, but if you get an insulated (double-walled) container like the one shown in the video, you cannot use it to boil water over a fire; it will burst. This makes single-walled steel containers multi-purpose, as you can sanitize water through boiling if your other water purification/sanitization options fail or are exhausted.
Further, if it's so cold that you are worried about your water freezing, you want to keep that water close to your body anyway. This is for two reasons:
1) when you heat your water, you can put it against your body to help keep you warm;
2) aside from preventing the water from freezing, the water will stay warmer against your body, so when you drink it you won't lower your core temperature as much in an already cold environment.
I have used old army wool socks to insulate my bottles. It pretty well down to certain temps and depending on how stored.
Also Regarding the waxed canvas, you can buy a cheap canvas drop cloth, a large double toilet wax ring, and boiled linseed oil, melt the toilet wax ring and add certain amount of boiled linseed oil then apply to canvas drop cloth, making it waxed canvas.
Hey... As a plumber that's genius... I've only seen it done with linseed and silicone tubes mixed up
💯 good idea
TOILET WAX... that's flipping ingenious
Tyvek house wrap is also great for this use. Very durable and light weight. Can be put in the dryer to make it more supple without ruining the waterproofing ability.
@@CalThompson-oj2kk I didn't know that's how they've been softened... I thought it was just from people using it a lot
I keep tyvek coveralls in my pack. Sometimes you just need a clean set of clothes or pajamas, or an extra layer of wind proof. A few ounces, but so useful/@@CalThompson-oj2kk
I’ve watched more hours of pack videos than I’d like to admit but every minute of this one was of value. Mitch is brilliant at his craft. The hypothermia bag really hit hard that’s a must have for me now in the truck
Yeah... I have it in the truck, but I'm putting one of the microfiber towels in the hunting pack after this video. Had everything else, thought ahead on changes and spares... but having a quick dry off solution at almost no cost on the weight is a smart decision and I just hadn't thought about it.
Yeah same, never thought of that until now. Will 100% be implementing that.
His is a pro, imagine child support services trying to get a hold of him
@@Dantick09they would not need to find him I think his offspring would be right next to him every step besides I don’t think Mrs big foot would take him to court like who else would he breed with
I got news for you buddy...it will never play out this way...people will be attacking others any chance they get..You will not have a chance to frolic in the woods like rambo..wake up.
A cook pot, fishing kit and fixed blade knife would be great additions to that kit.
Retired Navy SERE Instructor, I run a 65 liter Kifaru pack(the Navigator) It is a panel load style pack and all my gear is in water proof modules that are marked. I also have modules I switch out or add to what is in the pack depending on the environment I'm going into and the season. Being Navy, I do have a dedicated fishing kit in my bag as well as a tarp, not just a poncho. The reason being if I use my poncho as a shelter and need to go out in the rain to check my traps and snares, gather water, firewood etc. I'm going to get wet unless I tear down my shelter. I also prefer a hydration bladder(3 liters) and a steel Nalgene bottle for mixing up electrolyte drinks. I like water filters and I've rigged my up to pump filtered water directly into my hydration bladder. I also prefer freeze-dried foods to MREs and keep a titanium ember lit stove and pot in my kit.
I am a kifaru fan myself, not familiar with the navigator, though I like the Mag series. Great packs and a great brand.
@@anthonybevers6066 The Navigator is a panel load pack. I like it because I lay the pack on the shoulder straps open the panel and all my modules are right there for me to pull straight out, no digging around for the items I need.
Nalgene is a polymer right? Not Steel.
@@bryanst.martin7134
No he was specific that it was a steel unit.
@@bryanst.martin7134 Nalgene is the company name and they do make stainless steel bottles
I'm convinced Mike just sends a mass text out to everyone in his friend group that also does TH-cam any time he does a new video to see how many dudes will also do a video to help provide more knowledge. Great video gents!
Haha it just so happened Mitch was with us for a few days then flew out to the Idaho boys. Great timing!
Also merino wool socks are my daily wear, also saved me when I broke through a stream in -20 degree temps on Mt Lafayette. Merino wool is amazing and keeps you warm even when wet.
Great video, really appreciate the wealth of knowledge. Added suggestion here from a long-distance backpacker; weight is a critical consideration for any more than a day hike (prevent injuries, conserve energy, resources, etc.) so I trim weight wherever I can. One thing that has helped me in this is a 6' x 6' (or whatever size fits your needs) piece of Tyvek (house-wrap / vapor barrier). No, its not "tacticool", but you can do a lot with it:
- Weighs just a few ounces and folds up extremely small so I can keep it on me even when I leave my pack at camp.
- Costs next to nothing (can probably ask for a piece of scrap from a construction site if you're really in a pinch)
- Works as the changing mat / ground cover mentioned in this video; great for layout of gear, getting dressed, etc.
- I roll a bit of duck-tape around a black sharpie (for emergency tape), and keep that with this for writing in any condition, making signs, plotting, dank memes, etc.
- Easily seen from the air as a signal or cut into strips to mark a trail
- Footprint for a shelter
- Emergency shelter / lean-to / poncho. Can use the duck-tape on the sharpie to seal holes in it or fashion something out of the Tyvek.
- Rain-water catchment
- Additional sleeping-bag insulation (outside of bag)
- Sun-shade
There are more but those are off the top of my head. Hope its worth something to someone, thanks again for the great video.
I work in a large water treatment plant and just wanted to remind people that using chlorine alone won’t necessarily make water safe to drink. Things like cryptosporidium or giardia (aka beaver fever) can survive chlorination. You really want to use a fine filter (ideally 1 micron or less) and then add the chlorine to it to make sure it’s safe. Some of the Sawyer filters are very fine (0.1 micron) so also consider that if your water source is turbid (e.g. Mississippi or a turquoise lake in the rockies) that filter could clog pretty quickly and become useless (so pack a 2nd method or use a system with replacement filter components). Some uv systems can disinfect crypto and giardia without filtration (as long as the water is perfectly clear to the eye - no fine particles larger than 5micron - which is basically any that you discern by naked eye). Boiling 5 mins at a rolling boil for questionable water is also tried and true if you’re ever in doubt.
You really want to avoid parasitic infections because they can last for weeks and cause crippling dehydration. Hopefully then you’ll be leaving the anti diarrhea meds right in your pack!
good advice man, thank you
Aqua Mira has been shown to be perfectly effective against giardia for years without filtration. You just have to wait the allotted time for purification. Hell the military studied this too and showed clo2 was perfectly suitable.
@WYrfcook
He's not wrong. This is direct copy and paste from National Institute of Health
"In addition, pathogens of concern to the water industry, such as Giardia lamblia and especially Cryptosporidium parvum, are known to be resistant to chlorine at concentrations typically applied for water treatment"
Even the CDC says chlorine dioxide is a low to moderate effectiveness against giardia.
Iodine works a bit better than chlorine b boiling or a good filter is the way to go. Especially for Cryptosporidium. Which is harder to kill than giardia.
Filter and boil is simple and cheaper, while still being effective if you're worried.
What is your opinion on those p&g packets that use flocculation to make the smaller bits filterable by a T-shirt style cloth?
WOAH. That water filtration system is next level, why haven't I seen that used with more people!?
One more thing to break?
I had no idea you could use bleach to purify water
@@scottpiper654Because the beauty of this water filtration system is that you *make* bleach. As stated in the video, bleach has a certain shelf-life. This is great long-term
Prepared Airman(?) did a video on it. Pretty good long term and you can do a lot of water.
I agree this is the first I've heard of it also! I knew about the bleach, but having something the size of a handheld gps that is the equivalent to a pool salt generator is amazing!!
Thank you for this excellent presentation.
In several instances, I have found others who became slightly dehydrated, and then immediately fell victim to hypothermia or hyperthermia. I stopped to help them. It took a great deal of effort to bring them back from the brink. You are absolutely correct: Once the metabolism begins that slide into hyper-or hypothermia, bringing them back is almighty difficult. Also, either state---hypothermia or hyperthermia---will not only make the victim much more susceptible to another bout but will also make the victim much more susceptible to falling into the other state. If one's urine is not copious, clear, and light yellow, one is not sufficiently hydrated.
Again, thank you for this valuable, informative, and interesting video.
A helpful tidbit when storing ANY BATTERY OPERATED DEVICE. I always place a small piece of plastic between one of the battery-Ends to keep it from touching the base that it sits in. And when I need the device to work. I just remove the plastic barrier. This helps to prevent the situation where you try to use (let's say), a headlamp that has had batteries in it for a year. And it doesn't work. You open the battery compartment and what do you see? Blue/Green Corrosion everywhere. Never keep your devices 'fully connected' to the batteries that you store inside them. Use a barrier of some kind to prevent one of the battery-end from engaging. This acts as though you were storing your batteries in a separate container.
Good set up. I gotta have a tent personally. So nice to have an actual shelter to get out of the wind, rain, snow
The question around 35:05 about putting seasonal gear in and out was gold. In AZ we have different needs for different seasons. For example, we can have 120 something days and 3 months later it can be below freezing and we need to cover the tomatoes.
Same here in Texas. We've had 100 degrees, 45 degrees, rain, drought and wind and it's only been 2 month
I noticed that when I was in AZ. I miss the desert southwest. The skies are beautiful out there.
This was spectacular content. Thank you, gentlemen!
Back in 2001 as a 16 year old in the Air Force Auxiliary in San Diego, I had the honor of going to the Navy’s SERE facility in Warner Springs to spend a week learning the S.E. (Survival Evasion) components from the school. While a good chunk of that knowledge is still stored away in my skull, this video really worked magic to not only pull a lot of that back to the front of my mind but it inspired me to freshly engage in developing this skill set and gear. As a full time educator, I truly appreciate the way Mitch presented this content as systems with focus on principles, not just methods. This knowledge is priceless and I pray you are blessed for the equipping you are providing 🙏🏻
The best part is that almost everyone down in the comments is an outdoor expert S.E.R.E instructor who lives in the woods and gives advice to an actual instructor😂😂.. He just gives us some ideas guys and packs what works for him..
It's because these types of videos attract those of us that have either taught these skills or have been trained in them.
If watching vids, by itself, makes you an expert-LOOKOUT, IM READY!
Chapstick also makes a good Firestarter when worked into a cotton ball 😉
Clothes dryer lint and wax is a cheap fire starter.
So does Vaseline, and it can be used for a variety of purposes
@@kirstyzubrinich1012Chap stick and Vaseline are both petroleum jelly. They’re the same thing.
26 years humping rucks…spine and shoulders show it! Good demonstration! De Oppresso Liber
My SERE packout was a canteen and a K-bar knife. Didn't need a lot to be starved and waterboarded at Warner Springs in 1975.
Me and my battle were manning a LP/OP during an FTX, we started at it during the day, just moving there we got soaked from our own sweat (South Carolina Summer heat), we get into position and night comes, we are still wet, a little wind comes and I wanna say by 23/2400 we were starting to go hypothermic. We had no sleeping bags, bivy's or woobies with us. Luckily this was a training exercise and we were able to be brought to a place to get warmed up and dry. The cold kills, the heat kills. Just because its hot when you leave doesn't mean those conditions don't change.
5:47 This is the single most important tip from this video. Limit your capacity and you will thank yourself later.
Another god-tier tip my friend gave me is once you think you're packed pull everything out and stuff a full size bath towel in the bottom of your pack then pack again. It's just enough to force you to find more efficient ways to pack your things.
I saw Gerald Thumb’s recent SERE video and was saying “it’s good to know these techniques, but what gear should I have?”, and then this video arrived that perfectly answered my question.
Grand Thumb also has a vid on that. I recommend the U.S. RSOG packing list instead. It’s free on their website along with pretty much the rest of their field manual in tab format.
Mothereffin Gerald Thumb😂😂😂
Clarifications it’s not “osmosis”, but electrolysis… also not “sodium chloride” aka salt what he was going for there is sodium hypochlorite..
I used to be a husquvarna dealer and personal did some research on their Axes, they are great and by traditionally blacksmith by one of the oldest smithy's in sweden (i believe sweden) common shape and style like the Granfors Burk but way cheaper not sacrificing the quality!
As someone who is relatively new to backpacking, I have to say that this vodeo was immensely useful. The depth of knowledge and experience from Mitch is world class
You guys just keep cranking out the most high quality content. I thoroughly enjoy this channel
My husband had a military style Eberlystock pack, and it was terribly heavy! I agree that it wrecked his spine. He has moved to an Oprey pack now and it is much lighter and comfortable with heavy weight in it.
I think I hear an ultralight backpacker screaming, "Nooooo! It's too heavy!"
ultralight backpackers depend heavily on resupply pickup points
@@surfingtothestars and this dude doesnt? he literally has no food or water, pretty sure ultralights have both most of the time
A military warrior and c.i.a vet ain't having a bar of it.......STAY blessed from the uk...sbs are the top boys
Because it is. There are many things the military, bushcraft, and backpacking communities can learn from each other. But after ul backpacking, I will never go back to carrying those unnecessarily heavy military loads i used to carry. These are not combat loadouts with ammo, weapons, and comms. Work smarter not harder. You can have all of the same capability at half the weight.
Was in a car accident and had one of those splints in my first aid kit. Reset my arm and splinted it before paramedics arrived! Adrenaline is one hell of a drug
I like a lot of what he has going on. I'm also a combat vet and have been lucky enough to have several SERE instructor friends. I grew up a scout on Army bases. I have spent, and still spend, a lot of time outdoors. I'm absolutely, in no way, claiming to be the ultimate authority on all things outside, but I've done a lot of learning (often painful) over the years. I suppose that's the price of experience. There's still so much to learn...
I made a video which dovetails nicely with his theories; you'll see many of them repeated. I would say that there are many items he's carrying that really fall more into the bushcraft camp rather than employing better, lighter, stronger, more versatile options that are readily available, like using Dyneema blended line over paracord. It doesn't stretch, it isn't nearly as bulky, it is significantly stronger, and it can be used to stitch with smaller needles (this is important in many instances) as well as for fire starting, etc. I like cord from a company called GO! Outfitters because they blend polyester into it and it holds a knot really well, and it is cheap. Unfortunately it is yellow with reflective tape run through it (which is nice 99% of the time) but there would need to be some covering/color changing desired for clandestine operations.
I've made changes to the pack in this video, however the theory and general loadout is similar (at least as far as the type/category of item inside). It is scalable for whatever adventure, but keeping it small and light is paramount. Weight is calories, and calories make or break your fatigue point, and your fatigue point correlates directly with your ability to make sound decisions.
I'll opt for a shelter over a tarp every single time. For my GHB (or whatever variant) I employ a Six Moon Designs Gatewood Cape/Serenity Net Tent combination. It's a poncho which will cover your backpack, and pairs with the mesh inner with a bathtub floor to reduce condensation issues and keep critters out. In their dark green, it is absolutely invisible from dusk to dawn. A Lunar Solo by the same company, in the same color, is similarly invisible and a bit roomier. They both pack incredibly small and are under 2lb. They need a pole of some sort (they are designed to use A trekking pole, however they do sell poles that are smaller lighter, and you can always tie off to an overhead point or use a stick in place of the poles).
On down:
1. Never leave it compressed. This is also true for synthetics. It damages it's ability to 'loft' which is what provides the insulation
2. Down is much more compressible and is significantly warmer per ounce/gram compared to synthetics. It does cost more though, however there are some really good cost-effective down options available if you look for them. I absolutely recommend quilts
3. *maybe* synthetics do a slightly better job of retaining heat when wet, but at that point all bets are off and you're within millimeters of eachother on the hypothermia scale. IMO you're better getting a good DWR treated down which does a REALLY good job mimicking the synthetic properties, and conserving the weight (which translates to calories) and space by going with down.
th-cam.com/video/6PISsWxXbnI/w-d-xo.html
This reeks of “how can I promote myself on the coattails of someone else?”
@@amoledor nope, if you look at the channel you'll see that I'm in no way doing videos for anything like a career move. I just occasionally make one for use for training for my local group.
Two seconds of research and you'd clearly have seen that. Your post, however, reeks of Karen tribalism, and it's pathetic.
@@amoledorhe's right though
taking alot of tips from long distance thru hikers is one of the biggest things most 'bug out bag' guys miss.
Concur with your observations
Right out of the gate, the branch part made me chuckle.
Good advice all down the line. I mentally ticked most of the boxes pertaining to my own Rucksack whilst watching and took a couple of tips along the way. The Monkey tail was one of them. Thanks Guys (Y)
🤟
Lol, I started using an ALIC in the 82nd Airborne, I am thankful to be in the goldielocks zone .
great info, funny catch at 14:56, sodium chloride is salt. Sodium hypochlorite is bleach.
Yeah, that, I did chemistry once like 15 years ago 😅
With this salt and water. I will boil it and make SALT!!! LOLJK
Mitch blew my mind on so many levels I can't even comprehend it.
dry bags aren't just great at keeping water out, they can also keep water in. when water is scarce and you find a source, fill em up quick by dunking it. you can purify it later using a filter or iodine
'Hyperthermia bag', good idea I have not thought about and will incorporate into my system. Thanks.
Hypo- and Hyper-thermia kits for cold and hot abnormalities are part of my medical kit having endured extremes of weather in the UK on the mountains.
I’ve been working on and researching packs all week. This is absolutely incredible timing.
EXO, Stone glacier, Kifaru are going to be your top 3 just FYI
Dude same here! Been trying to figure out something just like this pack but not $700 but also not cheap as shit. It’s tough because I’m debating on like. 50L but I feel like that’s too small and might need a framed out like 65L pack
@@OneShotOkieget the contents you want, then find the pack size you need to fit them? You may be surprised and need less than you think?
@@aml8444 true I think I’m going to go with this Tasmanian tiger Raid pack mk 3. It’s a 48 liter pack for $250. Good tip though I do need to acquire all the stuff for it first
Granite Gear makes the best lightweight, multi-day packs for the money. The Crown series 60L pack is the sweet spot, in my opinion.
Osprey and Gregory are nice, but going to cost you more money and don't save weight. They are usually fussy with too many straps and pockets.
All three are better than REI house brand, but if you're on a budget, that's not a bad choice.
"For falling out of hueys" ... those have been out of regular use in military for decades. I love those birds. I was in them in the 1980s
It's what we had for our RQS up in Fairchild AFB.
Very good video. Hybrid bushcraft and backpacking. All to often people try to put these two separate camps when the skill really do overlap more often than not.
Super episode....wish i could have your guest here for a tropical survival/ bushcraft training experience for serious guys! ..Expat American prepper salutes from crazy Venezuela!
This was an awesome video, a lot of great information about how to be better prepared! Is there a full list of all of his gear he uses in his pack?
Stumbled onto you guys a couple weeks ago and have been loving it! Western hunting and specifically backpack/backcountry hunting has a ton of overlap with this sort of gear and mountain navigation/dwelling skill sets. Definitely worth the time to dig into something like the hunt backcountry podcast to pick up some useful mountain skill and gear philosophies and recommendations.
A list of the stuff would be great for someone who wants to get some of these things. What were the battery pack and solar charger, for example?
Goal zero sherpa 15 solar
Goal zero sherpa 100pd
Roughly 160 pounds 👍
@@swiftlee5718The currency?
I got soaked in a storm in New Mexico in July 2017, temp dropped to 43, by the time I made it back to camp my fingers could barely grasp a match to start my camp stove
For sleeping bags. Above 20 degrees I like a synthetic quilt. Synthetic because it handles moisture better and a quilt because its more comfortable and can be vented. Below 20 degrees I like a down mummy bag. Down because it lighter and more compact and there's less moisture issues because everything's frozen and a mummy because you don't want any venting when it's that cold.
Same here, Enlightened Equipment for both. I also throw in a silk liner, gives another 3-5 degrees of insulation, plus it really helps keep the quilt/bag clean.
Consider that wool retains body heat, even while wet.
It was about 80 yesterday here in TN, it's going to be low 30's tonight. Oh, and rainy...
Vacuum sealed double wall bottles are great util you need to boil water. Something I feel like is super important to clarify. Also, I’ve ditched the 550 and started carrying #36 bankline. 440 lb tensile strength and 1 lb of it it just under 500 ft
I dont think he was ever boiling water, hence the H2go. But I agree with the bank line. That shit is super nice to have.
@@50shadesofcerakote you’re right. I would just have a hard time trusting that thing to work effectively in any long term capacity
His background is in SERE. In a SERE situation a fire is a beacon to your position.
@@spicysnowman8886 understood. Just think it should be clarified
not gonna lie. i have watched alot of pack videos and i have to say that i actually learned stuff from this one. very cool, and great work. thank you
Desert specialist here.
Packing is always about the environment your packing too things ive learned along the way are.
1. Water&salts 💧 is your economy
2. Carry less and be uncomfortable will do more than carrying more and being comfortable. The distance you can cover before diminishing returns or injury begins is fixed to the weight you bring. More gear/ weight can extend your trip at the cost of covering less distance equalling the same covered should you have packed less. That being said more gear can pseudo break equality to cover more distance at the cost of injury which ultimately will set you back eventually.
3. Cover all your skin always.
4. Light Flat shoes, never boots , never heavy, bring extra socks.
5. Infections & insects are worse monsters than wild animals & people.
When he is talking about the Hypothermic bag at around 36:16 he isn’t joking about the crazy weather shifts. We had it go from 88 Tuesday to 30 the following night and stay that way here in Southeastern Wisconsin. I like that he emphasized this and made sure to emphasize keeping that kit all the time.
Tennessee here... The Appalachian Mountain temps can vary by 10-20 degrees certain times of the year... Simply due to tree coverage, altitude, mountain wind and rain... I always say that the mountains are their own climate...
It hit home after the second time of getting caught with my pants down (unprepared)...
You are not joking!
@@DontLookBehindYou1 Pennsylvania here, People dont believe me when I say there might be days I cant make it into work because itll be snowing at my house, but be fine down at the shop. Then it happens, and Ill send a picture and theyre like, "holy shit". Theres been a few times where when I was going to school, the bus couldnt make it to our houses because the snow wasnt plowed yet, but down the mountain only got a light dusting that melted by 9am.
@@50shadesofcerakote exactly! People don't take mountain temp seriously enough... Especially when new to the area... I'm guilty on that
Cette chaîne est incroyable en terme de contenu, on rigole, on voit des personnes de qualité et surtout on apprend des tonnes de choses. Beavo à vous les gars 👌
Super interesting. I'm a vagabond spendong lots of tine in the bush. I go with much less gear, emphasize being on not getting hurt and being able to walk great distances. A mix between a survical enthusiast and a thru hiker if you will. Still, all the gear I carry you'll find in his pack. Tweezer, muktitool, big blade, ferrorod, steel bottle, pad, tarp and so on
The H2GO is a game changer. It’s essentially a free chlorine generator, like a pocket public water treatment device, as regulated public water has to have a certain residual chlorine for sanitary reasons.
Well no. It costs salt and electricity.
The water purification game? It has been changed?
I did walk the Camino 800+ km. Learned a lot!! Had to by a knew bagpack and get rid of things so I came down to 10% of my body weight. I was an eye opener.
When I was at home in my sweet sofa it was easy to plan. Really hit me in the face after 200 km 😅
The boys were thoroughly shook by that H2go device and so was I. So efficient.
Until you see the Katadyn BeFree.
@silvermediastudio yep you’re right about that one
Great to see Mt Nanda Devi(नंदा देवी)written on the bag it is situated in Uttrakhand my state😁❤️. Mt nanda devi is a sacred mountain in Hindu religion just the look of mt nanda devi brings lot of peace and spirituality to one's mind USA C.I.A and Indian RAW planted a nuclear device on this mountain to track Chinese now it is prohibited to ascent the mountain due to security, environmental and religious region Indian army and USA army do regular joint military excercise here in uttrakhand, overall great video sir
Back in my day...Showing my age, Dana Design Astralplane was my favorite pack. It was a little bigger than I needed, but for 9 or 10 day on the Ozark Highland Trail, it was the most comfortable. Of course, that was in the 90's. Not even sure if Dana is still around.
Lol...me too. Dana was good. I used Osprey packs before they moved to overseas production. I even went to the "factory" in Colorado once. I still have Wilderness Experience pack i bought in 1983..... yeah showing our age... i have all the packs i have bought over the years. hahah
I see a lot of Dana's design cues in this pack. They really boosted the load carrying abilities of internal frame packs.
We joked you could put an unconscious person in there and carry them all day.
Dana Design has morphed into Mystery Ranch.
Ouch, you had to say that... my K2 Longbed from Dana is still my favorite external and still doing great... I wish my back was doing as well!
I have used packs from 3 of the big manufacturers in the western hunting/backpacking space and I'm totally sold on EXO Mountain Gear's K4. It carries weight perfectly and allowed me to bring a few extra creature comfort items on my recent mule deer trip.
I feel the same about my K3 4800, but am looking forward to upgrading just for that new hipbelt. One of my kids will inherit the K3.
Great video. That H2O Go thing is totally boss.
That 30 days before bleach becomes useless is crap though. It does degrade but 3-6 months untill it's not peak effective.
My uncle had the privilege to meet Colonel James N "Nick" Rowe then a Major, on a tour of the UK, lecturing in survival, Colonel Rowe was the founder with Sergeant Major Dan Pitzer, of the original SERE school. He also helped design the original SERE folder knife made by Al Mar. I mention this as a tribute to a superb soldier, a great survivor "Five Years to Freedom" was his book, a pioneer and innovator, and as my uncle said "a very nice gentleman". God speed and a salute to Colonel Rowe, Dan Pitzer, and remembering Rocky Versace. Great video. We also have SERE courses in the UK Survival Evasion Rescue Extraction.
Excellent setup. The only thing I would add to the pack if it is intended for more than 3 days is emergency antibiotics. Infections are a death sentence in these situations if allowed to continue for too long. Especially since you can get an actual prescription for them for emergency purposes online, and get emergency supplies of any non narcotic meds you take on a daily basis like insulin or blood pressure meds, or even epi pens.
Well done. I felt like I was actually there in the woods with you. Great breakdown of your kit. Thank you guys!
I’m a backpacker who has done hundreds of miles at a time and I can tell you that that pack and gear probably weighs close to 50+lbs. That alone is going to stop you from getting anywhere and kill your feet, back, and shoulders. 2 weeks you don’t need an axe ever you’re not homesteading. Get a decent knife and small multi tool. The less electronics the better. Should just be your phone a head lamp and small battery bank. It’s all fine to have a tarp but get a light weight 1p backpacking tent that instantly gives you 360 protection from wind and rain. Then light as possible pad and sleeping bag for the climate. The bleach maker is cool but you will never catch anyone who does extended stays outdoors using one. Get a sawyer filter good for 100,000 gallons and used daily all over the planet and is small and lighter. About the only useful thing here is the proper base layer you keep separate and dry. You will get wet and cold no matter where you are. Trying not to rant but almost everything here is only good if you are staying in one place near your vehicle.
I keep braided 10lb fish line in my sewing kit, much better then reg thread. Also , i like to replace the thread on any of my clothing buttens with said braided line...reduces the chance of loosing any buttens. Really good video..
Finally, someone has an axe. I carry the Council Tools Camping axe. An advantage it has over your axe is better steel and the butt (flat part away from the bit) is harden for striking.
For those who are unfamiliar with axes, you really need to practice with one before you need it.
A shorter axe, such as the one he has and mine, are actually more dangerous, as a miss can hit your leg. Longer axes will hit the ground and an errant swing. Hatchets can hit your body.
You do not want to be in the woods a long time without an axe, and you don't want to learn how to use an axe under stress.
Chop while on your knees and it still hits the ground. A technique I was shown.
Im not a SERE expert but i have done my share of backpacking across the states, hitchhiking, train hopping, walking... he is definitely right about the ruk and weight
I went thru a 4 day wilderness survival training by a 30 year SERE instructor, trainer.
This is luxurious compared to what we had
Sure. But why would you make things harder on yourself intentionally?
@csolivais1979
It was called school of survival. Maybe that's why
I'm not going to question a 30-year retired Sere instructor
The third night, I was feeling pretty weak and didn't know if I'd make it out of the mountains. Thankfully, the olè boy in his shelter up from me had a copperhead crawl up in with him while he was sleeping. He jumped up and pinned him with a stick, n I got up n cut it's head off.
In an instant, we had a fire going the copperhead skinned and gutted, and cut up in about 6" chunks
We had gallon greenbean cans, added some water, so no sticking, and I watched for the largest chunk
The next morning, when we went down the mountain, I was like a banshee coming out of the woods. That small amount of protein was amazing
My point in doing these trips is for my family. To be able to pull off the side of the road and get out of the car and walk off in the woods, and survive
Be safe
Well no shit. This isn’t a video on survival training.
@damianchristopher205
Are you the author there, no shit?
@@shadythereok I don’t understand, author?
Geez... The day pack top idea... Sometimes the simple stuff goes right past me...
We all have our hacks... That's why i love these videos...
Thanks for the video Specialist Jones!
A thing to remember with wipes (which are great) is to keep them in a ziplock bag when you are in freezing temps bc they can in fact freeze on you.
@1:10... love how Mitch is holding back the laugh as he hears about the "blow up.... mattress"... Great video guys! New to your channel and am thoroughly appreciating your content!
that intro is golden goated hall of famed. im downloading this vid just for that intro
As an old 75th Ranger and 82d Abn Troop I can say listen to many such reviews. I learned more in three months on the AT hiking in my late 40’z than all my time earning Eagle in Scouts and as a soldier. Experience is a teacher of lessons you never forget. Yes, you can learn from videos, but an expert is truly defined as Ex= has been Spert= a drip under pressure. Live it, learn it, pass it on RLTW
I worked with Zach recently after knowing him since 2014. Got me squared away with his Decon kits, those Aqua to go chlorine generators and his AR 1 water pump. I had my water decon pretty well good to go, but we got a nice rounded system here now for going full sustainment from our on site springs and creeks to sustain us for the duration of SHTF.
Who is Zach, and what is his website?
Hard to beat a bic lighter, stays in you pocket quick and easy, fixed blade knife 4 to 5 in blade, silky saw or equivalent safer than an axe more precise.
A saw and an axe are BOTH invaluable. The saw can cut chunks of wood and the axe makes quick work of splitting and shaving.
I walked across the United States In 2011. by the time I made it to Oregon (from Florida) I learned most of this out of necessity..also, I started with a crappy Jansport backpack and upgraded after dozens of trial and error packs to an osprey Atmos 65. now I live out of my jeep FULLTIME in Arizona and I have all of this and more and always ready to toss it into the pack just in case.
14:55 I always thought sodium chloride (NaCl) was just table salt although he says that's what bleach is. I googled it and I think he meant sodium hypochlorite (NaClO).
You are correct.
Again, thank you for this excellent presentation.
My fire-kit includes a 30-minute road flare because if you really need a fire, seconds count. You may already be going hypothermic and losing your fine motor skills. A road flare is about the easiest fire you can start and takes zero fine motor skills.
Spend five minutes thawing your hands, then get some wood on that flare.
You can cut the flare into three pieces for multiple uses when you may not be cold but have no tinder and do not want to waste time. They will start easily with a Bic lighter or ferro rod.
Always have at least two Bic lighters.
Mitch Wiuff, the Leonidas of Survival. Seriously one of the best beards of TH-cam. Thanks for sharing.
32:18 - The microfiber towels are great. I always have one in the pack just for recreation in the mountains.
You guys make great content. I love the video but I really hope no one goes out and buys an axe with a 5 pound head and takes it out the in the woods. That looks more like 2 pound head and would be considered a boy’s axe. It’s a great size and generally what I take in the woods!
Great tips for some small adjustments to my hiking setup next time I am on the AT. I really liked that water treatment setup, I might have to use that as a backup.
I'm a section hiker, usually ultralight. Don't bother with his water treatment nonsense. Katadyn BeFree and two or three SmartWater bottles is sufficient. Fill the BeFree from the source, squeeze into the SW bottles. Fast, light, reliable.
Ive done about 500 miles on the AT. All the hikers are laughing at this guy. He doesnt know shit about shit. My pack with 5 days of food weighs 17lbs.
Flannel is the common denominator
The best survival video I've seen so far.😮 This video actually made me take notes. Definitely deserves a 👍🏾