Starting to get physically prepared for our local SAR group a few counties to the west of you. Thank you for all the videos, they have really helped me get a good footing in regards to gear and techniques.
gray bearded green beret recommends this one: smile.amazon.com/GRAYL-Ultralight-Purifier-Filter-Bottle/dp/B07YNR9XDB/ref=sr_1_12?dchild=1&keywords=water+filter+bottle&qid=1592240604&sr=8-12
Sawyer mini or the trio Renovo straw if you want an emergency filter. These items are both significantly better than the life straw and way more worth your money. Sawyer Mini: www.amazon.com/Sawyer-Products-SP128-Filtration-System/dp/B00FA2RLX2/ref=sr_1_1_sspa?crid=3M0G6NDUUVTKP&dchild=1&keywords=sawyer+mini+water+filter&qid=1592254046&sprefix=sawyer+mini%2Caps%2C208&sr=8-1-spons&psc=1&spLa=ZW5jcnlwdGVkUXVhbGlmaWVyPUEzTUZCT0NUVkpWTVkxJmVuY3J5cHRlZElkPUEwNzk4NDcyU0FTMFlFSVA1VDFPJmVuY3J5cHRlZEFkSWQ9QTA1NTYzNDAyT1JDMTkwMlpWUkxXJndpZGdldE5hbWU9c3BfYXRmJmFjdGlvbj1jbGlja1JlZGlyZWN0JmRvTm90TG9nQ2xpY2s9dHJ1ZQ== Trio Renovo: www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00LA97I8M/ref=ox_sc_saved_title_6?smid=A19NVE4G6SOT2C&psc=1 I have used these myself and these are what I generally suggest to my survival students.
I’d suggest Sawyer Mini over the Life Straw. I have several of both but if you compare the filtering abilities and life span (number of gallons it can filter) between the 2 the Sawyer absolutely out performs the Life Straw. Just my 2 cents. :-) Great loadout! Thanks for sharing!! :-)
Great video. 2 suggestions: 1)Sawyer as others have recommended + iodine tablets as you noted. 2) legit compass (minimal weight/small space, potentially critical functionality)
Very good video Sam as always keep it up, you inspire many people of all ages and you have taught me so much after being subscribed for just over a year. Thanks for the great content.
Great video. Some gear suggestions from a Sierra Nevada SAR EMT: Consider a signal mirror so the helicopter can spot you. For your coordinates, a GPS/topo map app like Gaia or CalTopo. Consider a monocular instead of binoculars. Smaller, lighter, cheaper. Consider a road flare as a fire starter. Faster & surer. Hypothermia claims more hikers than trauma. Pack accordingly.
Another good wrapping tool for Duct and other tape are those “credit cards AARP and others send out all the time. You should also have some sort of “rain” hat and if that hat is HUNTER ORANGE it serves double duty
Some thoughts- beef up your fire starting capabilities: tinder, ferro rod / signal mirror, flagging tape For signal/ marking/ get a real signal whistle with a lanyard fox 40 etc / ditch the leather man get a small fixed blade - maybe Daniel will hook u up SD2. Shelter capability heavy duty space blanket- ditch the quasi military Mole pouches- ounces equals pain. HPG is good stuff but for rec hiking you could shave a lot a weight with other pack options You’ll need a container with an actual opening big enough to efficiently fill water for purifying. Some paracord . 👍
@@MysticBeans69 check out Orion fire pit pro. They're smaller than the standard road flares but they're fantastic fire starters and are also recognized signal flares. Only downside is the weight but the capability they have is great.
Would agree except that a heavier pack, with a more sophisticated suspension system, will always be more comfortable than a lighter pack with shitty straps
I suggest using hunter orange duct tape. You can use it for marking trail or other signaling purposes. That’s what I carry, and why. Also. Being a civilian, I can use it for marking tourniquets.
For a First Aid Kit I bought a LifeSystems Mountain Kit. Butchered the contents and combined them with an old kit to create a comprehensive basic first aid kit
There are some important things I feel would complete what you already have. Firesteel, a real compass, tinder, space blanket, a fox 40, and stainless steel cup. This is the minimum I take with me in the woods.
For the water purification, I recommend the renovo muv if you are ok with the size. I've tried a ton of brands and have been happy with renovo. I used the renovo trip for a long time then picked up the muv and I love the flexibility and customization.
It would be interesting if you made a video o the uses you have for webbing, and specifically how to arrange it into a litter/dragging system. Thanks for the video.
Maybe a tarp/poncho that can be used as a tarp is a good thing to add. Easy shelter for rain and shade. In case you have a patient that is injured en can't move and it's raining or you have to spend the night. Natural shelters are hard to make ;)
I recommend Rapid pure for water treatment. Its a purifier ceramic filter that can be frozen and not be damaged.(not recommended but.).They really are the best. Kman
Hey Sam. Great videos. For years I've put one of those aluminum splints on the bottom of my packs. They paid and protect the pack and contents,weigh almost nothing.
At 5:55 he says he has a multi-tool that he transfers between this setup and his tactical gear; I strongly advise against this. No matter how disciplined you are you will forget to move it eventually, and that will likely be the day that you really need it. "If it can go wrong, it will."- Audie Murphy The Leatherman mutt has an msrp of $160 you should just buy another or find a cheaper alternative for your hiking bag.
Thank you for the video! One quick question: Would you say that those sidepanels are strong enough to keep a big lens in place weight wise? The size of the pouch would easily fit the lens, I am just curious, as a lens like that is easily five pounds.
OMG YOU CARRY TAMPONS?!?!??! EWWWWWWW! Just kidding I carry like 5 in my booboo kit in my edc bag. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve been the hero among my female friends.
Two torniquets and a multitool but no dedicated water bladder pocket? For backcountry hiking??? I'm sorry but you are clueless about how to fill a hiking backpack. You are just showing the same trauma kit over and over again...
@@PrepMedic I'm sorry but that's a plastic ice cooler not a water bladder. That weighs 10x more than a bladder. No emergency shelter/tarp, no water filtration system, no fire making element, no cooking system, etc. You don't need pliers on the backcountry unless you are out skiing. Why the heaviest leatherman possible? A Victorinox Trailmaster would be lighter and more useful. My point is still valid: this is just another EMT/Trauma kit.
@@The_One-Eyed_Undertaker While I partially agree with you, a tarp is missing from that kit, you don't need to be such a dick about it. Most of the stuff in this kit is meant to be used on hikers that did not plan on an emergency.
I imagine him resting with his wife during a hike, he starts unpacking and explaining the contents of his backpack automatically
Starting to get physically prepared for our local SAR group a few counties to the west of you. Thank you for all the videos, they have really helped me get a good footing in regards to gear and techniques.
I highly recommend the Sawyer mini over a lifestraw
Josh Dudash or the little tablets for occasional backup use.
gray bearded green beret recommends this one: smile.amazon.com/GRAYL-Ultralight-Purifier-Filter-Bottle/dp/B07YNR9XDB/ref=sr_1_12?dchild=1&keywords=water+filter+bottle&qid=1592240604&sr=8-12
Sawyer mini or the trio Renovo straw if you want an emergency filter. These items are both significantly better than the life straw and way more worth your money.
Sawyer Mini: www.amazon.com/Sawyer-Products-SP128-Filtration-System/dp/B00FA2RLX2/ref=sr_1_1_sspa?crid=3M0G6NDUUVTKP&dchild=1&keywords=sawyer+mini+water+filter&qid=1592254046&sprefix=sawyer+mini%2Caps%2C208&sr=8-1-spons&psc=1&spLa=ZW5jcnlwdGVkUXVhbGlmaWVyPUEzTUZCT0NUVkpWTVkxJmVuY3J5cHRlZElkPUEwNzk4NDcyU0FTMFlFSVA1VDFPJmVuY3J5cHRlZEFkSWQ9QTA1NTYzNDAyT1JDMTkwMlpWUkxXJndpZGdldE5hbWU9c3BfYXRmJmFjdGlvbj1jbGlja1JlZGlyZWN0JmRvTm90TG9nQ2xpY2s9dHJ1ZQ==
Trio Renovo: www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00LA97I8M/ref=ox_sc_saved_title_6?smid=A19NVE4G6SOT2C&psc=1
I have used these myself and these are what I generally suggest to my survival students.
Anyone have experience with the Grayl filters? I purchased one but haven't had a chance to use it.
Sawyer sneeze is an excellent filter and easier to use over the life straw. I used mine all over the Rockies in 2018.
I appreciate your content. Very practical, easy to understand! (From a 24 year paramedic in the Canadian Rockies).
Good work!
I’d suggest Sawyer Mini over the Life Straw. I have several of both but if you compare the filtering abilities and life span (number of gallons it can filter) between the 2 the Sawyer absolutely out performs the Life Straw. Just my 2 cents. :-) Great loadout! Thanks for sharing!! :-)
Great video. 2 suggestions:
1)Sawyer as others have recommended + iodine tablets as you noted.
2) legit compass (minimal weight/small space, potentially critical functionality)
Legit compass without a legit map and legit navigation skills isn't much use
@@theenglandguy yeah you need a map to use the compass, otherwise its pretty much useless
The elastic loops on the shoulder straps are for securing your trekking poles. Look at the osprey stow on the go trekking pole system.
I put torches with pocket clips on them
Very good video Sam as always keep it up, you inspire many people of all ages and you have taught me so much after being subscribed for just over a year. Thanks for the great content.
Great video. Some gear suggestions from a Sierra Nevada SAR EMT:
Consider a signal mirror so the helicopter can spot you.
For your coordinates, a GPS/topo map app like Gaia or CalTopo.
Consider a monocular instead of binoculars. Smaller, lighter, cheaper.
Consider a road flare as a fire starter. Faster & surer.
Hypothermia claims more hikers than trauma. Pack accordingly.
Thanks for doing such a thorough video on the Connor! There are very few out there!
Gotta love the St. Fisher patch on the plate carrier in the background, lol.
Look at the sawyer water purification system to add in there.
Just wanted to tell you you are my fav TH-camr
Another good wrapping tool for Duct and other tape are those “credit cards AARP and others send out all the time.
You should also have some sort of “rain” hat and if that hat is HUNTER ORANGE it serves double duty
Some thoughts- beef up your fire starting capabilities: tinder, ferro rod / signal mirror, flagging tape For signal/ marking/ get a real signal whistle with a lanyard fox 40 etc / ditch the leather man get a small fixed blade - maybe Daniel will hook u up SD2. Shelter capability heavy duty space blanket- ditch the quasi military Mole pouches- ounces equals pain. HPG is good stuff but for rec hiking you could shave a lot a weight with other pack options You’ll need a container with an actual opening big enough to efficiently fill water for purifying. Some paracord . 👍
awesome tips! currently building a get home/emergency bag for the trunk of my car and you've definitely added a few thing to my shopping cart.
@@MysticBeans69 check out Orion fire pit pro. They're smaller than the standard road flares but they're fantastic fire starters and are also recognized signal flares. Only downside is the weight but the capability they have is great.
Would agree except that a heavier pack, with a more sophisticated suspension system, will always be more comfortable than a lighter pack with shitty straps
I suggest using hunter orange duct tape. You can use it for marking trail or other signaling purposes. That’s what I carry, and why. Also. Being a civilian, I can use it for marking tourniquets.
really nice setup. picked up a few tips. might mention the addition of toilet paper!
For a First Aid Kit I bought a LifeSystems Mountain Kit. Butchered the contents and combined them with an old kit to create a comprehensive basic first aid kit
watching Sam + pizza = great evening :)
On the water side of things. Check out Grayl water bottles. Awesome super fast water purification.
As a medical student in the UK i wish i had the money to purchase a kit bag 😥🙏 Great vid as always
There are some important things I feel would complete what you already have. Firesteel, a real compass, tinder, space blanket, a fox 40, and stainless steel cup. This is the minimum I take with me in the woods.
Forgot you have a blanket. 2 wouldn't hurt.
For the water purification, I recommend the renovo muv if you are ok with the size. I've tried a ton of brands and have been happy with renovo. I used the renovo trip for a long time then picked up the muv and I love the flexibility and customization.
It would be interesting if you made a video o the uses you have for webbing, and specifically how to arrange it into a litter/dragging system. Thanks for the video.
Maybe a tarp/poncho that can be used as a tarp is a good thing to add. Easy shelter for rain and shade. In case you have a patient that is injured en can't move and it's raining or you have to spend the night. Natural shelters are hard to make ;)
I recommend Rapid pure for water treatment. Its a purifier ceramic filter that can be frozen and not be damaged.(not recommended but.).They really are the best. Kman
Very great kit. A little mix of everyone. I like it
Hey Sam. Great videos. For years I've put one of those aluminum splints on the bottom of my packs. They paid and protect the pack and contents,weigh almost nothing.
I suggest adding a small knife like the Moreau bush craft
Where can find the ice plate from thanks
At 5:55 he says he has a multi-tool that he transfers between this setup and his tactical gear; I strongly advise against this. No matter how disciplined you are you will forget to move it eventually, and that will likely be the day that you really need it. "If it can go wrong, it will."- Audie Murphy The Leatherman mutt has an msrp of $160 you should just buy another or find a cheaper alternative for your hiking bag.
Duplicate and separate
Add a needle and dental floss. Gear fix or large wound fix. And some crazy glue. Fix for cuts too
I think the lines on the shoulder straps are for trecking poles
GOOD PACK. I WOULD ADD A SAWYER MINI WATER FILTER
You sure that's enough stuff for a day hike chief?
I can use some ideas for my bag but I need to add items that I could use in my environment because I live in a tropical country... Thank you.
Please let us know how the HPG Connor V2 carries under weight and distance when you have a chance. Thank you!
Nice stuff. It'd be cool to see your get home bag !
Дуже дякую за Ваше відео. Дивлюсь із великим задоволенням. Багато чого цікавого, дещьо роблю так само. Успіхів Вам. Бережіть себе, коллего.
Replace your water bottle for a Grayl geopress for a water container and the ability to purify water.
the elastics are for treking poles
Love watching ur vids after good joint
Didn't know you lived in Colorado! Hope we run into each other out there one day. Happy trails!
amazing video
And, where do you carry your food, water and other things?
already liked as its gonna be a banger.
As you mentioned you have a dog can you do a dog gear setup?
I like people gear I have the mountain serape
Sam, Just wanted to check and make sure you received my email from the other day. Just wanted to follow up. Thanks!
Thank you for the video! One quick question: Would you say that those sidepanels are strong enough to keep a big lens in place weight wise? The size of the pouch would easily fit the lens, I am just curious, as a lens like that is easily five pounds.
Really nice shirt!
I like the pack.
Great video bro, going to give you a shout out in my next video,
Looking to move to Colorado soon as a medic, any recommendations on ambulances to ride while trying to get on with a FD?
Totally unrelated: what shirt is that you’re wearing?
Do you have a mountain equipment co-op
If you do they have empty ifak pouches
Or 5.11
When the things came up for when you showed what was in the hiker first aid kit I think you spelled lighter wrong
What Hiking First Aid bag is that? Thanks!
What shirt is he wearing looks dope
I think i found it www.velsyst.com/collections/featured-products/products/boss-rugby
Closer than I found but no hexagon pattern. Mmmmm the mystery deepens.
@@NOLTOCed i found a better photo of its and it look like it has the pattern on it
images.app.goo.gl/yZQiSogkCAFgmtw39
@@nathangilmore6345 thank you sir appreciate it
Hey Bro, what water drinking system are you using?
get a sawyer mini for water
link of rain jacket?
finally!!! hpg
Good Video
Can still buy ice pack
How much does it weight?
@prepmedic.
I have a request.
It's rather simple, but at the same time not.
Could you make a video about improvised stuff to use (ABC related)
You still using this pack?
Could you maybe collaborate with Tommy from Free Field training sometime? He is a cop that makes TH-cam videos...
No dedicated hydration pouch makes it a no-go for me
I want to know do you have to pay for all of your gear
No, I do not. Some of the items in this video were sent to me and others I had or payed for.
PrepMedic thank you for replying I’m from the uk and I can’t wait to be a paramedic
If you remove the cardboard from inside a roll
Of duct tape you can flatten a whole roll
Sr. Your a badass, your everywhere.
No toilet paper? $450 rain jacket? Very strong.
Gauze works just fine. Not really a necessity for a day bag.
Before watching this I can guarantee there is an ARS needle in there
2:14 Using dog and wife in the same scenario? Don't let her watch this video!
I realize I’m a year late but don’t get a life straw it limits your options get a sawyer
Not first
on a hike....? Just say you’re doing a product review....
you have a dog?? can we see it?
OMG YOU CARRY TAMPONS?!?!??! EWWWWWWW!
Just kidding I carry like 5 in my booboo kit in my edc bag. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve been the hero among my female friends.
You can always use it to plug a wound or to start a fire
Abdallah Manasrah exactly man, besides the obvious the amount of uses those things have is absolutely crazy
$250 for a bag? No thanks.
You do not carry all that dumb stuff for a 5 hour hike! That doesn't make sense!
Spend less money on gear and pay your electric bill... That's the darkest room I have ever seen.
Two torniquets and a multitool but no dedicated water bladder pocket? For backcountry hiking??? I'm sorry but you are clueless about how to fill a hiking backpack. You are just showing the same trauma kit over and over again...
? There is no water bladder built in but I put one in for use...... as is shown in the video.
@@PrepMedic I'm sorry but that's a plastic ice cooler not a water bladder. That weighs 10x more than a bladder. No emergency shelter/tarp, no water filtration system, no fire making element, no cooking system, etc. You don't need pliers on the backcountry unless you are out skiing. Why the heaviest leatherman possible? A Victorinox Trailmaster would be lighter and more useful. My point is still valid: this is just another EMT/Trauma kit.
@@The_One-Eyed_Undertaker While I partially agree with you, a tarp is missing from that kit, you don't need to be such a dick about it. Most of the stuff in this kit is meant to be used on hikers that did not plan on an emergency.