they dont. They go home cause they are starving. The 2 people that have had enough food both won their respective seasons, and if moose guy this season doesn't get hurt, sick or lose the meat, he'll win, too.
in a 3 day weekend, I can teach anyone how to last at least a month longer than they would have without the training. Many seasons now, a month or less has separated 4th place from the winner. Dont waste 1-3 weeks on a shelter, which can be better-created in 12 hours (ie, no need of a fire or sleeping-bag) Dont waste 2 weeks on cutting, hauling and processing firewood. Dont waste a week on boiling 2 qts of water at a time, 3x per day, Dont waste 1-2 weeks bowhunting for birds and small game, or trying to fish with barbless hooks and non-organic bait. Instead, make lots of netting out of the cotton rope hammock. Netting can be wrapped around stick box-frames, and used to catch rabbits, and birds. So screw them and their rules about how much netting you can have "in the water".
a lot of these people call themselves "survival instructors". As such, it looks REALLY bad when they can't feed themselves, eh? Better optics to say that you "got lonely'. I think that if they are your "survival instructors'", they owe you double your money back. Not a damned one of them has known to heat rocks OUTSIDE of their shelter, and put said rocks in a row of pits under their raised bed, surrounding each stone with a 2" thick layer of ashes. The ashes slow down the heat-release from the stones. So you can raise the temps inside of your small, reflective, insulated, SEALED tent by 20F degrees for 5 hours. Heating the stones take just 1/2 hour. Snuff the flames with dry dirt or ashes. Bury some coals and charcoal in an ashes-pit, and the fire will remain "alive' for 12+ hours. You should only have to start ONE fire "from scratch" and it's easily done by Rudiger-Rolling a strip of your shemagh, using rust from your shovel as an accellerant. Once you have ashes, and charred punkwood, and tarp and tape bags for your fire kit and tinder, you can easily start other fires with any hard, sharp rock and the spine of your carbon steel knife-blade. The ferrorod is a complete waste of a gear pick. So is the cookpot. The Native Americans had no metal pots for 10,000 years.. All you have to do is dig a pit, which takes about half an hour, Line the pit with the reflective tyvek bivy. Line the bivy with grass, and use it to stone-boil 5 gallons of water at a time, (ie, one hour) twice per week. Make a basket, line it with a chunk of tarp and use it to store the boiled water. You can make a dipper out of the duct tape. Ya gotta be smarter than the tools, or you can't use them.
Hi! I been watching this series since season one, it’s surprisingly when they go home because of lonely, thanks for the recap! 🤗🥰
they dont. They go home cause they are starving. The 2 people that have had enough food both won their respective seasons, and if moose guy this season doesn't get hurt, sick or lose the meat, he'll win, too.
@@SonnyCrocket-p6h wrong! One went this season because of being lonely ! End of discussion! 🙄
No problem
in a 3 day weekend, I can teach anyone how to last at least a month longer than they would have without the training. Many seasons now, a month or less has separated 4th place from the winner. Dont waste 1-3 weeks on a shelter, which can be better-created in 12 hours (ie, no need of a fire or sleeping-bag) Dont waste 2 weeks on cutting, hauling and processing firewood. Dont waste a week on boiling 2 qts of water at a time, 3x per day, Dont waste 1-2 weeks bowhunting for birds and small game, or trying to fish with barbless hooks and non-organic bait. Instead, make lots of netting out of the cotton rope hammock. Netting can be wrapped around stick box-frames, and used to catch rabbits, and birds. So screw them and their rules about how much netting you can have "in the water".
a lot of these people call themselves "survival instructors". As such, it looks REALLY bad when they can't feed themselves, eh? Better optics to say that you "got lonely'. I think that if they are your "survival instructors'", they owe you double your money back. Not a damned one of them has known to heat rocks OUTSIDE of their shelter, and put said rocks in a row of pits under their raised bed, surrounding each stone with a 2" thick layer of ashes. The ashes slow down the heat-release from the stones. So you can raise the temps inside of your small, reflective, insulated, SEALED tent by 20F degrees for 5 hours. Heating the stones take just 1/2 hour. Snuff the flames with dry dirt or ashes. Bury some coals and charcoal in an ashes-pit, and the fire will remain "alive' for 12+ hours. You should only have to start ONE fire "from scratch" and it's easily done by Rudiger-Rolling a strip of your shemagh, using rust from your shovel as an accellerant. Once you have ashes, and charred punkwood, and tarp and tape bags for your fire kit and tinder, you can easily start other fires with any hard, sharp rock and the spine of your carbon steel knife-blade. The ferrorod is a complete waste of a gear pick. So is the cookpot. The Native Americans had no metal pots for 10,000 years.. All you have to do is dig a pit, which takes about half an hour, Line the pit with the reflective tyvek bivy. Line the bivy with grass, and use it to stone-boil 5 gallons of water at a time, (ie, one hour) twice per week. Make a basket, line it with a chunk of tarp and use it to store the boiled water. You can make a dipper out of the duct tape. Ya gotta be smarter than the tools, or you can't use them.
Hope you have a great day
You too
Anyone watching Alone Australia?
I haven’t watched yet but I plan on it