damn, how did I miss this video. This one is a banger. Makes me realize a lot of shortcoming of my current setup. Time for some shuffling around. Specifically the usage of a foam vs a air, and the usage of a large dry bag to break down camp rapidly. great stuff.
It alsways amazes me how in every of your videos you manage to share so mauch knowledge and pratical stuff, that nobody really thinks about; you always give us a lot of new stuff to consider and/or think about for our loadouts/kit and Preps. Thank you so much for your welth of knowledge, great content and great vids...take care and keep the good work up. 💪🏼
Thank you for talking about proper sleep gear. People don't realize that your body needs to recharge and if you don't let yourself recharge you will make yourself sick.
The Z fold pads have their time and place. They are alot quicker and quiet when it comes to set up and tear down but, I do love the added R value I can get out of some of the inflated pads plus I think they are a little more comfortable. As you said though, they take more time and they are a little louder.
My go to is the seated bivy. Poncho (add a woobie for cold weather). Dawn poncho Find an adequate place to sit. Sit on your pack. Hood up, legs comfortable but tucked/crossed under the poncho (in cold weather a hand warmer in your groin will keep the blood running through your femoral arteries warm and therefore keep your body temp up. If you have the luxury of a fire you can heat up your stainless steel bottle or canteen and use it in place of a hand warmer), then get comfortable. If something spooks you, you hear or see someone, or your spidey sense goes off. All you do is stand up, dawn your pack and move. Once you displace and get off the X, doff your poncho and stow it. This system works in both wooded or urban environments (think 90° corners of buildings, end of alleyways, in bushes, or overhang areas like loading docks or storage areas), is actually very effective camouflage, and allows you have an effective op/lp + shelter that you can actually fight from. This is my go-to for hunting/scouting and I have personally used it at least a dozen times and it works. You figure out a comfortable sitting position fairly quick, but it is not hard to sleep in this seated position. And for me this is a benefit as I am a snorer but never snore sitting up when sleeping.
Again, great tips! Good to see someone adressing these overlooked questions. I even use this mindset in everyday life, either just be out and about in the woods, or in the city. Example: when im working on the road and staying in a hotel for the night, i keep my stuff as packed as possible and ready to go, instead of an "exploded" bag with stuff all over the room. It has served me at least one time that the fire alarm was activated and everyone had to be evacuated. I had my stuff with me, others didnt. Ok, i know, stuff is not worth loosing your life, i would leave it behind to save my life, but its a good habit to have, and in some situations your stuff might save you later. Mindset and practise, and you can do it with your eyes closed. Good video!
For a pillow I've used packs, chest rigs, organizing sacks, brush, roots, stumps, rocks and a handful of other things....an actual lightweight compressable pillow is worth more than its weight in gold.
I stash a inflatable pillow for said usage, I store a good warm hoodie all rolled/balled up for quick use though. It works(ish) but the pillow is much better
Also, your r value means nothing in the winter if you r sleeping on a pad, you will be extremely uncomfortable with no pad in the winter due to not being able to maintain body heat. Awesome vid haven’t seen anyone take some of your talking points into consideration! Keep them coming!
Loving your content! Thank you for the great ideas, and tactical but practical mindset. Watching your videos has me rethinking my entire set up for my needs and area.
I'm a huge fan of your channel and the content you create. The knowledge you share is priceless, and I can't thank you enough🙏🏽. Most importantly, thank you for your service.🇺🇸🤘🏽
I was always trained and raised to not leave anything behind. As you are stuffing the sack with your sleeping gear, you aren't really adding any time if you stuff those extra bags in there at the same time. But that's me, you do as you see fit. Excellent video as always.
Might not be comfy but I feel in this scenario you could also jettison the sleeping pad. Ideally you wouldn’t want to leave anything behind but in an emergency I consider it more of a luxury than essential. Great content though! Just found this channel and def want to see more
If you want to control the lighting outdoors, it's pretty easy actually! Although probably not really practical or worthwhile for you, but it'll still share if anyone is interested! All you need is a decent c stand, I used Matthews C stands, Avenger is good as well. A sand bag or two depending on wind (which you would want to use on the highest leg of the c stand and it should also be opposite of the any weight on the c stand. So if you have a boom with a light at 12 o clock, you should set the highest leg w/ sandbags at 6 o clock), and a 6-8' flag. Flag not meaning like an American flag but like some sort of object or material to block or control the light. A big reflector can help, or even a sheet! It will diffuse the light. I used this all the time when I was out shooting on location as a photographer doing off camera flash too. lol not that it really matters lol just sharing some boring stuff probably no one cares about 😂
Thanks for that over-sized ditch bag idea. I'm still searching for a decent lightweight quick take-down air mattress; I've used those waffle mats before, but apparently I have a princess back and can't get rested enough without a stack of mattresses under me.
Really liked the idea of an Stuffsack by your side. I honestly dont know if the valve is necessary since you would probably deflate it only in an secure moment after the initial flight and therefor could easily open the stuffsack regularly and compress it.
For the foam mats a backpacker trick is to chop it at the knee for back sleeper or one panel below the knee for side sleepers shave some weight and keeps it more compact
If you are gonna use a tarp, make sure all your lines for it are quick deploy. Make a quick deploy ridgeline (rope bundle with a bowline pre-tied in one end to make a quick release with), and tie your other lines into the grommets on your tarp with a tensioning knot of your choice already tied in them. If your tarp can't go up and come down in under a minute each way in this context, you're probably dead
Old School! K.I.S.S thanks from this old explorer. Ps If you don't leave anything behind a it leaves the incoming people questioning rather was someone there or not and whether they should continue to follow or Was it Bigfoot. Any second guessing the pursuit does will slow them down!
Bro you can get that tarp down really low with no cordage. Stake three corners down, prop up the center, and tie down the "door". Its tight, but its super low profile. Additionally, plow points, and butting up against natural terrain features. Lots of options.
I carry a poncho for certain situations but they all have two major flaws, visibility and setup/teardown time. As soon as you stake down your corners your 360 visibility is gone.. If you do setup a design that is good for your visual avenues of approach then you no longer follow your BLISS acronym for shelter...Or you have cordage strung everywhere which makes it difficult to take down in the middle of the night under duress. If speed, security and observation are the necessities, traps aren't that great.. If you don't have those needs then yes a trap is definitely a top contender. It's all situational based.
Just a heads up, for a good intermediary between helmet and the crye cap, check out the Raptor Tactical gen 2 Skull Cap, I like to throw those in a backpack when a helmet is out of the question or I'm just travelling.
The enemy #1 tool to be effective and lethal will be infared and silencers. They will pick one by one from a effective distance while everyone panics. Underground and above the trees is a good area to rest.
A little less cool but I was camping one night and has to break camp and get moving in the middle of the night because my brother got in a wreck. Doing all that under nods was way weirder than I thought it would be
Have liytle experience, however having pack, rifre and node open in the rain seems suboptimal. Also how is sleeping in shoes like? Doesn't all moisture, mud etc migate thermal advantage of layered sleeping bags?
I will place my poncho on top of my gear if It starts to rain. I'm personally not worried about my pack getting wet because it's waterproof and properly layered. As for sleeping in boots I normally swap socks before bed and after I wake up. The bivy will add some moisture if not vented but that will be a decision you will need to make based on METT-TC if you do so in the moment.
I whould like to see that happen. What happen to a few branches to cover the position? What do they teach you in the military down there? 20 secs is too much to get our things. Can you do that in that time and show?
@@PreparedAirman Thank you. If I remember well from my time with the USA troops, METT-TC is: Mission, Enemy, Terrain & Weather, Troops, Time Available, Civilian Considerations, right? This is good, but it will not work as you say. Specialy, alone in a hot area. To gab all that you got there, it will take a min, min and half, and it needs to be close to you. Then, one needs to know where to go: up, down left, right. What cover one as around: rocks, grass, vegetation, trees... Keep up th good work.
That is correct about METTTC. It's mainly a catch all term that means every situation is different and not one single solution will work. Multiple situations require multiple different solutions. The video is explaining 1 potential way to do things. So I can be modified to the users needs depending on the situation you are faced with.
Hi QUESTION, I live in the great lakes states area and would that bed system you have be good enough for winter time if one had to bug out in winter time or if not what do you recommend that would be fast and warm enough ?
I would say no. I am originally from Ohio and grew up their with all the lake effect. Personally knowing the weather there I would carry a dedicated sleeping bag in the winter time. Summer time yes in my opinion you could use the exact setup I'm running, that's what I would do.
I didn't lol. I personally grew up their so I can relate to the climate. Ohio, Indiana New York, Pennsylvania, Michigan have a close climate from the Great lakes.
@@PreparedAirman Ok its kind of cool that we are from the same state and i was in the military as well as a tank crewman B1-1. Can i ask what state you are in now ? I am thinking about selling this house in Canton here and moving to another state and back out in the country as i grew up in the country her in East Sparta,Oh.I also need to find a good prepper group to join soon as the people here cant even seem to understand the need for a Urban defense league.
Alot of through hikers do that. I have thought of doing it myself but my environment is fairly cold most of the year so i'm always plagued by conduction.
A collaboration with Garand Thumb would be good and logistically not difficult as you both are in the Pacific Northwest. If your location has been discovered haven't you made a mistake
Realistically, youre gonna be sleeping in your kit. Poncho liner and poncho combo for a few hours rest, but if you are worried about being discovered then you prolly shouldnt unpack completely
Sleep with your feet inside your pack. Then we you have to bug out, you just have to start kicking your sleeping bag downwards into your pack as you get out
damn, how did I miss this video.
This one is a banger.
Makes me realize a lot of shortcoming of my current setup. Time for some shuffling around. Specifically the usage of a foam vs a air, and the usage of a large dry bag to break down camp rapidly.
great stuff.
Same..
Very true I was thinking the same thing.
Love Brass Facts channel!
Dude your channel rocks thank u for the real world information...🤜🤜🇺🇸🇺🇸🐍🐍🪖
Wow, you too Here...that's great !
Love to se good quality channels supporting each others !
Such an underrated channel. Thanks for the vid!
Truth!
My current favorite
Some darn good advice,,
I'm homeless & hadda grab my gear & scoot a few time's.
Ya gave me a few ideas
Prepared Airman and Brass Facts are definitely two of the best and most underrated channels!
Would love to see a collaboration vid.
It alsways amazes me how in every of your videos you manage to share so mauch knowledge and pratical stuff, that nobody really thinks about; you always give us a lot of new stuff to consider and/or think about for our loadouts/kit and Preps.
Thank you so much for your welth of knowledge, great content and great vids...take care and keep the good work up. 💪🏼
I clicked on this video by accident. Now I am a subscriber and I don’t subscribe to many. Keep up the good work.
I watch corporals corner for a reason, the basic ridge line tarp setup is always great cover.
Thank you for talking about proper sleep gear. People don't realize that your body needs to recharge and if you don't let yourself recharge you will make yourself sick.
The Z fold pads have their time and place. They are alot quicker and quiet when it comes to set up and tear down but, I do love the added R value I can get out of some of the inflated pads plus I think they are a little more comfortable. As you said though, they take more time and they are a little louder.
I definitely like the oversize dump pouch idea. I will incorporate something like this for myself
I just found your channel on feed while searching for route for hiking Appalachian trail. Now subscribed.🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲
Thanks for subbing!
Awesome video! Site selection is key, find thickest vegetation you can find and crawl in and set up. Stay away from any natural lines of drift.
My go to is the seated bivy.
Poncho (add a woobie for cold weather).
Dawn poncho
Find an adequate place to sit.
Sit on your pack.
Hood up, legs comfortable but tucked/crossed under the poncho (in cold weather a hand warmer in your groin will keep the blood running through your femoral arteries warm and therefore keep your body temp up. If you have the luxury of a fire you can heat up your stainless steel bottle or canteen and use it in place of a hand warmer), then get comfortable.
If something spooks you, you hear or see someone, or your spidey sense goes off. All you do is stand up, dawn your pack and move. Once you displace and get off the X, doff your poncho and stow it.
This system works in both wooded or urban environments (think 90° corners of buildings, end of alleyways, in bushes, or overhang areas like loading docks or storage areas), is actually very effective camouflage, and allows you have an effective op/lp + shelter that you can actually fight from.
This is my go-to for hunting/scouting and I have personally used it at least a dozen times and it works. You figure out a comfortable sitting position fairly quick, but it is not hard to sleep in this seated position. And for me this is a benefit as I am a snorer but never snore sitting up when sleeping.
Again, great tips! Good to see someone adressing these overlooked questions. I even use this mindset in everyday life, either just be out and about in the woods, or in the city. Example: when im working on the road and staying in a hotel for the night, i keep my stuff as packed as possible and ready to go, instead of an "exploded" bag with stuff all over the room. It has served me at least one time that the fire alarm was activated and everyone had to be evacuated. I had my stuff with me, others didnt. Ok, i know, stuff is not worth loosing your life, i would leave it behind to save my life, but its a good habit to have, and in some situations your stuff might save you later. Mindset and practise, and you can do it with your eyes closed. Good video!
Thank you for the great tip.
This is something that’s never occurred to me until now.. (Also came from Brass Facts) Love your breakdown and explanation of the bugout setup!
Brassfacts is making some really good content on his channel, really enjoying it. Glad you came over and checked out my content!
For a pillow I've used packs, chest rigs, organizing sacks, brush, roots, stumps, rocks and a handful of other things....an actual lightweight compressable pillow is worth more than its weight in gold.
I stash a inflatable pillow for said usage, I store a good warm hoodie all rolled/balled up for quick use though. It works(ish) but the pillow is much better
Thank you makes one think, and that is something we need more of.
Cheers.
Also, your r value means nothing in the winter if you r sleeping on a pad, you will be extremely uncomfortable with no pad in the winter due to not being able to maintain body heat. Awesome vid haven’t seen anyone take some of your talking points into consideration! Keep them coming!
Solid video and considerations. I have been eying up that Snugpak SF Bivvy for a bit. Glad to hear your positive feedback.
Loving your content! Thank you for the great ideas, and tactical but practical mindset. Watching your videos has me rethinking my entire set up for my needs and area.
I'm a huge fan of your channel and the content you create. The knowledge you share is priceless, and I can't thank you enough🙏🏽. Most importantly, thank you for your service.🇺🇸🤘🏽
Thank you I appreciate!
Love the dump pouches on hip belt, such a good idea.
Great Info on how to set up camp to evade incoming opposition.
Sent by BrassFacts. Saw some of your other content and I likes it. Keep ‘em coming dude.
Thanks for checking out the content!
very realistic and sensible move
Thats actually vary close to my set up sleep system wise I definitely will be adopted some of the same ideas as this set up
I was always trained and raised to not leave anything behind. As you are stuffing the sack with your sleeping gear, you aren't really adding any time if you stuff those extra bags in there at the same time. But that's me, you do as you see fit. Excellent video as always.
Nice video. Well thought out and realistic solutions.
Thanks for the good info. Stay safe out there
Might not be comfy but I feel in this scenario you could also jettison the sleeping pad. Ideally you wouldn’t want to leave anything behind but in an emergency I consider it more of a luxury than essential.
Great content though! Just found this channel and def want to see more
Depends on the location, but I agree that it's not ideal.
If you want to control the lighting outdoors, it's pretty easy actually! Although probably not really practical or worthwhile for you, but it'll still share if anyone is interested! All you need is a decent c stand, I used Matthews C stands, Avenger is good as well. A sand bag or two depending on wind (which you would want to use on the highest leg of the c stand and it should also be opposite of the any weight on the c stand. So if you have a boom with a light at 12 o clock, you should set the highest leg w/ sandbags at 6 o clock), and a 6-8' flag. Flag not meaning like an American flag but like some sort of object or material to block or control the light. A big reflector can help, or even a sheet! It will diffuse the light. I used this all the time when I was out shooting on location as a photographer doing off camera flash too. lol not that it really matters lol just sharing some boring stuff probably no one cares about 😂
Thanks for that over-sized ditch bag idea. I'm still searching for a decent lightweight quick take-down air mattress; I've used those waffle mats before, but apparently I have a princess back and can't get rested enough without a stack of mattresses under me.
Have you tried two foldy waffle mats?
Really liked the idea of an Stuffsack by your side. I honestly dont know if the valve is necessary since you would probably deflate it only in an secure moment after the initial flight and therefor could easily open the stuffsack regularly and compress it.
We need to get this channel some more love.. maybe even collab with the clone father, Garand thumb can happen.
Sent here by Brass Facts, stayed for the great content
I appreciate him sending you my way, and I'm glad you enjoyed the content!
For the foam mats a backpacker trick is to chop it at the knee for back sleeper or one panel below the knee for side sleepers shave some weight and keeps it more compact
Depending on you normal climate that can help out alot! I currently live in the northern United States so I need the extra warmth lol
Great video as always man! I always look forward to your content.
Great quick easy out setup
Really enjoy these practical videos.
Good day, I understand that you said it's free to donate.
If you are gonna use a tarp, make sure all your lines for it are quick deploy. Make a quick deploy ridgeline (rope bundle with a bowline pre-tied in one end to make a quick release with), and tie your other lines into the grommets on your tarp with a tensioning knot of your choice already tied in them. If your tarp can't go up and come down in under a minute each way in this context, you're probably dead
Great idea!
Great info and channel! Excellent points and details. Thank you
Another awesome informational video!!!! Thank you for sharing.
A mock emergency evac would be cool to watch
Good info for thought in regard to get home or possible bug out
Well hell.....guess I'm ordering some stuff! Thanks for the ideas! 👊
Great video as always
This is awesome. Definitely sharing it with my friends.
good stuff brother. Also recently got on the pillow train. makes a big difference for that high demand recovery
Thanks
Great vid!
Love this video
Somehow I missed this vid, but it turned up on my feed, strange, thx for the vid bro
well done
Great video, you give me plenty of interesting idea's with that setup
in addition to the Nightvision, I also carry a basic thermal camera
Glade I found your channel 🤜🏼🤛🏻
Good stuff as usual!
Old School! K.I.S.S thanks from this old explorer. Ps If you don't leave anything behind a it leaves the incoming people questioning rather was someone there or not and whether they should continue to follow or Was it Bigfoot. Any second guessing the pursuit does will slow them down!
Merci beaucoup
Tres interressant
Smart and fun video
Always a learning experience. Thanks.
Thanks for another great video.
Great video. Thanks.
Great info.Much appreciated
Bro you can get that tarp down really low with no cordage. Stake three corners down, prop up the center, and tie down the "door". Its tight, but its super low profile. Additionally, plow points, and butting up against natural terrain features. Lots of options.
I carry a poncho for certain situations but they all have two major flaws, visibility and setup/teardown time. As soon as you stake down your corners your 360 visibility is gone.. If you do setup a design that is good for your visual avenues of approach then you no longer follow your BLISS acronym for shelter...Or you have cordage strung everywhere which makes it difficult to take down in the middle of the night under duress.
If speed, security and observation are the necessities, traps aren't that great.. If you don't have those needs then yes a trap is definitely a top contender. It's all situational based.
@@PreparedAirman good points. Thanks for replying.
Thanks. Helpful
Thanks for the info
Good stuff
The only people that hate in a legit pillow have never spent long periods of time in the bush.
Great video
Really well thought out. What about in cold like
four to one... I like those odds
Good video as always brother have a good weekend
Just a heads up, for a good intermediary between helmet and the crye cap, check out the Raptor Tactical gen 2 Skull Cap, I like to throw those in a backpack when a helmet is out of the question or I'm just travelling.
Good Ideas
Stumbled upon you and liked the vid. Subbed
Good content. Subscribed.
The enemy #1 tool to be effective and lethal will be infared and silencers. They will pick one by one from a effective distance while everyone panics. Underground and above the trees is a good area to rest.
Thermals are a game changer too
Yep, a thermal scope and thermal camouflage will be a huge edge. Forget the IR laser.
Love your content!! Keep it up
Where ya get those smoke grenades?
IWA International
@@PreparedAirman ty sir
Aim High!
🔷🔷 GREAT VIDEO 🔷🔷
A little less cool but I was camping one night and has to break camp and get moving in the middle of the night because my brother got in a wreck. Doing all that under nods was way weirder than I thought it would be
O yes, especially trying to focus your NVD back and forth between near and far.. it's can be a hassle
What do you do with your footwear at night? That likely changes your break contact time by a lot.
Swap socks and keep my boots on.
Have liytle experience, however having pack, rifre and node open in the rain seems suboptimal.
Also how is sleeping in shoes like? Doesn't all moisture, mud etc migate thermal advantage of layered sleeping bags?
I will place my poncho on top of my gear if It starts to rain. I'm personally not worried about my pack getting wet because it's waterproof and properly layered.
As for sleeping in boots I normally swap socks before bed and after I wake up. The bivy will add some moisture if not vented but that will be a decision you will need to make based on METT-TC if you do so in the moment.
@@PreparedAirman thank you for insight
This is f*cking amazing, thank you
I whould like to see that happen. What happen to a few branches to cover the position? What do they teach you in the military down there? 20 secs is too much to get our things. Can you do that in that time and show?
20 seconds is a arbitrary number... Ultimately it's METTTC.
@@PreparedAirman Thank you. If I remember well from my time with the USA troops, METT-TC is: Mission, Enemy, Terrain & Weather, Troops, Time Available, Civilian Considerations, right? This is good, but it will not work as you say. Specialy, alone in a hot area. To gab all that you got there, it will take a min, min and half, and it needs to be close to you. Then, one needs to know where to go: up, down left, right. What cover one as around: rocks, grass, vegetation, trees... Keep up th good work.
That is correct about METTTC. It's mainly a catch all term that means every situation is different and not one single solution will work. Multiple situations require multiple different solutions. The video is explaining 1 potential way to do things. So I can be modified to the users needs depending on the situation you are faced with.
If your throw your pad in your bivy you won't roll off of it and it's a little warmer, just be careful not to poke holes on the bottom lol
If I had a larger bivy I normally would. This one is a little small for me and makes me feel like a bunch of Toothpaste if I do lol
@@PreparedAirman lmao gotcha , looks like a nice bivy and foldable foam pad, Ill probably end up replacing my issued blow up pad after this video lol.
Damn the vented Snugpak Dri-Sak is out of stock everywhere :D
Maybe here- shop.opticsplanet.com/snugpak-dri-sak-with-air-valve-40l.html?_iv_code=SPK-HY-BRDK1310-80DS02OD-40LAIR&srsltid=AYJSbAe19NHbeWr9vwhlZcXB1EGnC_736Bry6eUmcVYe-JUF6onicjEAcJk
@@PreparedAirman Sucks when you're based in europe even though snugpak is from the UK :D Thanks though much appreciated!
Hi QUESTION, I live in the great lakes states area and would that bed system you have be good enough for winter time if one had to bug out in winter time or if not what do you recommend that would be fast and warm enough ?
I would say no. I am originally from Ohio and grew up their with all the lake effect. Personally knowing the weather there I would carry a dedicated sleeping bag in the winter time. Summer time yes in my opinion you could use the exact setup I'm running, that's what I would do.
@@PreparedAirman Okay thank you but how did you know i was in Ohio ?
I didn't lol. I personally grew up their so I can relate to the climate. Ohio, Indiana New York, Pennsylvania, Michigan have a close climate from the Great lakes.
@@PreparedAirman Ok its kind of cool that we are from the same state and i was in the military as well as a tank crewman B1-1.
Can i ask what state you are in now ? I am thinking about selling this house in Canton here and moving to another state and back out in the country as i grew up in the country her in East Sparta,Oh.I also need to find a good prepper group to join soon as the people here cant even seem to understand the need for a Urban defense league.
I would cut that sleeping pad down to slightly larger than torso. Don't need pad for legs and your bivy would keep the moisture off your legs.
Alot of through hikers do that. I have thought of doing it myself but my environment is fairly cold most of the year so i'm always plagued by conduction.
A collaboration with Garand Thumb would be good and logistically not difficult as you both are in the Pacific Northwest.
If your location has been discovered haven't you made a mistake
Realistically, youre gonna be sleeping in your kit. Poncho liner and poncho combo for a few hours rest, but if you are worried about being discovered then you prolly shouldnt unpack completely
Exactly why I set it up that way 😉
50k lets go lads!
Prepared Airman, what is that sleeping mat you have? I'm in the market for a good one since all I have is a leaky thermarest.
Therm-a-rest zlite. It's R value is a little low at 2.0 but it's works well.
🔷🔷 GREAT VIDEO 🔷🔷
Greetings from Florida 🌴
June 9th 2022
Sleep with your feet inside your pack. Then we you have to bug out, you just have to start kicking your sleeping bag downwards into your pack as you get out
Where is this in what state?
This bag is being used all over the northern US (in its current summer configuration). North Dakota, Montana, Idaho, Washington and Wyoming.