Thanks so much for watching! Please leave me a thumbs up and a comment in the section below. Make sure and check out our website at www.waypointsurvival.com where you can sign up for classes and check out the required gear list!
Former 50 of 74 years a hobo. Another great how to video. Even with all my years I hadn't thought of a grater used as a " grill " . So am still learning even at my age. A sort of tin cup I had used was a old quality measuring cup from a thrift store. Might have been steel rather than tin tho. If I look around may be able to find the fry pan you show. Had a small stove top coffee pot like what you show that I used at one time. Used when I had an room on a hot plate. Way cheaper than the electric kind. I think it was bigger than 2 cups tho. Great for soups/stew cooking as well. Used my stove top coffee pot for such. I would carry the cook kit in a small stuff bag, not canvas. Wrapped cookware in paper bags and grocery bags. The paper sacks could be cut in thin strips for fire starting. Usually used instant coffee rather than grounds. Stored in an old Prince Albert pipe tobacco tin. I would put a number of salt, pepper, & sugar single serving from cafes in 35 mm film canisters. Of course always had pliers, p-38, and " church key " type bottle opener. I carried a soup spoon for a long while but started using chop sticks most of the time instead. Could knife shave a couple of twigs for chop sticks in a pitch. The highlight of my week is looking for whatever new videos you produce. Keep up the good work.
I guess it would depend upon the region you live, or were raised in. My folks always called any sheet steel cooking vessels or utensils, cans, etc. as "TIN" It might actually be tin plated or not, they still referred to anything such, as " tin"
@@dlighted8861 The Orientals ( China & Japan ) ate soup with chop sticks. You pick out the solids with the chop sticks first, then drink the broth from the bowl. Like the Orientals I also eat noodles ( even spaghetti ) with chop sticks. Watch a karate flick or an anime when they eat a bowl of ramen noodles and you'll see how they do it.
Found a real hobo camp with markings pointing to it from the highway where people would walk. Just like one of your earlier videos showed it had pots, frying pan, blankets and tarps. Never would have noticed it before without these vids! Please keep it up super interesting
Go! I got my Glaciar 4 piece mess kit from my local second-hand store BRAND NEW for R120 (South African Rands). Two pans, a little plastic bowl, a 375ml blue plastic mug, and a pot-grabber. All in a ducky little mesh bag. Not two months later I found a tiny little brand-new K-way backpacking kettle for R20! So - GO!
I just discovered your channel and must say the Hobo collection is outstanding. I adjust the videos speed at 90%, light a pipe, pour myself a drink and relax watching them…Pure gold! Thank you for all the time you put into them.
Wow- the cheese grater! I went out and took mine, a 5x12” and grated hard cheese. Then grated potatoes and carrots and set them to boil on the cheese grater, when done cooking, set aside to cool and added grated cheese. Then on the smooth side of grater I cooked a NY strip steak. Brilliant! Now to sleeve your cheese grater/grill is a product by Setton Nuts that comes with a 16 oz. Cotton sack, fits perfectly.
I don't know why I find your videos so relaxing! I guess it's because I'm sitting in my house watching TV, wishing that I had the strength and energy to go camping like I used to. I was a minimalist camper when I used to bring my four children with me even when they were in diapers😊
I have lived with south American tribes in my younger years,50 years ago. They cook what we would call primitively. Most things are cooked in a pot of boiling water. Rice , beans and what ever else they can find. Fish, snake monkey or any other meat. Great video.
Put together great. The one talked was more modern butwas well on the road in the 1960s. He carried a packso as to not come up short. He also when the funds got low found day labor to build up his road poke. He checked in to the YMCA to get clean clothes as well as himself. I belive they pointed him toward day labor. Once his poke was full and his needs set back on the rails. He was not a bum as some would like to believe.
I'm 68 and still use a perc for coffee, did go elec a few years ago. my dad would make morning coffee and as I grew into my teens I would get up and have a cup. The morning coffee conversations gave me time to know and really respect him. Thanks in part to a old perc.
Good info, thanks. You always show uses of the frying pan. A lot of lessons can be learned from these guys!! You used the grater for soap to wash clothes in another video, and it seems multitasking was very important to reduce weight.
Absolutely. When your whole life was lived on the road and you had to carry things and stay lightweight, being able to have items that could be used in multiple ways could be very important.
Britt Iowa is great But an eeast coast Museum would be great Red bird express used to Run the Pennsberg hobo Gathering Rest in Peace Brother and King On the westbound Regards Bike Week Hobo 🚲✅✌️@@WayPointSurvival
Can remember reading about your civil war and a comparison of the soldiers on both sides. It said the Norths soldiers required more equipment and supplies as many were from urban environments whereas the Southern soldiers were generally raised in the country and only required a tin cup and a spoon. I wonder if the tin cup and spoon thing had just become a shorthand way of describing used to roughing it and quite hardy? When I was younger you always got the odd person who turned up to camp with below the bare minimum because they couldn't be bothered to carry the kit and borrowed from everyone else, a quick way to make yourself less than popular. Can't imagine it being any different in the 1930s and I'm sure they did their best after a camp or two of sour looks!
Years ago while I was in college I was a Flagger for road construction. I’d take a can of Beef Stew for lunch. I’d set it on the exhaust manifold on one of the construction trucks about an hour or so before lunchtime. It would be piping hot at lunchtime. When it was hot during the summer, I’d take a PB&J sandwich and a bottle of cold water or sweet tea.
I love the idea of the grater as a grill over the fire and back when shotgun cartridges were paper a fired 16 gauge fitted inside a fired12 gauge making a waterproof matchbox. Great video
James, Thank You once again for sharing your vast knowledge about the Hobo Culture/Lifestyle. It's a very interesting topic and never boring! Keep up the great work and God Bless and Be Safe.
Fascinating video. Wish those vintage type of graters were more common nowadays. I carry a modern-day flat, small titanium mesh grill for the same purpose. Wouldn't mind something that could do double-duty.
🎉love that hack with the grater! Ya know... you can easily pick up and put together that neat kit at any dollar store or Salvation army. You laid it out so well! Love to see a side by side with dollar tree stuff!🎉
This guy is adorable, isn't he???❤ I really love all these little sets he puts together!! Antique buff myself, used one of those tiny percolators for years until I switched to just boiling grounds in a saucepan like my grandmother did. Coincidently I have my grandfather's pliers, they look very similar- dark like that, more refined build than modern pliers. Thanks for the great video James!!!
I like the idea with the grater, but i would turn it upside down so that the "legs" would be pointing up therefore nestling the grater so its less likely to budge and drop your hard earned meal into the fire 😉👍
@@WayPointSurvival I'll take your word for it 🫡 Also not all graters are the same anyways so... To each their own, gotta find your own system with what you have. Keep up the weekly videos!
A nice and very informative video that tells you a lot about the time of the Great Depression. If you were a hobo looking for work where it was needed, you had little or no money. So equipment had to be cheap and durable. It also couldn't be too heavy, because the hobo had to carry it. This led to an involuntary minimalism. Just the bare essentials. We can learn a lot from that. The perculator seems a bit big to me, I suspect the smaller version for a cup of coffee was a bit more common.
i would imagine being after ww1, surplus m1910 mess kits would have been a popular choice for the skillet, being a folding handle and a lid, allowing to store items, and being pretty light
Thank you James for yet another great video. I'm slowly working my way through your collection. Particularly like the Hobo and the historical ones. All the best from Scotland.
Love that you wear the suits and gentlemen outfits! The old style of dress looks so smart. Thanks! Excited for your trip with Dave Canterbury with all the old gear
I CONTINUOUSLY PURCHASE BANADAS AT KAMP WALMART..ONE OF MY OLD ONES I FOLD IN THIRDS AND IT IS MY INSULATION ON MY GREEN BEAN CAN I USE FOR MY COFFEE UNTIL I GET MY HOBO HANDELS ON MY SML CAN ASWEL AS MY 20 OZ CAN
The grater grate was a great idea. I'm sure I can get some potatoes and grate them up and make hash, probably get some eggs too. Loose leaf tea might work in the coffee pot, if not I'd just find another pot to boil water and use teabags. Great lil kit James, thanks for the video.
Using that food grater as a grill is also a new one on me. Don't believe I have ever seen that before but its obviously a good thing that would have been considered, (and now will be). Another really good video on this arena James!
Will keep this setup in mind, even if I’m not up to the hobo road. (Age, disabilities, and health problems.) Maybe the bicycle-traveling road (1-3 weeks or so a year on a good year) and for power outages.
I have the same old Ford pliers but they aren't the ones I usually tote. Also, great idea using the grater as a fire grate. I have one of those, too, from a thrift store. It will now have a reason to justify caring it on more that just truck camping. Keep these fun, informative videos coming.
Man i really look forward to seeing your videos I now sit down an have a cup of tea an watch it on my tv I love the cheese grader grill idea the hobo life is so interesting and so many different tricks that really are genius I wish there were more hobo movies only one I found the the emperor of the north. Thanks so much
Not only are your videos entertaining' But can help tremendously in a tight spot. I've always enjoyed your content and now I'm currently working in another State staying in a RV with not a whole lot of home goods if you will " and you're advise and ideas are helpful to me! 👍🏻
Thanks so much for watching! Please leave me a thumbs up and a comment in the section below. Make sure and check out our website at www.waypointsurvival.com where you can sign up for classes and check out the required gear list!
Former 50 of 74 years a hobo. Another great how to video. Even with all my years I hadn't thought of a grater used as a " grill " . So am still learning even at my age. A sort of tin cup I had used was a old quality measuring cup from a thrift store. Might have been steel rather than tin tho. If I look around may be able to find the fry pan you show. Had a small stove top coffee pot like what you show that I used at one time. Used when I had an room on a hot plate. Way cheaper than the electric kind. I think it was bigger than 2 cups tho. Great for soups/stew cooking as well. Used my stove top coffee pot for such. I would carry the cook kit in a small stuff bag, not canvas. Wrapped cookware in paper bags and grocery bags. The paper sacks could be cut in thin strips for fire starting. Usually used instant coffee rather than grounds. Stored in an old Prince Albert pipe tobacco tin. I would put a number of salt, pepper, & sugar single serving from cafes in 35 mm film canisters. Of course always had pliers, p-38, and " church key " type bottle opener. I carried a soup spoon for a long while but started using chop sticks most of the time instead. Could knife shave a couple of twigs for chop sticks in a pitch. The highlight of my week is looking for whatever new videos you produce. Keep up the good work.
Thank you so much, my friend! I always enjoy your input, and you have a lot of wisdom and experience to share, which I also enjoy!
Glad you found stability 👍🏽
I guess it would depend upon
the region you live, or were
raised in. My folks always called any sheet steel cooking vessels or utensils, cans, etc.
as "TIN"
It might actually be tin plated
or not, they still referred to
anything such, as " tin"
Good for the waistline too. You won't gain any weight eating soup with chop sticks. 😉
@@dlighted8861 The Orientals ( China & Japan ) ate soup with chop sticks. You pick out the solids with the chop sticks first, then drink the broth from the bowl. Like the Orientals I also eat noodles ( even spaghetti ) with chop sticks. Watch a karate flick or an anime when they eat a bowl of ramen noodles and you'll see how they do it.
Found a real hobo camp with markings pointing to it from the highway where people would walk. Just like one of your earlier videos showed it had pots, frying pan, blankets and tarps. Never would have noticed it before without these vids! Please keep it up super interesting
Very cool! Thanks for watching!
…Brotherman! That suit and hat is suave survivor~ lookin’ sharp!
Thanks!
I was just thinking the same thing. I especially like the Hat.
I like the fact that that old stuff was made batter then anything today.
Absolutely!
The way I see it, that pair of pliers was the FIRST element in the now special . . . multi-tool!
Indeed!
That's how Mr. Leatherman came up with the idea to put pliers in his multitool.
Every time I finish watching one of your vids,
I feel compelled to go to the second hand store!
👍
Love that!
@@WayPointSurvival
👍
me to
Same here!!!
Go! I got my Glaciar 4 piece mess kit from my local second-hand store BRAND NEW for R120 (South African Rands). Two pans, a little plastic bowl, a 375ml blue plastic mug, and a pot-grabber. All in a ducky little mesh bag. Not two months later I found a tiny little brand-new K-way backpacking kettle for R20! So - GO!
I just discovered your channel and must say the Hobo collection is outstanding. I adjust the videos speed at 90%, light a pipe, pour myself a drink and relax watching them…Pure gold! Thank you for all the time you put into them.
I appreciate you taking the time to watch and relax!
Wow- the cheese grater! I went out and took mine, a 5x12” and grated hard cheese. Then grated potatoes and carrots and set them to boil on the cheese grater, when done cooking, set aside to cool and added grated cheese. Then on the smooth side of grater I cooked a NY strip steak. Brilliant! Now to sleeve your cheese grater/grill is a product by Setton Nuts that comes with a 16 oz. Cotton sack, fits perfectly.
Goods to know, thanks!
That grater is a great idea for my mishmash cook/mess kit. Thanks James.
You're welcome!
As soon as you picked up the grater, I knew what you were going to do with it. Never would have thought of that on my own. Excellent use for it.
Thanks!
I don't know why I find your videos so relaxing! I guess it's because I'm sitting in my house watching TV, wishing that I had the strength and energy to go camping like I used to. I was a minimalist camper when I used to bring my four children with me even when they were in diapers😊
Love that!
with soft wood the grader can also make tender shavings. if its sharp enough.
Good idea!
Another great one, James! The Civil War Era spoon looks like it is made of Pewter! May god bless you.
Thanks! I actually believe that the spoon is made from what is called German silver.
The grater over the fire idea is GENIUS! See? I wouldn't last 5 minutes in that life. I never would have thought of such an idea. LOL!
Thanks so much for watching and I'm glad you liked it!
Using the grater as a grate is an especially neat idea.
Thanks!
Yep! NEVER seem that before!
You can bring a bar of soap and grate the soap to clean with. I have a small one in my camping gear.
I love it when you use hobo and minimalist in the same sentence 😅
Right?!
@@WayPointSurvival makes me wonder if you've ever seen a glamping hobo though 🤷🏼♂️
I have lived with south American tribes in my younger years,50 years ago. They cook what we would call primitively. Most things are cooked in a pot of boiling water. Rice , beans and what ever else they can find. Fish, snake monkey or any other meat. Great video.
Thanks so much!
Put together great. The one talked was more modern butwas well on the road in the 1960s. He carried a packso as to not come up short. He also when the funds got low found day labor to build up his road poke. He checked in to the YMCA to get clean clothes as well as himself. I belive they pointed him toward day labor. Once his poke was full and his needs set back on the rails. He was not a bum as some would like to believe.
Yes, there is a great misunderstanding about the difference between bums, tramps, and hobos.
Very cool! I never would have thought about the extra use of the grater!
Glad you like it!
I'm 68 and still use a perc for coffee, did go elec a few years ago. my dad would make morning coffee and as I grew into my teens I would get up and have a cup. The morning coffee conversations gave me time to know and really respect him. Thanks in part to a old perc.
Very cool and wonderful memories!
Good info, thanks. You always show uses of the frying pan. A lot of lessons can be learned from these guys!! You used the grater for soap to wash clothes in another video, and it seems multitasking was very important to reduce weight.
Absolutely. When your whole life was lived on the road and you had to carry things and stay lightweight, being able to have items that could be used in multiple ways could be very important.
As always, thanks for the great videos.
Glad you like them!
Good ideas, James. You’re a gem of a hobo.
Courtesy of Half Vast Flying
Thanks so much, my friend!
Wow, you are getting quite the collection of vintage camping/hobo gear. Museum some day? Excellent video!
Maybe one day! Thank you for getting!
Britt Iowa is great
But an eeast coast
Museum would be great
Red bird express used to
Run the Pennsberg hobo
Gathering
Rest in Peace Brother and King
On the westbound
Regards
Bike Week Hobo 🚲✅✌️@@WayPointSurvival
I can imagine your house is like a museum great video👌👍
Thanks so much for watching!
The great grater used as a grate. Excellent video.
Many thanks!
I don't know how you find all these items, but thank you for sharing them with us so carefully.❤
Thanks for watching!
Antique stores & estate sales.
Can remember reading about your civil war and a comparison of the soldiers on both sides. It said the Norths soldiers required more equipment and supplies as many were from urban environments whereas the Southern soldiers were generally raised in the country and only required a tin cup and a spoon. I wonder if the tin cup and spoon thing had just become a shorthand way of describing used to roughing it and quite hardy? When I was younger you always got the odd person who turned up to camp with below the bare minimum because they couldn't be bothered to carry the kit and borrowed from everyone else, a quick way to make yourself less than popular. Can't imagine it being any different in the 1930s and I'm sure they did their best after a camp or two of sour looks!
I would say that you are correct in that!
Years ago while I was in college I was a Flagger for road construction.
I’d take a can of Beef Stew for lunch.
I’d set it on the exhaust manifold on one of the construction trucks about an hour or so before lunchtime.
It would be piping hot at lunchtime.
When it was hot during the summer, I’d take a PB&J sandwich and a bottle of cold water or sweet tea.
Very cool!
@@Doc1855
Did you say SWEET TEA???
I SALUTE YOU SIR!
@@KevinSmith-yh6tl Yep 👍
Love the cheese grater idea !!!!
Thanks!
Great new video, James. This kind of kit would be prefect for the “bare bones” carrying Hobo. Heck, it would be great to take camping too!
Absolutely!
Excellent research, James, that kit will last forever and I am glad you salvaged it. Need more people like you…
Thanks for watching and for the kind words!
A very good cook kit. and ready for any meal opportunity.
Absolutely!
I love the idea of the grater as a grill over the fire and back when shotgun cartridges were paper a fired 16 gauge fitted inside a fired12 gauge making a waterproof matchbox. Great video
Thanks!
This is one of my favorite camping channels. Love the history tid bits too
Awesome, thank you!
James, Thank You once again for sharing your vast knowledge about the Hobo Culture/Lifestyle. It's a very interesting topic and never boring! Keep up the great work and God Bless and Be Safe.
You're very welcome and may God bless you too!
Fascinating video. Wish those vintage type of graters were more common nowadays. I carry a modern-day flat, small titanium mesh grill for the same purpose. Wouldn't mind something that could do double-duty.
That would be a grate idea!
@@WayPointSurvival
😆
Cheese grader over the fire is a great idea for a grill! Thanks James!
You're welcome!
Still building my ultralight Spam/fish can kit.
Excellent!
@@WayPointSurvival I need to punch the holes, paint them and build the grill
I had just bought a 1920s two cup perculator 3 weeks ago . Happy to see your lil pot!
Excellent!
Cheese grater is a good idea
Thanks for the grate compliment!
Your enthusiasm is infectious! Great job!
Thanks so much!
🎉love that hack with the grater!
Ya know... you can easily pick up and put together that neat kit at any dollar store or Salvation army. You laid it out so well! Love to see a side by side with dollar tree stuff!🎉
That would be pretty cool!
Great job. I'm thinking of cooking wild game on the grater with oil coating for my bushcraft. Genius.
Go for it!
Always learning.
Yes the grater is a grand idea.
Thanks again 🙏
You're welcome!
Thanks James for the info, especially the tip about the grater... Never would have thought of that.
You're welcome!
This guy is adorable, isn't he???❤ I really love all these little sets he puts together!! Antique buff myself, used one of those tiny percolators for years until I switched to just boiling grounds in a saucepan like my grandmother did. Coincidently I have my grandfather's pliers, they look very similar- dark like that, more refined build than modern pliers. Thanks for the great video James!!!
You're very welcome!
I like the idea with the grater, but i would turn it upside down so that the "legs" would be pointing up therefore nestling the grater so its less likely to budge and drop your hard earned meal into the fire 😉👍
Actually it fits best and is more stable the way that I used it.
@@WayPointSurvival I'll take your word for it 🫡 Also not all graters are the same anyways so... To each their own, gotta find your own system with what you have. Keep up the weekly videos!
I like your videos they help me to remember to be humble. Plus they are entertaining and informative. Thanks!
Glad you like them!
Thanks, James
You're welcome!
A nice and very informative video that tells you a lot about the time of the Great Depression. If you were a hobo looking for work where it was needed, you had little or no money. So equipment had to be cheap and durable. It also couldn't be too heavy, because the hobo had to carry it. This led to an involuntary minimalism. Just the bare essentials. We can learn a lot from that.
The perculator seems a bit big to me, I suspect the smaller version for a cup of coffee was a bit more common.
Thanks for watching!
Nice set of cooking tools.
Glad to see someone put
salt in a non-metallic container
Yes, even though they carried them in tins, yet the glass is a better choice, for sure.
i would imagine being after ww1, surplus m1910 mess kits would have been a popular choice for the skillet, being a folding handle and a lid, allowing to store items, and being pretty light
Yes, I'm sure that that would have been a common item as well.
Using a grater like that as a grill is a great hack! I believe some 'Bos carried green tea. Anyway, it may be a useful option now as then.
Indeed!
Thank you James for yet another great video. I'm slowly working my way through your collection. Particularly like the Hobo and the historical ones. All the best from Scotland.
Glad you like them!
Love that you wear the suits and gentlemen outfits! The old style of dress looks so smart. Thanks! Excited for your trip with Dave Canterbury with all the old gear
You are so welcome!
Good video and tips James, thanks for sharing, YAH bless brother !
Glad you enjoyed it and God bless you too, my friend!
Great content James!!! The hobo series is most definitely one of a kind!!!
Thanks so much, my friend!
@@WayPointSurvival anytime buddy!
I CONTINUOUSLY PURCHASE BANADAS AT KAMP WALMART..ONE OF MY OLD ONES I FOLD IN THIRDS AND IT IS MY INSULATION ON MY GREEN BEAN CAN I USE FOR MY COFFEE UNTIL I GET MY HOBO HANDELS ON MY SML CAN ASWEL AS MY 20 OZ CAN
Excellent idea!
GREAT idea on that grater! Downsizing my gear. Best
Thanks for watching!
Enjoyed this. Simple is so much more fun. Great thrifting with the spoon!
Yes! Thank you!
The grater grate was a great idea. I'm sure I can get some potatoes and grate them up and make hash, probably get some eggs too. Loose leaf tea might work in the coffee pot, if not I'd just find another pot to boil water and use teabags. Great lil kit James, thanks for the video.
Thanks for watching!
I love this series you are doing. That grater as a fire grill is a brilliant idea!
Thanks!
Using that food grater as a grill is also a new one on me. Don't believe I have ever seen that before but its obviously a good thing that would have been considered, (and now will be). Another really good video on this arena James!
Thanks so much!
Great video brother thank you for sharing your knowledge and expertise and GOD-BLESS
You're very welcome and God bless you too!
"Grate" idea😁
Thanks, lol!
Will keep this setup in mind, even if I’m not up to the hobo road. (Age, disabilities, and health problems.)
Maybe the bicycle-traveling road (1-3 weeks or so a year on a good year) and for power outages.
Sounds good to me!
Nice video.
Thanks!
Always enjoy 😊
Thanks so much!
The Grater grill is new to me. Thanks
When I go out on the town I always carry matchbooks to give out if asked for a light. Lots of people smoke or start fires in the cold.
Matches are definitely a great invention!
You should take that kit and use it in a video
Thanks for watching and for the suggestion!
Ah😮 I like the grater😊 nice kit. Take care. 😊
Thanks, my friend!
Excellent video.I was thinking that M might be a W. THANKS JAMES
Right! Thanks for watching!
Good stuff James. As a famous person once said, "It's life Jim but not as we know it". 😉 Good video
Exactly!
Great idea on grader , thank you !!! 🙂
You are so welcome!
Каждое видео полно новых открытий и полезных идей 🤝
Thanks so much!
I think the match container has a "W" on it for Waypoint.
Right! Good one!
Hi James Love this use for the Grater as a cook top! Excellent video as always!☮️
Thanks!
I have the same old Ford pliers but they aren't the ones I usually tote. Also, great idea using the grater as a fire grate. I have one of those, too, from a thrift store. It will now have a reason to justify caring it on more that just truck camping. Keep these fun, informative videos coming.
Thanks, will do!
Can almost taste that coffee now. Great video.
Thanks!
i like the grainder-grill idea 🙂
Thanks!
Thank you. I always enjoy the antiques you find.
I had a feeling you was dropping a video today. Man I'm so glad I was right! I look forward to these hobo videos.
Thanks so much!
James another interesting and informative video thank you.
Glad you enjoyed it!
You look so snazzy! Makes me think of bluesy jazz for some reason...
Thanks!
Love your videos. Keep them coming
Thank you! Will do!
Thanks bro.😊
You're welcome!
great kit. can't wait to see what you show Dave Canterbury and love that coffee pot
Thanks so much! The squirrel hunting camp is going to be a lot of fun!
Great video and some very nice old stuff. So vintage.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Man i really look forward to seeing your videos I now sit down an have a cup of tea an watch it on my tv I love the cheese grader grill idea the hobo life is so interesting and so many different tricks that really are genius I wish there were more hobo movies only one I found the the emperor of the north. Thanks so much
You're very welcome!
Great littel kit brother
Thanks, my friend!
Very interesting
Thanks!
i really like your hobo series keep up the good work
Thanks, will do!
There you go! Another awesome piece of content' thanks once more
Much appreciated! Thank you for watching!
Not only are your videos entertaining' But can help tremendously in a tight spot. I've always enjoyed your content and now I'm currently working in another State staying in a RV with not a whole lot of home goods if you will " and you're advise and ideas are helpful to me! 👍🏻
Very nice kit
Thanks!
Another very interesting and informative video. These are so nostalgic and put you back to days of yore. Love it.
Thanks so much for watching!
Ok James now it’s time to put that kit to use and cook us up a typical hobo dinner 😎.
That would make a pretty cool video!
Great kit, love it!
Thanks!