Wet Weather Fire-Making - HowTo

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  • Опубліковано 24 сер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 698

  • @MrJzlavallee
    @MrJzlavallee 8 років тому +785

    My god. I haven't thought of using a pencil sharpener to make super fine tinder material. Probably gonna throw one in my kit now.

    • @hugeenzo7884
      @hugeenzo7884 8 років тому +2

      me to

    • @joshporter5773
      @joshporter5773 8 років тому +9

      Well, there cheap, easily accessible, I'm a 13 year old and I can just go into WHSmith (or a stationery shop) and buy one.

    • @poldi2233
      @poldi2233 6 років тому +7

      Oh Lord I feel stupid now :D

    • @smokeythehuman3596
      @smokeythehuman3596 6 років тому

      If your around palmtrees and its wet and theres a bunch of dead palm frons laying around or still connected together you can always shake off the palm frons crumble up the leaves and break the actual branch part into peices and use the crumbled palm fron leaves to help the fire get going and the broken branch parts to help light bigger pieces as long as you have a lighter or if you have magnesium and a striker

    • @davesmith1771
      @davesmith1771 6 років тому +2

      A knife works nearly as good and I would assume everyone has one.....

  • @BruceNitroxpro
    @BruceNitroxpro 8 років тому +586

    This is just so well structured and correct that it deserves a rating of A+.

    • @kwf9225
      @kwf9225 7 років тому +8

      In Britain it's A*

    • @randalflagg9086
      @randalflagg9086 7 років тому +4

      Didn't used to be lol

    • @cockbreath01
      @cockbreath01 7 років тому +1

      It's Randall Flagg btw

    • @Mati-nx4nn
      @Mati-nx4nn 4 роки тому

      @@kwf9225 9 now

    • @kwf9225
      @kwf9225 4 роки тому

      @@Mati-nx4nn You have found an old comment of mine. Well done.

  • @ericpowell1533
    @ericpowell1533 10 років тому +556

    You throwing that match on the wood pile and it catching in seconds was more bad ass than a man slowly walking away from a car explosion without turning around

    • @erikkitvisets213
      @erikkitvisets213 5 років тому +1

      Eric Powell compare this with Gangnam style...

    • @andychase7693
      @andychase7693 5 років тому +27

      Except he obviously used some sort of accelerant that he didn't show for that shot. Fake news!

    • @theaslam9758
      @theaslam9758 5 років тому +1

      Idiot!

    • @AKAxeMan
      @AKAxeMan 5 років тому +36

      @@andychase7693 he used pine resin. Mentioned it at 3:15

    • @amandab4102
      @amandab4102 5 років тому

      Movie logic

  • @alessandrotorres1962
    @alessandrotorres1962 9 років тому +277

    I will be homeless eventually so I watch these videos so I am prepared to survive. I've watched some of your videos and I come back for a refresher. Being prepared is great.

    • @Ghost572
      @Ghost572 7 років тому +14

      Yeah I thought it was always handy to know things like this to avoid making mistakes if there is ever the situation I need to build a fire.

    • @fuckantifa2162
      @fuckantifa2162 7 років тому +36

      Alessandro Torres haha I'm in the same boat. Soon to be homeless. These.tips will keep me going. Just need whisky now.

    • @huraira448
      @huraira448 6 років тому +12

      Fuck Antifa how's your life now?

    • @brianrios9561
      @brianrios9561 6 років тому

      Alessandro Torres .

    • @DARKNIGHTMM
      @DARKNIGHTMM 6 років тому +11

      Me too. Hahahaha. I thought i was alone in life.
      Humans. One minute you hate them, next minute you love 'em. Its complicated. Lol

  • @johngo6283
    @johngo6283 9 років тому +134

    I like your voice over style of narrating. Generally, this makes videos much more concise and to the point, rather the oh-so-common how to videos that are mostly "blah blah blah blah blah . . ." Great material, thanks for posting!

    • @CircumcisionIsChildAbuse
      @CircumcisionIsChildAbuse 4 роки тому +1

      how does anyone do bushcraft in the UK, there's barely any bush.

    • @AlyxAesthetics
      @AlyxAesthetics 2 роки тому +1

      @@CircumcisionIsChildAbuse I know its depressing. there's a small woodland near me that I go to frequently but seeing people and few animals is all too common. it's also not an ancient woodland, so there's no bluebells. it was planted like 100 years ago for a wood farm and now it's just a woodland. so a lot of trees are in stupid perfect lines. it's good enough though. I wish there was a coniferous forest near me though. there's only so much I can do with birch

    • @CircumcisionIsChildAbuse
      @CircumcisionIsChildAbuse 2 роки тому

      ​@@AlyxAesthetics birch is an extremely useful tree, the aboriginals in Canada used it for pretty much everything. but don't be too discouraged, the train networks in Europe are extensive enough to be able to take a week long trip anywhere and be in the middle of nowhere in only a few hours. Thankfully for me Canada is few and spacious. When I lived in a very rural area with few trees I made due with camping along a river lol you just have to make due with what you have sometimes, that's life. Have you made birch oil yet? I use it to seal my wooden utensils and bowls (just be careful and use is sparingly the taste is foul if you use too much)
      just remember, your situation is entirely up to you to determine. If you want something, say "This is what I want and I'm going to make plans to do it." I mean, you don't even have to uproot everything, you just have to set aside some time. A week, a month? Take a backpack and go somewhere you know would be an excellent place, secluded and just give it a go. Use the trails, then go off the beaten paths, if its annoying YOU to get there, it will annoy anyone else to get there too. I've lived in my own woodland encampment on and off for 17 months, I've gone through 2 winters in my tipi, and my camp has been found just once lol because someone managed to follow my foot prints in winter out of curiosity, said hello, and left. Too many people think there's obstacles in the way, when its mostly just them. Even when I lived in the city, I used to bike 2 hours away to camp.

  • @ronerkkila8245
    @ronerkkila8245 10 років тому +333

    Pencil sharpener...brilliant.

    • @ChrisWildmen
      @ChrisWildmen 10 років тому +7

      indeed, never considered it... may just end up as a primary in my rucksack.

    • @lesterclaypool1
      @lesterclaypool1 9 років тому +16

      Maurice Weiss
      If you carry a ruck sac , try these keep a pill bottle with Vaseline laden cotton in it starts fires very fast , even when soaked ,,, or a 9 volt battery and steel wool ,just rub the battery ends back and forth on the steel wool ,, there are many other but these are two cheap very good reliable ways of fast fire making ,,, try them out in your yard , or some where safe ,, cheers from Canada

    • @shawnfox1100
      @shawnfox1100 9 років тому +1

      lesterclaypool1 is right. You can do these things.

    • @poldi2233
      @poldi2233 6 років тому

      Late response but another thing that works really well is melting a wax candle in a jar, tearing pieces of tissue paper and twisting them to create sort of sticks out of it and then dipping those sticks in the wax. They can easily be ignited by a lighter even in wet weather and provide substantial and long-lasting heat.

    • @alloypaulson7520
      @alloypaulson7520 6 років тому +3

      If you can, try to find a pencil sharpener for carpentry pencils. They are much larger, and allow you to use larger sticks that won't break, and create much larger shavings. I recommend getting a yellow one, because I always lose mine.

  • @Lightzrave
    @Lightzrave 7 років тому +29

    Haha. 'We all go through that phase of makin' shit fires.' Legend.

  • @chuckfox5496
    @chuckfox5496 5 років тому +2

    Building the platform is absolutely clutch and its something that the Boy Scouts never properly taught me. Great video.

  • @mrdave22
    @mrdave22 8 років тому +345

    gg well played mother nature
    lol

    • @herohour6496
      @herohour6496 6 років тому

      G spot? What do u mean?

    • @ygatesatellite4964
      @ygatesatellite4964 6 років тому

      This is just superb, I've been looking for "skill survival" for a while now, and I think this has helped. You ever tried - Lidacoob Protection Percipience - (just google it ) ? Ive heard some great things about it and my colleague got cool results with it.

    • @JasonR1998
      @JasonR1998 6 років тому

      dave22 haha I died when he said that 😂

    • @OkoYT
      @OkoYT 5 років тому

      clearly a gamer

  • @TheBrawz
    @TheBrawz 9 років тому +253

    *drops match* ... *walks away like a boss*

    • @Oozywolf
      @Oozywolf 7 років тому +30

      Cool guys don't look at combustion

    • @brianmyers9989
      @brianmyers9989 7 років тому +7

      He took that match and Threw it on the Ground.

    • @andyw3152
      @andyw3152 6 років тому

      4:26 threw it into the middle.

    • @kristinadk
      @kristinadk 5 років тому +1

      @@brianmyers9989 😂
      "I dont need your handouts...I'm an adult"

    • @brianmyers9989
      @brianmyers9989 5 років тому +1

      @Kristinadk........ha! So funny I jizzed my pants!

  • @yvetteholder1793
    @yvetteholder1793 3 роки тому

    OMG, I'm going to binge watch this video. I found the jackpot of the answers to ALL, and I mean ALL of the answers to my questions in one video. PLUS, there is no RAMBLING on in this video....straight to the details. Thank You!

  • @LeonRFpoa
    @LeonRFpoa 8 років тому +18

    This is the most excellent explanation of fire making on UA-cam. Kudos to you, sir. I know it well myself but could not have said it better.

  • @SCRnflz
    @SCRnflz 10 років тому +1

    One thing I would add to this fire for longevity of warmth is add some good sized stones if available. They'll heat up and retain heat for a long time in case the fire goes out. Great presentation.

  • @awesomewizard99
    @awesomewizard99 10 років тому +13

    I'm going to use this every time I need to cook over a fire when I got camping. Great tip!

  • @ZeroGHome24
    @ZeroGHome24 10 років тому +3

    Excellent video, I have been using this method of upside down fire for time (3/4y) so it's totally tried and tested. I love the way the fire lasts much longer then a normal fire (prep is key). I made a sort of paste with Vaseline and sawdust and spread it around just to help it along when it's really wet.

  • @TheElvenArcher
    @TheElvenArcher 8 років тому +36

    4:31 that had to be some British woodsman magic. that spread really fast.

    • @punknhead23
      @punknhead23 7 років тому +8

      TheElvenArcher Well he said he was going to use pine resin which is extremely flammable, but only like that if it is already liquid which you would need recent heat to create. It is very curious. Did he use a fire to melt the resin to create a fire?

    • @lithiumlight6128
      @lithiumlight6128 7 років тому +4

      solid resin works, too

    • @whynottalklikeapirat
      @whynottalklikeapirat 6 років тому +2

      Lyoko Code
      Yeah but not like that ...

    • @kristinadk
      @kristinadk 5 років тому

      @@punknhead23 I was thinking the same thing

    • @colec.6477
      @colec.6477 5 років тому +1

      Or lighter fluid

  • @nothing-wp9ti
    @nothing-wp9ti 5 років тому +17

    This taught me I'm not using nearly enough wood

  • @Joxman2k
    @Joxman2k 7 років тому +2

    I have never seen a fire ignite and spread from a single match in such a way without an accelerant, especially in wet conditions. Pine resin cannot be underestimated in its effectiveness. It is truly a necessity in wet conditions.

  • @REVERSE_BIAS
    @REVERSE_BIAS 7 років тому +3

    Mate, I thought you narrated this video brilliantly and structured it absolutely spot on too. Well done. I could listen to you and remain interested for hours!

  • @mike796
    @mike796 10 років тому +47

    Hey dude, by far you are my favorite survivalist youtuber so please keep up the awesome videos!!!

  • @1212zeek1212
    @1212zeek1212 9 років тому +22

    Damn, what a great video. Thanks for making it! Really clear with everything you say, camera positions are all solid, easy to follow. I've been practicing fires since I was a little kid, and mostly just learned from fucking up a lot, haha. As you put it, the "shitty fires stage". I really like your platform though. I would always just put one layer down on the ground and build atop that. Yours allows much needed airflow though. Really great. Going to make mine like that from now on.

  • @andrewpullen5454
    @andrewpullen5454 7 років тому +1

    Excellent video. No excuse for a poor fire from now on. All your vids are so informative. Big thumbs up. 👍👍👍👍👍👏👏👏👏

  • @Ingeb91
    @Ingeb91 9 років тому +3

    Very thorough. I tend to not put as much work into my firemaking as this, but this will definitely help me in awful conditions, and believe me, we have those. The place I live is one of the wettest places imaginable. Thanks =)

  • @DennisChaves
    @DennisChaves 9 років тому +4

    This looks like an awesome fire. I'm going to try it as soon as camping season starts, with or without rain!

  • @erikvosenmd676
    @erikvosenmd676 8 років тому +2

    "We all go through that phase of making sh** fires." Love this explanation!

  • @m0onst9er
    @m0onst9er 10 років тому

    Detailed and straight to the point. You should earn some sort of reward for doing what 98% of most videos fail to do nowadays.

  • @queenanne94101
    @queenanne94101 3 роки тому

    WOW. Excellent wet fire video. I live in the Pacific Northwest USA so for 8 months of the year, every fire is a wet fire. Thanks for taking the time to share this information. Cheers! 🔥🔥🔥🏕😎

  • @danofiremano
    @danofiremano 8 років тому

    WORD . . . Absolutely one of the greatest fire making videos of all time! No shameless promotion or plugs to buy gear.

  • @Bl4CK.S1TE
    @Bl4CK.S1TE 2 роки тому

    I every time came to this channel , in hope he has continued his outstanding Wildernis Skills Explanations.
    BigPlayer through his good and enjoyable Humor , the accuracy of his informations and the visualisation all on Point.
    Huge Respect from Germany

  • @oldbatwit5102
    @oldbatwit5102 6 років тому

    Practical advice, well explained, and no bollocks about 'survival'

  • @pedroqueiroz2735
    @pedroqueiroz2735 3 роки тому

    Saturday I'm going camping on a waterfall, this video is gold

  • @thomasstewart7317
    @thomasstewart7317 10 років тому +2

    i just started building fires a few days ago and as you go on you find ways of getting it better bigger and warmer

  • @andyw3152
    @andyw3152 6 років тому

    Wow, that is how to make a fire, excellent demo. I've seen so many people think that they can pick up wet twigs and larger pieces from the wet floot.

  • @sandravalani359
    @sandravalani359 9 років тому +2

    Another Awesome Video Alfie!!! Your Brilliance, Hard work, and great sense of humor and joyfulness truly make your Video in the top Fire making Videos on the Internet!!! Plz keep on being the genuine and very creative Soul who you are!!!

  • @malapoyo
    @malapoyo 4 роки тому +1

    Best fire starting video I've seen. And you blew me away with that pencil sharpener trick! Awesome!

  • @garrity5
    @garrity5 10 років тому +4

    Subscribed, the pencil sharpener is genius. Great sense of humor and well filmed. Cheers

  • @fritz1990
    @fritz1990 4 роки тому +1

    Great video. I know the tricks, but it's nice to know that others haven't forgotten them.

  • @arpc
    @arpc 5 років тому +1

    I am addicted to this guy's videos - another awesome video. Had to subscribe!

  • @19ghost73
    @19ghost73 9 років тому

    Clear, concise, easy to understand, no unnecessary blah-blah -> very well done!

  • @JohnnyPalmer
    @JohnnyPalmer 8 років тому +10

    awesome video mate! Direct, to the point and technically spot on

  • @Not0riousNarwhal
    @Not0riousNarwhal 10 років тому

    You just encouraged me to start a fire on tomorrows camping trip. It had been raining, so I thought all hope was gone. Then I watched your well explained how to video! Thanks

  • @guycarrwuzright7189
    @guycarrwuzright7189 5 років тому

    Hey Alfie, you're one of the first outdoor/bushcraft/survival youtubers I ever watched. My first debri shelter I learned from your videos as well as my first wet weather fire, which I referr back to quiet Often. Thanks man. Keep up the good work.

  • @MountainGardenGirl
    @MountainGardenGirl 9 років тому

    Awesome! Learned a lot from this video and we agree, the pencil sharpener is a wonderful idea. Thanks for packing so much info into this presentation. Finally some answers to why our fire has not been starting under damp conditions. Thanks!

  • @cherylcampbell9369
    @cherylcampbell9369 5 років тому +1

    I've been collecting pine pitch in ziplock bags. Good to see this.

  • @netherdominater9960
    @netherdominater9960 9 років тому +1

    My favorite firefeul that I make at home is I take the dry, curling bark off of birch trees, then impregnate it with wax. Best firefeul ^^

  • @izil1fe
    @izil1fe 3 роки тому

    BY FAR the best tinder for starting a fire in wet conditions(rain, snow, wet wood) and where you need it to work 100% of the time, is the inner tube of a bicycle tire.

  • @ScottyT47
    @ScottyT47 3 роки тому +1

    If this guy kept posting even once a month still he'd be huge. Such an amazing channel

  • @tristanrl1940
    @tristanrl1940 Рік тому

    Resourcing kindling on one’s own property in suburbia is a wee problem indeed. I have recently purchased a half cord of hardwood and was repeatedly assured - that the batch had been sufficiently dry. My first go at a fire in the fire pit was an utter failure as I used an empty paper towel roll with a ball of paper as starter, spritzed with veg oil and tucked inside. I then gathered all the dried twigs about the garden and set the logs just above! Alas, once the kindling bits burned-off, the logs received a bit of a char but were never went alight

  • @wolf1066
    @wolf1066 10 років тому +2

    Great video, Alfie. Very nicely demonstrated and getting all the important points across.
    With good techniques like that, you can generally light a fire with just what you can forage and a match or lighter, without using any specialised tinders or fire-starting aids carried on your person - saving those pre-prepared tinders and such for those really extreme cases when they're absolutely necessary.

  • @MountainGardenGirl
    @MountainGardenGirl 7 років тому

    It has been some time since we watched your video, but not avid bushcrafters so we are still making those fires you mentioned at the end...but we are learning and processing why not to. So thank you again...its registering better this time.

  • @TheCarrotCutter
    @TheCarrotCutter 10 років тому +4

    Your videos are so high quality, love em'

  • @petalss5325
    @petalss5325 6 років тому

    I don't plan any outdoor activity whatsoever but I'm sold. Subbed.

  • @harrisonking8156
    @harrisonking8156 9 років тому

    That is an incredible way to make fires, i can't believe i never thought, or have seen that, before! Great work!

  • @musicisbrilliant
    @musicisbrilliant 8 років тому +8

    I love you Alfie. Keep it up.

  • @valiantknight8483
    @valiantknight8483 8 років тому +2

    Thank you very much for taking the time to make this video I found it quite informative and very helpful my father and i are moving to Alaska soon and i think these tips you have provided just might come in handy

  • @theMickBrittle
    @theMickBrittle 10 років тому +4

    "GG, well played, mother nature" you caught me off guard on that one

  • @cowboyfromkettins
    @cowboyfromkettins 10 років тому +24

    I am waist deep in the phase of making shit fires (:

  • @trailtrackersurvivalstande162
    @trailtrackersurvivalstande162 7 років тому +2

    Always informative and helpful and it's good to go over things you once knew

  • @vole12
    @vole12 8 років тому +1

    Very nice video mate . Nothing happens without a decent fire . Many thanks .

  • @dustinbrandel59
    @dustinbrandel59 5 років тому

    Im sure u won't see this cause it's so many yrs later, but I build a "log house" type of fire, but I leave a little "door" where a door would be on an actual house, that way I can make a little bitty torch to stick inside the "door", thereby placing a good lit fire starter in the bottom of the house shaped campfire bundle.

  • @Krissy_Bunnie
    @Krissy_Bunnie 5 років тому

    So many of these videos are just a guy standing there, droning on... THANK YOU for actually DEMONSTRATING it!!!

  • @dominusdash2549
    @dominusdash2549 4 роки тому +1

    You had me at "gg wp mother nature"

  • @allenbarrow4904
    @allenbarrow4904 4 роки тому

    Alfie, thank you for this video.
    I Iiked the presentation and the use of the pencil sharper 😃😃😃. It will help save lives and more importantly give hope to someone in trouble!!! Thank you this presentation.

  • @invisiblefiddle1645
    @invisiblefiddle1645 5 років тому +5

    3:18 dark souls consumables will come in handy.

  • @bobbyhill4118
    @bobbyhill4118 6 років тому

    I used to use a method really similar to this when making winter fires. I’d look for branches laying on top of the snow but not fully submerged in the snow, and I would break those top pieces off and use a couple to make fine shavings. Pine works best because of the resin in the shavings which prolongs the burn time. I put a small base down and fill it up with shavings, and then add very small twigs to it. A few millimeters thick to a few centimeters thick. I just have to make a fire last until I have enough embers to ignite new sticks I add on. It’s important to have it there, as all you need to do to re-light a burned down fire is add a little dead grass and use small sticks to ignite new, larger sticks. As we all know, fire rises due to the work of gravity. The air around the fire weighs more because it is less dense, making the flame buoyant, so it’s important to build up in cold and wet conditions. I can tell that Alfie has years of firemaking experience due to how much he knows about it.

  • @roberttakacs19
    @roberttakacs19 8 років тому +18

    Hi Alfie I think youre so cool mate I love your videos you do an amazing job ☺ I was just wondering have you got any hints of making fire in rain? any kind of protection against wind and wet weather? would you make a video of it pls? or you think its just best leave it for a while even if rain lasts all night?
    what do you think?
    thanks

  • @ronr.53400
    @ronr.53400 7 років тому

    yes indeed, the procurement of such wood for such a fire is KEY .... and weather conditions add to A FORMULA,, be safe, .B welllll

  • @hamzakucuk3449
    @hamzakucuk3449 3 роки тому +1

    The moment the world needed him the most, *He vanished*

  • @AndrzejKarol-ri8rl
    @AndrzejKarol-ri8rl 7 років тому +1

    I have never seen the tip#1 before. Easy and great!

  • @kambing2834
    @kambing2834 6 років тому +1

    GREAT VIDEO straight forward and no adlibs...thanks for sharing man :)

  • @ihernandezsolano
    @ihernandezsolano 2 роки тому

    This dude did a terrific job

  • @damionandy
    @damionandy 6 років тому +1

    This is an insanely good fire. Great job!

  • @davidanderson5259
    @davidanderson5259 10 років тому +6

    Lots of good advice here... One way of generating kindling is to gather materials _before_ they get wet, or well before you need them. Even damp bark or twigs will dry out sufficiently if you carry them under your coat next to your body where the heat can get at them. Candle stubs or cotton balls soaked in paraffin wax are also excellent, as they store indefinitely and are easy to keep with you in a survival kit. If you have the foresight to carry matches or a firestarter, you should also be wise enough to carry kindling materials.

  • @butterfliesandtape
    @butterfliesandtape 5 років тому

    Clear, well structured, to the point and very well concluded. A+

  • @yngvark
    @yngvark 9 років тому

    Wow, so amazingly concise and informative talking! So many people could learn from your way of communicating!

  • @ryansmith6619
    @ryansmith6619 5 років тому

    Can we all agree that Tinder is what catches the original spark, kindling is the small twigs that create embers and help catch the fuel logs, and the fuel logs are the larger logs that last for a long time?

  • @LeSadW666
    @LeSadW666 8 років тому +2

    I love your videos by the way! You're quite thorough with the advice and tips you give. The way you deliver the information is great, I've already learned some pretty cool stuff from these videos! I'd love to go camping with you, I expect it would be a laugh and I'd learn a bloody load!

  • @jasonkirkwood8743
    @jasonkirkwood8743 5 років тому

    Lovely weather you're having. Pencil sharpener is brilliant!

  • @sixteenstringjack
    @sixteenstringjack 6 років тому

    Everything about this video is fantastic

  • @AnyDayNow360
    @AnyDayNow360 7 років тому

    That small pencil sharpener is genius!

  • @marksilva311
    @marksilva311 5 років тому

    The biggest point there thats hardest to translate into practice is "taking the time process and find fuel wood. This is were people run out, haven't judge the progression of size or put expectation over experience. My advice, collecting for a large mediocre fire naturally becomes a good start for a boss small fire.😉

  • @mayhembeading3737
    @mayhembeading3737 8 років тому +2

    Thank you for making this video. It's got clear instruction with good video. Again, thank you.

  • @thoughtyness
    @thoughtyness 6 років тому

    DOn't know if you've mentioned this somewhere, but if you cover up the fire with an inch or two of ash you can relight it 5-20 hours later after uncovering the ash. This only works when you have a bed of coals. I have tried it several times and it works wonders.

  • @mrj4990
    @mrj4990 6 років тому +3

    “gg well done Mother Nature” I think I’m in love with you

  • @leonetv4425
    @leonetv4425 7 років тому +1

    so well structured and informative, great video

  • @cessnacoffelake2012
    @cessnacoffelake2012 7 років тому

    Best video for fire making in wet conditions. Love ur vids!!!

  • @thomasplatt6743
    @thomasplatt6743 4 роки тому +2

    “Sup Fellas”
    Instantly love this video

  • @martinjolly
    @martinjolly 7 років тому +1

    one of the best ive seen, nice work

  • @TheJq32
    @TheJq32 5 років тому

    This video should be on the Golden Record

  • @tallcedars2310
    @tallcedars2310 7 років тому

    Like the way the fire was built quickly, shows that it can be done without making it perfect. Folks get bogged down about details they can't see the forest for the trees, in this case the wood for the fire.

  • @KotoBish
    @KotoBish 2 роки тому

    if the one match in, instantly lit and blazing wasn't some sort of social media edit, this is amazing

  • @davidmorrison6787
    @davidmorrison6787 6 років тому +1

    This is perhaps the BEST video I've seen on wet weather fire making ..BRAVO

  • @John-lr3ix
    @John-lr3ix 8 років тому +3

    Awesome video of extraordinary quality.
    (Those feather sticks though... xD)

  • @mattstan2499
    @mattstan2499 7 років тому +1

    Hi Alfie glad your back

  • @chamikeradharmawardene850
    @chamikeradharmawardene850 6 років тому +1

    Amazing video! Very informative and well filmed.

  • @thecleaner1237
    @thecleaner1237 6 років тому

    I like watching stuff like this I just started staying in the woods I watched other videos and first time watching this one I Learned a lot things. Only 23 but I love beginning in the woods .. #Woodslife 🤠👀

  • @bastiendietemann6115
    @bastiendietemann6115 7 років тому

    Why haven't I seen this Video before? Awesome.

  • @starguard4122
    @starguard4122 Рік тому

    Thank you for making this video. It was very useful and informative

  • @thokozani031
    @thokozani031 9 років тому +1

    Great video! Straight to the point and informative!!

  • @sinfonianbarelytone9191
    @sinfonianbarelytone9191 8 років тому

    Great technique. Wish we had that material in the Pacific Northwet.