Why do old fashion things seem so much cooler and interesting than modern things? There’s a million idiots with UA-cam channels who sleep in the woods but this is a million times more watchable.
This is back before little dictators with stripes told ya what u can and can't have in air war. I preferred during my tenure to carry as much as ammo as possible as well as weapons & leave em all behind mind screwed anyway. Even a dishonorable discharge during Iraq woulda been better than being there.. I carried as much personal ammo and U.A. gear as I could and it saved my life. At the Captains Mast I had the pleasure of telling JAG folks to kiss my fat Hillbilly ass right when & where I was sworn in. I had a goddamned audience behind me that could not be silenced. They kept cheering over the prosecutor until the case was dismissed. Too bad other guys didn't have the known & UNKNOWN friends I had. I left Norfolk kinda humbled that many guys stuck up for me.
There was another Pennington In Three Forks Montana this winter, 2018/19. He was stranded out on a rural road overnight at 38 below Fahrenheit. The ambulance driver showed me a picture of his hand. His fingers were black from frost bite. I said "I hope they can save his fingers". The ambulance driver said " no his finger are gone". I've learned to go heavy on the survival supplies. 15 years in Search and Rescue and 37 years as a truck driver in the Rocky Mtn West. Its a hassle to carry around until you need it. And I've needed my supplies a few times over the years. This is one of my favorite films because it's relevant to my area of operation. Thanks for posting!
I like these kinds of movies! They give you a window into the thinking and understanding of the time. They come off like “hey buddy, tough luck huh? Well, with a little know how and guts you’ll make it out alive if ya gotta ditch over the tundra.”
I was born in Alaska and lived there 30 years. This video is excellent. I should only stress that there is not enough emphasis on the on the lack of daylight. In south-central Alaska, in December, the sun rose at 10 in the morning and set at 3 in the afternoon. The further north, the fewer hours of daylight. Yes, start a fire and make a frame for the parachute shelter. Do your best to pile spruce branches to get off the snow. If you can do these things in three to five hours you are doing well.
I remember my Dad bringing these various training films home for us kids to watch (I was in the 3rd and 4th grades then) when we were living on Adak Island in the Alaska Territory (yup , not a State back in 1949-50). Alaska became a State in 1959. As my Dad was an Air-Sea Rescue pilot then, he felt for some reason we just had to see these films. They are very good, and they did help me in later life when I taught Search and Rescue to Civil Air Patrol Senior Members and Cadets.
Summer Rose Sutton Probably because your Dad wanted you to live long enough to give him Grandchildren. 😀 I like these films, they are models of clarity and the basics don't change.
I remember seeing this film when I about 7-8 years old, when my Dad and our family were stationed on Adak Island, Alaska Territory in 1949-50. My Dad was an Air/Sea Rescue pilot, flying SA-16 (small twin engined) seaplanes. He and others were allowed to bring these films home for general viewing. This was one of many we used to see back then. Definitely taught me lots about survival in different "hostile" environments. Used to fall back on these films when I taught CAP cadets survival skills.
Nice footage. Keep in mind this is not "a movie". In the making of it, they did not care to entertain anyone. Just cramming certain information into a learning session. Still, it was pretty cool, nostalgic.
Pennington really drove home the point!! I grew up in Idaho, so have spent a lot of time in the snow. In the winter, I always carry a kit in the trunk of my car. I don't expect to get lost in the wilderness, but I'm ready if I slide off the road or something. In addition to my tire chains and tools (essential) a full set of extra clothes and boots, shovel, blue tarp, sleeping bag, propane stove and pan, along with a couple cans of Spam and tuna in oil--doesn't freeze solid like the cans in water. And these days a cell phone of course. It all fits in a box, I just keep it in there all Winter.
I love these old training films. A glimpse into the past, nostalgia perhaps. What I truly love via UA-cam however, are the comments of other viewers. Humorous; and the connection some have with the subjects and events herein! I love the “retro” crowd.
When those emergency ration packs came fluttering down i felt a pang of jealousy! I used to love camping out on Dartmoor, UK and making my camp as cosy as possible from just the stuff you could scavenge. Excellent film. Thanks for the restoration and posting. Much appreciated!
That’s cool! These films Im sure were sometimes regarded by the airmen that watched them as silly. But if they ever found themselves in the same situation, they mustve been wishing they’d paid more attention.
If possible ask your Father who was the main actor in this film? He looks like Robert Culp to me but Culp would have been to young to be in this film. I would really like to know. Best Wishes! M.H.
I just finished a good book on this topic. It's a true story of a B-24 pilot Lt. Leon Crane, who is the only survivor in an Alaskan crash in Dec. 1943. It's got a long title. "81 days Below zero - The incredible survival story of a WWII pilot in Alaska's Frozen Wilderness". Author is Brain Murphy..Published June 2015. He's is given up for dead but fights to survive against nature at its coldest. Great adventure story. I got it at the library. Maybe you can too.
Don Neary. I saw your comment about that book and who would've guessed my library had it. I really enjoyed that story of the Lone Survivor. Great True Adventure Book. I Recommend it Highly. Thanks for the heads up to a Great Book! Best Wishes! M.H.
They had a very talented group of professionals producing them, including famous Hollywood directors like Frank Capra ua-cam.com/video/tGrcfMaKb6Q/v-deo.html
Perhaps the whole living thing is a passion of yours? The whole being curious enough to want to make sure that you might be able to survive in conditions away from your cosy home? Healthy curiosity, and a willingness to learn are never bad things. Be thankful that you have a brain that hasn't become deadened and in a rut. :)
They forgot a lot of the most important parts - like what to do about all the leaking fuel from your upturned wreck of a plane (which is probably on fire), taking advantage of engine heat before it's gone, what to do if you don't actually land in the woods, digging/building snow shelters (Boy Scout stuff). On some WWII aircraft (like the C-47 that found him) the control surfaces were covered with doped fabric that's incredibly flammable, and their structural members might be made of wood. This seemed geared toward a single, narrow scenario that wouldn't be much use to pilots stranded in slightly different arctic conditions.
He should have built his shelter under the wing of the plane. put brush on both sides of the wing, then cover that with the parachute. Hold parachute in place with more brush. Then he could have built a fire at the tip of the wing/entrance.
You'd be amazed at how much you can get done when not doing it means a fairly awful death. That said - moving around actually keeps you warm, and that makes it easier to stay up and moving.
Me too. It had to have been 1958-1959. We did lots of winter camping in Ohio, including a survival exercise when we were put out with a shelter half, match, a knife, and a candy bar for three days. I used a lot of the tips in this movie at the time.
I wrote Lt Pennington 30 years ago but no reply... he is featured at conclusion minus his toes. Pennington b1915-d2005 chose the warmth of Longboat Key, Florida to retire. I couldn’t find records of Pennington making more flight to/from Alaska while with 7th Ferrying Group. Corresponded with several other ferry pilots on the flight in November 1942 that resulted in Lt. Pennington’s forced landing of the P-36 he was ferrying south bound from Anchorage to Great Falls, Montana. Plane went down near Wellesley Lake in Yukon Territory and this film was one of the results of an inquiry.
meat should be removed 2 minutes after boiling starts to preserve essential vitamins. that's the best cooking advice ive ever gotten and i just got it from a survival movie from the 40s.
Was a interesting film to watch as I had my artic SERE B training last year. Not a pilot but so our survival kit was but different, but the things taught are pretty much the same
I was a tanker on the Chez border in the mid 80's and with all the equipment that the army supplies we had all of us always carried a separate loose ruck sack with Xtra stuff ...just in case ..never hurts to prepare ahead of time..never ..
Still relevant after all these years, starting to look like he was enjoying himself; food, tools to get firewood easily, extra rations, sleeping bag, and extra matches! Come back next week after you drop off more rations!
After I heard, Fairbanks, AK, I started looking around and looks like the western side of Fairbanks, where the Tanana flows through, to the north Checkmate hills. Yeah, at the western end of Fairbanks, AK Intrn'l near Phillips Field.
7:20 I love these fly boys. "Such a landing capably executed is only SLIGHLY ROUGHER than normal." Then the screen comes to life in a thunderous crash!
For those who have not see it. The movie In to the White is amazing. It’s not set in the Artic (but close to it) and is about WW2 downed pilots surviving in frozen tundra.
I've used a lot of these tips when hunting in the wilderness. Winter camped in a tent but we a small kerosene heater to keep warm. Best thing was washing dishes after a meal because you got to put your hands into warm water.
This poor guy spends so much energy trying to pull down tree's One trick they taught us on my survival course was to feel for dead fall while walking and use that He's got to drag it back anyway The other thing they missed out was how much easier a snow shelter is ( and they're remarkably warm )
Great video i remember the ones they showed us so boring this one was great they should have continued using it. I also remember they did make the guys who screwed up do briefings about how and why they messed up and we learned a hell of a lot more from that experience then today's touchy feely BS way of doing business. Thank for the video.
Essential Equipment for the Arctic: 1. Rucksack or Duffle 2. Box of Matches 3. Gloves 4. Full Flight Suit w/ Hat 5. Auto .45 cal Pistol w/ 2 spare clips 6. Boots 7. Extra Socks 8. Rations, 2 MREs 9. Watertight Floatable Matchbox 10. Pocket Knife, Scout or Swiss Army 11. Small Axe 12. Parachute What you forgot: 13. Metal Cookpot, 750-1000 ml 14. Signal Mirror 15. First Aid Kit 16. Map & Compass 17. Wool Blanket
If you are writing a book would you Please research who the main actor in this film is. It's kind of bugging Me. I would Sincerely like to know!? I couldn't find anything on line about the film. Best Wishes! M.H.
Fire is your only life line in arctic conditions all else is secondary. If help doesn't come,, well, just pray it comes. Every thing in deep snow becomes very much more difficult. Your body becomes exhausted very quickly. You'll spend most of you time trying to supply fire wood. A hatchet is your best friend then. Your plane was full of gas, if any left be prepared to torch craft for signal fire if you hear search craft. A fresh fall of snow will make your crash sight almost invisible. Your in a void of millions of acres of wilderness, to find you, hope for a miracle. Before g.p.s. it was darn hard to locate anything very easily.
Wonder what happened to the P-40? She's no film prop fabrication, but the real deal. But as someones says in comments below it was filmed at the end of a runway. So she was surplus to requirements know doubt. a most enjoyable and instructional film.
Great training film. I'm a little skeptical about fashioning mukluks out of parachute silk and some odd scraps of leather, but the rest was very plausible. That's John Hodiak, I believe, doing the pilot's voice.
Just watched jungle survival, dessert survival and now watching this .hopefully will be as good . I'm so glad i wasn't a man born back then because i know i wouldn't have lasted 5 minutes 😊
Like what you see? Your DVD purchases at our store make this channel possible. www.zenosflightshop.com Get this film full screen our DVD "Land and Live in Extreme Environments for World War 2 Airmen" bit.ly/2RzE5T9 We need your support! Zeno
Great clip thanks. Very watchable sitting here in my nice warm house, but compared to the (British)training films I saw in my early service, far more likely to be enjoyed(and thus watched and listened to much more attentively and discussed by a group of soldiers than the dry offerings we Brits had to watch,. A little bit of humour, even in such a serious subject, helps hold the interest, hence the message takes hold better- this film was well balanced in that respect. We often would have been training very hard physically, in cold weather, and the training team would cram in an instructional film. No video in those days, just a cine projector in a darkened billet, so cold exhausted troops+warmth+shelter+boring, if essential film= zzzzzz! You Yanks have never been scared to throw money at a project to get it done well!
All the best Jay. one can nod off (even a micro sleep) during a film after coming from serious exercises etc (or worse) to a dark warm film room. Many often best watched many times to catch the details!
53:18, You don't need to make holes into your extra socks if you wantt to warm your hands. Just wear the socks like mittens under your weather-proof gloves. If you need to use fingers, take the glove off! (works well enough in survival conditions, although in combat you need to use trigger finger on the gun)
Dang. If I were that dude, I'd work on a fire as soon as I made sure there were no fuel leaks and that I wasn't injured and bleeding. Way before I started making DIY snow boots.
I have to wonder if this was earlier in the war, because later a lot of pilots were issued a .38 revolver instead of the 1911, but agreed, I'd definitely take my sidearm with me.
Here's a classic book about a French adventurer who chose to live a year inside of Artic Circle: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kabloona Kabloona ("Fool") is anyone who goes into the Artic and doesn't know what he is doing. He learned a lot in that year. The most important survival tool is a "snow knife". How to make a shelter in open space.
at29:16 i would have used the oil to start the fire....Just a question to someone that knows more than me...can you start your fire on top of a piece of metal from the plane with wood on top of it and it would melt the snow as it burns...at least saving some of your energy? no flare gun...what about the signaling mirror you 'should have' in your pack...i know I know there is no sun out, but in the morning it might be...
Looked like the original search plane was a B-18 Bolo. The RCAF had the B-18 titled the Digby Mk1. Almost all the US B-18's were employed for coastal patrol but Digbys were used for search and rescue in Canada. Makes me wonder if this whole things was filmed n Canada.
If this guy can build 3 signal fires with wood, another fire for warmth, a lean-to shelter, make snow shoes, snare and cook a rabbit, make a pair of mukluks ALL in one day following a crash - I would say he and Robinson Crusoe were cousins. But this film by the military is totally exaggerated. So scoring this out of 10 (and taking in considerations that this is from 1944 - I rated it at 6.
I very much dig this. However, I wish I could do some sound tweaking on this baby, since I've got to crank up my laptop to maximum volume to make it audible, along with de-noising.
If he had any of the fuel get on exposed skin he would have had a major problem with frostbite. When stationed at Ft. Wainwright Sep 79 - Feb 82, I watched a guy deliberately spray MOGAS on his hand in sub-zero temperatures at the fuel point on the airfield one night because he didn't want to go to the field anymore. I found out a while later, that he had lost 2 1/2 fingers. Here's yer sign.
Ha ha you are so smart, gun Einstein is what we should call you. Bet you are really fun to watch movies with pointing out every little inaccuracy with how they hold, load, fire, don’t have trigger discipline etc. A real barrel of fun. I am sure the world is smarter now that you have corrected a 75 year old movie, dip shit.
Why do old fashion things seem so much cooler and interesting than modern things? There’s a million idiots with UA-cam channels who sleep in the woods but this is a million times more watchable.
I find a lot of these era training films very interesting. I'd rather watch this than some of the big-budget movies of today.
Maybe More than todays, TV... but I say about a push between Big Budget and these. The added Bonus is with these I actually Learn somthing
i feel that the films have a unique pacing to it
M P me too
This is back before little dictators with stripes told ya what u can and can't have in air war. I preferred during my tenure to carry as much as ammo as possible as well as weapons & leave em all behind mind screwed anyway. Even a dishonorable discharge during Iraq woulda been better than being there.. I carried as much personal ammo and U.A. gear as I could and it saved my life. At the Captains Mast I had the pleasure of telling JAG folks to kiss my fat Hillbilly ass right when & where I was sworn in. I had a goddamned audience behind me that could not be silenced. They kept cheering over the prosecutor until the case was dismissed. Too bad other guys didn't have the known & UNKNOWN friends I had. I left Norfolk kinda humbled that many guys stuck up for me.
Course!
What is most surprising about these films is how much is still relevant and useful even today. Awesome work!
Doug00òpanu
Kept human kind alive for generations, if it ain't broken don't fix it;)
Some of the best training in the world.
There was another Pennington In Three Forks Montana this winter, 2018/19. He was stranded out on a rural road overnight at 38 below Fahrenheit. The ambulance driver showed me a picture of his hand. His fingers were black from frost bite. I said "I hope they can save his fingers". The ambulance driver said " no his finger are gone". I've learned to go heavy on the survival supplies. 15 years in Search and Rescue and 37 years as a truck driver in the Rocky Mtn West. Its a hassle to carry around until you need it. And I've needed my supplies a few times over the years. This is one of my favorite films because it's relevant to my area of operation. Thanks for posting!
I like these kinds of movies! They give you a window into the thinking and understanding of the time. They come off like “hey buddy, tough luck huh? Well, with a little know how and guts you’ll make it out alive if ya gotta ditch over the tundra.”
I was born in Alaska and lived there 30 years. This video is excellent. I should only stress that there is not enough emphasis on the on the lack of daylight. In south-central Alaska, in December, the sun rose at 10 in the morning and set at 3 in the afternoon. The further north, the fewer hours of daylight. Yes, start a fire and make a frame for the parachute shelter. Do your best to pile spruce branches to get off the snow. If you can do these things in three to five hours you are doing well.
I thoroughly enjoy watching these WW2 training films. They are really interesting and informative. Thank you very much for sharing them!
I remember my Dad bringing these various training films home for us kids to watch (I was in the 3rd and 4th grades then) when we were living on Adak Island in the Alaska Territory (yup , not a State back in 1949-50). Alaska became a State in 1959.
As my Dad was an Air-Sea Rescue pilot then, he felt for some reason we just had to see these films. They are very good, and they did help me in later life when I taught Search and Rescue to Civil Air Patrol Senior Members and Cadets.
Summer Rose Sutton Probably because your Dad wanted you to live long enough to give him Grandchildren. 😀
I like these films, they are models of clarity and the basics don't change.
Love the parashoot boots he made 😊
I could survive anything if that narrator was always giving me tips from the great beyond
I remember seeing this film when I about 7-8 years old, when my Dad and our family were stationed on Adak Island, Alaska Territory in 1949-50. My Dad was an Air/Sea Rescue pilot, flying SA-16 (small twin engined) seaplanes. He and others were allowed to bring these films home for general viewing. This was one of many we used to see back then. Definitely taught me lots about survival in different "hostile" environments. Used to fall back on these films when I taught CAP cadets survival skills.
Nice footage. Keep in mind this is not "a movie". In the making of it, they did not care to entertain anyone. Just cramming certain information into a learning session. Still, it was pretty cool, nostalgic.
Pennington really drove home the point!! I grew up in Idaho, so have spent a lot of time in the snow. In the winter, I always carry a kit in the trunk of my car. I don't expect to get lost in the wilderness, but I'm ready if I slide off the road or something. In addition to my tire chains and tools (essential) a full set of extra clothes and boots, shovel, blue tarp, sleeping bag, propane stove and pan, along with a couple cans of Spam and tuna in oil--doesn't freeze solid like the cans in water. And these days a cell phone of course. It all fits in a box, I just keep it in there all Winter.
I love these old training films. A glimpse into the past, nostalgia perhaps. What I truly love via UA-cam however, are the comments of other viewers. Humorous; and the connection some have with the subjects and events herein! I love the “retro” crowd.
When those emergency ration packs came fluttering down i felt a pang of jealousy! I used to love camping out on Dartmoor, UK and making my camp as cosy as possible from just the stuff you could scavenge.
Excellent film. Thanks for the restoration and posting. Much appreciated!
My father was in this film. He said it was filmed near the end of the runway in Fairbanks.
Where is he in it?
cool. excuse the punt.
That’s cool! These films Im sure were sometimes regarded by the airmen that watched them as silly. But if they ever found themselves in the same situation, they mustve been wishing they’d paid more attention.
@@pod9538 "excuse the punt." "Punt???" What punt? Do you mean like in football???
If possible ask your Father who was the main actor in this film?
He looks like Robert Culp to me but Culp would have been to young to be in this film.
I would really like to know.
Best Wishes! M.H.
This is such a relaxing and informative watch!
I love these old survival episodes. They contain alot of excellent info and tips valuable even today.
I just finished a good book on this topic. It's a true story of a B-24 pilot Lt. Leon Crane, who is the only survivor in an Alaskan crash in Dec. 1943. It's got a long title. "81 days Below zero - The incredible survival story of a WWII pilot in Alaska's Frozen Wilderness". Author is Brain Murphy..Published June 2015. He's is given up for dead but fights to survive against nature at its coldest. Great adventure story. I got it at the library. Maybe you can too.
Don Neary. I saw your comment about that book and who would've guessed my library had it. I really enjoyed that story of the Lone Survivor. Great True Adventure Book. I Recommend it Highly.
Thanks for the heads up to a Great Book! Best Wishes! M.H.
@@mikehagan4320 Thanks Mike...Glad you enjoyed it. It was one of favorites too.
@@donneary7104 👍✈
@@mikehagan4320 This was literally the most wholesome UA-cam comment chain I've ever read. You two are awesome.
OMG, what a story!!!
Good fun! And very important. Insane how good these films are, considering they were made during a war.
They had a very talented group of professionals producing them, including famous Hollywood directors like Frank Capra
ua-cam.com/video/tGrcfMaKb6Q/v-deo.html
>>-------------------------------> Why in the hell do I love these old training films so much? WHY!!!?
I have asked myself the same thing and I have no good answer, I guess we're just nuts.
they're some of the most direct and succinct videos on survival without a lot of bs..
surearrow They are even entertainning
Perhaps the whole living thing is a passion of yours? The whole being curious enough to want to make sure that you might be able to survive in conditions away from your cosy home? Healthy curiosity, and a willingness to learn are never bad things. Be thankful that you have a brain that hasn't become deadened and in a rut. :)
Because they're great.
" Such a landing faithfully executed is Only Slightly rougher than normal " ...
WHAAAAMMMM BAMMM !!!
They forgot a lot of the most important parts - like what to do about all the leaking fuel from your upturned wreck of a plane (which is probably on fire), taking advantage of engine heat before it's gone, what to do if you don't actually land in the woods, digging/building snow shelters (Boy Scout stuff). On some WWII aircraft (like the C-47 that found him) the control surfaces were covered with doped fabric that's incredibly flammable, and their structural members might be made of wood.
This seemed geared toward a single, narrow scenario that wouldn't be much use to pilots stranded in slightly different arctic conditions.
He should have built his shelter under the wing of the plane. put brush on both sides of the wing, then cover that with the parachute. Hold parachute in place with more brush. Then he could have built a fire at the tip of the wing/entrance.
"Where am I? - A certain well known creek!" "One camping knife, one match pack... one jerk!"
that airman was so productive i am surprised he wasnt renting out rooms at his chalet by the end of the film
You'd be amazed at how much you can get done when not doing it means a fairly awful death. That said - moving around actually keeps you warm, and that makes it easier to stay up and moving.
We were shown this film in the Boy Scouts in approx. 1960. Good advice it was.
Me too. It had to have been 1958-1959. We did lots of winter camping in Ohio, including a survival exercise when we were put out with a shelter half, match, a knife, and a candy bar for three days. I used a lot of the tips in this movie at the time.
'I think it might be necessary', 1940's sarcasm, who knew? I'm busting a gut, that's priceless man.
I wrote Lt Pennington 30 years ago but no reply... he is featured at conclusion minus his toes. Pennington b1915-d2005 chose the warmth of Longboat Key, Florida to retire. I couldn’t find records of Pennington making more flight to/from Alaska while with 7th Ferrying Group. Corresponded with several other ferry pilots on the flight in November 1942 that resulted in Lt. Pennington’s forced landing of the P-36 he was ferrying south bound from Anchorage to Great Falls, Montana. Plane went down near Wellesley Lake in Yukon Territory and this film was one of the results of an inquiry.
Old but still great survival info! Thanks for posting.
meat should be removed 2 minutes after boiling starts to preserve essential vitamins. that's the best cooking advice ive ever gotten and i just got it from a survival movie from the 40s.
or drink the water?
Dirty White Boy only for canadians
In Canada we call this "going outside".
Gordon Murphy lmao
Going outside with the hot girl from Edmonton, Alberta :o))) And with Canadian beer !!!!
What's the big deal, eh Gordon Murphy?
The pilot is a typical US-snowflake. At least he won't melt in the Alaskan winter.
hey ... at least the Americans made some good cars....
HAHAHAHAHAHAHA
Was a interesting film to watch as I had my artic SERE B training last year. Not a pilot but so our survival kit was but different, but the things taught are pretty much the same
Thanks for showing these great training films.
First thing is make fire. In winter is short daylight. Next shelter. paracord is best to tie wood and branches. Silk is good for blanket.
I was a tanker on the Chez border in the mid 80's and with all the equipment that the army supplies we had all of us always carried a separate loose ruck sack with Xtra stuff ...just in case ..never hurts to prepare ahead of time..never ..
Still relevant after all these years, starting to look like he was enjoying himself; food, tools to get firewood easily, extra rations, sleeping bag, and extra matches! Come back next week after you drop off more rations!
I was thinking the same thing ! Kicking back having a ball just enjoying the camp out !
After I heard, Fairbanks, AK, I started looking around and looks like the western side of Fairbanks, where the Tanana flows through, to the north Checkmate hills. Yeah, at the western end of Fairbanks, AK Intrn'l near Phillips Field.
Thanks for posting this stuff!!!
You are welcome
Z
Thanks
How nice to know that one can survive an emergency without a roll of duct tape.
@Patrick Ancona flextape. No joke. And if.You Really want it Sticky slap on a little tire glue/cement
@Patrick Ancona Information I didn't know. Thanks!🌹
Or a cellphone !
7:20 I love these fly boys. "Such a landing capably executed is only SLIGHLY ROUGHER than normal." Then the screen comes to life in a thunderous crash!
Gosh Golly Gee, This is swell fellas!
For those who have not see it. The movie In to the White is amazing. It’s not set in the Artic (but close to it) and is about WW2 downed pilots surviving in frozen tundra.
Just to be anal, there ain't no tundra in Norway. They were in a mountainous area hehe.
Cool movie though.
Thank you for this tip. You should watch 'into the wild' if you wanna know how to fnck it up majorly.
But it's an awesome movie...
@@Nghilifa Jupp... no tundra in Norway. But it's close enough to it.✌️
I've used a lot of these tips when hunting in the wilderness. Winter camped in a tent but we a small kerosene heater to keep warm. Best thing was washing dishes after a meal because you got to put your hands into warm water.
48:19 The pilot looks so happy eating that rabbit! I can't help but smile myself, and reminisce on my own times in the army :)
steelpanther88 same here bud
Anything hunted in the wild and cooked on a campfire is the best thing I've ever eaten.
This poor guy spends so much energy trying to pull down tree's
One trick they taught us on my survival course was to feel for dead fall while walking and use that
He's got to drag it back anyway
The other thing they missed out was how much easier a snow shelter is ( and they're remarkably warm )
Thanks for that sharing that info -- much appreciated!
Great video i remember the ones they showed us so boring this one was great they should have continued using it. I also remember they did make the guys who screwed up do briefings about how and why they messed up and we learned a hell of a lot more from that experience then today's touchy feely BS way of doing business. Thank for the video.
Essential Equipment for the Arctic:
1. Rucksack or Duffle
2. Box of Matches
3. Gloves
4. Full Flight Suit w/ Hat
5. Auto .45 cal Pistol w/ 2 spare clips
6. Boots
7. Extra Socks
8. Rations, 2 MREs
9. Watertight Floatable Matchbox
10. Pocket Knife, Scout or Swiss Army
11. Small Axe
12. Parachute
What you forgot:
13. Metal Cookpot, 750-1000 ml
14. Signal Mirror
15. First Aid Kit
16. Map & Compass
17. Wool Blanket
It is good film for keep calm in danger.Psihological film,not for practical.Luck of fair wood,no axe,...etc
For only halfassed listening in class he retained a lot of memory!😂
There was some good training in that film 😉👍👍🇺🇸
he is Capt. McIntire, he was in he ready room, at the beginning, when they mention his name and flying the B-17.
Steven, I'm writing a book about these films, and I'd love to ask you a couple of questions about what you might know about this one.
If you are writing a book would you Please research who the main actor in this film is. It's kind of bugging Me. I would Sincerely like to know!?
I couldn't find anything on line about the film.
Best Wishes! M.H.
So good a film love these old military films. Just watched 1 with Bergess Merideth and Ronald Regan. (Tail gunner).
With those 2 cats,the movie must have been a doozy
gosh, it's so witty, like "rare rabbit, patriot. He serves his country." I learned a lot from this video.
Fire is your only life line in arctic conditions all else is secondary. If help doesn't come,,
well, just pray it comes.
Every thing in deep snow becomes very much more difficult. Your body becomes exhausted very quickly. You'll spend most of you time trying to supply fire wood. A hatchet is your best friend then.
Your plane was full of gas, if any left be prepared to torch craft for signal fire if you hear search craft.
A fresh fall of snow will make your crash sight almost invisible. Your in a void of millions of acres of wilderness, to find you, hope for a miracle.
Before g.p.s. it was darn hard to locate anything very easily.
Wonder what happened to the P-40? She's no film prop fabrication, but the real deal. But as someones says in comments below it was filmed at the end of a runway. So she was surplus to requirements know doubt. a most enjoyable and instructional film.
Probably a casualty of an accident already and was cheaper to use for this than fix, maybe
56:25 Here the C-47 deploys the survival sled and dog team out of the planes 3 day survival kit.
Great training film. I'm a little skeptical about fashioning mukluks out of parachute silk and some odd scraps of leather, but the rest was very plausible. That's John Hodiak, I believe, doing the pilot's voice.
I thought he used canvas and the chute?
They're far from perfect, but better at frostbite prevention than a frozen leather boot and damp feet.
Best ending ever.
Just watched jungle survival, dessert survival and now watching this .hopefully will be as good . I'm so glad i wasn't a man born back then because i know i wouldn't have lasted 5 minutes 😊
This may come in handy some day soon......
Need to find that P-40. Its probably left behind after filming and still out there.
Probably still is! Here we see an Allison engine performing to its usual standards LOL!
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Great clip thanks. Very watchable sitting here in my nice warm house, but compared to the (British)training films I saw in my early service, far more likely to be enjoyed(and thus watched and listened to much more attentively and discussed by a group of soldiers than the dry offerings we Brits had to watch,.
A little bit of humour, even in such a serious subject, helps hold the interest, hence the message takes hold better- this film was well balanced in that respect.
We often would have been training very hard physically, in cold weather, and the training team would cram in an instructional film.
No video in those days, just a cine projector in a darkened billet, so cold exhausted troops+warmth+shelter+boring, if essential film= zzzzzz!
You Yanks have never been scared to throw money at a project to get it done well!
All the best Jay. one can nod off (even a micro sleep) during a film after coming from serious exercises etc (or worse) to a dark warm film room. Many often best watched many times to catch the details!
I love watching this never interesting, entertaining and educational.
No planes were harmed during the filming of this video.
53:18, You don't need to make holes into your extra socks if you wantt to warm your hands. Just wear the socks like mittens under your weather-proof gloves. If you need to use fingers, take the glove off! (works well enough in survival conditions, although in combat you need to use trigger finger on the gun)
Dang. If I were that dude, I'd work on a fire as soon as I made sure there were no fuel leaks and that I wasn't injured and bleeding. Way before I started making DIY snow boots.
I can't believe he or anybody else would take off without carrying their 45.
I have to wonder if this was earlier in the war, because later a lot of pilots were issued a .38 revolver instead of the 1911, but agreed, I'd definitely take my sidearm with me.
No mention of what to do in case of run in with Sasquatch.
So true
Off to watch Land and live in the jungle for airmen - 1943. / Then land and live in the desert for airmen - 1945 - restored.
That's using your bean, Luitenant!! 😇👍
Here's a classic book about a French adventurer who chose to live a year inside of Artic Circle: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kabloona
Kabloona ("Fool") is anyone who goes into the Artic and doesn't know what he is doing.
He learned a lot in that year. The most important survival tool is a "snow knife".
How to make a shelter in open space.
Good video 👍♥️
at29:16 i would have used the oil to start the fire....Just a question to someone that knows more than me...can you start your fire on top of a piece of metal from the plane with wood on top of it and it would melt the snow as it burns...at least saving some of your energy? no flare gun...what about the signaling mirror you 'should have' in your pack...i know I know there is no sun out, but in the morning it might be...
Kennynva oil from other episodes of these gives it a thick black smoke so it’s great for signaling
If that’s what you asking of course
Fire and wood first always
All ideal conditions. No 40 MPH winds at ten below! Cool video though. Shoulda helped. Spare us the criticism.
Looked like the original search plane was a B-18 Bolo. The RCAF had the B-18 titled the Digby Mk1. Almost all the US B-18's were employed for coastal patrol but Digbys were used for search and rescue in Canada. Makes me wonder if this whole things was filmed n Canada.
It states it was done at Wright Field which is in Fairbanks. It also mentions Ft. Wainwright.
If this guy can build 3 signal fires with wood, another fire for warmth, a lean-to shelter, make snow shoes, snare and cook a rabbit, make a pair of mukluks ALL in one day following a crash - I would say he and Robinson Crusoe were cousins. But this film by the military is totally exaggerated. So scoring this out of 10 (and taking in considerations that this is from 1944 - I rated it at 6.
fred c dobbs talking to himselk again . good film!
I very much dig this. However, I wish I could do some sound tweaking on this baby, since I've got to crank up my laptop to maximum volume to make it audible, along with de-noising.
I watched the Survive the Desert one…..If I had to choose I would go with Survive the Desert….The cold is painful
slopes or ridges are generally warmer than valleys
I wonder if this survival movie is still effective for use today.
Sure. Some of the materials may have changed, but the challenge of cold survival has never changed.
Even as old as it is you always learn something
Great survival music!
Glen Miller and other Disney tunes.
35:29 Step 10 - Smoke em if ya got em!
I have heard that saying many times.why is it once in the army 4 quite a few years,u can't seem 2 shake this stuff.oh well
very kool thanks so voted
Pretty cool.
"Maybe I shouldn't sleep."
gEt PlEnTy oF sLeEp
Well made training film. To search that long for one pilot? NOT!! But good film.
Mention Broads and pinup girls today and you'll get the me- too movement climbing up your whazoo.
Hahah right ? Did ya catch the striptease comment too ? Life was better when I was younger, I hate to admit.
I'm surprised UA-cam did not ban this film.
Why didn’t he make his shelter under the wing of his plane? And was there any gas left he could have used?
If he had any of the fuel get on exposed skin he would have had a major problem with frostbite. When stationed at Ft. Wainwright Sep 79 - Feb 82, I watched a guy deliberately spray MOGAS on his hand in sub-zero temperatures at the fuel point on the airfield one night because he didn't want to go to the field anymore. I found out a while later, that he had lost 2 1/2 fingers. Here's yer sign.
OMG. The plane was upside down. You didnt notice that ?
wool loses its ability to heat when wet? maybe if it's sopping wet.
@ 45:29 i thought his face morphed into a monster. But it was just his goggles lol.
with your gear retracted, danger of turning over is very slight
Very important if you were assigned to the Aleutian Islands.
This needs a RiffTrax.
Looks like he could have taken that whole plane apart with that little screwdriver
45 caliber with two extra clips.
It's a magazine! Lol
If the Men of WW2 call it a clip, then I will too.
Ha ha you are so smart, gun Einstein is what we should call you. Bet you are really fun to watch movies with pointing out every little inaccuracy with how they hold, load, fire, don’t have trigger discipline etc. A real barrel of fun. I am sure the world is smarter now that you have corrected a 75 year old movie, dip shit.
@SaltyBrains exactly. Because that term Supposedly didn't start till the 80s 90s. Clips Meaning Magazine.
@@TheAvkdutch hell ya. If im Spending time Watching something, I want To Notice everything i see..