Wilderness Survival for Actual Outdoorsmen

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  • Опубліковано 13 лип 2024
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 313

  • @GruntProof
    @GruntProof  3 місяці тому +124

    Priorities:
    1. If you're not injured, take a walk
    2. If you're hurt, being seen by everyone possible is crucial

    • @cassallen6362
      @cassallen6362 3 місяці тому +2

      Hey man who makes that IR signal? I took mine with me when I got out and the screw closure on the bottom broke. Great video brother, Charlie mike.

    • @brettlaw4346
      @brettlaw4346 3 місяці тому +1

      There is a training course for shooting where they tape your hand up and cover it with a blood substitute. If there was a training course for being injured in a survival scenario, people's approach to training, gear and their confidence in the woods might be vastly different. Sometimes you have to take a step back and ask yourself, "Is this being wise or being lazy?"
      I do think being chased by a wildfire would be quite a survival scenario. Dropping gear to cut weight while legging it, ideal directions being cut off, having to redirect because of shifts in the forward edge of the fire area, loss of landmarks due to obfuscation, obstruction and destruction.

    • @milesrost6674
      @milesrost6674 3 місяці тому +1

      Words of wisdom from Randall!! Cheers man!

    • @Shadowaspen
      @Shadowaspen 3 місяці тому +4

      I got into trouble last friday in the saskatchewan prairie ...jeep broke down...sun was setting cellphone discharged in minus 20 c wind chill walked with a blanket in a full cotton gorka suit no long johns for 5 miles almost home before a guy drove by and picked me up...I am glad that I always during the winter accustom my self up to minus40 c by going out naked and wet in the yard after a shower...cause the burning cold would have taken a lot of other people out but my body was used to it...I walked in open plain ..no trees no bush no cover for wind at all...made a small short about it for who is interested ... for sure put a extra pair of cloth now in the jeep and a windproof jacked

    • @milesrost6674
      @milesrost6674 3 місяці тому

      fail to prepare, prepare to fail. Glad you were prepared Brother. - Godspeed@@Shadowaspen

  • @raymondsanchez808
    @raymondsanchez808 3 місяці тому +55

    a quote that I heard and stand by is , what most people call a "survival situation", unless you're injured is nothing more than just "Inconvenient camping"

  • @SNAFU_73
    @SNAFU_73 4 місяці тому +122

    To this day it's still amazing to me at the amount of people that will spend hours watching all things outdoors on the web but you ask them the last time they actually bothered to "outdoor"....they give you a blank stare.....like it's a foreign concept.

    • @The_Red_Off_Road
      @The_Red_Off_Road 3 місяці тому +16

      They can’t get away from the controlled environment of their couch! 😂
      Most of our fellow countrymen are soft af.

    • @TexasNationalist1836
      @TexasNationalist1836 3 місяці тому +9

      Some of us are busy and don’t have the time or land to do outdoor operator special forces minute man LARPing training

    • @The_Red_Off_Road
      @The_Red_Off_Road 3 місяці тому +7

      @@TexasNationalist1836 I have a feeling you are not a Texan. Something is off about that statement coming from a “Texas nationalist.”

    • @Downhaven
      @Downhaven 3 місяці тому +6

      ​@The_Red_Off_Road Considering public land for that in Texas is non existent (I'm lucky enough to have family with land) it's sadly fairly common for a lot of people to practice in the house and backyard.
      That being said, there's still plenty of ways to appreciate the outdoors here, just a lot harder than even 20 years ago.

    • @rickyflinchum2909
      @rickyflinchum2909 3 місяці тому +3

      And I don't understand why any of these people watching wilderness survival videos don't go out in the woods and do all the "things". It's fun, it's great exercise, and you will learn stuff. I enjoy being in the woods and am there every chance I can be. Oh well just my mean nothing two cents on the thing you were commenting about.

  • @natsirttrebor1425
    @natsirttrebor1425 3 місяці тому +9

    In my personal experience, when I was a teenager, maybe 17 or 18, I worked on a fireworks crew. One job was in Dearborn, MI at Camp Dearborn. Working from before dawn until 23:00 or so. Long story short, my so called friends that I drove with there left me at the behest of a girl. I was quite pissed, but I started walking the unknown distance home with the only knowledge of direction came from the previous day riding in a vehicle and paying attention to street signs. I walked from Camp Dearborn to River Rouge roughly 49 miles with nothing but the clothes on my tired back.
    I appreciate your channel because I appreciate the brutal honesty of life. Thanks for keeping in the realm of reality.

  • @stephen_north
    @stephen_north 3 місяці тому +5

    Please make that a t shirt. “Walk your Happy ass home.”

  • @realpropertymangement7640
    @realpropertymangement7640 3 місяці тому +29

    I was a helo cop for about seven years in SW Oregon, just north of where Randall shoots these videos. We flew SAR missions fairly often. A few points... best to stay with your rig unless you're certain you can and are equipped to walk out, if you have comms (cell and/or radio) and can provide your lat/long 👍, using a laser to signal an aircraft is no bueno 👎 aim it at a treetop or rock face! (I've been lazed a few times!). Big fire (but NOT in fire season 🙄) is good for warmth and signaling. Bottom line... be prepared, stay cool, think it through.

  • @historyguy8208
    @historyguy8208 3 місяці тому +47

    One point of advice as a pilot. The laser might not be the best idea because it will basically blind the pilots. When a laser hits a cockpit it reflects all over and can temporarily blind or disorient the pilots and at worst give them permanent vision damage depending on how powerful the laser is. It hasnt happened to me but i know a few small aircraft pilots who have been lased and it would be 100% be better and safer if you just used a bright flashlight. If youre in a survival situation you likely dont have lights around you so it will be easier to see a flashlight as it will stick out if you shine that at the airplane without having the strength to harm the pilots in the airplane. Just my thoughts on the matter. Great video.

    • @analprolapse6969
      @analprolapse6969 3 місяці тому +1

      Fuck ‘em

    • @David_Quinn_Photography
      @David_Quinn_Photography 3 місяці тому +4

      I agree, that little 2k lumens tac light he has will do just fine and keep him from being locked up though I would rather be judged by 12 than carried by 6.

    • @andrewlaughbon9468
      @andrewlaughbon9468 3 місяці тому +4

      Agree with the blinding issue. However the idea is to disrupt the camera and be painfully obvious to the instruments. A regular light doesn't do that. The laser is just that painfully obvious. I agree the flashlight for the pilots would be better. And if it's flying around at the dead of night. Try it. However that laser will bounce around day or night. It is a desperate risk. Use a signal flare first. Lol

    • @historyguy8208
      @historyguy8208 3 місяці тому +2

      @andrewlaughbon9468 I don't know of any airplane outside of equipped surveillance aircraft (usually only military aircraft) that have a camera, otherwise a laser would do nothing to instruments and only causing a massive risk of blinding or disorientation in a pilot, causing a large undue risk to the safety of the aircraft and anything below. The vast majority of the time in a survival situation you're talking about getting the attention of a small private aircraft or search aircraft and a rescue helicopter. The flashlight will do just fine unless you're being found by a military crew with thermals. The laser is more of a danger to the pilots than a helpful tool. There's a reason people go to jail for a while for lasing aircraft.

    • @historyguy8208
      @historyguy8208 3 місяці тому +2

      Signal flare, flashlight or fire would likely be the best route, as well as signal mirrors in the daytime.

  • @ldtexas1648
    @ldtexas1648 4 місяці тому +21

    "There's no such thing as the middle of nowhere Agent Scully!"

    • @2nd_coming
      @2nd_coming 3 місяці тому +1

      agent scully aint been to the yukon. alaska, british columbia,

  • @TennGrizz
    @TennGrizz 3 місяці тому +20

    I run my hounds on 🦝 and bobcat about 200 nights a year. I hunt deer , turkey , hogs etc. as well as predator calling for coyotes. Love fishing as well. I hunt 90% of the time by myself. Last night I followed my hounds about 4 miles in a Wilderness area public hunting.

  • @terryrichards8645
    @terryrichards8645 3 місяці тому +9

    You mentioned having flat tires on your ATV I always carried tire plugs and a bicycle pump tape to the handlebar. Never let me down. Plus the duct tape I could start a fire with it.😊 I even had to put four tire plugs in one hole before, but it got me home. Save me a little egg time.😊

  • @YouveBeenMiddled
    @YouveBeenMiddled 3 місяці тому +11

    Map & Compass, Knife (small), Lighter (small), Whistle, Bandanna - all this fits in your pocket.
    Rain Gear, Water, Snacks
    Everything else is extra weight for extended efforts.

    • @RodCornholio
      @RodCornholio 3 місяці тому +4

      Agree. Even in my city park, I would stuff a Bic lighter, an emergency poncho, maybe a snack bar, in my pockets. Carry a disposable plastic bottle of water from 7-11. Took under 30 seconds to grab those things.
      I'm certain preppers would laugh and non-preppers would say, "paranoid" for having those minimal items. However, those things could have meant the difference between a very uncomfortable and deadly situation to just a very uncomfortable but _living_ situation.

    • @doc650adventures
      @doc650adventures 3 місяці тому

      I would add a ferro rod and tinder. The ferro rod is extremely reliable for starting fires

  • @theintrovertedcalifornian5047
    @theintrovertedcalifornian5047 3 місяці тому +5

    Listen to this man. Im a 51 year old infantry veteran. 2 years ago i weighed 270 lbs now im down to 210. I work out and walk 6 days a week. I realized 2 years ago I was a fat fuck who could not protect his family now I almost feel like i could serve in the infantry again lol. Get in shape go camping and rough it with one man tents and back packs. This will give you a better idea of what is needed in the outdoors in your area. Only thing he forgot to mention was bring bug spray its a game changer lol

  • @kevinbenoit7167
    @kevinbenoit7167 3 місяці тому +4

    Great realist video. My wife and I did not always own a car. We thought nothing to walk to town to do earns and get groceries. A 7 miles loop. We even added an extra mile to hit a big hill for extra exercise. We are 46 and 51.

  • @asmith7876
    @asmith7876 3 місяці тому +12

    Trolls be like: He's promoting Bic Lighters, he's getting paid by BIC for this video! 🤣🤣🤣 Love your style and content! I carry in a cross draw holster, it's the only thing I've found that provides access but doesn't interfere with any other straps or belts when I have a back pack on. I have a great big coyote brown scarf, some piece of surplus I got years ago, thin cotton, quite long and large and I drape it around my neck. It can hang in such a way that you would walk right past me and never see the S & W 686 hanging there but it's still right there if I want it. Have fun!

  • @jimmyzulu85
    @jimmyzulu85 3 місяці тому +3

    You're spot on! Especially about building a shelter, people don't seem to understand how much time it takes to build a "bushcrafter's" shelter like the ones we are seeing on UA-cam or how much more difficult is to start a fire with a ferro rod..

    • @thopkins2271
      @thopkins2271 3 місяці тому +1

      It doesn’t take much effort at all to do either. A simple lean to is not hard nor time consuming to make if you’re in actual wilderness and not what the woods look like in most parks where the deadfall is all picked clean for fires.
      And I couldn’t disagree more about a ferro rod. They aren’t easier than a lighter, but far from the most time consuming part of building a fire.
      Collecting and processing wood, kindling, and tinder is the most time consuming part by far…and necessary even with a lighter AND some sort of chemical accelerant. The ferro rod just necessitates a few extra minutes at most of making better tinder.
      It shouldn’t be anyone’s go to…but there are enough keychain sized ones, or even ones that fit in the corkscrew of a Swiss Army knife…that it’s an utter no brainer to have one.
      The Boy Scouts for well over a century have preached three ways to make fire. They weren’t being paranoid or trying to make you haul too much weight.
      That you can carry water purification tabs, storm matches, whistle, cordage, spare havalon blades, a ferro rod, a small bic, safety pins, a tinder or two, and a small flashlight in an altoids tin?
      Stick a piece of cut inner tube around it to hold it shut and throw one in your fishing bag, one in your day hiking bag, one in your hunting vest. It weighs nothing and almost every item listed has value well beyond bonafide survival.
      To me that’s the key. Carry the survival items. Just figure out how to make the survival items the same items you often use or need in the outdoors anyway. Stuff that is truly just survival needs to be tiny and light and impossible to leave behind.
      I do not go out without a headlamp. Full stop. So I have a really good one.
      I use my knife all the time outdoors. So I have a nice one albeit relatively little by many survival standards.
      But I almost never need a compass so I make sure that the one I have does multiple things and is light enough to be able to justify.

    • @jimmyzulu85
      @jimmyzulu85 3 місяці тому +1

      @@thopkins2271 I'm not talking about a simple tarp shelter. I'm talking about those big wooden shelters that we're seeing on UA-cam. People think that they can build such a shelter but in reality they won't when really needed, because it takes hours to build it, skills and planning. About making fire yes you must be able to start a fire with multiple ways, but a lighter should be number one. It's the easiest, cheapest and everyone has a lighter on him/her (or should have). I couldn't agree more about carrying the survival items although I'm not a fan of survival tins, I just carry them on my person. Something I'd like to add is that people need to get out and test all their gear and skills.

    • @thopkins2271
      @thopkins2271 3 місяці тому +1

      @@jimmyzulu85 I’m all for carrying them b on your person. I don’t, other than a knife or multi tool and a tiny ferro rod connected to my keys. But I never hunt without a day pack, and I never fish without an orvis sling bag. If I’m off roading in the jeep…well then I’m better outfitted than almost anyone.
      And yes those shelters are ridiculous. Maybe fun for those that consider that their recreation though.

  • @BCVS777
    @BCVS777 3 місяці тому +2

    The more you know the less you carry! That’s why i go into the wilderness with two pack horses.

  • @chriss2283
    @chriss2283 3 місяці тому +14

    Water in a survival situation. Tap a tree, it's already purified. Drill a shallow hole about 1/2 and inch, maybe an inch, in. Tap it with a hollow tube of some type and stick a cup under the end. It runs decently. Don't forget to plug it with sap if you can. Otherwise it will eventually heal itself after take the tap out. (If you don't have tablets or a filter at all that is.)

    • @BCVS777
      @BCVS777 3 місяці тому

      😅

    • @chriss2283
      @chriss2283 3 місяці тому

      @@BCVS777 Yea, certain someone's are gonna LOVE that FYI. 😏

    • @eddiekane1202
      @eddiekane1202 3 місяці тому +1

      I usually pack a drill when I go to the woods too

    • @chriss2283
      @chriss2283 3 місяці тому +1

      @@eddiekane1202The end of the saw on a multi tool.works. even the corks screw could do the job with some effort. Or the the thin blade FCOL. You really think I literally ment a drill. 😂🙄

    • @eddiekane1202
      @eddiekane1202 3 місяці тому

      @@chriss2283 it’s called busting your balls. get a sense a humor

  • @chrisminniear7243
    @chrisminniear7243 3 місяці тому +4

    Road flare...carry two. I live near the rainforest and if it's not fire season, it's wet.

  • @PistolsPlayground
    @PistolsPlayground 3 місяці тому +3

    Good video, simple and to the point.
    A lot of people have an opinion about wilderness survival, while having spent no time in the wilderness.

  • @huwhitecavebeast1972
    @huwhitecavebeast1972 3 місяці тому +1

    Randall's fireside chats lol. Imagine trying to get back home after a bear attack, like the Revenant movie....

  • @yellowdog762jb
    @yellowdog762jb 3 місяці тому +1

    I've had to break out an old school compass twice on the same small ranch that I lease the hunting rights to. Both times it was well after dark and the canopy was thick enough that I couldn't see the sky well, plus the brush was thick enough that one had to stick to cattle trails. For some reason, it's really easy to walk in circles when you have to watch the ground and you can't just march off in a straight line. I have google maps on my phone, but with spotty reception it's easy to walk off in the wrong direction because the phone doesn't always show it's exact location.

  • @andreas.v6059
    @andreas.v6059 4 місяці тому +6

    Absolute on point, Randal

  • @robbentodd6824
    @robbentodd6824 3 місяці тому +10

    You’re right! I graduated from SERE in 2000. One thing I carried as a loadmaster was a 5mW green laser. I put that fact into my ISOPREP too.
    Mike Jones recently did a couple of survival vids. Check them out too.

    • @randomname6710
      @randomname6710 3 місяці тому

      I'm not sure you're going to find garandthumb by searching mike jones, i'm not going to test it lol

    • @Chudchanning
      @Chudchanning 3 місяці тому +1

      Is 5mW and 5,000mW the same? I know that sounds stupid but I was curious about abbreviations in the numbers because mine says max output 5,000mW. I can light shit on fire with it and it shoots a visible column of light into the sky without fog or smoke in the air

    • @robbentodd6824
      @robbentodd6824 3 місяці тому +1

      Mine is a tiny one. Its marketed use is for pointing out celestial objects, but in a survival situation I probably would have just shot it straight up so my location could be seen by rescue.

    • @Chudchanning
      @Chudchanning 3 місяці тому +1

      That makes sense. Mine is like one of those palm sized maglight style flashlights but 3xs as long. Overall it's not small but it's not bulky either. I think it's one of those "illegal" lasers from on-line but I'm not really sure about it, it was a gift and I'm not a laser autist like some folks

    • @jonathonmcmillan9410
      @jonathonmcmillan9410 3 місяці тому

      @@Chudchanning5,000mW is 5 Watts. That'll completely blind any eye it hits, and start grass fires. Be careful with that...

  • @mbb12
    @mbb12 3 місяці тому +1

    Finally! Someone mentions a Laser for signalling - I always thought it was a no brained

  • @randybrown140
    @randybrown140 3 місяці тому +5

    WOW, someone with common sense ideas 👍 I'm tired of GLOOM DOOM, LET'S BE HEROES TYPES. THANK YOU 👍

  • @onega2116
    @onega2116 3 місяці тому

    I broke down 80 miles away from home when i was doing a very long commute during the height of the cvid issue (couldnt ride in the tow truck) not even remote. Grabbed my water changed into my boots grabbed my pack w a few snacks and tarp just in case. Walked about halfway home b4 someone was available to pick me up. An hr or 2 more that tarp would have been invaluable. Left my wallet at home so no cash or card just the batt left on my phone and battery brick. Great info, major lesson... stay fit friends.

  • @terryrichards8645
    @terryrichards8645 3 місяці тому +3

    I kind of agree with you had a heat riser go bad in my exhaust. I ran out of gas 3 miles from home. It was 19 below zero and 35° winds but I was prepared. I had a winter parka and winter boots. I just started walking and walked all the way home at 3:30 in the morning no problemo.😊

  • @familygene9030
    @familygene9030 3 місяці тому +2

    I have spent weeks in the mountains as a younger person and what drove me out time and again is hunger . Contrary to UA-cam there is nothing to eat in the Great Outdoors .

    • @M.R.T.V.Videos
      @M.R.T.V.Videos 3 місяці тому

      I always went back to town for food also 😂. Never made it more than a little past 2 weeks out

  • @bds123087
    @bds123087 3 місяці тому +3

    I have always carried a green laser pointer in my backpack for that reason, excellent signaling device. Surprising I never hear anybody talk about them being used for that you’re the first person.

  • @TheBlackKnight6
    @TheBlackKnight6 Місяць тому

    I cannot overstate how refreshing it is to hear you speaking common sense. I have had many of these thoughts watching other videos and it’s great to hear that I’m not the only one questioning some of the “fantasy land” tactics. Sure it’s fun to go camping, but in most cases you sure can just walk home or call for help…

  • @CosmicTaco333
    @CosmicTaco333 3 місяці тому +6

    Three centuries ago, the population of game animals (and their four-legged predators) was much greater than it is now. Back then, the human population on this continent was much smaller.

    • @billbbobby2889
      @billbbobby2889 3 місяці тому

      It will flip again when the grid is permanently shut down. By sabotage or a CME aka Nature

  • @zplitterz
    @zplitterz 3 місяці тому +2

    A hatchet or knife wound to leg is the most likely need for a TQ. Other than that, fall out of a tree a puncture. In 20 years I know of one bear who impaled its stomache on a branch. And 2 humans broke vertebraes falling out of trees. And they got up and walked. One had a collapsed ribcage so he couldn't yell. One guy I know hit himself real bad with an axe.

  • @shadepb
    @shadepb 3 місяці тому +4

    Friendly reminder, never ever point a laser to your camera sensor.

  • @ALoonwolf
    @ALoonwolf 3 місяці тому +1

    There seem to be many videos about a "get home bag". Back in the 1980s and 1990s we went for miles carrying NOTHING. If we were stranded far from home we just walked home, we didn't need a bag of supplies or any kind of special skills. Just walking.

  • @billiep4338
    @billiep4338 3 місяці тому +1

    Thank you for your service and your time. My Dad retired from the military after twenty years. Every year we took weekend trips around Thanksgiving and Christmas to the hunt camp in Georgia. We spent many hours there in the spring planting alfalfa, corn, & other native grasses to build up the herd at hunt camp. In the summer we would camp for 2 weeks on a river in Tenn. and run trout lines. He taught me how to hunt, fish, and sustain myself through the elements, hot or cold, good & bad times, & to always be prepared for the inevitable accidents. What you just went over is almost the exact same things he taught me. As a girl it was hard at times to be as tough as he wanted me to be, but as I have grown, I understand that everything he taught me was not just for me, but for the generations after him. I just wanted to tell you that you & the info. your sharing is appreciated. I’m pretty sure it would have my Dad’s approval ,Sgt. Potter 1923-1993. 🫡

  • @DuneRatt
    @DuneRatt 3 місяці тому +4

    I've built a fire and spent the night, then walked out, instead of stumbling onto a grizzly bear in the dark. 99.99999% of the time, that will suffice. what you can carry in an altoid tin will do the job. However, from a standpoint of just gaining knowledge, when you watch the UA-cam stuff, go practice in the backyard, then take it up in the hills and try it. You want the reflexes before you have to do it under shitty conditions. It's fun stuff even if you never have to use it. Nothing wrong with learning the skills.

    • @thopkins2271
      @thopkins2271 3 місяці тому +1

      This is exactly it. I think people load their packs down with the stuff they camp or recreate with, and then add a bunch of survival stuff. Silly.
      Make quality and informed purchases the first time when buying outdoors equipment…and then all of a sudden your regular gear is a perfect multifunctional survival tool. When you aren’t intending on spending the night…you’re spot on. A well thought out altoids tin with a space blanket attached to it with a piece of inner tube is hard to beat, fits in any bag you would have while outside, and adds no weight.

  • @ROMAN138
    @ROMAN138 3 місяці тому

    You’re the first channel I’ve ever seen that touches on this subject. Having the mental strength to get yourself home in adverse conditions is key

  • @The_Red_Off_Road
    @The_Red_Off_Road 3 місяці тому +8

    I took the Wildeness Survival classes for my Wilderness Sirvival Merit badge. We had to build a shelter and spend the night out there, without a tent. It was hands down the best class I took in the scouts. That and pioneering. And maybe the first aid. Anyways…
    I got lucky having a scoutmaster that was a 30-year navy veteran that retired as a master chief. He could speak Eskimo and Inuit.
    If you have never built a shelter, I’d recommend going out and practicing. City folks prolly can’t do that, but you can go to a national park or a state park and at least get out there and out of the house. I can teach you how to do a lot, but I can’t teach you how to persevere. Know what it’s like so you won’t be distracted by the environment. Most Americans are too comfortable in the A/c. It’s amazing how many people won’t even sleep in a tent. 😂

    • @EWOKakaDOOM
      @EWOKakaDOOM 3 місяці тому

      Nice, I wish I stuck with scouts

  • @ManInTheWoods76
    @ManInTheWoods76 3 місяці тому +1

    I'm not starting a wildfire.
    I'm not putting a laser in a pilot's eyes.
    I have solutions that meet the same need differently. But point well taken.👍
    Excellent vid, my man.

  • @TheLordMyRock
    @TheLordMyRock 3 місяці тому +3

    Starting a wildfire when I’m injured in the middle of nowhere doesn’t really sound like I’d be doing much to improve my situation.

  • @kyjelly5524
    @kyjelly5524 3 місяці тому +3

    I got stuck on my dirt bike soaking wet because I crashed into a creek. I struggled for hours on this trail in a snowstorm and decided to leave the bike behind. I walk/jogged out in fun dirt bike gear. It sucked but I got home.
    Another time I broke my handlebars and my friend came to get me in his truck. I was freezing so I did jumping jacks, push ups, squats and walked constantly until he got there. It sucked but we got my bike out. I still like the survival gear though but it’s mostly useless unless you are stuck for days.

  • @hornedgod2873
    @hornedgod2873 3 місяці тому

    Loved it. This video, your consistent advice and some comments here make venturing out very accessible and inexpensive. Thanks for the great, reassuring advice and the consistently excellent work.

  • @paul7754
    @paul7754 3 місяці тому +2

    Solid 'common sense' for most of us. However IMO there is the other side of the coin for 'wilderness survival' and that is if you are trying NOT to be found or rescued. Admittedly that's a rare circumstance but it's a big part of SERE training - hiding from/evading the enemy, surviving the circumstances.

  • @user-xv9cw9sc8e
    @user-xv9cw9sc8e 2 місяці тому

    Love your content!! You’re awesome and I really like your take on things. I do think that if someone is hiking or camping up here (Upstate NY) in the Adirondack high peaks or anywhere “back Country,” that the cold is definitely a factor, distance is a factor, and the possibility of getting injured and having no communication is also something to be considered when heading out. I always go out with most everything I need to make it for a couple of nights. The Cold seasons require a lot more gear but it doesn’t take much during the warmer months. Aside from that, we have meth heads and just dirt bag people preying on the weak. I try to be prepared for anything and try to be anything but weak. I am not a bad ass but I will keep my family safe and prepared. We love your channel!! Love it! Thank you for everything you’ve done and continue to do for your fellow Countrymen. We owe you so much!! We have nothing but respect and d gratitude. Thank you!!

  • @dalecoffin7419
    @dalecoffin7419 3 місяці тому +2

    People do bushcraft because they like doing bushcrafty things

  • @raysmith6829
    @raysmith6829 3 місяці тому +3

    I wouldn't go out to help people without being equipped and armed

  • @peasant1381
    @peasant1381 3 місяці тому +2

    An ample supply of tea will cover most emergencies.

    • @YouveBeenMiddled
      @YouveBeenMiddled 3 місяці тому +2

      Well, there was that one time in Boston Harbor...

  • @oneadamj
    @oneadamj 3 місяці тому +1

    You're definitely a grunt. I can tell by the way you talk. Lol. Infantry leads the way!

  • @danielbast352
    @danielbast352 3 місяці тому

    You made me happy a cpl minutes in. I remember a few years back when I spent 3 months paddling the Missouri. I took a short vid to message my friends. It was basically, how I can believe how privileged I am to be able to enjoy such beauty. And the you hit the whole survival thing. Here’s my big one, you fools rubbing two sticks together, got to have a flint n steel. Dude a pack of bic lighters will offer you years of fire.

  • @TheUnhousedWanderer
    @TheUnhousedWanderer 3 місяці тому

    Love tip #2. Got lost on a late day hike with my girlfriend. She got scared, so i told her that if we didnt find the car soon, I would start a fire so big that someone would definitely find us.

  • @jasonwilliams4390
    @jasonwilliams4390 3 місяці тому +3

    Ever seen or heard a sasquatch out there?

  • @6point5
    @6point5 3 місяці тому +3

    What? You mean when you get your ATV stuck, you don't immediately grab two sticks to start making a friction fire, and scavenge the land for flint stone to start making primitive arrows?
    Shocked.

  • @JustInCases72
    @JustInCases72 3 місяці тому +2

    In the eastern woodlands/ Ohio you will probably find a road in a few hours.

  • @TheGopher67
    @TheGopher67 3 місяці тому +1

    The idea of heading out for a day trip in the wilderness and a disaster making it a multiple day walk to get back is real for some people - you have no idea. But you do you. You are right that people should be able to make it to the highway from the middle of the state park.

  • @alancarter4270
    @alancarter4270 4 місяці тому +2

    Good talk Brother, I agree.

  • @Jonathan-SW89
    @Jonathan-SW89 4 місяці тому +1

    Learned something! Thanks dude! 💯🍻

  • @hiramhaji7813
    @hiramhaji7813 3 місяці тому +1

    Oh, I absolutely love videos like this…… keep burning their reality down Randall😂😂😂🔥🔥🔥

  • @TacticalGaggle
    @TacticalGaggle 3 місяці тому

    Oh snaps, Another Grunt Proof video dropped. Time to watch

  • @DuneRatt
    @DuneRatt 3 місяці тому +3

    If i snowmachine 60 miles into the mountains, i.want survival skills, knowledge, and equipment. No such thing as being too knowledgeable or too prepared.

  • @clurra
    @clurra 3 місяці тому

    Super underrated advice 👏

  • @anthonydolezal6627
    @anthonydolezal6627 3 місяці тому

    Thanks for keeping it real!
    Keep Smilin!!!!

  • @srbontrager
    @srbontrager 3 місяці тому +1

    While I do have knives for specific tasks. The only 'knife' I EDC is in my Leatherman Surge. The reason I like the heavier Surge is because of the larger scissors and more robust pliers than what the wave or the charge has. I snapped the tips off my Leatherman charge trying to remove a nail from a tire.

  • @David_Quinn_Photography
    @David_Quinn_Photography 3 місяці тому +1

    I have walked my ass home once before, it ain't the funniest thing to do but I wasn't going to be a sitting duck in a state park where the last tracks I saw were at least a week old, no cell service, and it was a 6-hour walk home.
    I am lucky that the big cats are not in my area and the black bear is easily spooked off.

  • @milesmoyers
    @milesmoyers 4 місяці тому +3

    The IR beacon is a great idea, any experience with the trip wire perimeter alarms?

  • @DroopyWorm
    @DroopyWorm 3 місяці тому +1

    The wilderness survival philosophy comes from 1) Getting lost, 2) Grid down, had to leave home on foot, 3) Down on your luck, homeless & 4) You are being hunted.
    Learning wilderness skills is absolutely not a bad thing.

  • @jetmuchacho
    @jetmuchacho 3 місяці тому +1

    When we were kids man we'd survive in the middle of nowhere on Atvs, dirt bikes, snowmobiles all weekend with nothing but rum, beer, hot dogs and a pack of smokes. 10 or 20 of us would do these long multi-day loops through the most remote holes way up North. Worst injury I ever got in the bush was when I punched out a cabin window and the glass came down and cut me to the bone on my tricep . I just took my shirt off and tied it really tight around the arm. We kept fooling around and drinking beer all day then I finally went to emergency room and got stitched up, the nurse had very little remorse. Not my best decision. The entire arm turned purple and green for weeks, and I still don't have much feeling in my forearm. Not the first time booze got me in trouble lol.
    Anyway I live, work, ride hunt and fish in some good remote places. Most of the time I just carry a multitool, lighter plus something as backup, and something to drink out of. Most of the time you're never further than a few hundred feet from the nearest trail/cut-line/road, so yeah I've always walked out. Worst case I've had to walk all night to get to cell service or to get where "normal vehicles" could reach, then just light a fire or walk till the ride shows up. Take a nap here and there if needed, but if you run out of beer, god help ya. I guess when you grow up doing the things in the bush, it's surprising what little you need. Yet so many people just walk out into the bush with backpacks full of stuff and die every year on well established trails in big busy national parks. Some people need all the help they can get I suppose, hence the hyper popular bushcrafty youtuber channels.
    My biggest pet peeve of youtube is all the feathersticking nonsense. People out there buying $300 knives just based on how well they can featherstick lol. I've never seen anyone do that in my entire life until the internet and youtube was invented. There is shit laying around in the woods everywhere that will burst into flames in less than 3 seconds with a bic lighter lol. Even if it rained all week, it's at the base of the spruce trees and hanging off the side of the birch trees among other places. It's probably necessary in some parts of the world. But mother of god I'm not gonna split wood with my knife and stand there whittling to get a fire going when I'm in stage 2 hypothermia cause I was too stubborn to come off the lake, or down out of the deer stand sooner lol.

  • @BUZZKILLJRJR
    @BUZZKILLJRJR 3 місяці тому +1

    I used to live in the actual wilderness for a few years, now I live very close to it haha 😂 and its a hard ass life dont fool yourself be prepared and your kit will weigh a shitload more in the winter time that's just the way it is.

  • @jeffp3415
    @jeffp3415 3 місяці тому

    It's a lot easier if you like to camp and hike anyhow. I'm old, so I'm going to suffer if I have to hike 50 miles, but I routinely hike with gear and camp with a tarp just for fun. Instead of a chest rig, I've got a riggers belt with first aid, survival gear, a fixed blade and I can attach my holster. I also have a full get home bag if I want food, water treatment, shelter, etc.

  • @billk630
    @billk630 3 місяці тому

    Speaking the truth, good video!

  • @pastormike541
    @pastormike541 3 місяці тому

    Great video as usual !!! My days of doing the hardcore Survivalist stuff back in the hills ( Sangre De Christo Mountains CO.) are now past me due to multiple injuries and illness , yet I keep the truck prepped and multiple plans to sloowly get back home from Cañon City ( about an hour’s drive) . I also used to be a VFF and Wildland Firefighter and I agree 100% about starting a BIG ASS FIRE ..safely . After all you don’t want to have the fire meant to save you be the reason you are now BBQ and will never get home .. alive. 😂

  • @crusader.survivor
    @crusader.survivor 3 місяці тому +1

    In my experience, setting up a camp and utilizing bushcraft skills, are only for when I am on extended hunting trips that last for several days/weeks. . . On a regular day out, the only tools for emergency are my pocket knife and my torch lighter.

  • @DamianBloodstone
    @DamianBloodstone 3 місяці тому

    Exactly right. I carry just enough to walk back home or signal someone.

  • @jimmylarge1148
    @jimmylarge1148 3 місяці тому +2

    And make SURE they are BIC lighters too. There’s zero other dependable disposable lighters better than bic.

  • @N88369
    @N88369 3 місяці тому

    Thank you! Making common sense, common practice. 👍

  • @OnTheScout
    @OnTheScout 3 місяці тому +1

    The people who get lost and find themselves in a survival situation aren't usually the ones who buy Baofengs(or get HAM licensed or look up repeaters), bring a sat beacon, wear bushcraft chest rigs, carry redundant layers of survival equipment, extra clothes, a fixed blade tool, all weather fire starting, extra food, be able to trek out from a stranded vehicle over new country... etc....

  • @Swish82
    @Swish82 3 місяці тому

    Excellent points, brother.

  • @Flashahol
    @Flashahol 3 місяці тому +1

    Based on what most people do in the woods, you are perfectly right. Unless you had to drive for weeks, ride some animal for 5 days and then paddle for 3 days to get there, there should be a way to walk out alive or get some attention.
    I think most people teach survival based on their overall teachings. If you preach carrying an axe or giant knife, of course you should have tourniquets and israeli bandages.
    BTW, even if you don't seem to have a signal, try 911 anyways because that signal is boosted and may still work.

  • @hoss5852
    @hoss5852 3 місяці тому

    Real shit. Great vid. Thanks

  • @hagman1077
    @hagman1077 3 місяці тому

    That sunset looks cool- San Juaquin Valley that way- I think its good to have some sort of kit with you whether your on an ATV or in your truck or car. Something that you can put over your shoulder and go. Water, water- must have along with the other basic stuff. Some of this stuff should be already on you as part of your EDC-

  • @ifell3
    @ifell3 3 місяці тому

    100% man, I totally agree with this!!

  • @WDLC1911
    @WDLC1911 3 місяці тому +4

    I fear Grizzlies, moose, venomous snakes, big gators and mountain lions. Other than that…

    • @JC-oy3ns
      @JC-oy3ns 3 місяці тому +1

      Venomous snakes and big gators are definitely over-rated as far as danger goes. I've lived in Florida my entire life and encountered them a million times... we always seem to back away from each other at an equal gtfo of here pace. I guess maybe in Australia or Africa, I might think differently, but ours are all scary looking but pretty wussy.

    • @WDLC1911
      @WDLC1911 3 місяці тому +1

      @@JC-oy3ns I didn’t say my concerns were rational! 😄😁😆😂🤣

    • @yellowdog762jb
      @yellowdog762jb 3 місяці тому +2

      Fire ants are one of my nemesis in South and Central Texas. You almost can't sit down on the ground without getting bitten. Bug spray and tucking your pants legs into your boots helps. But if you lay down, they are going to get you. A lightweight hammock is pretty nice to have. Mosquitoes can be really fierce as well. Other than that, 2 legged varmints are a bigger threat than wildlife.

  • @tomhamilton7726
    @tomhamilton7726 2 місяці тому

    Sound advice, GP. Thanks.
    I like to have an Israeli bandage in my IFAK.

  • @iraidalodevic1262
    @iraidalodevic1262 3 місяці тому

    Good info thanks ❤ from Puerto Rico island

  • @samsimon8357
    @samsimon8357 3 місяці тому

    Your radio has a light and strobe on it too. So you are definitely good

  • @gw5436
    @gw5436 3 місяці тому

    Mate, your excellent down-to-earth videos are coming thick and fast, and they are very much appreciated. From an Australian bushman.

  • @Chudchanning
    @Chudchanning 3 місяці тому

    I have a laser that shoots a solid stream visible stream straight through the clear air, I can actually start fires with it its so powerful. glad to see I was on the right track packing it in my survival bag because that thing seems visible from space with how strong it is and it doubles as a fire starter

  • @timhall9540
    @timhall9540 3 місяці тому +1

    I do this stuff to practice and learn skills it is a hobby
    If it ever gets real then I sure will be glad that I have the experience and skills that I need to survive praise Jesus

  • @DJTheMetalheadMercenary
    @DJTheMetalheadMercenary 3 місяці тому +2

    On point bro!

  • @chrisb.4496
    @chrisb.4496 3 місяці тому

    Hill People chest bag it looks like? Great choice! Also a very common sense loadout, good info sand hill.

  • @williamwalker1277
    @williamwalker1277 3 місяці тому

    I'm 64 yrs old.! But in my younger life, l bet I've walked 1000 miles because my 4-wheeler had a flat. Now that I'm old and got a spare tire . I've never had a flat. Funny how things work.

  • @WKND_Warrior
    @WKND_Warrior 3 місяці тому

    I enjoy bushcraft im not a bushcrafter.i enjoy survival and the outdoors. but i feel like your right walking out is never talked about or signaling. i think they assume that most people are lost and then need to use some kind of survival tactics. and here in Oregon we do get a few lost people in the woods hundreds of miles from their home, and they have been known to get themselves killed buy trying to walk out. i say always if your lost then just make your car your camp. you will be found for sure, faster if someone knows your route. but you will be found. awesome video brother!

  • @bullpup33
    @bullpup33 3 місяці тому +1

    My two cents: buddy system. Don't go alone in the first place. Respect nature. A couple of kids just got mauled by a cougar recently. One kid died. It can happen.

  • @user-qv6hm1vg5c
    @user-qv6hm1vg5c 3 місяці тому +1

    Great Vid Man.

  • @realrimreaper69
    @realrimreaper69 3 місяці тому +2

    Grunt Proof = realistic & logical

  • @mediclimber
    @mediclimber 3 місяці тому +1

    Yeah, I learned a bunch. One thing I learned is you gotta an issue with big ass giant fire. You need to talk to somebody. (JK)

  • @bradwilson7514
    @bradwilson7514 3 місяці тому

    Good Video, keep it simple, stay fit

  • @old-man463
    @old-man463 3 місяці тому

    very good, thanks

  • @swanee22
    @swanee22 3 місяці тому +1

    Boy Scout Motto: Be Prepared.

  • @jasonespinoza5105
    @jasonespinoza5105 3 місяці тому

    Exactly. If you're injured, making shelter is a bitch. A poncho and space blanket would be sufficient for a night in the woods.

  • @ErickChurch-gz4jn
    @ErickChurch-gz4jn 3 місяці тому +1

    Hey brother. GREAT points. "Walk your happy ass home "