I have my ring I didn't lit yet in the back yard, I started gathering wood for it, the ones I let in the wood and the one on the hill I'll need a magnet to find, there buried under 3 feet of snow. I will light my burner only if electricity fails as our building relies solely on electricity. I always keep 2 steel drums for heating outdoors in case of emergency, they are easily transformed into efficient wood stoves. Thank you Tom for showing your outfit, it's great,✨
@@cimbrerbushcraft-vikingheritag As a kid , we had one at our cabin we used to burn garbage with, We don't use them anymore because of the pollution it creates, nevertheless I one used a smaller grease drum to make a stove for a cabin and it worked real good, I salvage 2 drums every season from a nearby garage for a friend who collects scrap metal. you can use them for so many things.✨💥🐱🐉
Just love the way you do your videos..... How you show the scenery around you wherever you are..... I have learned a great deal just by watching you use your gear and the times you explain things.... You always seem so peaceful and lighthearted which makes it an absolute pleasure to watch and always leaves me feeling so relaxed !!! Thank you for sharing your beautiful country and your experience and knowledge..... All the best to you.... 🤠
When i was deployed to bosnia we had a team of Danish radio operaters on our remote post. (Only about 30 people total) the danish soldiers were really nice and fun to talk to. They gave me some coffee (even though i dont care for coffee) with some balieys in it. After that id go to thier tent and chill with them for a hour or so every night as we drank coffee.
Thank you so much Paul for your positive feedback 😁👍🏻 I’m glad you found it and that you enjoyed it. Hope you’ll enjoy some of my other videos as well 🏕🔥🌲Tom
Does anyone else find watching him open all the little pouches oddly satisfying🤔 I love all the leather and canvas! That stuff will last forever if taken care of
Thank you so much Tinker for your kind and positive feedback 👍🏻😊 I’m glad you like my video and the gear I have. Thanks for dropping by my friend 🤗 hope you’ll enjoy some of my other videos too Hope to see you again on my next one 🔥🏕🌲🛶🇩🇰 Tom
Whiskey in the coffee is like being in heaven, I think that too! Happy new year, may 2018 brings new sunsets on the trail and lots of cups of coffee. God bless you and your family, best wishes from Mexico!!
Thanks Harvey 👍🏻 then we have something in common … whiskey 🥃 and coffee ☕️ … and being in the nature. Thanks for your support and kind words and happy new year to you and your family. And God bless to all of you Best regards from me 🥂🍾
Kanzee hello, him backpack that him use for excursions where him bought it? do you remember the model or brand? it's really nice and I'd like to take it. Write me soon, thank.
Hi, Tom. Old old gear, old equipment. Now you've changed. better and new ones. That time were the best equipment. Good video. Thank for teaching us. Rogatto Vagner - Brazil
I don't think it's so much sophisticated as UNsophisticated - rural, traditional, common-sense, down to earth with a VERY strong connection to traditional roots. And what I particularly like is the willingness to carry a little extra weight because they LIKE their equipment. They carry it, and don't go into rhapsodies about shaving 5 grams off their kit.
Hi Todd Thank for your comment and support. And I agree with you regarding the Solo Stove … It’s an awesome piece of equipment 😁 I love it Happy new year to you and your family from me 🥂🇩🇰
Not really, it's heavy. For some reason none of these people showing their loadouts ever tell us their pack weight, which is one of the most important considerations. There's no proper sleeping items and he carries 5 different items for starting a fire, some tinder is understandable, but he is including full-on wood. Point of bushcraft is to scavenge from your surroundings. He also bothered to have canvas sacks and pouches for every single item, adding a ton of weight for items already enclosed in a canvas rucksack. His bag is just a very aesthetic looking novelty for picnicking in the woods.
Thanks for sharing your opinion with us 😉👍🏻 and I believe it’s a matter of taste and how organised you want it. Hope you’ll have a great Yule ahead 🎄🤗🏕🔥Tom
I agree with Alabama Bushcrafters. In addition to your excellent review, the setting you selected & the presentation you maintained were very informative, peaceful & attractive. I wanted to jump into the scene & join you for a cuppa! Thanks for sharing.
I love the items you have in your rucksack and all of them will come in handy there and here in the United States also. Since I don't drink coffee it is cocoa which is in my backpack instead to drink, and I keep energy bars to snack on when out overnight. I also carry a large full tang knife on my utility belt along with a folding knife inside my backpack as a backup knife which can be used when cooking also.
You have the same approach as Lars of Survival Russia and Far North Bushcraft, you are both pleasing to listen to and realistic in your approach. Thank again, Greg
Hi Tom! Just to mention the Shmag, we’re here using it for covering our faces and head from the heat and dust in the desert. I mean here in the Middle East and North Africa. Nice stuff to have, also we use it in the cold weather to keep our heads and faces warm enough.
Yeah I love Norway 🇳🇴 to 👍🏻 I live in Denmark 🇩🇰 but Norway is my favourite country to travel in 🏔🏕🔥 Thanks for your feedback 😉 See you on the next one 🦌🌲 Tom
I love the natural feel to your kit, perhaps it could be called old school but to me it looks like quality gear and a pleasure to use. Thanks for sharing. ATB Jason.
Thank you so much for your kind and positive feedback 😁 I’m actually from Denmark 🇩🇰 but I love the Scottish accents 👍🏻😉 So if I sound like that it’s great. Hope you’ll have a wonderful Sunday 🌤🦌🔥 Tom
Oh wow, I love your load out! Been looking at the frost river packs for awhile. That's quite a lot things that pack holds, now I have an idea of what pack I can purchase. Thank you!
Thanks my friend for your feedback 👍🏻😉 It’s great if you can use my video to make that important choice of choosing the right rucksack for your purpose. Atb 🌲🔥
Thanks a lot Mike for your nice comment 👍🏻😁 Whiskey is a good thing to have with you in the woods … especially when it’s cold 🤗 Have a nice weekend and enjoy nature 😉
Your Frost River pack and ditty bags are very nice...and surely very expensive , too. Nice kit overall. Add a 55 gallon contractor bag (two would even be better) and a wool blanket or an SOL bivy you would have an overnight kit.
Great video. I really enjoyed seeing all your gear and it is amazing how much you can fit in that pack. You seem very prepared for any situation and I especially liked how all your gear was organized in different bags and pockets. That sure makes it easier to find. Happy New Year Tom
I'm watching this video at ten in the evening, but I had to go make a pot of coffee. I may be awake all night, but I can't resist. I have a decades old percolator coffeepot that works as well on the gas stove at home as it does on a campfire, and it makes far better coffee than the drip pot my wife loves. "Hot as the sunny side of hell, black as sin, and strong enough to float a horseshoe" is how we put it around here. Anyway, another enjoyable video.
Hi James 👍🏻 thanks for your comment … I love the “poem” about strong coffee 🤗🤪👌🏻 And I appreciate your support Happy new year to you and your family 🍾🥂🇩🇰😎
And so am I 👍🏻😁 Thanks for your feedback … I really appreciate that a lot. Hope you’ll subscribe to my channel and find some of my other videos interesting to. If you get any questions … don’t hesitate to ask. Atb to you 🏕
Thanks my friend for your feedback on my video. Yes the cowboy coffee tastes great 👍🏻. And now I’ve found the right way for me to make it Have a nice day 😁👍🏻🌲
Cimbrer Bushcraft also i left a comment on his etsy that i had learned of this bag from you..not sure if this gives you any credit with him..but at least he knows that you do influence us with your gear choices...i hope next month to try to get the ground cloth. I have a brand new never used heavy canvas tarp i would love to give you but im sure shipping would be OUTRAGEOUS!! Anyway..safe trip n happy trails..thanks for taking us on your adventures
Thanks for your feedback 👍🏻 I appreciate that very much 😁 and I’m glad you like my kit. Hope you’ll watch some of my other videos to 😊 and find them interesting to 🔥🌤🌲 Happy new year to you 🥳
Your hiking stick is just like mine, and I don't leave home without it. I sharpen and fire-harden one end so I have a ready weapon. The only problem I have had is with dogs, and they take one look at the stick and go away. + 100 other uses.
About the coffe, to get all the right aromas, the water should be about 85-90 celsius. I would boil the water, take it off the fire, and leave it without the lid for a short minute, then add coffee grinds. leave that to sit for 3-4 minutes, to enjoy the best coffee of your life. If you boil it, the acids is extracted easier, and it gets more bitter. Try it once :)
Hello from Canada, enjoyed watching your video. That bag you made is great, opens as wide as you want or lays out flat so you don't need to dump stuff on the ground to get to the bottom. You should sell them.
Thanks James for your positive feedback and comment 👍🏻😊 I’m sorry but I just don’t have the time to make leather work for sale 😉 But I’m glad you like the bag
Nice well rounded kit. I can only imagine how good that coffee tasted! I like the fact that you carry more than 1 or 2 small pieces of fatwood and dry wood for kindling. I see people using all their fatwood for one fire and don't understand why. Thanks for sharing your hike with us and Happy New Year!
I drifted off for a second and dreamed this gentleman was in front of me going through TSA. PS: I hate TSA but have grown to love this viking fellow. 🛡🗡
Waw 😃 thank you so much Jason for your kind words 👍🏻 it warms my heart and makes me happy 😃 🙏🏻. I really appreciate your feedback very much my friend and I’m grateful to have you as a friend and subscriber 🔥🏕
Tom what I would add to your rucksack kit is a 9 by 12 thin mill tarp and light weight that can be used for shelter tent for a unexpected storm that often comes. I keep the poncho to keep me and clothes dry. If I need to I can use the poncho for ground cloth while 9 by 12 thin painters tarp is used to cover everything for a few days time. Have done this out of needed experience. (I did not see Bear Spray on your list - and for Crazy Animals which may come at you with Sharp Teeth and RABIES - No Joke!). Here in USA we got bears everywhere when not expected. What about a snake bite or bee sting kit?
I live in Denmark 🇩🇰 Thomas and we have no 🐻 bears or other dangerous animals 😁 I’ve added a kit for bee stings and have changed some other stuff since I made this video some years ago Atb to you 🏕 Tom
Thanks my friend. I admire all your gear. I just ordered a Pathfinder canteen cook set to go with my Stanley cook set. I also like gear.Thanks Tennessee.
Yeah gear is great 👍🏻😁 But I have to be focused on not to let my passion for gear overtake my goal : to come out and enjoy nature 🌤🌲 I’m sure you understand and have the same issue 😎👌🏻
Really liking the Sami-style "kuksa" cup and the spoon-carving blade (I have and use a horse-shoeing knife for the same thing) along with the tinder-pouch as those I carry of a sort. Personally, I carry a Cherokee-made shooting bag or "possibles pouch" made from bison leather with a lynx-claw button and strap-hold and inside is plenty of cordage, beeswax for sealing and waterproofing as well as tinder, a whetstone, a sewing set and some sinew, plus an old-fashioned tinderbox with flint and steel along with plenty of stuff for collecting for tinder. Plus a red cloth it's wrapped in as well as an antler tine and a small smooth basalt stone for a pressure-knapper and a hammer for making fresh flints for fire-starting and replacement arrowheads. I also carry a drawstring Pueblo-style tobacco pouch for a tinder bag that for also carrying extra cordage and flints, an antler base much like a handle for the "billet" for knocking off fine edges on flints for fire-starting and arrowheads, a good spare pocketknife in case of losing my sheath knife or pocketknife outside the bags, plus ramen bullion packs for soups and teabags (I'm particularly fond of Russian teas) as well. I also wear a neck sheath so my knife (either my sturdy Mora companion or my razor-sharp Furlong Bowie) doesn't get lost and that has a Speedy Sharp magnetized cobalt and titanium-diorite, utility-knife sort of sharpener hanging from it. I also keep a ring cord or "frog-loop" on the strap of the possibles pouch for my old hatchet, just a splitting piece from an antique shop. To finish this is a steel cup that doubles as a tiny pot for tea and soup that one can fill up from a water bottle as it's easy to just take a six-inch piece of string and hitch-loop a cheap one-liter bottle of water from the gas station that's usually just a dollar or two to my pack-strap next to the axe that rides with the frog-loop and water on the strap. As for the issue of a blanket, regardless of the season I'll wear this custom-made, Navajo blanket-coat that keeps you cool in the summer (think like an Arabian robe) and warm in the winter in addition to being able to take it off and place it on the ground as cover in good weather or as shelter in rain. Keeps it all minimal and simple. Still, great video. :)
Hi Robert. Waw what a collection of awesome gear. I wish I could see a picture of it … I especially love that it’s old school and natives American style … if I have read the list right. Thanks for sharing your collection of gear 👍🏻 and your comment.
Thanks and you're welcome. :) Most of the cordage is sisal, or yucca-fiber and very strong and I got an actual, no joke, eight-mile bale (rolled up it's the size of a large paint can) that I often cut twenty to thirty yard lengths at a tie from for projects and those last awhile since you can use a toothpick or pocketknife like a sailor's marlinespike and pry them into smaller and thinner cords for sewing and whatnot. You can also wax it when fine thread and twist them into fishing cord (I use my smaller stitching needle for a fishhook) along with a pebble for your sinker and bark for your floater, no need for a pole and a twig for your reel. I also carry a pipe as you do, any one of the smaller ones about the size of yours or less from my collection taken apart lest it break along with a half-ounce, mini-pouch of "Longbottom" which is a Rooh Afza rose oil and treacle-flavored Latakia and Cavendish blend made to taste like hookah tobacco and is named after the "Eastern pipe-leaf" Aragorn favored in "Lord of the Rings" and is part of the "Middle-Earth Collection" from a number of US and Canadian smoke shops and tobacconist dealers. I have thought about getting a custom-forged and fully-functional pipe-tomahawk that can be used as an axe and the pipe bit as a socket wrench/hammer, as well as smoking piece. Plus before forgetting, I prefer a bow or blowpipe to a gun as it's quiet and often safer as well as easier to clean and maintain and will carry a pair of arrows without a quiver tied to the pack-strap along with a shorter bow like a horse-bow as not to get tangled in the bushes or wear one of two woven Choctaw-style (one was made by them, the other a replica) dart quivers around the neck for small, skewer-like darts with raw cotton or thistle-down fletching alongside a six-foot (two meter where you're from) walking stick object that's a hollowed-out river bamboo (American river cane or river bamboo for houses of tribes east of the Mississippi River and blowguns, as well as mountain cane or mountain bamboo often called "switch wood" from their use by the Jesuit "black robes" and translated as "arrow cane" from the languages of those who used it) for a cane and a handy little squirrel-shooter, something often brought along on the Trail of Tears as a "walking stick" but a cleverly disguised hunting weapon when disarmed of their guns (those who went willingly two decades prior were actually given a gun, however). Say, you watch Bjorn Andreas Bull-Hansen and his Viking archery and Asatru channel? Me and him talk a whole bunch about mixing 50/50 Native American survival stuff with Scandinavian survival stuff since my mom and her family came to the US from Norway while dad and his family are Cherokee with a number of Choctaw by marriage. As a result, things like anthropology and the pre-Christian and pre-Islamic religions of various places as well as prehistory and the way humans lived before we all got screwed up with modern culture are very fascinating to me. Great stuff here. Again, thanks.
Well … you blow me away with all your well thought gear 👍🏻 Don’t you have a UA-cam channel? … you could have one. What about mailing some photo to me … of your gear ? … 😀🙏🏻
I don't have any pictures up online, but you could probably Google Furlong and Mora knife brands as well as Cherokee and Choctaw bows and blowguns and the way they are strung with either smoke-treated squirrel-hide or hemp fiber or also how the darts and arrows are fletched (southeastern arrows are two-vane mounted over-under rather than three neatly aligned unlike most archery-using cultures). You can also find milled steel cups on most survival pages and online stores in addition to Speedy Sharp (which is an amazing sharpener). But maybe at some point I can get some up. :)
Thanks for your info regarding where I can find info and photos of gear like yours 👍🏻 I’ll check it out. And if you … sometimes in the future … post photos with your gear … you have to tell me 👍🏻😀🇺🇸 See you
amazing your ruck sack and my backpack have the same thing accept the whiskey I don't drink but am in California so I carry Weed my pipe and 3 bic lighters because 3 is 2 and 2 is one and one is none, thanks
Hi Charlie … that’s awesome 😎 and cool 👌🏻 whiskey 🥃 is nice … I don’t do weed 🤪 But I’m guessing it’s as good 👌🏻 Thanks for your support and interest in my channel 🤗🙏🏻
As much as your comment is probably meant in good spirit, this is a very bad idea. Alcohol thins your blood, making it harder for your body to keep warm. It makes you -feel- warm, but your core temperature will drop in cold weather. A nice shot of whiskey in front of a fire is very relaxing, but using it as a first aid method for being cold is 100% bunk and can cause serious issues!
Thanks for your feedback 👍🏻😁 I make that at home 😉 but when I’m in the forest I make “cowboy” coffee because it’s easy and very strong 💪🏻 ( great together with a sip of whiskey 😇) Have a wonderful day 🔥🏕
I have the small bush stove and it works fine, but to safe some space, I have started using the folding wood stove. The nano for my day pack and the large one for my larger pack. Great pack set up. The only thing I would add is a little more to eat, lol.
Your right 👍🏻 more food would be nice 😛 I prefer the twigs stove … I have a Essential Bushbox … but I think it’s too dirty to handle … it makes too much sod on the outside … but your right … it is more compact. Have a great New Years 👍🏻🍾🥂
When you keep boiling coffee for longer than a second or two it starts to burn and make the brew stronger, but also very bitter. And yes, it is a sin to put expensive whiskey in coffee haha. You can put the coffee grounds into the water from the get go and just before it boils or just as it starts to boil take it off and let sit for a couple of minutes. Taste it and compare. Lmk how it goes if you do.
Thank you so much for your feedback and great suggestion. 👍🏻😊 It’s right that the coffee gets stronger and bitter when I cook it as I do in 1-2 min 🤔 and that’s why I’ve started to come salt in … it removes the bitterness and makes it taste very delicious 😋 👌🏻… you should try that some day 😉💪🏻 Tom
Thank you so much my friend for your kind feedback and support 👍🏻😉 I’m glad to hear that you found my video interesting. And happy New Year to you and your family Tom 🔥🌤🌲🌳🦌🛶🐶
Great video. A lot of really good information that I haven't seen before. You seem like a great guy and I don't want to see you get hurt so I'd like to suggest that you carry your first aid kit on the outside of your pack where it is readily accessible in a medical emergency. Thanks again for the video.
@@cimbrerbushcraft-vikingheritag -21Celsius at 4am in the freezing night, I think I'm going to stay in the house till 7am when the sun will show up,... ✨💥✨🐱🐉
I am revisiting your various pack/load-out combinations! I am also interested in the total weight of your various load-outs. Last night, I took out my mid-sized Firebox stove kit: I forgot how heavy it can seem in stainless steel! Or maybe I have 'lost a step' during the past winter🙄. I find enjoyment in improving the packaging of all the fine equipment I own.
Yeah and I like that very much 😉👍🏻 Making a more simple load with gear that can have multiple uses 🏕 I can’t remember how much it weighs 🤔 but I think it’s about 12-15 kg in total 🔥🌲 Tom
Nice video and gorgeous scenery! Reminds me of home! Seems like a LOT of items and weight for a 'Day Pack'...but then again, I'm attempting to lighten the load in my Day Pack and even tending to think about a 'Haversack' type Day Pack vice my other kits...but again, I'm much older and more out of shape than you are! ;>) Again, Thanks for the video, all the time/effort you took to share it with us!!! Safe and enjoyable hikes/bushcrafting to you and yours ALWAYS!
Hi Kenn 👋🏻 Your absolutely right about the weight … and I agree with you, that I should be as light as possible. I’m very fond of the minimalist approach … but my problems is … that I love all my gear … and love having it with my on my hikes. 😇😬 … A haversack is a very good solution … that way … you’re forcing your self to select only the most needed gear 👍🏻 Thanks for your comment and support 🤗
Thanks for sharing your outdoor experiences! Your videos make me travel through these forests. I live in Brazil, the forests here are very hot and it is impossible to make a shelter directly on the ground due to the animals' wild animals. But the techniques I learn with the videos are very important, I'm a Boy Scout leader and I always point out your videos to them. Thanks and a big hug.
Waw thank you so much Marcelo 👍🏻😁 I really appreciate that you use my videos to educate your scouts It makes me happy to think about that 💪🏻😎🇩🇰. Please give them all my personal greetings and keep up the important job of learning youngsters bushcraft skills See you on the next one 🏕🌲
Thank you so much my friend for your wonderful feedback 😊👍🏻 I’m glad you like it and I hope you’ll enjoy some of my other videos to 😉🏕🔥🌤 See you on the next one 🦌🇩🇰 Tom
Your welcome Margaret 😁👍🏻 and thanks for your feedback Hope you’ll enjoy some of my other videos too 🤗 and if you get any questions … don’t hesitate to ask 🏕🔥🌲Tom🇩🇰
Thanks Kenneth for your feedback and suggestion 😉 Yeah maybe a bigger flask would be nice 🤔 so I don’t have to fill it up so often 😇 lol It’s mostly Balentine whiskey I drink … but also JD some times. Stay safe my friend and enjoy life 😉👌🏻🏕🔥🦌🌲
You put a smile on my face when you added the "Johnny Walker Whiskey" to your coffee. Thank you for that, you have made my day better!
Ha ha that’s great Roy 👍🏻😉 Appreciate your feedback very much and grateful you came along and visited me 🏕🔥🦌
Tom
I have my ring I didn't lit yet in the back yard, I started gathering wood for it, the ones I let in the wood and the one on the hill I'll need a magnet to find, there buried under 3 feet of snow. I will light my burner only if electricity fails as our building relies solely on electricity. I always keep 2 steel drums for heating outdoors in case of emergency, they are easily transformed into efficient wood stoves. Thank you Tom for showing your outfit, it's great,✨
Great idea with those steel drums 🔥😉 Tom
@@cimbrerbushcraft-vikingheritag As a kid , we had one at our cabin we used to burn garbage with, We don't use them anymore because of the pollution it creates, nevertheless I one used a smaller grease drum to make a stove for a cabin and it worked real good, I salvage 2 drums every season from a nearby garage for a friend who collects scrap metal. you can use them for so many things.✨💥🐱🐉
Just love the way you do your videos..... How you show the scenery around you wherever you are..... I have learned a great deal just by watching you use your gear and the times you explain things.... You always seem so peaceful and lighthearted which makes it an absolute pleasure to watch and always leaves me feeling so relaxed !!! Thank you for sharing your beautiful country and your experience and knowledge..... All the best to you.... 🤠
When i was deployed to bosnia we had a team of Danish radio operaters on our remote post. (Only about 30 people total) the danish soldiers were really nice and fun to talk to. They gave me some coffee (even though i dont care for coffee) with some balieys in it. After that id go to thier tent and chill with them for a hour or so every night as we drank coffee.
That’s great to hear 😉and I’m glad they took good care of you 👍🏻🇩🇰
Tom
I just saw this, I wish I had seen it sooner. You think of everything, great job!
Thank you so much Paul for your positive feedback 😁👍🏻
I’m glad you found it and that you enjoyed it. Hope you’ll enjoy some of my other videos as well 🏕🔥🌲Tom
It’s a pleasure to watch a man who enjoys every detail of his outdoor experience and prepares for it in the modern equivalent of Otzi.
Thanks my friend for the special feedback 👍🏻😉 And your so right 😁 Thanks for your kind words 🙏🏻😁 🌳🌤
Atb to you my friend 🦌🔥⛺️
Does anyone else find watching him open all the little pouches oddly satisfying🤔 I love all the leather and canvas! That stuff will last forever if taken care of
Thank you so much Tinker for your kind and positive feedback 👍🏻😊 I’m glad you like my video and the gear I have. Thanks for dropping by my friend 🤗 hope you’ll enjoy some of my other videos too
Hope to see you again on my next one 🔥🏕🌲🛶🇩🇰 Tom
Whiskey in the coffee is like being in heaven, I think that too!
Happy new year, may 2018 brings new sunsets on the trail and lots of cups of coffee. God bless you and your family, best wishes from Mexico!!
Thanks Harvey 👍🏻 then we have something in common … whiskey 🥃 and coffee ☕️ … and being in the nature. Thanks for your support and kind words and happy new year to you and your family. And God bless to all of you
Best regards from me 🥂🍾
Well done !! 💪 😀 👍 enjoyed viewing your daypack items. Cheers..
Happy new year. Subbed yah
1:56 Hatchet , kuksa cup , fat wood, pins , Roly poly pouch for tinder harvesting.
2:45 Ground Cloth
3:00 FAK , whistle, blanket
3:25 rain gear/coat + mosquito net
3:54 Whiskey flask / coco beverage / tissue / energybar + 3 small bags for electronics kit
5:06 bag with compass / bowdrill handle
5:35 Sawyer mini for water
5:49 Headlamp + xtra batteries
6:10 Drinking canteen / lrg tinder pouch /
6:54 piece of cake / leather gloves
7:19 Dry woods +fat wood
7:49 Shemagh / thermal neck warmer
8:10 spoon / cook kit /cordage
10:22 Field note book / spoon knife / beeswax / blade compound / twizzer
12:42 Poncho
Hi Kanzee thanks for subscribing and your comment. And waw 😁 that’s cool … making the time frame for my video … respect 👋🏻☺️
Agreed, great idea.Thanks
Kanzee hello, him backpack that him use for excursions where him bought it? do you remember the model or brand? it's really nice and I'd like to take it.
Write me soon, thank.
Hi, Tom. Old old gear, old equipment. Now you've changed. better and new ones. That time were the best equipment. Good video. Thank for teaching us. Rogatto Vagner - Brazil
Thanks for watching it Rogatto 🤗 and for your kind feedback 🏕🔥🌲😉🇩🇰Tom
European bushcrafters are so much more sophisticated than those we have here in the US. I admire and salute your dedication to the craft!
Thanks a lot my friend for your kind words and support 👍🏻😁
Appreciate that very much
See you on the next one 🏕🔥
I don't think it's so much sophisticated as UNsophisticated - rural, traditional, common-sense, down to earth with a VERY strong connection to traditional roots. And what I particularly like is the willingness to carry a little extra weight because they LIKE their equipment. They carry it, and don't go into rhapsodies about shaving 5 grams off their kit.
Thank you for showing your kit. I am loving the frost river. Will be adding one to my collection. Keep up the good work.
Thanks for your feedback and support. I can only recommend the Frost River rucksack 👌🏻😊
@@cimbrerbushcraft-vikingheritag it The black scarf is called a Buff
Thanks Luis 👍🏻😁 appreciate your help my friend 🏕🔥🌲
Tom
I love that you always carry your solo stove. This is one of my favorite things to pack with me during a trip to the forest. Great video as always.
Hi Todd Thank for your comment and support. And I agree with you regarding the Solo Stove … It’s an awesome piece of equipment 😁 I love it
Happy new year to you and your family from me 🥂🇩🇰
Cimbrer Bushcraft you might try the bio-lite stove. You can charge your phone with it while making coffee lol. I love mine
According to Cowboy Kent Rollins, that IS how you make real cowboy coffee.
Kaz Puisis yup, you gotta boil the tannins out, I promise you that
I can taste the coffee and his cowboy chili on a cold snowy night in my canvas tent!!! Delicious!!
Exactly Kaz 😉👍🏻😋and thanks for your feedback
Tom
Cowboy Kent ?!?! What’s that guy know?? (just kidding; he’s awesome 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼)
Simply awesome! Watching it a second time as it just is full of good well thought out items.
Not really, it's heavy. For some reason none of these people showing their loadouts ever tell us their pack weight, which is one of the most important considerations. There's no proper sleeping items and he carries 5 different items for starting a fire, some tinder is understandable, but he is including full-on wood. Point of bushcraft is to scavenge from your surroundings. He also bothered to have canvas sacks and pouches for every single item, adding a ton of weight for items already enclosed in a canvas rucksack. His bag is just a very aesthetic looking novelty for picnicking in the woods.
Thanks for sharing your opinion with us 😉👍🏻 and I believe it’s a matter of taste and how organised you want it. Hope you’ll have a great Yule ahead 🎄🤗🏕🔥Tom
Hey... Great Video. Nice day pack. Good combination of Traditional and Modern kit.
I Will add a hip flask to my kit as a matter of urgency 😁
Thanks Mick for your positive feedback 👍🏻😁 I’m glad you like my rucksack lay-out and I agree with you regarding a water bottle 👌🏻😉 Atb to you
I also have to say, its one of the best setups I have seen. Thanks.
Thanks Chris 👍🏻😉 appreciate that very much my friend. See you soon buddy
Tom
I always loved the intros to your videos breath taking incredibly put together cheers brother
I agree with Alabama Bushcrafters. In addition to your excellent review, the setting you selected & the presentation you maintained were very informative, peaceful & attractive. I wanted to jump into the scene & join you for a cuppa! Thanks for sharing.
Thanks Kenn for the kind words and support 😁 I appreciate that Atb to you
I really like the soothing nature of this video.
Thanks Tom 👍🏻😁 I appreciate that. I’m glad you like it and I appreciate your support very much. 👌🏻😁
Atb to you ⛺️🌤🔥🌲🦌
I love the items you have in your rucksack and all of them will come in handy there and here in the United States also. Since I don't drink coffee it is cocoa which is in my backpack instead to drink, and I keep energy bars to snack on when out overnight. I also carry a large full tang knife on my utility belt along with a folding knife inside my backpack as a backup knife which can be used when cooking also.
Hi Sidney 👋🏻 thanks for your feedback and support. Thanks for sharing your experience in gear you use 😊👍🏻 Hope you’ll enjoy the weekend 🔥🌲🌤🌳😎
Your devotion to coffee is as strong as mine. Good to meet a brother of the bean!
Yeah that’s great 😀 ☕️😋👌🏻
Thank you for the enjoyable video. You are very well prepared for a day hike in your favorite areas. Thanks from Greg in Thailand
Thanks Greg for watching this video 👍🏻😁 Atb to you 🌤🌲
You have the same approach as Lars of Survival Russia and Far North Bushcraft, you are both pleasing to listen to and realistic in your approach. Thank again, Greg
Thanks for that fine comparison … those are great UA-camers and Bushcraft guys 😊👌🏻
Hi Tom! Just to mention the Shmag, we’re here using it for covering our faces and head from the heat and dust in the desert. I mean here in the Middle East and North Africa. Nice stuff to have, also we use it in the cold weather to keep our heads and faces warm enough.
Thank you so much my friend for your information about that item 👍🏻😁 Hope to see you again on my next one 🏕🔥🛶
Tom
A very relaxing video. I enjoyed it very much.
I was in Norway in 1980 while in the Marines.
Loved the people and the mountains.
Yeah I love Norway 🇳🇴 to 👍🏻
I live in Denmark 🇩🇰 but Norway is my favourite country to travel in 🏔🏕🔥
Thanks for your feedback 😉
See you on the next one 🦌🌲
Tom
I love the natural feel to your kit, perhaps it could be called old school but to me it looks like quality gear and a pleasure to use. Thanks for sharing. ATB Jason.
Thanks Jason for your positive feedback 👍🏻😁
I’m glad you like my gear
Hope you’ll have a great weekend 🌤🌲🔥
About 4-5 mounth ago by my self survival kit and dresses, Esee knife, Germany soldier shouse and many moore...I love Brushcrafting.
That’s great Imre 👍🏻😁 welcome to the community of bushcrafter’s 🌲🏕🦌🔥 Tom
I really like your cooking set up. the wooden spoon on the outside is a nice touch
Thanks a lot Louis. I like it to … and that’s why I bought the bag from PNW bushcraft 👍🏻 witch has the outside pockets
I'm Maltese🇲🇹 and your Scotish accent was truly pleasent
Thanks for the upload, great gear.
Keep it up
Thank you so much for your kind and positive feedback 😁
I’m actually from Denmark 🇩🇰 but I love the Scottish accents 👍🏻😉 So if I sound like that it’s great. Hope you’ll have a wonderful Sunday 🌤🦌🔥
Tom
@@cimbrerbushcraft-vikingheritag same to you Tom
I'm seeing the video again
great kit mate, very well organised , great looking rucksack
Thank you so much for your feedback 👍🏻😁 I appreciate that very much. Hope you’ll have a wonderful week 🌤🌲
@@cimbrerbushcraft-vikingheritag thanks mate, merry Xmas to you
And the same to you my friend
🌲👍🏻🎁🥩
Oh wow, I love your load out! Been looking at the frost river packs for awhile. That's quite a lot things that pack holds, now I have an idea of what pack I can purchase. Thank you!
Thanks my friend for your feedback 👍🏻😉 It’s great if you can use my video to make that important choice of choosing the right rucksack for your purpose. Atb 🌲🔥
That is a nice day kit. A little whiskey in the coffee for some extra warmth, always a good idea. Enjoy!
Thanks a lot Mike for your nice comment 👍🏻😁 Whiskey is a good thing to have with you in the woods … especially when it’s cold 🤗 Have a nice weekend and enjoy nature 😉
Your Frost River pack and ditty bags are very nice...and surely very expensive , too. Nice kit overall. Add a 55 gallon contractor bag (two would even be better) and a wool blanket or an SOL bivy you would have an overnight kit.
Great video. I really enjoyed seeing all your gear and it is amazing how much you can fit in that pack. You seem very prepared for any situation and I especially liked how all your gear was organized in different bags and pockets. That sure makes it easier to find. Happy New Year Tom
Thanks a lot Heather ? … and happy new year to all of you at PNW Bushcraft … atb Tom
You have a very nice Rucksack an equipment - I like it a lot. Thx for sharing 👍🏻😏
Thanks for subscribing 👍🏻😁 and welcome to my channel
I'm watching this video at ten in the evening, but I had to go make a pot of coffee. I may be awake all night, but I can't resist. I have a decades old percolator coffeepot that works as well on the gas stove at home as it does on a campfire, and it makes far better coffee than the drip pot my wife loves.
"Hot as the sunny side of hell, black as sin, and strong enough to float a horseshoe" is how we put it around here.
Anyway, another enjoyable video.
Hi James 👍🏻 thanks for your comment … I love the “poem” about strong coffee 🤗🤪👌🏻
And I appreciate your support
Happy new year to you and your family 🍾🥂🇩🇰😎
I am usaully bored by these videos but not yours infact i really enjoyed it glad i stumbled across your channel
And so am I 👍🏻😁 Thanks for your feedback … I really appreciate that a lot. Hope you’ll subscribe to my channel and find some of my other videos interesting to. If you get any questions … don’t hesitate to ask. Atb to you 🏕
Sweet gear and beautiful spot. I could spend days out there. The coffee looks tasty. Thanks for sharing.
Thanks my friend for your feedback on my video. Yes the cowboy coffee tastes great 👍🏻. And now I’ve found the right way for me to make it
Have a nice day 😁👍🏻🌲
Have your coffee how YOU like it Tom !! Making so much appear from such a small backpack makes you like a magician. Take Care my friend
Ahhh thank you so much Jeremy 👍🏻😉 your always so kind. Hope you’ll have a wonderful weekend my friend
Atb to you and your family 🌤
I have watch this video or another one of you videos before. I enjoyed it and found your kit well organized. Thank You!
I’m happy to hear that Brian
I appreciate your feedback 😎
You are getting that magic touch for coffee. thank for your time .
Thanks for your kind words and support. I really appreciate your interest in my channel. Happy new year to you and your family 🍾🥂👍🏻
And Happy New Year to you and yours
One of the best kits I’ve seen so far
Thanks 👍🏻😁🌤🌲🔥
♨️🤠
Just went to PNW and purchased the canvas bag for my stove and kettle...thank you for your great videos
That’s great Diane 👍🏻😁 I know you’ll be happy to have it. One of my favourite things I carry with me into the forest
Atb to you my friend 🤗🐶👌🏻
Cimbrer Bushcraft also i left a comment on his etsy that i had learned of this bag from you..not sure if this gives you any credit with him..but at least he knows that you do influence us with your gear choices...i hope next month to try to get the ground cloth. I have a brand new never used heavy canvas tarp i would love to give you but im sure shipping would be OUTRAGEOUS!! Anyway..safe trip n happy trails..thanks for taking us on your adventures
Tom, another great video! Happy father's day!
Thanks Otis 😁 and the same to you my friend 👍🏻😁🏕🔥
Tom
Good looking well rounded kit. Add a blanket and some food you'd be good for days.
Thanks for your feedback 👍🏻 I appreciate that very much 😁
and I’m glad you like my kit.
Hope you’ll watch some of my other videos to 😊 and find them interesting to 🔥🌤🌲
Happy new year to you 🥳
Your hiking stick is just like mine, and I don't leave home without it. I sharpen and fire-harden one end so I have a ready weapon. The only problem I have had is with dogs, and they take one look at the stick and go away. + 100 other uses.
I love my walking stick to … and have it with me … almost every time 😎😁👍🏻
About the coffe, to get all the right aromas, the water should be about 85-90 celsius. I would boil the water, take it off the fire, and leave it without the lid for a short minute, then add coffee grinds. leave that to sit for 3-4 minutes, to enjoy the best coffee of your life. If you boil it, the acids is extracted easier, and it gets more bitter. Try it once :)
Thank you so much for your tip about making great coffee
👍🏻😁 and of course I’ll try that … hope you’ll have a wonderful weekend 🏕🔥🌲
That's a great 👍 kit verry good thanks for sharing have a great day in the woods🎈😁
Thanks Gary. I'm glad you like my kit and grateful that you came along. See you soon again brother. Tom
Hello from Canada, enjoyed watching your video. That bag you made is great, opens as wide as you want or lays out flat so you don't need to dump stuff on the ground to get to the bottom. You should sell them.
Thanks James for your positive feedback and comment 👍🏻😊 I’m sorry but I just don’t have the time to make leather work for sale 😉
But I’m glad you like the bag
Nice well rounded kit. I can only imagine how good that coffee tasted! I like the fact that you carry more than 1 or 2 small pieces of fatwood and dry wood for kindling. I see people using all their fatwood for one fire and don't understand why. Thanks for sharing your hike with us and Happy New Year!
Thanks for your comment and kind words. Nice to hear from you and happy new year to you and your family to. 😀👌🏻
It’s a really fine old school rugzak. I have one now a month.
Yeah that’s right Richard 😁👍🏻and I love it. Glad you got on for yourself 😉🏕🔥🐕
Tom
Very nice. Thank you for sharing. Algerian American from Wisconsin :)
Thanks for your support 👍🏻 and comment 😁👌🏻
Your packs are very nice, and everything is nicely organized. Thanks for sharing
Your welcome my friend 🤗 and thanks for your support
Atb to you 😊👋🏻
Well done, sir! Whiskey in a flask...yes! Whiskey in coffee...even better! Well thought-out kit.
Thanks a lot John 😁👍🏻
I’m happy you like my video and it’s great you like whiskey too in your coffee 🌤👌🏻🔥
Great video! Lots of awesome gear you have there!
Thanks Bjørn and a happy new year to you and your family 🍾
I drifted off for a second and dreamed this gentleman was in front of me going through TSA. PS: I hate TSA but have grown to love this viking fellow. 🛡🗡
Appreciate that brother 😉👍🏻 but I don’t know what TSA means 🤔 lol Thanks for following me on my journey into the Viking area 🏕🔥🇩🇰
Tom
This bag is high speed, low drag. Efficient, light, well-organized, and even aesthetically pleasing.
Waw 😃 thank you so much Jason for your kind words 👍🏻 it warms my heart and makes me happy 😃 🙏🏻. I really appreciate your feedback very much my friend and I’m grateful to have you as a friend and subscriber 🔥🏕
Beautiful forest and you always have a very nice kit. Thank you for the videos!
Your welcome my friend and thanks for watching it 👍🏻😁
Thanks for your feedback
I’m glad you like my video and hope you’ll join me again on my next one 😁
Tom what I would add to your rucksack kit is a 9 by 12 thin mill tarp and light weight that can be used for shelter tent for a unexpected storm that often comes. I keep the poncho to keep me and clothes dry. If I need to I can use the poncho for ground cloth while 9 by 12 thin painters tarp is used to cover everything for a few days time. Have done this out of needed experience. (I did not see Bear Spray on your list - and for Crazy Animals which may come at you with Sharp Teeth and RABIES - No Joke!). Here in USA we got bears everywhere when not expected. What about a snake bite or bee sting kit?
I live in Denmark 🇩🇰 Thomas and we have no 🐻 bears or other dangerous animals 😁
I’ve added a kit for bee stings and have changed some other stuff since I made this video some years ago Atb to you 🏕
Tom
Thanks my friend. I admire all your gear. I just ordered a
Pathfinder canteen cook set to go with my Stanley cook set. I also like gear.Thanks Tennessee.
Yeah gear is great 👍🏻😁 But I have to be focused on not to let my passion for gear overtake my goal : to come out and enjoy nature 🌤🌲
I’m sure you understand and have the same issue 😎👌🏻
Looks like a great well thought out kit.
Thanks a lot 👍🏻 glad you like my kit and I’m great full for your comment and support😁
I like that canteen.
Thanks for your feedback Mary 🤗 I’m glad you like it and appreciate that you are watching some of my older videos as well 👍🏻🏕🔥Tom
Really liking the Sami-style "kuksa" cup and the spoon-carving blade (I have and use a horse-shoeing knife for the same thing) along with the tinder-pouch as those I carry of a sort. Personally, I carry a Cherokee-made shooting bag or "possibles pouch" made from bison leather with a lynx-claw button and strap-hold and inside is plenty of cordage, beeswax for sealing and waterproofing as well as tinder, a whetstone, a sewing set and some sinew, plus an old-fashioned tinderbox with flint and steel along with plenty of stuff for collecting for tinder. Plus a red cloth it's wrapped in as well as an antler tine and a small smooth basalt stone for a pressure-knapper and a hammer for making fresh flints for fire-starting and replacement arrowheads. I also carry a drawstring Pueblo-style tobacco pouch for a tinder bag that for also carrying extra cordage and flints, an antler base much like a handle for the "billet" for knocking off fine edges on flints for fire-starting and arrowheads, a good spare pocketknife in case of losing my sheath knife or pocketknife outside the bags, plus ramen bullion packs for soups and teabags (I'm particularly fond of Russian teas) as well. I also wear a neck sheath so my knife (either my sturdy Mora companion or my razor-sharp Furlong Bowie) doesn't get lost and that has a Speedy Sharp magnetized cobalt and titanium-diorite, utility-knife sort of sharpener hanging from it. I also keep a ring cord or "frog-loop" on the strap of the possibles pouch for my old hatchet, just a splitting piece from an antique shop. To finish this is a steel cup that doubles as a tiny pot for tea and soup that one can fill up from a water bottle as it's easy to just take a six-inch piece of string and hitch-loop a cheap one-liter bottle of water from the gas station that's usually just a dollar or two to my pack-strap next to the axe that rides with the frog-loop and water on the strap. As for the issue of a blanket, regardless of the season I'll wear this custom-made, Navajo blanket-coat that keeps you cool in the summer (think like an Arabian robe) and warm in the winter in addition to being able to take it off and place it on the ground as cover in good weather or as shelter in rain. Keeps it all minimal and simple. Still, great video. :)
Hi Robert. Waw what a collection of awesome gear. I wish I could see a picture of it
… I especially love that it’s old school and natives American style … if I have read the list right. Thanks for sharing your collection of gear 👍🏻 and your comment.
Thanks and you're welcome. :) Most of the cordage is sisal, or yucca-fiber and very strong and I got an actual, no joke, eight-mile bale (rolled up it's the size of a large paint can) that I often cut twenty to thirty yard lengths at a tie from for projects and those last awhile since you can use a toothpick or pocketknife like a sailor's marlinespike and pry them into smaller and thinner cords for sewing and whatnot. You can also wax it when fine thread and twist them into fishing cord (I use my smaller stitching needle for a fishhook) along with a pebble for your sinker and bark for your floater, no need for a pole and a twig for your reel. I also carry a pipe as you do, any one of the smaller ones about the size of yours or less from my collection taken apart lest it break along with a half-ounce, mini-pouch of "Longbottom" which is a Rooh Afza rose oil and treacle-flavored Latakia and Cavendish blend made to taste like hookah tobacco and is named after the "Eastern pipe-leaf" Aragorn favored in "Lord of the Rings" and is part of the "Middle-Earth Collection" from a number of US and Canadian smoke shops and tobacconist dealers. I have thought about getting a custom-forged and fully-functional pipe-tomahawk that can be used as an axe and the pipe bit as a socket wrench/hammer, as well as smoking piece. Plus before forgetting, I prefer a bow or blowpipe to a gun as it's quiet and often safer as well as easier to clean and maintain and will carry a pair of arrows without a quiver tied to the pack-strap along with a shorter bow like a horse-bow as not to get tangled in the bushes or wear one of two woven Choctaw-style (one was made by them, the other a replica) dart quivers around the neck for small, skewer-like darts with raw cotton or thistle-down fletching alongside a six-foot (two meter where you're from) walking stick object that's a hollowed-out river bamboo (American river cane or river bamboo for houses of tribes east of the Mississippi River and blowguns, as well as mountain cane or mountain bamboo often called "switch wood" from their use by the Jesuit "black robes" and translated as "arrow cane" from the languages of those who used it) for a cane and a handy little squirrel-shooter, something often brought along on the Trail of Tears as a "walking stick" but a cleverly disguised hunting weapon when disarmed of their guns (those who went willingly two decades prior were actually given a gun, however). Say, you watch Bjorn Andreas Bull-Hansen and his Viking archery and Asatru channel? Me and him talk a whole bunch about mixing 50/50 Native American survival stuff with Scandinavian survival stuff since my mom and her family came to the US from Norway while dad and his family are Cherokee with a number of Choctaw by marriage. As a result, things like anthropology and the pre-Christian and pre-Islamic religions of various places as well as prehistory and the way humans lived before we all got screwed up with modern culture are very fascinating to me. Great stuff here. Again, thanks.
Well … you blow me away with all your well thought gear 👍🏻
Don’t you have a UA-cam channel? … you could have one. What about mailing some photo to me … of your gear ?
… 😀🙏🏻
I don't have any pictures up online, but you could probably Google Furlong and Mora knife brands as well as Cherokee and Choctaw bows and blowguns and the way they are strung with either smoke-treated squirrel-hide or hemp fiber or also how the darts and arrows are fletched (southeastern arrows are two-vane mounted over-under rather than three neatly aligned unlike most archery-using cultures). You can also find milled steel cups on most survival pages and online stores in addition to Speedy Sharp (which is an amazing sharpener). But maybe at some point I can get some up. :)
Thanks for your info regarding where I can find info and photos of gear like yours 👍🏻
I’ll check it out. And if you … sometimes in the future … post photos with your gear … you have to tell me 👍🏻😀🇺🇸
See you
amazing your ruck sack and my backpack have the same thing accept the whiskey I don't drink but am in California so I carry Weed my pipe and 3 bic lighters because 3 is 2 and 2 is one and one is none, thanks
Hi Charlie … that’s awesome 😎 and cool 👌🏻 whiskey 🥃 is nice … I don’t do weed 🤪 But I’m guessing it’s as good 👌🏻
Thanks for your support and interest in my channel 🤗🙏🏻
You keep Alot of good stuff in your pack! Its good to keep some wiskey in your pack, it will help keep you warm! Thanks for sharing!
Thanks for your comment and support 👍🏻😁🤗🥃
As much as your comment is probably meant in good spirit, this is a very bad idea. Alcohol thins your blood, making it harder for your body to keep warm. It makes you -feel- warm, but your core temperature will drop in cold weather. A nice shot of whiskey in front of a fire is very relaxing, but using it as a first aid method for being cold is 100% bunk and can cause serious issues!
Thanks for your feedback 👍🏻😉
You have a great kit! I like how it has an old school feel. Thanks for another great video, and enjoy your NewYears!
Thank you so much my friend
Coffee is a personal thing, I enjoy dark roast coffee and its best peculated.
Thanks for your feedback and explaining that word 👍🏻😁🇩🇰
Atb to you my friend
Thanks for your feedback 👍🏻😁 I make that at home 😉 but when I’m in the forest I make “cowboy” coffee because it’s easy and very strong 💪🏻 ( great together with a sip of whiskey 😇)
Have a wonderful day 🔥🏕
I have been wanting that very rucksack for at least 5 years now. I may have to spend the money and go for it
Hi Michael … That’s a great idea 👌🏻 don’t think you’ll regret it … if you buy one
They are awesome 👍🏻😁
I have the small bush stove and it works fine, but to safe some space, I have started using the folding wood stove. The nano for my day pack and the large one for my larger pack. Great pack set up. The only thing I would add is a little more to eat, lol.
Your right 👍🏻 more food would be nice 😛 I prefer the twigs stove … I have a Essential Bushbox … but I think it’s too dirty to handle … it makes too much sod on the outside … but your right … it is more compact. Have a great New Years 👍🏻🍾🥂
Or a little more whiskey, heh heh.
When you keep boiling coffee for longer than a second or two it starts to burn and make the brew stronger, but also very bitter. And yes, it is a sin to put expensive whiskey in coffee haha. You can put the coffee grounds into the water from the get go and just before it boils or just as it starts to boil take it off and let sit for a couple of minutes. Taste it and compare. Lmk how it goes if you do.
Thank you so much for your feedback and great suggestion.
👍🏻😊 It’s right that the coffee gets stronger and bitter when I cook it as I do in 1-2 min 🤔 and that’s why I’ve started to come salt in … it removes the bitterness and makes it taste very delicious 😋 👌🏻… you should try that some day 😉💪🏻
Tom
Cimbrer Bushcraft interesting, I will try that right now!! Was just about to make a cup over the stove haha.
Really enjoyed your load out and discussion. Thanks for sharing and may you have a blessed and Happy New Year. Ax
Thank you so much my friend for your kind feedback and support 👍🏻😉 I’m glad to hear that you found my video interesting. And happy New Year to you and your family
Tom 🔥🌤🌲🌳🦌🛶🐶
Very enjoyable to watch, well done. Thank you
Your welcome Chase 👍🏻😉 and thanks for coming along 🏕🔥
Tom
Great video. A lot of really good information that I haven't seen before. You seem like a great guy and I don't want to see you get hurt so I'd like to suggest that you carry your first aid kit on the outside of your pack where it is readily accessible in a medical emergency. Thanks again for the video.
Thanks Nick for your feedback and concern 👍🏻😁 I’ve put my first aid kit in the outside 👌🏻 so I can get it quickly 😊🏕
Atb to you my friend 🔥🌤🦌
Интересный у вас подход к отдыху на природе:) . Удачи вам и всего хорошего! :)
My country's dying under several feet of snow, and spring isn't there yet, stay warm and heat the stove, and have a lovely Valentine day,..✨💕💖🐱🐉
Thank you so much my friend 😁👍🏻 and you keep warm and cozy in your home 🤗🏕🔥🌲
Tom
@@cimbrerbushcraft-vikingheritag -21Celsius at 4am in the freezing night, I think I'm going to stay in the house till 7am when the sun will show up,... ✨💥✨🐱🐉
Oh lovely kit also. Hope to bump into you on the trail some day.
Thanks a lot 😁👍🏻 I’m glad you like it 🏕️🔥
Tom
Great video. Old school and new stuff. Perfect combination.
Subbed.
Thank you so much for your support and feedback. And welcome onboard my channel
Hope you’ll watch and enjoy my other videos to 👍🏻😁🔥
Very nice! We are in the thick of winter up here in Canada... nice to see some green :)
Hi Canada 🇨🇦 👍🏻 … well I would like some snow ❄️ here in Denmark 🇩🇰 … but it’s okay that it’s easy to walk in the woods. Happy new year to you 🥂🍾
I am revisiting your various pack/load-out combinations! I am also interested in the total weight of your various load-outs. Last night, I took out my mid-sized Firebox stove kit: I forgot how heavy it can seem in stainless steel! Or maybe I have 'lost a step' during the past winter🙄. I find enjoyment in improving the packaging of all the fine equipment I own.
Yeah and I like that very much 😉👍🏻 Making a more simple load with gear that can have multiple uses 🏕
I can’t remember how much it weighs 🤔 but I think it’s about 12-15 kg in total 🔥🌲
Tom
@@cimbrerbushcraft-vikingheritag THANKS. Experiments continue!
this gear is just pure beauty 😍
Thanks a lot for that 😁👍🏻
It's SO STRANGE to hear house sparrow calls in the forests :)
😇🐣 … ornithologist ?
@@cimbrerbushcraft-vikingheritag Yeah, it's my hobby :)
I thought so 🤔 well done 👍🏻
I was to … when I was younger
… great hobby … stay focused
Awesome seeing your gear loadout my friend! Appreciate it!
Thanks for your kind words and support 👍🏻🤗 I really appreciate that. Happy new year to you and your family
from me 😁👍🏻🥂🍾
Thanks for sharing good to see what over people carry and compare kit with my own .
I wish you great new year and keep the videos coming. ATB Geoff
Thank you so much for the comment and new year greetings. 👍🏻😁
Nice video and gorgeous scenery! Reminds me of home! Seems like a LOT of items and weight for a 'Day Pack'...but then again, I'm attempting to lighten the load in my Day Pack and even tending to think about a 'Haversack' type Day Pack vice my other kits...but again, I'm much older and more out of shape than you are! ;>) Again, Thanks for the video, all the time/effort you took to share it with us!!! Safe and enjoyable hikes/bushcrafting to you and yours ALWAYS!
Hi Kenn 👋🏻 Your absolutely right about the weight … and I agree with you, that I should be as light as possible. I’m very fond of the minimalist approach … but my problems is … that I love all my gear … and love having it with my on my hikes. 😇😬 … A haversack is a very good solution … that way … you’re forcing your self to select only the most needed gear 👍🏻
Thanks for your comment and support 🤗
Thanks for the video. You have a nice way of demonstrating your skills. Once again I've taken something from one of your videos
Thank you so much Derek for your kind and positive feedback 😁👍🏻 I’m glad you like my gear and hope to see you again on my next adventure 🔥🏕 Tom
Thanks for sharing your outdoor experiences! Your videos make me travel through these forests. I live in Brazil, the forests here are very hot and it is impossible to make a shelter directly on the ground due to the animals' wild animals.
But the techniques I learn with the videos are very important, I'm a Boy Scout leader and I always point out your videos to them. Thanks and a big hug.
Waw thank you so much Marcelo 👍🏻😁 I really appreciate that you use my videos to educate your scouts
It makes me happy to think about that 💪🏻😎🇩🇰. Please give them all my personal greetings and keep up the important job of learning youngsters bushcraft skills
See you on the next one 🏕🌲
Would like to see how you guys camp in the Brazilian forest. Maybe consider uploading a video someday?
That would be great 👍🏻😁 I don’t think I’ll survive very long out there 🤔🔥🏕🌲🌤 but it would be nice to try 😎💪🏻🇩🇰
I like that hat patch as I am a devout Harley Davidson fan and rider (FLSTF Fatboy).
😎👍🏻
Great 👍🏻 😎 nice to hear from you brother … ride safe my friend
I very much enjoyed this video. How have I not discovered this channel already?! Subscribed!
Thanks for your sub 👍🏻 I’m happy you like my channel. Welcome onboard 😎😊
Brilliant set up my friend
Thanks Johnny 👍🏻😁 appreciate that very much
Have a wonderful day 🏕🔥
Some very nice gear you have my friend! Thank you for sharing your adventures! Happy New Year!
Thanks Richard for your positive feedback 👍🏻😁
I’m glad you like it and my videos. See you on the next one my friend 🔥⛺️🌤🌳🦌
Nice kit buddy, always great to see someone else their kit
Atb
Steve
Thanks for your kind words 😊 hope your subscribes to my channel 😉👍🏻😎
Fresh brewed coffee, whiskey and a pipe in the forest…it doesn’t get much better than that😎🤙. D😎🇺🇸
Ha ha I’m glad you like my choice of pleasure 😁👍🏻 and grateful that you came along and enjoyed it together with
See you again soon 🏕🔥🌲
Tom
@@cimbrerbushcraft-vikingheritag yes, excited to have found you again. My old channel got deleted so I’ve been rebuilding my subs community. D🤙
Thanks for choosing me 🤗
I love your backpack is so nice and beautiful, nice gear. Greetings from Spain!
Thanks for your positive feedback and comment 👍🏻
Nice to hear from you in Spain 🇪🇸 🤗😎
Hello. Thank you for sharing. Very nice kit.
Thanks Kevin 😁👌🏻 hope you’ll be inspired by my other videos to 😇😎😁
I really enjoyed watching this....thanks so much.
Thank you so much my friend for your wonderful feedback 😊👍🏻 I’m glad you like it and I hope you’ll enjoy some of my other videos to 😉🏕🔥🌤
See you on the next one 🦌🇩🇰
Tom
Great kit. I like your style.
Thanks for your kind words 👍🏻
I like your gear but I'd drop the second bundle of fatwood and add a 9x12 sil-tarp.
Hi John 👋🏻 thanks for your advice … I’ll take that in consideration when I reorganise my rucksack 👍🏻
Great gear. Thank you for sharing.
Your welcome Margaret 😁👍🏻 and thanks for your feedback
Hope you’ll enjoy some of my other videos too 🤗 and if you get any questions … don’t hesitate to ask 🏕🔥🌲Tom🇩🇰
I'm from Duluth, I too love Frost River products! Only thing I would adjust would be a bigger flask?! What kinda whisky?
Thanks Kenneth for your feedback and suggestion 😉
Yeah maybe a bigger flask would be nice 🤔 so I don’t have to fill it up so often 😇 lol
It’s mostly Balentine whiskey I drink … but also JD some times. Stay safe my friend and enjoy life 😉👌🏻🏕🔥🦌🌲
I like your fire kit pouch. I think I will try to make one but not of leather.
That’s great 😉👍🏻 it’s an old school way to keep your things and of course you can make it from other materials to 🏕🔥
Tom