100+ Wilderness Survival Tips: THE MOVIE



Here is a full length movie of over 100 wilderness survival tips and bushcraft skills for camping, and survival in the wild.

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About the Author: modernwarrior

22 Comments

  1. It's back. I have the same knife and loved the first episode, too. Thanks.
    Walnut scales are the best SAKs and the Evolution range handles really well.
    Have you tried an S557 Walnut? It is lockable and a bit bulky in a trouser pocket, but the tools are great – inline Phiilips!

  2. went to my local outdoor mart and found a Victorinox bushcraft knife it was pretty sick and i never knew it existed. just incase other people didnt know either. theyre also like $250+ USD 😭

  3. LOVE THIS! My little guy and I like to watch your videos during the day and to go to sleep (I also love that I don't have to worry about the content being appropriate for him and he loves it!) We've been hoping for a large survival tip video for so long! THANKYOU!

  4. Been watching your videos for a while now… Honestly, if you were to be selected to take part in the Alone show as a contestant, you'd have a high chance of success! Keep it up!

  5. Some great points in this video, thanks Mike.
    I use the air bladders from bladder wrack as seaweed whistles by cutting a small amount off one end and then blowing across, rather than into, the hole. This makes a surprisingly loud whistles, and it's great to teach people on foreshore forages.
    I love fried gutweed, but just as with jelly fungi, you have to be careful of the water exploding from the body, causing the hot oil to spit.
    I bury the tin after making charcloth/cones while they cool down, as the sudden intake of oxygen once off the heat, but with the tin and contents still being very hot, can cause the contents to ignite and ruin them.
    When carving a wooden spoon, be mindful of the direction of the grain in the wood. While carving the handle, you might find it easy to carve going on one direction on one side, but you'll find it digs in on the other. Just turn the wood and carry on.
    The narrower the blade, which you can see at the back of the blade opposite the sharp front, the easier it will go through wood. An Opinel No.8 locking knife is great for finer work with wood, such as carving, making tent pegs, the wood/bark whistle etc. It's a tool I use for the rough work in my own wood carvings, before moving down to more specialised knives. The Swiss Army Knife is great and I have several, ranging from a beast to a dinky keyring one, but the blades are quite wide and are therefore harder to get through wood.
    Many coniferous trees have an irritant that causes the skin to itch them handled. It affects me, although luckily the itching stops pretty quickly.
    I have very small 'paper' sheets of soap in a small plastic dispenser for if really needed, but also use the 99% water wet wipes, which are fragrance free.

  6. Id love to do some of these one day, but alas I own no land with trees and am no forester.
    § 242 Strafgesetzbuch (StGB) forbids me from even picking up a leaf in owned forrests and public forrests neqr me are all nature reserves.

    Giant industrialist may poison whole regions with permision of the state and I cant even fell a dead tree.

    And as I know the beurocrats of my city, they wont even consider giving me permision.

    It sucks that corruption doenst work in favour of everyone, only for the big and mighty.

  7. I remember watching the video when you showed the pine root as cordage ages ago. This video is literally everything I have learned in my youtube journey thank you for all the time you put into them

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