I stumbled across a new video review of Bug Out Vehicles and Shelters just the other night while browsing YouTube. I had to watch it all, of course, as it's good to see or read an unbiased, but well-considered review in which the reviewer discusses both what he or she likes, as well as dislikes about a product or book.
This led me to click through to the reviewer's YouTube channel after watching the video about my book, and browsing through it, I saw that Urbivalist Dan has a wealth of insightful videos that may be of interest to readers of this blog. His channel is called Urban Survival Tools, and with more than 100 episodes posted, he has explored a wide range of topics such as Know Your Area's Disaster History, How to Find Survivalists in Your Area, How Krav Maga Can Save Your Bacon, as well many reviews of books and products. Urbivalist Dan has an easygoing on-camera presence and a clear, conversational voice that makes watch his videos easy. I recommend you browse his channel if you haven't seen it before, and I'm sure your find several episodes (or "prepisodes" as he calls them) that will be of interest to you.
In addition to the YouTube Channel, these videos and more are also available on his website: The Daily Prep
Here's his review of Bug Out Vehicles and Shelters:
And here is a follow-up he posted since that explores the meaning of bugging-out in general and presents some concepts you might not have thought about when making a bug out plan:
Showing posts with label video. Show all posts
Showing posts with label video. Show all posts
Monday, February 6, 2012
Friday, December 10, 2010
More on Survival Hunting and Food Gathering
I spent most of the day last Saturday canoeing with my long-time camping and adventure-travel buddy, Ernest Herndon. We went to a large national forest lake here in south Mississippi mainly just to get out on the water for a few hours, but also because I wanted to shoot some footage for a video I plan to post here soon, in which Ernest demonstrates a simple paddling technique that makes long-distance travel in a canoe much more feasible and less exhausting. I'll have that video live here as soon as I have time to edit it.
Out on the lake, as we explored the hidden coves that reach like fingers into the wooded hills of the surrounding national forest, we saw a wide array of waterfowl coming and going, as well as deer and squirrel activity within sight of the water. Our conversation turned to survival hunting, as Ernest had read my last post here and we talked then about the different methods so many people use to achieve the same end, namely putting meat in the freezer
With over 30 years experience as a newspaper reporter in south Mississippi, including covering the local hunting and fishing reports and writing a weekly outdoor page for the Sunday Edition, Ernest has seen about every technique imaginable and has spend lots of time in the woods, swamps and fields with some incredibly skilled outdoorsmen. Most of these guys he knows are the kind I mentioned before that probably never read survival books yet have a knack for finding and getting their game when most everyone else comes up empty handed. They range from some local backwoodsmen who probably don't read any books at all to the highly-educated, like Ernest's own son, who is a doctor but also one of the most avid and skilled hunters I've ever met. Anyone who has done a lot of hunting and fishing has seen the type. The conversation reminded me of a hard-drinking surveyor I used to work with who each day after work would walk the banks of a lake near the job with a rod and reel and one specific artificial lure, and come back near dark with a plastic garbage bag full of bass. This in the same lake where my brother and I rarely got a strike. The same guy was equally proficient with getting deer during hunting season.
Discussing characters like this, especially the ones Ernest has accompanied and interviewed over the years, led us to more conversation about alternative methods of game and fish gathering that are rarely discussed in a survival context. Take hand-grabbing for instance: This involves wading along the shores of a creek or lake and reaching into holes to grab catfish that are laying up there. People who are good at this can get far more fish than they can eat in a very short time, but again, there's a knack to it that some have while most of us would have to work a lot harder at it. It's all about knowing how and where to look. The same goes for setting out drop hooks in the local creek, building fish weirs or rigging snares and traps. We also talked about frog-gigging, shining beavers, alligator, rabbit and deer at night, and even killing armadillos with a stick, if you were desperate and couldn't find anything else.
When the conversation turned to the optimum firearms to take in a survival situation, as these discussions always seem to do, Ernest expressed his thoughts on shotguns, which would be his first choice because of versatility with a variety of loads. He said the weight and bulk issues of the ammunition could be mitigated somewhat by choosing a smaller bore, like a 20 gauge, and that he would prefer the simplicity of a single or double-barrel over a pump or automatic. Knowing that if Ernest actually had to bug out someday he would do so in a canoe along a local stream, I could find no fault with his choice of weapon because in a canoe he could carry all the ammo he wanted and in the thick cover around here, the shotgun would sure make it easier to harvest squirrels and most other game. I grew up learning to hunt with a Savage singe-shot 20 gauge myself, and later switched to a .22 for small game before acquiring a variety of rifles in different calibers.
As a result of this conversation, Ernest decided to poll some local experienced hunters regarding their choice of a survival firearm and got a variety of answers, with many favoring 12-gauge shotguns, and few opting for a 20-gauge, a .22 rifle, a .22 revolver with interchangeable .22 Magnum cylinder, and one preferring a .17 HMR rifle.
Another interesting topic of this conversation we had regarding survival hunting concerned what we have seen in our travels in various parts of the world. Ernest went on two expeditions into the interior of New Guinea back in the 1980's, including visiting a village in the mountainous jungles there where the people still hunted with bows and arrows and wore bones through their noses. He wrote a book about it called In The Hearts Of Wild Men
. In New Guinea at that time, he also encountered various subsistence hunters that used shotguns, while crocodile hunters were still using spears. Later, in the 1990's, we traveled together in both the jungle areas and drier mountain areas of Honduras and encountered both Miskito Indians and campesinos who hunted every kind of animal in the region with .22 rifles. Lucio, our host at a remote ranch near the El Salvador border even used his .22 to shoot fish when we approached a stream and claimed to have killed over 200 deer with his well-worn and rusty Marlin Model 60.
The conclusion we came to is that you use what you have and what you feel comfortable with. When we stopped for lunch and Ernest broke out his banjo to pick some blues, I decided maybe he won't have to hunt after all in a post-apocalyptic world! People are still going to need entertainment after the lights go out, and what could be better than some banjo blues by a campfire out in the backwoods? I recorded one of his tunes for YouTube and thought I would share it here too:
Out on the lake, as we explored the hidden coves that reach like fingers into the wooded hills of the surrounding national forest, we saw a wide array of waterfowl coming and going, as well as deer and squirrel activity within sight of the water. Our conversation turned to survival hunting, as Ernest had read my last post here and we talked then about the different methods so many people use to achieve the same end, namely putting meat in the freezer
With over 30 years experience as a newspaper reporter in south Mississippi, including covering the local hunting and fishing reports and writing a weekly outdoor page for the Sunday Edition, Ernest has seen about every technique imaginable and has spend lots of time in the woods, swamps and fields with some incredibly skilled outdoorsmen. Most of these guys he knows are the kind I mentioned before that probably never read survival books yet have a knack for finding and getting their game when most everyone else comes up empty handed. They range from some local backwoodsmen who probably don't read any books at all to the highly-educated, like Ernest's own son, who is a doctor but also one of the most avid and skilled hunters I've ever met. Anyone who has done a lot of hunting and fishing has seen the type. The conversation reminded me of a hard-drinking surveyor I used to work with who each day after work would walk the banks of a lake near the job with a rod and reel and one specific artificial lure, and come back near dark with a plastic garbage bag full of bass. This in the same lake where my brother and I rarely got a strike. The same guy was equally proficient with getting deer during hunting season.
Discussing characters like this, especially the ones Ernest has accompanied and interviewed over the years, led us to more conversation about alternative methods of game and fish gathering that are rarely discussed in a survival context. Take hand-grabbing for instance: This involves wading along the shores of a creek or lake and reaching into holes to grab catfish that are laying up there. People who are good at this can get far more fish than they can eat in a very short time, but again, there's a knack to it that some have while most of us would have to work a lot harder at it. It's all about knowing how and where to look. The same goes for setting out drop hooks in the local creek, building fish weirs or rigging snares and traps. We also talked about frog-gigging, shining beavers, alligator, rabbit and deer at night, and even killing armadillos with a stick, if you were desperate and couldn't find anything else.
When the conversation turned to the optimum firearms to take in a survival situation, as these discussions always seem to do, Ernest expressed his thoughts on shotguns, which would be his first choice because of versatility with a variety of loads. He said the weight and bulk issues of the ammunition could be mitigated somewhat by choosing a smaller bore, like a 20 gauge, and that he would prefer the simplicity of a single or double-barrel over a pump or automatic. Knowing that if Ernest actually had to bug out someday he would do so in a canoe along a local stream, I could find no fault with his choice of weapon because in a canoe he could carry all the ammo he wanted and in the thick cover around here, the shotgun would sure make it easier to harvest squirrels and most other game. I grew up learning to hunt with a Savage singe-shot 20 gauge myself, and later switched to a .22 for small game before acquiring a variety of rifles in different calibers.
As a result of this conversation, Ernest decided to poll some local experienced hunters regarding their choice of a survival firearm and got a variety of answers, with many favoring 12-gauge shotguns, and few opting for a 20-gauge, a .22 rifle, a .22 revolver with interchangeable .22 Magnum cylinder, and one preferring a .17 HMR rifle.
Another interesting topic of this conversation we had regarding survival hunting concerned what we have seen in our travels in various parts of the world. Ernest went on two expeditions into the interior of New Guinea back in the 1980's, including visiting a village in the mountainous jungles there where the people still hunted with bows and arrows and wore bones through their noses. He wrote a book about it called In The Hearts Of Wild Men
The conclusion we came to is that you use what you have and what you feel comfortable with. When we stopped for lunch and Ernest broke out his banjo to pick some blues, I decided maybe he won't have to hunt after all in a post-apocalyptic world! People are still going to need entertainment after the lights go out, and what could be better than some banjo blues by a campfire out in the backwoods? I recorded one of his tunes for YouTube and thought I would share it here too:
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
Demonstrating the Green Sapling Tripod Cooking Method
I've posted here before about one of my favorite methods of cooking or boiling water using an open fire - the simple green sapling tripod support. This was also described and illustrated in my book, Bug Out.
Since I find the method so useful in that it allows you to carry nothing but one simple metal pot in the bug-out bag, I thought I would give you a better look at it in this video below. I plan to do more video demonstrations of various techniques and reviews of gear in the future, and will soon have some better equipment for this. If you can overlook the poor video quality of this footage, perhaps you can still benefit from the method. When I get set up with a better camera, I'll probably shoot this again in more favorable lighting and replace it here. This was done on a creek bank here in south Mississippi.
This method of cooking is well worth trying on your next overnight stay in the woods. I've been using it for over 20 years myself, since first seeing it done by some native coconut growers in a remote coastal area of the Dominican Republic. And although I say that one pot is all you need for the bug out bag, it also works as well when you're better equipped with skillets, coffee pot, etc. I've cooked many hundreds of pancakes this way and it's easy to regulate the heat by adjusting the amount of fuel you feed into the small fire.
Since I find the method so useful in that it allows you to carry nothing but one simple metal pot in the bug-out bag, I thought I would give you a better look at it in this video below. I plan to do more video demonstrations of various techniques and reviews of gear in the future, and will soon have some better equipment for this. If you can overlook the poor video quality of this footage, perhaps you can still benefit from the method. When I get set up with a better camera, I'll probably shoot this again in more favorable lighting and replace it here. This was done on a creek bank here in south Mississippi.
This method of cooking is well worth trying on your next overnight stay in the woods. I've been using it for over 20 years myself, since first seeing it done by some native coconut growers in a remote coastal area of the Dominican Republic. And although I say that one pot is all you need for the bug out bag, it also works as well when you're better equipped with skillets, coffee pot, etc. I've cooked many hundreds of pancakes this way and it's easy to regulate the heat by adjusting the amount of fuel you feed into the small fire.
Sunday, January 24, 2010
Thursday, January 21, 2010
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Popular Posts
-
Note: This checklist includes the items I would take in a bug-out situation in which I had to head out into the wilds of the Lower 48 State...
-
The feasibility of any bug out plan depends a lot on your starting point. Obviously, some regions of the country have more to offer than ot...
-
Whether considering a rifle for the bug out bag or for other purposes, I have a strong preference for short, handy carbines, and few rifles ...
-
The Ruger 10/22 is an all-time favorite among many rimfire enthusiasts, and for good reason. It's a reasonably priced, lightweight, rel...
-
I see a lot of discussion on survival forums and blogs about the options available for radio communication among small groups in a post-SHTF...
-
Here's an interesting product if you're using a Jeep or some kind of off-road capable SUV or pickup as a bug-out vehicle and would l...
-
I might have mentioned here before that I like guns. If not, I'll say it now. Not all of them have to be about bugging out or even abo...
-
I'm reposting this update from my main site, www.scottbwilliams.com for those of you who only check in here. As many of you know, The ...
-
My publisher is sponsoring a book giveaway of 10 copies of The Prepper's Workbook on Goodreads. You can enter to win one right here. ...
-
Bug out bag checklists usually focus on a full-sized kit of everything you would need for at least the first 72-hours after leaving home. I...