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Mountain Adventure Channel
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Добавлен 16 дек 2021
Welcome to the Mountain Adventure Channel, your one-stop source for all things outdoors and mountain adventures and life!
🌄 **Adventure Vlogs:** Join us on thrilling journeys through awe-inspiring mountain landscapes, from heart-pounding hikes to tranquil summit moments.
🏔️ **Gear Reviews:** Get the inside scoop on the best outdoor gear, whether you're a seasoned pro or a beginner, to make the most of your mountain experiences.
🌟 **How-To Guides:** Learn essential skills for conquering mountains, using gear to wilderness survival, ensuring your safety and success.
🆘 **Emergency Preparedness:** We prioritize your safety, providing knowledge and skills for handling unexpected situations in the wilderness and life.
Mountain Adventure Channel is your go-to resource for inspiration, education, and community.
Don't forget to subscribe and hit the notification bell, so you never miss an adventure. Come with us as we explore, educate, and empower adventurers like you.
🌄 **Adventure Vlogs:** Join us on thrilling journeys through awe-inspiring mountain landscapes, from heart-pounding hikes to tranquil summit moments.
🏔️ **Gear Reviews:** Get the inside scoop on the best outdoor gear, whether you're a seasoned pro or a beginner, to make the most of your mountain experiences.
🌟 **How-To Guides:** Learn essential skills for conquering mountains, using gear to wilderness survival, ensuring your safety and success.
🆘 **Emergency Preparedness:** We prioritize your safety, providing knowledge and skills for handling unexpected situations in the wilderness and life.
Mountain Adventure Channel is your go-to resource for inspiration, education, and community.
Don't forget to subscribe and hit the notification bell, so you never miss an adventure. Come with us as we explore, educate, and empower adventurers like you.
Make The Best Backpacking Food Kit With These Pro Tips!
Looking to get the best backpacking food kit? Watch this video for pro tips on selecting the perfect backpacking meals and snacks for your outdoor adventures!
Просмотров: 805
Видео
I SHOULD NOT BE HERE! Desert Survival With Only Items From My Truck!
Просмотров 27516 часов назад
Join me on a desert survival adventure as I try to survive using only items from my truck. Can a mountain man bushcraft guy make it out alive? Let's find out! Can I Mountain man Bushcraft Guy Survive being stranded in the desert?
I Spent 100 Hours Researching Bug Out Bags And Found The BEST One
Просмотров 1,2 тыс.21 час назад
I Spent 100 Hours Researching Bug Out Bags And Found The BEST One
WHAT THE FIZZ! Wranglerstar US Forest Service Pulaski Axe.
Просмотров 1,2 тыс.14 дней назад
WHAT THE FIZZ! Wranglerstar US Forest Service Pulaski Axe.
Are YOU Prepping For Civil Unrest This Winter?
Просмотров 6 тыс.21 день назад
Are YOU Prepping For Civil Unrest This Winter?
Is The LT Wright Lagom Knife The Ultimate Bushcraft Knife?
Просмотров 25921 день назад
Is The LT Wright Lagom Knife The Ultimate Bushcraft Knife?
WHAT TO KNOW Before You Buy The JOOLCA Hot Tap Shower!
Просмотров 9121 день назад
WHAT TO KNOW Before You Buy The JOOLCA Hot Tap Shower!
Is The Joker Ember The BEST Bushcraft Knife?
Просмотров 476Месяц назад
Is The Joker Ember The BEST Bushcraft Knife?
Is This The Best Bushcraft Camping Knife?
Просмотров 2 тыс.Месяц назад
Is This The Best Bushcraft Camping Knife?
Warning: How Long Can You Get The Best $150 Camping Knife?
Просмотров 4,7 тыс.Месяц назад
Warning: How Long Can You Get The Best $150 Camping Knife?
BEST Bushcraft Knife Under $100! But For How Long?
Просмотров 2,8 тыс.Месяц назад
BEST Bushcraft Knife Under $100! But For How Long?
Hidden Dangers Of Backpacking In The Rocky Mountains
Просмотров 1235 месяцев назад
Hidden Dangers Of Backpacking In The Rocky Mountains
Backpacking Self-Defense: Guns vs Bear Spray
Просмотров 1045 месяцев назад
Backpacking Self-Defense: Guns vs Bear Spray
Surviving In The Wilderness With BPS Adventurer Gear
Просмотров 3435 месяцев назад
Surviving In The Wilderness With BPS Adventurer Gear
BPS Knives Bushcraft: Field Test and Review
Просмотров 2,1 тыс.5 месяцев назад
BPS Knives Bushcraft: Field Test and Review
BPS Knives Adventurer - BEST Budget Knife For Bushcraft Survival!
Просмотров 2,4 тыс.5 месяцев назад
BPS Knives Adventurer - BEST Budget Knife For Bushcraft Survival!
Budget Backpacking Tents: Top 3 Affordable Picks
Просмотров 3766 месяцев назад
Budget Backpacking Tents: Top 3 Affordable Picks
Ultimate Bushcraft Survival Camping Knife That Started It ALL!
Просмотров 8 тыс.6 месяцев назад
Ultimate Bushcraft Survival Camping Knife That Started It ALL!
Bigfoot Attacks Cabin In The Sierras!
Просмотров 3406 месяцев назад
Bigfoot Attacks Cabin In The Sierras!
Best Ultralight Day Hike Backpack: Hill People Gear
Просмотров 7376 месяцев назад
Best Ultralight Day Hike Backpack: Hill People Gear
Ultimate Ultralight Day Hike Backpack: Gear Up for Survival!
Просмотров 6 тыс.6 месяцев назад
Ultimate Ultralight Day Hike Backpack: Gear Up for Survival!
Best Condor Bushcraft Survival Knife Made!
Просмотров 2,3 тыс.6 месяцев назад
Best Condor Bushcraft Survival Knife Made!
Survival Backpacking Self Defense Options For Women
Просмотров 1,2 тыс.6 месяцев назад
Survival Backpacking Self Defense Options For Women
I make my own meals at the house and pack them in Ziploc bags which save a lot of space. This way I know what I am eating and it's home cooking which is always tasty. Freeze dried meats can be purchased ( dehydrated can be done at home ) and all sorts of dehydrated or freeze dried vegetables / fruits can be located at Harmony House foods. If you don't want to dehydrate your own. By the way , freeze dried fruits are 100 times better then the dehydrated ones. I do what's called freezer bag meals. The meal is dehydrated at home or freeze dried ( purchased ). In camp they are re-hydrated in the freezer bags and when finished the 1 freezer bag becomes the trash bag for the rest. Only commercial made meals for myself are the Next Mile Meals , High protein and low carbs. When freezer bag cooking the water only has to be near boiling , when the small baubles start. Have a cozy to put the bag in while it re-hydrates and to eat from. Cleaning up is easy . lick the spoon and you are done. I use a alcohol / wood bring backpacking stove ( Firebox Titanium Nano Gen 2 ) since I hammock camp. Here in Florida and we have a lot of trees , free dry fuel for the little twig burning stove. As you guessed , I'm 80 and retired so there is a lot of time to use.
First thing taught in the Australian outback is never leave the vehicle
if you can hold it in your hand, it DOES weigh something. ozs become pounds and pounds=pain. I use "non-cook" food and dont carry a stove. If I want or need heat, I go off trail, dig a Dakota fire pit, use it, and then fill it in. A Cold Steel shovel, minus its handle, is always part of my pack. So is a modified Crunch multitool and 3 different types of saw blades, to be held by the visegrip of the Crunch. Ive rarely needed either one, but, like my 1 lb pistol, they go along, just in case. I carry jerky, granola, powdered milk, Koolaid, flour tortillas, salad dressi, almond butter, jelly. I also carry some electrolyte powders.. I ''ve had heat cramps so bad that I had to crawl to the toilet. Thankfully, it's never happened on-trail', but I see to it that it is highly-unlikely. That sucked really bad.
I’ve seen him talk before on other videos. He goes up at like 11,000 feet. In the winter and I know that he mentioned in another video that there’s not many things to make fire on the top of those peaks most time of the year.
Boobs 😂
My Bug Out Bag is the Aarn Featherlite Freedom PRO 55 Litre pack at 1210g or 2.6lbs and the Balance Pockets Expedition with addition 15 Litre capacity at 372g or 0.8lbs
I have major back problems including spinal cord damage. It is from a stuntman lifestyle since I was young. Everything dangerous is what I did. I was an Olympic grade athlete in Judo among one of the things which entailed getting slammed into a mat about 300 times a day. Motorcycle wrecks hit a car fractured skull, got hit by a pickup flew 90 feet, sorry getting off track. It is impossible to list all of my stunts and injuries. Anyway I woke up one day screaming in pain from sciatica so bad that I couldn’t walk for 2 years, crawling around on crutches for the rest of my life was my future at best. My friend told me to get a gravity table and use it 10 to 15 minutes a day. I thought that it sounded stupid. Anyway out of desperation I tried it. Today many years later I can walk normal where, morphine shots would only last 10 minutes and I was screaming in pain. A gravity table uses your body’s weight to decompress your spine. It really worked for me. It’s that 80 year old man that used to be on tv, Teeter inventor of the Teeter Table. If you start decompressing your spine early hopefully , what happened to me might be avoided. I wish that I would have listened earlier but. I was too tough and too macho. Best of luck. The 893
Great Content!
@@ReclaimTactical Thanks I’m glad you enjoyed it!
Very nice job! I would suggest adding a Dollar Tree clear drop cloth and a little duct tape so she can make a super shelter with the mylar blanket and paracord if she needs to. Also, can you really heat water in that Kleen Canteen? Are they really single-walled? I would add some tea light candles and/ or hand) feet warmers ( because our hands and feet get cold!) and bouilluon cubes, single coffee, tea, sugar packets , hard candies - wouldn't add a lot of weight and would help with comfort in a stressful time.
@@Stellaedocious Thanks for watching view. Yep, as long as they are single walled heat away!
I'm almost sold in buying one of these. Nevertheless, there's something intriguing: why such a good knife, reviewed positively in so many channels, is so inexpensive?? I mean, it's ridiculous cheap. Where's the catch??
It's definitely a great point to consider! Sometimes, lower prices can be the result of smart marketing or direct-to-consumer sales, but I totally get the skepticism. Always good to do some research before making a purchase!
Bugout bags are for noobs who want to paint targets on their backs. A wise man will use several different caches and tread offroad.
First off, last resort is to leave the truck which is a protected space and can keep out of the night time elements. But if you must that spot by the rocks can give off warmth stored from the day sun and give a protected backside. Start fire if possible and try not to let it burn out during the night. Then call Uber Eats for survival food. 😳
@@CSmith-oz4wp lol I think I have a coupon for that.
@@MountainAdventureChannel as the comedian Ron White would said you have “coo-pin” for that. 👍🤪🤣😅😂
@@CSmith-oz4wp 😂
What brand?
@@Ojdajuicemayne Altra shoes
Also i would look for the big tree off the road to stay at night. At least it can give you cover on your six. Theres two kinds of people you could find late at night in the desert.
Its easier for SAR to find you if you stay near the truck. Also if needing to leave the truck behind leaving a note in your truck with the info for them to find you like heading and timing. If Mask is sterile it could serve as a good patch ot to filter coffee.
@@rocky.racoon thanks for the comment!
So where's the test on these two?
The test? Oh, it got lost in the Bermuda Triangle of my to-do list! But don't worry, it's on the way!
What experience do you have that anyone should value your opinion? I breezed through a few of your videos, and everything is in excellent condition, unscathed, not a mark on them. Something tells me you are playing 'Prepper Survivalist' but have no training, never military and little to no experience at all.
How can you not tell the validity of an argument based on the merit of the argument itself alone? It’s kind of like thinking that you need to use a knife for two years before you know if it’s a good knife. This just exposes your lack of knowledge and experience, not his. Also, right in the beginning of the video, he tells you that he has 20+ years of backpacking experience. That should have answered your question right upfront.
Many people agree on a class of knives called Short Heavy Machetes. They run about 10 inch blades and near 2 pounds. They can chop through heavy brush that may have thicker branches than a regular long/thin grass machete can chop through. Additionally they can be your log splitter (batoning) and de-limber. They basically do most of a hatchet's work and are still good at large knife tasks. Some of the other front runners are the Ontario SP53 Bolo, SP8 Survival Machete and the Terava Skrama. There are 2 or 3 Condors in the size range. Tops and Esee have some. There are also some super premium brands that have souped-up versions if you have the scratch. Dave Pearson (reallybigmonkey1, Fun In The Woods) has a great "Machete" video ( ruclips.net/video/rtlpAM8XzBQ/видео.html ) covering a number of models of long grass machetes and short heavy machetes with sheath/carry mods and with usage and sharpening tips. Medium/light weight kukris (CKRT Kuk, Kershaw Camp 10, Kabar Kukri Machete) are basically short heavy machetes with a strategic bend in the blade to yield a more hatchet-like weight/head position. There are Parangs, Bolos, Goloks and a few other profile variations that are common in various parts of the world. Every region that needs medium weight chopping (less than a 3.5 pound axe) has their version of the short heavy machete. Even the much older Viking era Seax is basically a short heavy machete.
Have you tried a TRC Apocalypse?
TRC Apocalypse? Sounds like a party I didn’t get the invite to! Count me in for the next one!
@MountainAC1 it's a really nice survival knife that I think is right up your alley. My personal survival knife is the Work Tuff Gear Chanto.
@@RemyLebeau1985 Been trying to get my hands on a work tough gear knife for quite a while hard to get a hold of one to make a video.
Got 2 of em! 2 Silky Katanaboy 500's as well.
Audio was great camera work was great did find the from restaurant blue background distracting. Would’ve preferred a competition even between two knives draws the view were in closer. Lord knows I’ve never done a video but you asked for opinion and I did enjoy your video
My youngest son likes Molchat Doma!
That's awesome! Molchat Doma has such a unique sound. It's great to see younger generations appreciating their music!
what knife is the first one that looks like a modified kephart?
It is. It came from wood steel knives knives.woodsteelknives.com/
there's no point in bugging-out unless you've got a year's supply of food scatter-buried at your BOL. You can't be out and about in daylight, make noise, or show a normal light at night. When you go, lash 100 lbs of coconut oil and nut butters to a mountain bicycle and walk beside it. Tow 50 lbs more of honey, seeds, water, meds, supplements, vinegar, spices behind the bike on a trailer Have 30 lbs of BOB on your back. Amazon sells solid rubber bike tires and a spring clamp that holds your silenced autorifle across the handlebars. have pre-buried, empty 20 gallon drums and 5 gallon buckets at your BOL< too. You've got to get the stuff you're moving out of sight , out of 'the reach of bugs and animals. Caching and accessing caches must be done at night, showing no light, leaving no trace. It's a major pita. You can't use 4 wheeled vehicles or the roads when shtf cause there will be tire-flatteners and ambushes everywhere. Everyone will want your stuff and many will kill you in order to get it. It only takes ONE person to kill you and it can be a 10 year old kid with a pellet rifle, muzzleloader or xbow who does so. You can't risk it. Once you've secured your stuff at the BOL, get started on your 18" square, 20m long, foot of dirt on top tunnel. Stay in it for a year, coming out only at night and only for an hour, so as to access a food bucket, cook a meal, get water, etc. A year after shtf 99% of the population will be dead. That will make it much safer (at night) to tend hidden plots of root veggies, sprouts and peanuts. In another year, half of the remaining 1% will be dead, making it much safer (at night) to go scrounge what you need. Nuke submarines will probably save parts of a few cities on the coastlines and maybe get up the Mississippi to St Louis.. Things will improve eventually, after the non-productive are gone. Diseases will run rampant, etc, so you dont want anything to do with other people, for as long as you can avoid it.
Wow, that sounds like a scene straight out of a post-apocalyptic cycling adventure! Just imagine the looks you'd get biking around with a trailer full of honey-“Excuse me, sir, are you preparing for the end of the world or just really love your snacks?”
best handles yet !
Thanks for the love! I'm glad you enjoyed the handles-there's more to come!
I buried an Old Hickory paring-knife at my BOL, with one of the food caches. My BOB doesnt have a belt knife, because they are too limited. My BOB includes a small visegrip, 3 different saw blades to be held in the visegrip, a 3 cornered file, a Cold chisel, and the Cold Steel shovel (minus its handle). In an hour, I can make whatever length or configuration of handle I need for the shovel (adze, axe, paddle, hatchet, stand-up shovel) A mere knife is too limited. I carry a gerber multool, because it can do so many other things. I dont believe in half-assesd stuff. An actually effective, all season survival kit weighs 14 lbs, without water and it includes an effective pistol. shtf is going to be hell on earth, for everyone. 99% of the population will be dead in a year, 90% in 6 months. If you aint scatter-buried a lot of food, you'll be a cannibal or dead.
@@SonnyCrocket-p6h Always a good idea to have a secondary stash. Thanks for sharing!
I did a review of this knife recently where I put it through its paces and build a primitive shelter using only this knife and natural materials. I didn't resharpen the blade at all and it held up really well and I used it the slice meat and onions at the end of the review to do some cooking. The ferro rod surprised me by how soft it is and the large sparks it produced. Normally a lower price ferro rod will be as hard as a nail and only produce tiny sparks. I did manage to pull a rivit out of the sheath within a couple of minutes of unboxing but had a snap stud installed so the dangler on mine can now be removed or re-attached as required very quickly. Great knife with a great price tag.
Thanks for sharing your experience with the knife! It sounds like you really put it through its paces. Glad to hear it performed well for both shelter building and cooking!
Too easy. Yeah other than the rivet that pulled out shortly after unboxing it I've been really happy with it. And I like the sheath even more now that I had the press stud put on so I can take the hanger loop off and on as I desire.
Metallurgist's opinion: The knives look good, especially those without a Scandi grind. However, I see an issue with the steel used, 1066. It will sharpen easily, but the edge retention won’t be great for the price. The exception is the Beta model, made from D2. As a metallurgist, when I compare 1066 steel with 0.65% carbon to something like a carbon Mora made from C100 (almost identical to 1095) with 1% carbon and significantly better edge retention, the BPS knife doesn’t fare well in terms of price-to-edge retention ratio. Essentially, you’re paying an extra $45 for a wooden handle and leather sheath, but not for the steel. For example, the Ganzo G807, which costs around $18, has two to three times better edge retention than the 1066 BPS, and 9cr14mov steel is fairly corrosion-resistant (with 14% chromium helping with edge longevity). Sure, it has a plastic handle, but 9cr14mov is a much superior steel to 1066. If BPS knives were made from 1095/C100, O1, O2, or ideally 80crv2, I wouldn’t complain. But in this case, I don’t think BPS knives are worth the money (with the exception of the Beta model in D2). It’s also important to note that different steels can be processed differently. BUCK’s 420HC proves that even an average steel can perform well with excellent heat treatment. Unfortunately, that’s not the case with BPS. Look up "BPS knife edge retention," and you’ll see that among the tested knives, BPS in 1066 performed the worst, making around 50-60 cuts of sisal rope. Even a carbon Mora costing $7 handles 90-100 cuts. The Ganzo G807, at $18, does 160-170 cuts, and knives made from 9cr18mov or 14c28n reach 250 cuts. BPS makes visually interesting knives, but given the 1066 steel and its average heat treatment, they’re more suited for collectors or occasional users who might cut a stick a few times a year. (And they’ll be surprised how quickly the blade rusts when not in use).
So, BPS knives are like a fancy dinner that leaves you hungry-great presentation, but you’re definitely craving something more substantial!
How much did he pay for the small hatchet?😊
About $9.00.
I had a real close encounter with one. Nothing crazy happened but it got really really close and at that moment I realized, we are not on top of the food chain anymore
Thanks for sharing!
Stop filming stuff like this with a potato.
?
Change what?
Thats an orb, they're either reconnaissance drones or... They're an ultraterrestrial defense force. I'm in colo too. I see them often-ish. They respond to people with psi-influence....they are conscious. Watch missing 411...
I have seen missing 411....very odd....
Good video allows me to share it on my channel I will put the original link
Good video allows me to share it on my channel I will put the original link
Hey, that's cool! Go ahead and share it, I’m glad you liked it! Give me a shout out if you dont mind!
Thank you very much and I really thank you for giving me the opportunity to share this video
Playing a anti war song for some A Hole pretending to be tough.
Nice capture! Can I share your video on my channel? Location?
@@mavi777 yeah that’s fine if you don’t mind just give me credit. I’m in the Rocky Mountains. I don’t wanna be too specific just for my privacy on RUclips. Thanks!
@@mavi777 I have a more detailed video on my channel also.
Reach out to me! I have some videos and pictures you might find interesting
Very interesting. I have been seeing things like this over Texas a lot lately. Wasn’t a big UFO guy, but I am very interested in them now that I keep seeing them. Thanks for sharing. Contact me if you want. Let me know if you keep seeing them. Thanks.
Very very odd! 1000% it’s not a plane. I have more footage but I don’t quite know what to make of it……..or what to do with it.
@@MountainAdventureChannel I have had my RUclips and Facebook pages taken down and my computer wiped for sharing a UFO a long time ago. Can’t tell you who did that, but I can tell you to be careful with the video. Back it up somewhere safe.
@@MountainAdventureChannel get ahold of skin walker ranch guys😂
Well you are anglosaxon, tall with blue eyes... they need you based on missing 411. Where you sore after walking to the bathroom and a little teary? Like you lost something special? Lol
Looks like a UFO to me… did the clouds ever move away or did it just disappear?
@@woodrowsmith5484 No it just shot back up into the clouds and that was it. It didn’t shoot up super fast, but it definitely was not like it was floating up.
@@MountainAdventureChannel wow that’s crazy man! I bet there is definitely someone else that had to have seen it and or maybe filmed it too
@@woodrowsmith5484 I know Iv been asking around to some people I know in the the area! Spend thousands of hours and hundreds of nights up in the mountains and in the backcountry absolutely nothing I take my dog out to drop a deuce and it’s independence Day. 😂
@@MountainAdventureChannel 😂😂! Good luck hope you get some answers
@@woodrowsmith5484Thanks
Context for the video: The reason I do not have any footage of it moving and flying back up into the clouds is I ran back into my garage to get my vortex hunting binoculars to try to get a better look at when I got back, it was floating back up into the clouds before I could get my phone back out of my pocket and get the camera on again.
Just another guy sitting in his basement
@@donbaldwin1777 😂
That thumbnail picture is a very particular picture of Cody 😂😂
@@ChronicAndIronic The wonders of AI 🤣
@@MountainAdventureChannelNo it’s very real, I think you took it yourself
@@ChronicAndIronic 😂 You caught me.
@@MountainAdventureChannel What if instead of instead of the US Forest Service, it was the US Freaky Service 🤑
@@ChronicAndIronicThat’s only in California and days that end in Y
How are the scales an upgrade? They look like an identical shape to the walnut ones.
I get what you mean! They do look pretty similar, but there are some cool upgrades that make them way better. Trust me, you’ll love the difference!
Nice setup! I would love to know what the weight tops out at though.
Last time I used one my ulna broke from the shock force transmitted up the handle from hitting a boulder while chopping brush. But, I'd shattered my elbow 15 years before slipping on ice, so it wasn't really the pollocks fault.
@@Joe_Blo ouch!
Heading to the golf course😂😂😂😂😂
Lol I'm not prepared for shit!, but I'm from a generation that makes it happen no matter what comes at me! Good luck to all you other folks!
Same people are worried that the bad guys are gonna get the guns not realizing there them