As for moving the winch, you can get trays that hold a winch and go into a 2inch receiver. If you install a 2inch receiver front and rear you could carry the winch inside and install it only if needed
Hey Mike, we will come to Sweden this christmas with our jeep Cherokee 2001 we are preperating it for weeks now and almost ready😎 Our plan is to go to Thorsby
once again the humour is as low as the temperature. exactly how I like it. that definitely looks like a bit of stokes croft syphilis ,and I should know
Again and again and again, You found your voice, you're in a segment of 1 , .... You got a niche! And boy ! what a niche it is, Your format is definitely amazing, the pertinent info, the build videos with litterally no tools , no garage or shop, the skills , the thought process , the english humor that reminds me Top Gear, ... Yeah I'm putting you up there . To me , I rarely see that much packed in only one person... Dont change anything , your're perfect at the top of your art. Cheers
That's very kind, thank you! I certainly don't consider myself up there, but it's nice to get such positive feedback! I really appreciate it 🙏 I must admit I do enjoy making content so perhaps it shows 😆 thanks again
As I wrote, don't change anything, I am myself a 4x4 modifying , wild camping, hunting fishing kind-of-person , and I drive a jeep, I did work layed down on back in the snow and mud under my 4x4 many times , I been there, and I follow a lot of channels on the tube , yours is on my top-5 , so ... Yeah I put you up there ,
I appreciate that evrything what you're showing us has quality, like all your hunting stuff in earlier times now with your incredible nice selfmade car.
Always appreciate the coverage elements with humor. About eighteen years ago I "started out" with a '89 Grand Wagoneer which I threw a mattress in the back for a trip, then onto a '97 ZJ I kept with the concept of sleeping in the back, finally this May I got my '87 XJ that has 6" total foam in the back with a mosquito net that can go over the vehicle front windows or the back while open. Currently using dry bags which I always have prepared to throw in the back, if they are not already in. I also keep a couple cases that have seals, one to keep a micro stove as well as a secondary multi-fuel type (AGP/BRS) with a few other non-perishables. Second unit has dehydrated and couple canned items. The sleeping gear is heavy winter bags on top while summer blanket gets swapped to sleep on top of during winter. Common basic XJ tools, 10/12/13mm and multi-tool (Leatherman). Several thermal flasks for water, always onboard filled. Most of the gear has a bag now and is "modular" making "load out" variable for the type of outing, with commons remaining as many probably do. I need a new "med/1st aid kit". Always more wools socks than I actually may need. I hadn't done my kit coverage content yet as I'm still going over my rig dong service and quality of life improvements (sound dampening to reduce travel/noise fatigue). Takes time to provide/edit content, as I should take more time with my open source tools to get better. Once again, thank you for the coverage.
I'm a former military special forces, in my late 30's now. I enjoy sleeping in my bed, warm and cosy. Again, great video. Love Your humor and straight forward attitude. I think You are one step away from buying an F250 Econoline to have a proper camp away vehicle. Cheers buddy!
Brilliant video mate enjoy watching all the work you do on that jeep👍 the outtakes were Brilliant had me in hysterics after a shit day thank you. Outback legend 🙌
Good setup 👌 just love that channel video, gets me pumped up! I mean this channel video, not your only fans channel, I didn't really care for that one...
A different but really great video Mike. With your real world advice! Gotta have good basic kit. What you wear. What you sleep on and what you sleep in. A small thing I do regardless of what weather or what I’m sleeping in. Tent/jeep etc. I don’t let the self inflating mattress inflate till just before I want to use it. Especially lightweight thermorest kind I blow up with my lungs. As the air is still warm from me. I also don’t unpack my sleeping bag until right before I want to use it. As not inflated it’s not full of as much cold air. Then when I do unpack it and I’m just about to get into it. I fluff the sleeping bag up as much as possible to get as much air volume inside it. This also makes me warm doing this by shaking it vigorously. But I’m sure I look like I’m having a fight with it lol. But with your setup Mike inside. With the diesel heater running. It would not make much of a difference I’m sure. And then only sleep in my boxers and my hat. ( just the way Bigfoot prefers if I’m honest). Let my body heat up the air between the fibres inside the sleeping bag. And my thermal base layers go inside the sleeping bag with me. As they are then warm to put on in the morning. Love the content Mike. Hopefully the front locker will perform better now with different oil in it.
I can’t wait to watch your video tonight on tv. My hubby & I always look forward to your videos. I had a shit day- was in a car accident. Your humor is just what’s needed. Thanks for your time & efforts.
Ah shit that is a bad day! Hopefully, you're alright, and the damage wasn't bad? Hopefully you can relax this evening and recharge. Thanks for watching and greetings to the hubby.
I'm glad the video can help out! Exciting that your XJ is almost ready! It's all a very enjoyable process I find that never ends 😆 Thanks for watching!
Canned foods can be heated inside the can itself, no cleaning needed after eating. Also in the sleeping bag it might be good idea to take all your clothes off, they trap moisture from sweat and your clothes can become "wet" by morning. Keep them in the bag but take them off.
Very good kit especially having a walk out kit with snowshoes! One correction: ditch the lightweight shovel and get a real steel and wood d-handle drain spade. Compact snow when you're high centered on it can feel like you're digging sandstone! I'd break that shovel real quick. And a question, do those off brand traction boards actually work (cause they look like they don't)? Chains - carry them but know that they will dig deeper into the snow, and often work against you when you need to float on deep snow, for me they're a recovery item.
Thanks for watching. The shovel is one of my favourites personally. I have a long steel wooden one, and it's not as practical for me. It would have to be a deliberat act to break that aliminium shovel as it's extremely strong and not cheaply made. I drive snow most of the time, and it's been used countless times. Traction boards are cheap, and I don't like them, but it's better to have something than nothing in this case. I will probably end up braking them this year in the very cold temperatures due to the material. I do like chains, but like you say, they dig, so no good when you want to float. The snow always keeps me on my toes! Thanks for watching and the information
@WorkshoptoWilderness the long spade is not suitable for recovery that's true, the blade angle is wrong and it doesn't work in tight spaces. The drain spade is a short heavy duty shovel with a long narrow blade, suitable for tight spaces where you would hit rocks, and great for chipping ice. When it comes to just snow the MSR would be much better, I'd carry both if I had both.
Hahaha omg the bloopers! Meanwhile I'm here in the remote Australian outback, 40 degrees and rain, pretty much none of this wisdom applies but I'd happily watch it anyway :)
What about some sort of way to use a pulley or two, to move the line from the winch down and under the rear of the truck? Rather than be able to move the entire winch, able to reroute the line?
Hello, Mike. Great video. Really good info for camping in super cold temperatures. I've been looking into a diesel heater system for my Jeep Wrangler. Might be the next upgrade 🤔 I'm planning a trip up to the Arctic Circle from Germany to see the northern lights. Planning to go through either Norway or Sweden. Could you recommend any wild campsites in Sweden? Preferably "off the grid" as my Jeep is pretty well outfitted for it. Thanks!
Are you sure you don't need a snowmobile and a gear sled for these conditions? You could go farther and explore so much more with way less effort and risk of getting stuck. Altho it won't be quite as comfortable. My father used to own two of them back when the winters were still real winters, down here in Dalarna. It was always super fun to drive around, explore, stop at the various shelters you find out there and get a fire going, have a few hotdogs and so on.
@WorkshoptoWilderness Mike would there be enough of the compressed atoms from the shovel to inflate an adjustable butt plug up to a decent size ? Or would I need to buy multiple shovel extensions to achieve sufficient girth ? On a second point I see you recommend the thermal under suit from a drysuit as a good addition to a sleep system . You neglected to mention if these have the rear access flap or not ? Thanks for all the useful tips , especially the butt plug one . Fattrucker
I don't see why not. It's just diesel with a dye it from memory. I haven't Googled it, but perhaps there are others who have tried it? Thanks for watching
Well in all of my years, I never knew about greasing your valve caps, greasing one's nipples, yes, greasing one's tow ball yes, but this is a first. Any old grease will do - would a smear of Bigfoot Vaseline do the job I wonder. In the Army we used to use some metal runners' known as PSP's (Pierced Steel Planks) basically a lengths of pressed metal sheets with holes in them. I didn't know you could get what you have, I have a couple of much shorter orange thingy's that I found in a cash & carry, but not had to use them yet.
Speaking of skills and basic kit. A 22 year old man died of hypothermia just the other day when out camping 15km from his car in Norrbotten. He was out on a hike and was attempting to film a RUclips video, but a snow storm rolled in and the temps dropped drastically. He supposedly did not have a true 4-season tent and people speculate that the tent eventually failed, which may have been the reason why he left it and attempted to hike out on foot in the storm. He was found frozen to death not far from it, sleeping back packed up and everything. It's tragic and it really shows you the importance of basic skills, prep and carrying the right equipment for the job. Your comment on people using diesel heaters as a substitute for a real winter sleeping bag comes to mind here. The basic kit *needs* to be able to deal with the conditions on its own. In this case, the kit was inadequate. Also, he learned from RUclips videos. I'm happy to see you provide some very sensible and thoroughly researched information in your videos, because someday someone might check this video and use it as a basis for their own winter prep. So you want the info to be trustworthy.
I still use gopros. It's a pretty old school setup as I use a hero 8 black still with a Rode video mic pro. I have a couple of gopro 6 blacks as action cameras for under the jeep, etc, and the dji mini 3 pro for the drone work. It's not the most advanced setup, but it's very practical, point and shoot, light, and small. I find it doesn't take away from the actual experience for me because I'm not having to focus in a camera or think too much about shots. I wouldn't mind an updated gopro though. Thanks for watching
@@WorkshoptoWilderness That's what I like about it, pratical! How do you edit those video's that they don't look warped (fish eyeyy)? Would love to hear your thoughts on editing.
I think its more how you use the gorpo. You want them on Pro Tune Mode, no sharpening, flat color and a linear lens setting. You can then adjust the color and add sharpening in Post. I use Adobe Premier Pro and I use Sharpening +30, RGB and Fast Colour Correct to make the gorpo image look better. If you want to use a gorpo a hero 10 would be good. You have better bitrates lens options and settings. If you need help with it all you can email me at info@mcqbushcrft.co.uk and I will share all the settings and stuff. Its the same with the DJI also, I generally don't let the camera do any processing. Its better to do it all in Premier. Like I said though my stuff isnt like cinema high production stuff that's become normal in YT these days. I try and keep the standard at a certain level without letting the camera gear take away from my experience.
Not only does Bigfoot have big feet Mike ! Be careful out there because when there's lots of snow around Bigfoots cousin comes out to play. Apparently his cousin like to blow up male cows as he got the nickname "The A bomb in a Bull Snowman".
Lol. Hopefully, climate change has pushed his cousin further north. Honestly, I wish we had more snow. Hopefully, you are well, Sandy, and the family. Are you all together for Christmas?
@@WorkshoptoWilderness Yes Mike, All well here. Just me and Mandy here over Christmas I think, no doubt Anne and Chris will pop in at some point. I have outline plans to visit Nordkapp next year probably around June. I'm travelling by motorbike. Just have to get over the nerves and stress of booking and planning and travelling in foreign lands! What do you reckon to climate change, do you think its an actual phenomenon (like the Bigfoot : ) ) and if so is it manmade or just natural cycles? I'm open minded on it. So clever people seem to think it's not a thing and other think it is ???
I'm using RuffStuff one ton steering. They make an RHD version. It's a nice setup, and it can be adjusted for OTK and high steer later if needed. Thanks for watching
Revolution Race make them. I would give them a 7 out of 10. They could be more flexible, but for the price and materials, they are robust. Thanks for watching
I just looked it up. I had no idea. That's really sad. He was very young for such a thing. He was starting a youtube channel about outdoors. It looks like he was caught in a blizzard, injured. Poor guy. Thanks for watching
@WorkshoptoWilderness I've watched you for years. I especially loved the early stuff of bush craft skills in the UK. Would love to see more of that sort of stuff, but I love the channel all the same.
As for moving the winch, you can get trays that hold a winch and go into a 2inch receiver. If you install a 2inch receiver front and rear you could carry the winch inside and install it only if needed
I've seen those, and I like that idea. I've welded a receiver at the back, and it's easy to do one up front. Thanks for watching and the info.
Wow....all the gear and preparation that goes into getting pummeled by Bigfoot in the woods...:)
Pretty sure that is the whole purpose for Mike's Jeep XJ OCD buildout. 😜😜😘
It's the driving force behind everything...
Thanks for watching
Him having this big foot kink is quite a big flex... not sure what I meant by that, but probably just that.
Hey Mike, we will come to Sweden this christmas with our jeep Cherokee 2001 we are preperating it for weeks now and almost ready😎
Our plan is to go to Thorsby
once again the humour is as low as the temperature. exactly how I like it. that definitely looks like a bit of stokes croft syphilis ,and I should know
2:40, I absolutely lost it for a minute!!
That one almost didn't make the edit, but the energy in that statement couldn't be ignored. Thanks for watching
The outtakes portion was my favorite 😂
I will include them in future videos, I think. There are so many I wish I had kept them from earlier videos. Thanks for watching
Hello from York, Pennsylvania United States! Love the channel!
Again and again and again,
You found your voice, you're in a segment of 1 , .... You got a niche! And boy ! what a niche it is,
Your format is definitely amazing, the pertinent info, the build videos with litterally no tools , no garage or shop, the skills , the thought process , the english humor that reminds me Top Gear, ... Yeah I'm putting you up there .
To me , I rarely see that much packed in only one person...
Dont change anything , your're perfect at the top of your art.
Cheers
That's very kind, thank you! I certainly don't consider myself up there, but it's nice to get such positive feedback! I really appreciate it 🙏 I must admit I do enjoy making content so perhaps it shows 😆 thanks again
As I wrote, don't change anything, I am myself a 4x4 modifying , wild camping, hunting fishing kind-of-person , and I drive a jeep, I did work layed down on back in the snow and mud under my 4x4 many times , I been there,
and I follow a lot of channels on the tube , yours is on my top-5 , so ... Yeah I put you up there ,
Love it, i want to go winter camping and need the oomf to get going :D
This has been a great adventure watching you grow MCQ. Always a pleasure to watch. 🍻
Nice one Mike.
The bloopers and end credits reel are good!👍🏻
Thanks for watching
I appreciate that evrything what you're showing us has quality, like all your hunting stuff in earlier times now with your incredible nice selfmade car.
Maybe a few pool nudels could be used to insulate the gap for the roof tent?
That's a good idea 💡
Thanks for watching
Tons of really good info in this one, thanks for all the advice…really helpful coming from someone that actually knows what they are talking about..:)
lots of great advice and, as always, a well-informed video. take care and remember to be safe out there. coming to you from Vancouver bc Canada.
Always appreciate the coverage elements with humor. About eighteen years ago I "started out" with a '89 Grand Wagoneer which I threw a mattress in the back for a trip, then onto a '97 ZJ I kept with the concept of sleeping in the back, finally this May I got my '87 XJ that has 6" total foam in the back with a mosquito net that can go over the vehicle front windows or the back while open. Currently using dry bags which I always have prepared to throw in the back, if they are not already in. I also keep a couple cases that have seals, one to keep a micro stove as well as a secondary multi-fuel type (AGP/BRS) with a few other non-perishables. Second unit has dehydrated and couple canned items. The sleeping gear is heavy winter bags on top while summer blanket gets swapped to sleep on top of during winter. Common basic XJ tools, 10/12/13mm and multi-tool (Leatherman). Several thermal flasks for water, always onboard filled. Most of the gear has a bag now and is "modular" making "load out" variable for the type of outing, with commons remaining as many probably do. I need a new "med/1st aid kit". Always more wools socks than I actually may need. I hadn't done my kit coverage content yet as I'm still going over my rig dong service and quality of life improvements (sound dampening to reduce travel/noise fatigue). Takes time to provide/edit content, as I should take more time with my open source tools to get better. Once again, thank you for the coverage.
The perfect blend of informative and comedy content. Gold. I always pick up a solid bit of advice from your videos. Cheers Mike!
Ah, finally Winter! Looking forward to more Winter-Camping Content.
Wish you and your family the best.
Greetings from Germany.
I'm a former military special forces, in my late 30's now. I enjoy sleeping in my bed, warm and cosy. Again, great video. Love Your humor and straight forward attitude. I think You are one step away from buying an F250 Econoline to have a proper camp away vehicle. Cheers buddy!
Not an expert? I disagree you are most definitely an expert in my opinion. You have a unique set of skills, give yourself some credit! 😊😊
I appreciate that 🙏 I try my best. Thanks for watching
He said that because some people get so into snow wheeling, they basically do it in a lab coat with a clipboard. Like some of the folks at 4WDABC.
0:30 - Mike is dropping knowledge like a boss.
Brilliant video mate enjoy watching all the work you do on that jeep👍 the outtakes were Brilliant had me in hysterics after a shit day thank you. Outback legend 🙌
Good setup 👌 just love that channel video, gets me pumped up!
I mean this channel video, not your only fans channel, I didn't really care for that one...
Haha 😄 thanks for watching!
A different but really great video Mike. With your real world advice! Gotta have good basic kit. What you wear. What you sleep on and what you sleep in. A small thing I do regardless of what weather or what I’m sleeping in. Tent/jeep etc. I don’t let the self inflating mattress inflate till just before I want to use it. Especially lightweight thermorest kind I blow up with my lungs. As the air is still warm from me. I also don’t unpack my sleeping bag until right before I want to use it. As not inflated it’s not full of as much cold air. Then when I do unpack it and I’m just about to get into it. I fluff the sleeping bag up as much as possible to get as much air volume inside it. This also makes me warm doing this by shaking it vigorously. But I’m sure I look like I’m having a fight with it lol. But with your setup Mike inside. With the diesel heater running. It would not make much of a difference I’m sure.
And then only sleep in my boxers and my hat. ( just the way Bigfoot prefers if I’m honest). Let my body heat up the air between the fibres inside the sleeping bag. And my thermal base layers go inside the sleeping bag with me. As they are then warm to put on in the morning. Love the content Mike. Hopefully the front locker will perform better now with different oil in it.
I can’t wait to watch your video tonight on tv. My hubby & I always look forward to your videos. I had a shit day- was in a car accident. Your humor is just what’s needed. Thanks for your time & efforts.
Ah shit that is a bad day! Hopefully, you're alright, and the damage wasn't bad? Hopefully you can relax this evening and recharge. Thanks for watching and greetings to the hubby.
Thank you for this video! My xj is almost done and plan to take it out to start my camping ventures. Your insight is so valuable!
I'm glad the video can help out! Exciting that your XJ is almost ready! It's all a very enjoyable process I find that never ends 😆
Thanks for watching!
Great info especially re the sleeping bag and the range they cover 👍
Canned foods can be heated inside the can itself, no cleaning needed after eating. Also in the sleeping bag it might be good idea to take all your clothes off, they trap moisture from sweat and your clothes can become "wet" by morning. Keep them in the bag but take them off.
More good tips 👌
Thanks for watching
@@WorkshoptoWilderness Can you toss me that MRE...
Accordion 😀 I think you are hilarious! Thanks for the Friday night chuckle.
Good advice-
Thanks for watching
Wonderful video! Reminds alot of your vibe from England!
You might also have found a bit of cheek in the snow. Love it! Cheers bruv!
Thanks mate.
Thanks for watching
Very funney with the blooper’s in the end 👍
Excellent video! Abraço do Brasil.
Very good kit especially having a walk out kit with snowshoes! One correction: ditch the lightweight shovel and get a real steel and wood d-handle drain spade. Compact snow when you're high centered on it can feel like you're digging sandstone! I'd break that shovel real quick. And a question, do those off brand traction boards actually work (cause they look like they don't)? Chains - carry them but know that they will dig deeper into the snow, and often work against you when you need to float on deep snow, for me they're a recovery item.
Thanks for watching. The shovel is one of my favourites personally. I have a long steel wooden one, and it's not as practical for me. It would have to be a deliberat act to break that aliminium shovel as it's extremely strong and not cheaply made. I drive snow most of the time, and it's been used countless times.
Traction boards are cheap, and I don't like them, but it's better to have something than nothing in this case. I will probably end up braking them this year in the very cold temperatures due to the material.
I do like chains, but like you say, they dig, so no good when you want to float. The snow always keeps me on my toes! Thanks for watching and the information
@WorkshoptoWilderness the long spade is not suitable for recovery that's true, the blade angle is wrong and it doesn't work in tight spaces. The drain spade is a short heavy duty shovel with a long narrow blade, suitable for tight spaces where you would hit rocks, and great for chipping ice. When it comes to just snow the MSR would be much better, I'd carry both if I had both.
Carrying both is sound advice. I need to make some kind of mount on my rack for various things, including the shovel. Thanks again
Hahaha omg the bloopers!
Meanwhile I'm here in the remote Australian outback, 40 degrees and rain, pretty much none of this wisdom applies but I'd happily watch it anyway :)
Great video
So many great tips
Some excellent tips
Thanks for watching.
great vid proper chuckle
Thanks for watching
I just picked up a dong cheng battery chain saw for my jeep kit because some times i find trees in the road on my way to work
What's it like? China model? I'm considering one at the moment. Thanks for watching
@@WorkshoptoWilderness yes the cheepiest 16" one on amazon and it works great fyi they all are made in China or Tiwan
Nice, I will take a look and see what I can find.
Mike, thank you for the laughs!
You're welcome Mike 👍
Thanks for watching
Always love your information, delivered with verve
What about some sort of way to use a pulley or two, to move the line from the winch down and under the rear of the truck? Rather than be able to move the entire winch, able to reroute the line?
Keep the videos coming!
Great video mike!!! Thanks for your hard work and thanks for sharing!!!!!
Next level innuendo... Even for you 😅😅
Hello, Mike. Great video. Really good info for camping in super cold temperatures. I've been looking into a diesel heater system for my Jeep Wrangler. Might be the next upgrade 🤔
I'm planning a trip up to the Arctic Circle from Germany to see the northern lights. Planning to go through either Norway or Sweden. Could you recommend any wild campsites in Sweden? Preferably "off the grid" as my Jeep is pretty well outfitted for it. Thanks!
Brilliant mate 😂👍🏻🏴
Don’t mind me I’m just here for the outtakes
Haha thanks for watching
😅😅 Good video this one 😅😅 Had me laughing several times 🤣👍
Another fab video
Lots of good info!
Are you sure you don't need a snowmobile and a gear sled for these conditions? You could go farther and explore so much more with way less effort and risk of getting stuck. Altho it won't be quite as comfortable. My father used to own two of them back when the winters were still real winters, down here in Dalarna. It was always super fun to drive around, explore, stop at the various shelters you find out there and get a fire going, have a few hotdogs and so on.
Awesome channel. What kind of diesel are you running. And are you happy with it?
10:03 whats that mat? looks decent!
Its an accordion mate.
Ah that's it! Thank you
Micheal?? What are the sway bar disconnects you are using?
Thank you, Bob
16:30 Outtakes & Bloopers 🍺😄
Haha thanks for watching
@WorkshoptoWilderness Mike would there be enough of the compressed atoms from the shovel to inflate an adjustable butt plug up to a decent size ?
Or would I need to buy multiple shovel extensions to achieve sufficient girth ?
On a second point I see you recommend the thermal under suit from a drysuit as a good addition to a sleep system .
You neglected to mention if these have the rear access flap or not ?
Thanks for all the useful tips , especially the butt plug one .
Fattrucker
Can you use #2 fuel oil in the diesel heater.
I don't see why not. It's just diesel with a dye it from memory. I haven't Googled it, but perhaps there are others who have tried it?
Thanks for watching
Well in all of my years, I never knew about greasing your valve caps, greasing one's nipples, yes, greasing one's tow ball yes, but this is a first. Any old grease will do - would a smear of Bigfoot Vaseline do the job I wonder. In the Army we used to use some metal runners' known as PSP's (Pierced Steel Planks) basically a lengths of pressed metal sheets with holes in them. I didn't know you could get what you have, I have a couple of much shorter orange thingy's that I found in a cash & carry, but not had to use them yet.
Does floor insulation help with keeping the warm inside the car longer when sleeping? Got an XJ 1997 too.
Speaking of skills and basic kit. A 22 year old man died of hypothermia just the other day when out camping 15km from his car in Norrbotten. He was out on a hike and was attempting to film a RUclips video, but a snow storm rolled in and the temps dropped drastically. He supposedly did not have a true 4-season tent and people speculate that the tent eventually failed, which may have been the reason why he left it and attempted to hike out on foot in the storm. He was found frozen to death not far from it, sleeping back packed up and everything.
It's tragic and it really shows you the importance of basic skills, prep and carrying the right equipment for the job. Your comment on people using diesel heaters as a substitute for a real winter sleeping bag comes to mind here. The basic kit *needs* to be able to deal with the conditions on its own. In this case, the kit was inadequate. Also, he learned from RUclips videos. I'm happy to see you provide some very sensible and thoroughly researched information in your videos, because someday someone might check this video and use it as a basis for their own winter prep. So you want the info to be trustworthy.
"it's not syphilis" 😂 Meg'll be relieved. Bigfoot's not about to get tested or bag it, I guess you just have to commit to the risk
You just have to hold your breath and play dead. With Meg, I mean... thanks for watching!
Cool video, are you still using only gopros to film your video's?
I still use gopros. It's a pretty old school setup as I use a hero 8 black still with a Rode video mic pro. I have a couple of gopro 6 blacks as action cameras for under the jeep, etc, and the dji mini 3 pro for the drone work.
It's not the most advanced setup, but it's very practical, point and shoot, light, and small. I find it doesn't take away from the actual experience for me because I'm not having to focus in a camera or think too much about shots.
I wouldn't mind an updated gopro though.
Thanks for watching
@@WorkshoptoWilderness That's what I like about it, pratical! How do you edit those video's that they don't look warped (fish eyeyy)? Would love to hear your thoughts on editing.
I think its more how you use the gorpo. You want them on Pro Tune Mode, no sharpening, flat color and a linear lens setting. You can then adjust the color and add sharpening in Post. I use Adobe Premier Pro and I use Sharpening +30, RGB and Fast Colour Correct to make the gorpo image look better.
If you want to use a gorpo a hero 10 would be good. You have better bitrates lens options and settings. If you need help with it all you can email me at info@mcqbushcrft.co.uk and I will share all the settings and stuff.
Its the same with the DJI also, I generally don't let the camera do any processing. Its better to do it all in Premier. Like I said though my stuff isnt like cinema high production stuff that's become normal in YT these days. I try and keep the standard at a certain level without letting the camera gear take away from my experience.
Does the blow up doll get brittle in the cold?
Could you recommend a sleeping bag for dogging at -30 ?
Normally, you generate so much heat that you want a bag a season below..... so a friend told me anyway.
@@WorkshoptoWilderness thanks
Not only does Bigfoot have big feet Mike ! Be careful out there because when there's lots of snow around Bigfoots cousin comes out to play. Apparently his cousin like to blow up male cows as he got the nickname "The A bomb in a Bull Snowman".
Lol. Hopefully, climate change has pushed his cousin further north. Honestly, I wish we had more snow. Hopefully, you are well, Sandy, and the family. Are you all together for Christmas?
@@WorkshoptoWilderness Yes Mike, All well here. Just me and Mandy here over Christmas I think, no doubt Anne and Chris will pop in at some point.
I have outline plans to visit Nordkapp next year probably around June. I'm travelling by motorbike. Just have to get over the nerves and stress of booking and planning and travelling in foreign lands!
What do you reckon to climate change, do you think its an actual phenomenon (like the Bigfoot : ) ) and if so is it manmade or just natural cycles? I'm open minded on it. So clever people seem to think it's not a thing and other think it is ???
What steering arms do you run ? finding it a nightmare to find HD for RHD
I'm using RuffStuff one ton steering. They make an RHD version. It's a nice setup, and it can be adjusted for OTK and high steer later if needed. Thanks for watching
Innuendos. What innuendos! 🤷🏻♂️😆😂
I had to replay that part. 0:38 ……did I hear him correctly? 😂😂😂😂
Unfortunately 😄 thanks for watching
Murdica Medica How do you spell that flat cooking pan that you use. It's the only time I haven't been able to find something on the internet 0.o
Muurikka griddle pan
@@allieb1621 Thank you 👍
Hej! 🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻
Hey! tack för att du tittade!
What is dogging life scene?
I’m surprised you don’t carry a sleeping bag big enough for both you and Bigfoot
Who is the maker of your pants?
Revolution Race make them. I would give them a 7 out of 10. They could be more flexible, but for the price and materials, they are robust.
Thanks for watching
Do you talk with Mat Armstrong?? Via FaceTime???
I have no idea who that is?
a 22 year old man just froze to death in sweeden. he went on a hike and was caught in a snow storm. it was in the news today.
I just looked it up. I had no idea. That's really sad. He was very young for such a thing. He was starting a youtube channel about outdoors. It looks like he was caught in a blizzard, injured. Poor guy.
Thanks for watching
You're hilarious
How’s your mental health ?
First comment. Do I win something 😅
A night with Bigfoot...😘
@mtate02 I'm sure this channel is getting more comedic by the day. 😀
You get a big thank you from me. I appreciate you tuning in and enduring it all. Thansj for watching
@WorkshoptoWilderness I've watched you for years. I especially loved the early stuff of bush craft skills in the UK. Would love to see more of that sort of stuff, but I love the channel all the same.
Are you bored? 😂
Unfortunately not, life is too busy right now. Christmas soon, though! Thanks for watching