48 Hour Pack | ON3 Jason Salyer
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- Опубликовано: 15 сен 2024
- Take a look inside Jason’s 48 hour pack. He discusses each piece of survival gear in detail. Learn what, why and how you can carry everything you need for a 48 hour journey into the wilderness in a small pack.
#48hourpack #48hourbag #survivalkit
Shelter:
Helikon Poncho
SOL bivvy bag
Grand Trunk hammock
Water:
Grayl Water Filter
Stanley Cook Pot
Fire:
Bic Lighter
Wazoo fire plugs
Vaseline and cotton balls
Food:
Jerky
Granola bars
Mountain house meals
Tools / equipment:
Machete
Cordage
Sewing kit
Charging devices
Large cotton cloth
Wool socks
Duct tape
Fallkniven DC4 sharpener
Compass
Packs:
PNW Bushcraft drawstring pack
Hill People Gear Tarahumara pack
#survival #prepping #gear
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In addition to the items that I keep in my pocket and on my person this is what I carry into the woods. What’s missing?
Super cool place and video
We can get by quite well with very little. Being away from civilization for 2 days can seem daunting, but it really goes by so fast.
You have plenty of gear.
Myself, I never carried a tent until I got married. And then only when she comes with.
My boys and I used to have “survival kit campouts” or “survival knife campouts”. Taking only what’s in our pockets and a knife, or a small kit. The two night trips really make you aware of what gear is important and what isn’t. Especially for edc.
I usually have to take some kind of dog food with me though…
I like the cotton cloth idea. I keep old bedsheets as drop cloths. I might pull one out to put in my pack
Baby swaddles work great as well!
I would never head out into the woods with only a pocket knife and my wits. Seems like you cover all the bases in that simple kit. The more you know the less you need. I'm recording some haversack videos and minimal kit stuff right now. It's really cool to see what works and what doesn't. Cool video! 👍
Awesome. Thanks for watching
It’s always interesting to see what other guys carry.
Consider a mosquito head net for stanley storage, filters debris well and well, keeps bugs off your face.
Another great video! I love seeing how you cover just the basics to be comfortable but not to comfortable. I'm glad I'm not the only one who has instant coffee stashed
Gotta have the coffee ☕️ 😋 I keep a few instant cups and a little salt and pepper just in case some needed flavor for unexpected food!!✌️💚✊️🔥
@canadiancraftsman333 the salt and pepper is a great idea.
@PnwBushcraftShop even if unexpected we still can be civilized 🤣👌
Looked like quite a night out for Sam Winchester ridden with ghouls and rain!!! Can’t wait to see the journey on the next one 👊🏻🔥👊🏻
Ready for the brothers reunion. Sam and Dean back in action. 😂 fighting gools and the Occasional ark angel. Sams in the right place for gools. 😂😂
@@elevatorman7750🤣.. You’ll definitely see the brothers back together- you can’t keep ‘em apart for too long 💪🏻
Jason, as always I learn so much “useful info & ideas” from your videos👌 I think what I truly appreciate is you keep things simple (nothing fancy) yet will see you through the situation at hand😊 Your great personality keeps things enjoyable & interesting 👌❤️
I really appreciate that!
nice load out, I don't go anyplace without my wilderness innovations poncho, it can be a hammock, chair, tarp..
Dude, we just evac’d from Maui. Totally cut off from electric, cell coverage, fuel, and dwindling food for 4 days from the fire. After 4 days, we heard that we were also going to lose our water supply. We just swam in the ocean to pass the time (nothing else to do) and lasted as long as we could until we could pick a good time to get out. Thanks God we brought flashlights and a little radio. Don’t ever travel without these. I should have also brought my Grayll too but I didn’t need it (came close though).
Wow! Prayers headed your way.
Looks like you got your bases covered Jason, I love a machete and use mine routinely, I really like your pack, hope they still make that one, thanks
This is a well thought out video!!!!! Only items missing,are a multi -tool,and a swiss army knife.... Otherwise your good to go! 😁❤
Looks about right to me. I carry an SRO haversack in my kit for the same reason as your drawstring bag. I also have a Swagman roll because I've spent too much of my life cold, wet and miserable to not carry it. Most of my kit is pretty similar to yours otherwise. Fits comfortably with some room to spare in a Fjallraven 28L pack. Figure if I needed to actually use it as a get home bag, I'd stop at the nearest gas station and fill it with munchies, cause I avoid being hungry if at all possible.
Well thought out sir 🫡
I have that same bivy bag and have slept in it a couple of times, both with and without extra layers. It’s good! Also have the Stanley pot; it’s my most used cooking item. Must look in to getting a Grayl filter at some point. I would probably go with linen over cotton for my own wee blankie/towel, but linen can be a bit hard to find at times.
See ya on the next one
Maybe add a Shamogh.. One of the best things I've ever used in over 40 years
Looking forward to seeing your video. My son is trying to get me to be more minimal. I just can't seem to get there. That's why Mr. B built me a camper van (him too to travel to see family).
Thanks
The bivvy looks like a nice addition to any pack.
Time for a collaboration video with JJ titled, "Survival Challenge - 3 Item Overnighter."
Very well thought out. I would include some first aid supplies for disinfecting and covering a wound. Yes you have the materials to improvise in your kit but honestly its not ideal to be foraging for yarrow (or other plants)and looking for a clean corner of your cotton cloth while you are leaking all over the place. A couple if bandages, a sealed military cravat and a small tube of neosporin are light weight and packable insurance that are often worth carrying. Sometimes its the difference between finishing the outing and having to cut it short to seek medical attention. Certainly avoiding an infected wound is worth it.
I keep a tourniquet in my pocket. Thanks for the input
@@SurvivalDispatch honestly hope you never need it. Thanks fir the videos.
Love that PNW pack super versatile and multifunctional as always thanks for the great content!!✌️💚✊️🔥
Good kit Jason!
Being very cautious, we feel you have everything required to survive. A good minimalist carry although a light first aid would be good. Definitely a multitool would make situation a bit better. Other than all that you're good to go mate. Reckon JJ will have a similar kit with a couple of extras.! Heads up mate, you both will be on our big screen. Mum & Dad will be watching too but from Christmas Island. Cheers Mr. Salyer.
That’s great. Glad y’all are watching as a family. Multi tool and tourniquet are in my pocket. Infections are for the weak
@@SurvivalDispatch of for the guy with the Columbian made machete. Accidents happen, I’ve had 2…both daughters. lol
@@DJTruth_1970Love it mate.! We've got three...all beatiful girls..!
Thank you for the video.
My minimal set up is similar but I love having my harritage rough rider with me with the 22lr cylinder as a companion to my ccw.
Medical kit, change of socks, small survival tin. Hygiene items. Flare pen/gun wouldn’t hurt either.
I see it all the time, food gets over prioritized. I just cary some sort of cured meat and posibly an eggs. And not neary as hungry as before whey I ate lots of carbs. Still cary some excess stored food on my person :-) but lost 70lbs to day. My filosophy is if one is around the food (stying inside, or in town near grocery's shops) it is convenient to grab some when ever, unneceserrly. But If one is ocupied or out off it, like woods or feld or craft or anything in between, mind goes from the need of it.
First aid kit would be a good add along with ibuprofen.
Ascetic.
I have more and heavier. Old me and already and love comfort)
The machete does not suit me, I use Terava Skrama 240, a very comfortable handle.
A small roll of 20 gauge brass wire weighs very little and gives the chance for time extension. A good slingshot does the same but is dependent on ammunition. They compliment each other very well.
Also, two pair of socks at all times!
Great tips. I love a sling shot
@@SurvivalDispatch about a month ago my wife decided to buy herself one and ordered me one as well, I hadn't even held anything but a wrist rocket before but now I am hooked and disappointed in myself that I totally missed this area of potential food procurement and pest control for so many years.
Like the idea of that waxed canvas gym bag and the bedsheets. Those two are getting added to my ruck. You forgot your Jason mini knife and the ubiquitous multitool
😂😂😂😂
Freeze-dried meals are quick and easy however they lack the fat needed to absorb all the protein and nutrients of the meals, because in storage the fat would go rancid. The fat also makes you feel full for longer and is crucial in colder climes in the Winter months. I realize your only on a short journey in the warm South; but for longer trips when relying on freeze-dried meals I would suggest to take along a small plastic tub of coconut oil or ghee [clarified butter], or even some extra-virgin olive oil to satisfy your nutritional needs more fully. Thank you for your tips and tricks that you share with us, I particularly like the beeswax and linseed oil one you shared for waterproofing a pack.
Very thought out. Thanks for thinking for us ❤
Hi Jason! Great loadout, I am always very astonished how small your gear list for about 48 hours is. In comparison to your gear I carry a ton of extras garbage with me, which I finally do not need. I think a neckknife and a kind of fire steel (besides the one you always carry around your neck) would probably made your day if problems occure. Thank you for sharing and all the best from Austria 🤠👍🏕🔥
Imho you'd get more warmth from that bivy if it was over you like a tube or underquilt instead of laying in it. Your spine would be less cold
Medical kit, change of socks, small survival tin. Flare pen/gun wouldn’t hurt either.
Edc are crazy interesting. My summers can be 30c n winters -30c
I do realize that your Leatherman Wave is your constant companion in your hip pocket or on your belt, but a good Swiss Army knife nestled down in the pack, is a good just in case item, should you lose the Leatherman for any reason. I never leave home without one.
Its a good load out .ID have a small med bottel with different stuff and a bottle of glucose tabs in case it drops ? One or two high calorie bars of somekind also
I always cary a firearm. Usually a snub-nosed 38.
Can't wait for tomorrow
Keep ‘em comin
A multitool could come in handy
Not bad
This was refreshing. I personally get tired of all
the gear wh*re videos that
are so prevalent.
I always have one of those silicone collapsible cups.
I like to have a separate
drinking vessel sans food
residue and cookfire odor
and flavor. IIRC coupla
dollars at wallyworld. A
couple in the glovebox of
the truck, and one in every
kit large enough to hold it
Thanks for the video
Right on!
Meant to comment about the
poncho
The USGI poncho is the best
piece of gear they ever used
For a quick, on the go set-up, not bad at all. Definitely would only consider it for something within ones territory though (less than 10-15 miles from your AO). I'd definitely compliment it with a MinuteMan Bag from @SewJournGear.
0:43 The Samurai training started at a very young age and it included sleeping at cemetaries during childhood in order to learn how to overcome fear.
Great kit
When I set off into the woods, I usually forget my wits. Or at least half of them according to my wife, but that's another story.
Great video brother. A pocket knife and wit's is rough. And it's never enjoyable. If I can do it once I'm good. I don't need to do it everytime. I lean more toward having gear to be comfortable.
T-P? I know the machete can dig a hole for #2 but why not take some T-P. Did I miss that? Either way, thanks for sharing. Take care!
Great video!
Sleep in the cemetery
The dead won’t harm you, it’s the living who are the problem 🇬🇧
Wow with all that gear I would cosider that glamping. Okay just kidding.😁
I didn't see any toilet paper, I carry a guesstimated amount for 2 days in ziplock bags
Unless you're in Canada, which I know you're not you need 5 gallons of gasoline, a small generator, and an air conditioner; it's HOT outside
You forgot the ice for the margaritas…now that’s roughing it.
Im a pack rat so id bring cordage, pills, first aid kit and maybe a multi use entrenching tool--- I really like the “scout bag” tho.
Hello there let me ask about why u put de paracord on the machete?
Does the bivy bag cut down on the draft in the hammock?
I'm sure a lot of us could survive with a pocket knife and our wits for 2 - 3 days but why? It wouldn't be as comfortable or as fun unless it was a get to know your limits type experience
I lived in a cemetery…
Super quiet neighbors....most of the time 👻
@@pennsyltuckyreb9800 this was in NYC in the 80s.
Really? Why?
I died in a cemetery.
2 days is nothing, you can go with very little, if no gear and survive. It would actually fly buy because you would be busy making everything you need!
Great kit! I would just want more food, water and I prefer a more robust 1st Aid setup. Also iodine. Cleans water and wounds. Tastes like crap.
First aide kids you’re missing other then that your okay
Do you have a video on safe mushrooms to eat? See you and other picking mushrooms in videos.
No. I only know of a few that I can positively identify and find regularly. I’m not an expert in that area
Bug dope?
Nice pack, but you need a “survival” knife, aka, a fixed blade full tang with a six inch cutting edge and (for me) one quarter inches thick of steel on the blade - needs to be virtually indestructible.
Ya never know!
I keep a small fixed blade on my hip and carry a machete. Tough combo to beat! Thanks for watching!
@@SurvivalDispatch Good man!
I know you love to go as lite as possible, but something like the On 3 oh sh#t kit could create redundancy for many of the items you presented without nearly adding any weight.
Where’s your work gloves safety glasses, folding saw…
Nice setup...what kind of grind do you use on machete?
It started out a scandi. Now it is pretty much convex.
no first aid, fixed blade, I would need a little more food bit I am a big guy with diabetes.
Jason, isn't it pronounced Gavi lan? not galivan, attest thats how its spelled. Not that it matters just say..
Don't make it a change of address. Still got things to say and do.
A machete is the most useless thing you could carry. A chopping tool is not necessary in a modern kit at all, a folding saw and a fixed blade knife are completely sufficient. But as far as chopping tools go a hatchet or tomahawk is vastly more useful. A hatchet can be much lighter because it barely needs any sheath to speak of. The Cold Steel Trail Hawk and Gransfors Outdoor Axe for example weigh 20 ounces WITH their sheaths and can still easily fell a 12" thick tree or lay down a winter night's firewood in no time. A hatchet is a much more effective chopping tool, and can also handle light brush just fine when used with two hands for speed and control. A hatchet is much shorter and easily fits any backpack. A hatchet is effectively indestructible because only the handle can break, and a new one can be made in the field.
Hatchets are stupidly easy to sharpen. A hatchet can hammer very effectively, more than a rock or anything you'll find laying around, and be used in conjunction with a prybar for breaching/escape techniques and other urban survival applications and improvisation. A hatchet can be used for hooking and as a climbing aid. A machete is just wobbly piece of sheet steel that is good for nothing but harvesting cash crops. People in South America and Africa like machetes because they're widely available and cheap there due to the populations being mostly employed in agriculture. A hatchet is superior in every way from a survival perspective. Neither one belongs in a minimalist loadout. 7" saw and 7" combat/survival knife are the only cutting tools I'm carrying. Machetes are only for fun, cutting new growth in the backyard and pretending you're in Lord of the Rings, nothing more.
Your missing an ifak. At least have a tourniquet.
Tourniquet is in my right cargo pocket. Huge big cotton cloth works great for bandages. Those two things will take care of 99% of the problems I might encounter and have the capability of dealing with.
Refuge Medical has an awesome IFAK. Goes on belt, chest rig or pack. I have several