the best part is that you not only show 'oh, look i have this and that' but you also display things at work which provides audience with a much better understanding
I like finding Nalgene bottles (in good condition) at thrift stores and repurposing them for camping. First aid kits, dry or wet food storage, survival emergency packs, condiments, maple syrup, milk, etc. they’re really a great product.
Excellent kit, but you need to have a proper signaling kit built in there (proper signal mirror, signal panel, whistle) and a sterilized bandana (you can dump the bandage and add all the things I'm telling you and it will fit) you can change the mylar blanket for a one who has orange in one side. And add a Steel who fits below the bottle and a couple of Bouillon cubes (some fats and electrolytes) and instant coffee powder, they're very small and excellent morale boosters. Excellent kit above all! Keep the good work! Greetings from Venezuela!
I like all of the items you chose for this kit, my biggest qualm though is that you put the good knife, the matches, and the toilet paper all the way at the bottom
@@FittoSurvive you have a good design n idea..it can be customized for each person , utilizing the basics that you have set down... I particularly like the compact design, as a bowhunter.. it will work for me, with some adjustments for my particular needs! Thanks for the help!
Some thoughts to this already excellent kit: 1. I’d include a signal mirror and a whistle (e.g. acme slim or fox 40 micro). 2. Add some instant drink powder (coffee, electrolytes, bouillon cubes) 3. What about a mini-bic and reducing the amount of matches? Larger variety, more redundant and the bic will last longer. 4. Tie a short hank of Paracord below the little lip on the bottleneck and clip your carabiner there. The plastic might tear if the bottle get tangled up and then the lid could get lost or even the whole bottle. Also I wrapped some additional duct tape and some para-cord around the outside of the bottle to have it at hand. If you decide to do so, think about swapping the Paracord inside the bottle against dyneema rope. Almost as durable, but you’ll be able to carry more rope with the same bulk. 5. Might consider also a small sheet of heavy duty aluminum foil to be able to make an improvised container foor boiling water or food in it (or even be able to char some cloth). 6. A small canvas needle could be included as well. 7. I’d consider to swap one esbit against a small candle / tealight 8. Maybe some ibuprofen, Imodium and caffeine Tablets in a small pillbox. Just some quick ideas I came across watching your vid.
Hey! Thank you for the advice! Really some excellent tips. I already plans to make a Water Bottle Survival Kit version 2.0. I will be making it with the advice and tips of many of the people who commented. I think it is going to be much better than the first one.
@@FittoSurvive I'd add a small piece of a glue stick (for glue guns). You can melt it and use it various ways. Glue sticks aren't really made of glue, they are made of plastic but they act like glue.
I’ve been making those for years and the simplest thing is just to carry a 1 gallon Ziploc bag so you can dump the contents in the Ziploc bag dump it in your ruck while you use the bottle to collect water If you use one of the single wall stainless steel bottles available, you now have the ability to boil the water in the same container, doubling it effectiveness
Thank you for an excellent video -- really like that you demonstrated items. Simple suggestion -- line the bottle with a large ziplock bag so you can i) keep the interior of the bottle clean, ii) retrieve things easier, and iii) store small items in the ziplock bag once they are removed. The bag itself can be used to carry stuff, including water. Looking forward to your upcoming Version 2! Thanks again.
You are welcome! I am glad that you enjoyed the video! Lining the bottle with a zip lock is brilliant! I am definitely going to do that in the second version.
I have a similar kit, utilising a steel, single walled ( that was the hardest part to find) bottle, and also containing a rolled up 3L bladder totalling 4.5L ( a bit over 1USgal). Here in Australia, water is especially needed. The steel bottle can also be used to boil water, and is quite sturdy, to say the least. It has an oxygen absorber in it for long term storage in my vehicle.
@@FittoSurvive I’ve been looking for a ‘parachute cloth’ bag ( satchel or messenger bag type) to put in as well. The satchel would be used to carry all the contents as well as foraged items, when in use in ‘survival mode’, but would be very light, and take up minimal volume when placed in the can. I have several reusable shopping bags, of a very strong polyester ’silk’ fabric which I might make one from.
additions to the larger bag you showed as an option at the beginning: 8’x tarp or two 4mm contractors bags, touk style beanie, full size chems (saw signal) Cliff bars -great kit
Switch out the plastic Nalgene bottle for a single wall SS Kleen Kanteen water bottle so you can boil water. Also, ditch the wire saw...marginal at best. You have SAK with the excellent saw. Just my two cents. Good kit brother! Thanks for posting!
I would suggest a coffee filter or 2 as a pre-filter to remove the majority of sediment, before using the Sawyer mini. They are extremely lightweight and can fold down quite a bit. 😎
Great vid. Well presented. Two point. The Nalgene loop is not strong enough for long term use being hung from a carabiner. Broken a couple doing that. Second, like the filter demo. In the field use coffee filter or some kind of stainer with dirty water. Make the filter last longer and will not get clogged with dirt.
Thank you! Oh, I can see what you mean about the Nalgene loop being a weak point. And the coffee filter idea is brilliant, definitely want to add that to the kit. 👍🏻
This is a really good kit!!!! The only thing I would add is a few more first aid medications and wound treatments, and a little more of that emergency food ration! This is the best water bottle kit I’ve seen! 👍🏼
first of all great kit and great demonstration! Thanks or filming. Like others have said before me. Signal mirror and whistle and maybe a bag liner for the bottle itself so when you have all the items out you can put it in the bag and keep them dry while drinking from your bottle. Also the sawyer mini sp 128 comes with a backflush syringe. If you can find a replacement one smaller and fit it into there do it, because that filter will jam up and water flow will be very slow. Maybe stick the a mirror on the inside of a lid. Also You could upgrade and fins a comparable all 18/8 stainless steel container to replace the nalgene with wide mouth single walled, so you can boil water in the container itself to purify the water to a certain extent. Good stuff. I make EDC bags with a bit of emergency gear in mind too. thanks!
Thank you! Yes, definitely need to add the mirror and whistle. I will probably make a "Survival kit in a water bottle V2" with the metal bottle and some of these added ideas. It will definitely be more versatile.
Brilliant Kit - I would look for adding a foldable backpack - I scored a few from a Trade Show freebies give away pack & perhaps a few garbage bags (transpiration water gathering or just making a shelter on a wet trip. The idea below are very well thought out & maybe a small fero rod too.
One of the best water bottle kits I have seen, very well thought out, Including a pouch is one thing many forget and like you say what you going to do with all the gear? I have a few suggestions that you might like to add, a nesting cup, great for cooking, making pine tea, couple of coffees, Oxo cubes, nice warm drink always makes life seem better ! wrapping duct tape around bottom section of the bottle (to suit nesting cup fit) also some around the top half under which you could trap a loop of para cord, this can be utilised as a carrying loop, but also you could attach a length of cord to lower into a well or a creek. So glad to see the sawyer filter, anyone who as ever boiled water to purify will attest it’s often gag inducing to drink, the sawyer makes palatable safe water, you can of cause use the straw to drink from crevices and puddles. Went camping with some friends, they were all lugging tents, when we got to the spot we were camping they asked where’s your tent? Pulled out a home made tarp from water bottle case (like the one you showed with pouch on front) it was a large tarp too, about 9x9 foot. That would make a fantastic addition to your kit👍
Thank you! I am pleased to hear that! I am planning a second version of this bottle and will try incorporate that, thanks for the advice! Yeah the Sawyer filters make drinking water much easier!
That was actually a cool idea and kids could get involved and make a game of it (Scouts). Something to consider would be a cotton cloth and a drum liner garbage bag both of which would take up to much room. might be able to stuff the drum liner garbage bag at the bottom of the bag and tie the cotton cloth to the water bottle bag? Thank you so much for sharing
Glad that you enjoyed the video! Yes, I can see this being a very exciting project for kids!! Check out my updated water bottle kit video. You will probably enjoy that one as well.
the only thing I'd add is a steel cup for the bottle to nest in or change the cup to a steel one so you can boil water but otherwise it will work for short term survival.
Really love how you demonstrated how each of these items work, ie the magnesium striker, the Esbit tabs, the Sawyer mini, etc. I built a similar kit but at a much larger scale. Imo I'd swap out the crank flashlight for a battery flashlight. It gets very very old quick using the crank imo. I'd also swap the medical supplies and have a more fleshed out one, unless of course this is just meant to be an EDC on the go with you and the medikit is its own thing. I'd add a Knipex XS in the bottle because the weakness of SAK are its weak pliers. I'd add a Bic Mini lighter - unless that's part of your EDC kit. I'm torn on the compass thing - it's likely never going to be used but it's also so lightweight and takes no footprint.
Thanks! I appreciate it! Yes, the medical kit is supposed to be carried separately. I did make a second version of this kit with some upgrades. You can check it out here: ruclips.net/video/LchvOEEG5hw/видео.html
You might be able to use a plastic grocery bag to tote the contents once you empty the bottle. It folds up fairly small and has handles that can be tied or looped around the waist with cord or a belt. A bit of gum or hard candy is always a morale booster:)
Add mini bic lighter, fox 40 whistle and some 1 liter whirl pac bags for water and some yellow 3M earplugs can be used for bobber when fishing as well as insert in ears for extra warmth small packets of neo’sporen some tongue depressors and some kind of survival candy( cough drops/peppermints/charms candy) and if possible small packets of honey or peanut butter
A good kit. I liked the fact that you demonstrate several items like the Sawyer, matches etc To maximise it it would be better in a stainless steel Nalgene (or Pathfinder or any other brand) to allow for boiling water. Survival is not mean to be permanent by definition so I would drop the MiniSawyer and add 50 water purification tablets, save space and weight. 50 liters will give you 25 days and you may also boil water from the steel bottle. For fire, once you've master it the firesteel is enought, no need for matches (take space). So 2 firesteel (the main with magnesium and the backup Firefly, a great product) and the fresnel lense should cover all fire needs for a loonngg time. Replace the gauze by a clean buff, so it has other uses if you do not have wound. Regarding the crank light...you have to understand that it carry a samll battery in it to store the crank energy it so it will died. Unfortunately those little gadget are not made with quality in mind so I would not trust my life on it, I would rather carry a quality AAA flashlight with 2 lithium AAA. Won't last for eternity but some 100 hours with the same lumens as the crank one. Should be enought for survival. Instead of the fancy Titan paracod, bring Dyneem cordage, much stronger and lighter so you can take more with you, cordage will help a lot to built shelter, traps etc etc. so the more you have the better. A 1mm dyneem rope have a 195 daN or kg breaking point and weight 0,09kg/100m when the titan paracord weight 1kg for 100m for a 250 daN. As for the multiwire...you already have tinder (magnesium and solid fuel) you have fishing line so if weight for weight you replace the paracord by dyneema you can have a lot more. I would use the space and weight saved by the above changes to add another space blanket or any other kind of tarp to keep you warm and protected from rain. As mentionned by Rafael from Venezuela who has good advices in his post : A mirror is a must have, if you ever got something in your eyes when alone you know how much a miror is priceless and you can signale yourself too !! And yes, weight for weight replace the ration by some coffee or tea and some Bouillon cubes, it will be worth it after some days to be able to drink a warm soup or a good coffee for morale booster. Remember, after 3 or 4 days your body will enter in ketosis and use your body fat so you will not be as hungry but you will need your morale to be strong, survival is a mind issue, not a material issue.
Wow! Thank you! Lots of excellent tips. I am working on a 2nd version, there is a lot of what you advised that I will try to implement. 👍🏻 Again, thanks for the advice.
Wow I really enjoyed this! Thanks for demonstrating, you don’t see that a lot on these types of videos! Great kit and great recommendations from everyone. Thanks for the video!
Excellent idea! I plan to make a second version of this Survival kit using a metal single-walled bottle that I could boil in. But, having a cup would be awesome too
Another good video. Love that you demonstrate the items. I suggest also including a coffee filter or 2. I would def strain the dirty water a time or 2 before putting it through the lifestraw filter. The coffee filters are good for many other things as well.
Hello, very nice and informative video. I don’t know if you heard about the german survival show “7 vs Wild”. The third season is going to be recorded this year and the nominees are already preparing for their time in nature. The basic concept of this year’s season is that seven teams consisting of 2 people are being dropped off in either Alaska or Canada and need to survive 14 days. There is no camera team, they have a camera kit consisting of several go pros powerbanks, memory cards and so on. There is also a flashlight in the film equipment. They also get a medikit and a defence kit against animals, these of course are not allowed to be misused. The last season was on an island in Panama but solo so no teams. The equipment they are allowed to bring is, one sleeping bag for each person and one Nalgene bottle filled with anything they want (apart from illegal stuff and multimedia devices). The bottle is the exact same one you are using. (the metal version is not allowed) The kit you are showcasing already seems to be very good for that purpose, but I really would like to know what you would bring in a bottle for that specific scenario. You could leave out the flashlight and maybe the medical stuff since that is included in the medikit and film equipment. Also you could add more items for catching food or building a waterproof shelter. I would be very happy if you would produce a video with a survival kit for this scenario. And I am convinced that the video will be well received, you could also add the hashtag 7vswild to draw even more attention to it.
I have to add that this show is not a small show, it is the biggest youtube show in europe. Season 1 had like 80 Million views in total and Season too even over 110 Million. Link too the second season: ruclips.net/video/tbapalw2-Eo/видео.html and yes the series is heavily inspired by ALONE
Thank you! Wow... That sounds like a great show. I'm curious if I somehow influenced their choice... 🤣😁 I will consider making a video showing what I would carry for a survival kit like that. It is unfortunate that they can not use the metal Nalgene bottle, that provides cooking and boiling options.
@@FittoSurvive Nice, I'm excited about the video. I would be very interested in what you take with you for water purification and for water proofshelter. I've already seen that the Sawyer is clogging up after several uses. So it won't last for 2 people for 14 days. People also tried tinfoil or aluminium foil for making a container to cook stuff in. Doesn't seem to work very good. One guy on yt tried it with a thick copper which did last, but there is the risk of it breaking when folding it.
Not bad. I would add a nesting metal cup for your bottle to sit in. All the professional survivalists (Les Stroud, Mychal Hawk) base their kit around a metal container. Fire kit should be one handed since your hand might be injured. Utilize outside of bottle by wrapping in duck tape, maybe cordage.
Thanks! I am working on a 2nd version. I plan to use a metal single walled bottle for boiling water. But, I like the idea of nesting it in a metal cup. 👍🏻 Thanks for the advice!
Realy good, but one thing I would change: the light. Because the battery would not work alfter 3-5 years and you have to trash the whole lamp. A little AAA lamp is brigther and you can use (expecive) lithium cells, they will work after 10 or more years laying in the bottle :-) Greetings from Germany PS.: Google displyed me your 2. bottle version, fine...
Hey Cody! It would be helpful to know up front the purpose of the kits. Hard to assess adequacy of contents if we don't know the goals. How long do you anticipate relying on this stuff? Lost on a hike? Bugging out on foot for a destination how far away? E&E? Do you want to be found or not want to be found? Some thoughts anyway: Agree with redundant fire sources but small butane lighter seems an obvious first choice. I am never without a SAK on my person except in the shower. It would be redundant in the kit. Let the lighter take that space. That bottle can handle a bigger fixed blade. As it is, it appears your fixed blade isn't much bigger, if at all, than the long SAK blade. Again, redundancy good, but what exactly is the intended use of the fixed blade beyond what the SAK offers you? Consider a larger folder with locking blade if you need a bigger blade - less space required than large fixed blade. Someone commented on a saw: you have 2, one on the SAK which is very good for its size, and the wire saw. Personally I wouldn't add a third unless it was a 2nd wire saw - so little space required. BTW you can improvise less painful grips for the wire saw by cutting 6-8 inch sturdy sticks with SAK saw to put through the rings for handles. Even with the best gear I am not a good fisherman, and I have never snared anything in my life. Depending on where you are, there may or may not be fish to catch or game to snare. Having the items to do those things is fine, particularly if you have those skills, and they don't take up much space. However I think you have significantly underestimated caloric and macronutrient needs when working strenuously and under stress to survive. I would search out a better protein/fat/carb ratio bar and try to have at least 2400 cal/day. Hard to focus when hungry, hard to wait on snares and fishing to eat. Can set those and keep working to create/improve shelter, gather fuel, etc. or just keep moving if that is necessary depending on scenario. I agree with commenter who expressed concern about the filter and bag fragility. I understand from reviews but not personal experience that some third party bags for the Sawyer are more durable. They also clog, and allowing sediment to settle before filtering is important. You have purification tabs as a backup - I would add more and use the 2 tab version that clears the iodine for palatability. Dysentery is a BAD thing and you'll need a sh - load more wipes than you've got - literally - if you get it. And more water, if you can keep it down. Again depending on your surroundings and intent, carrying potable water to start with would be huge - say in a canteen. I know that defeats the purpose of the water bottle kit idea, but water is SO crucial to survival... IDK if water bottles of this type come in stainless steel or not. If so, would consider because you could boil your water in that which is another tried and true back up for purification and can be used to make instant coffee or tea from packets or bags, which are a morale boost and minor stimulants - which I would include with sweetener/whitener packets in small ziploc. You would lose the transparency and view of bottle contents, but worth it imho. Consider a small travel toothbrush/toothpaste/dental floss for hygiene also. I have small free brush/tiny 1-2 use toothpaste kits from air travel that would fit. Floss useful for a lot of stuff, especially if you include a good sized sewing needle or two. I get the "no batteries - no recharging" idea of the micro lights, but really, do you want to rely on those in a survival setting other than to look in your kit for various items? Some small rechargeable lights will last over 40 hours on low setting, have beacon mode for rescue signaling and afford much brighter settings to evaluate the environment. Clip your Rovyvon or Nitecore to the bottle cap loop or bottle bag where it is readily available for emergency use and for top up charging periodically, or tape it to the inside of the cap if it has to be in the bottle to fit the theme. While I like the idea of maintenance free grab and go kit, the lack of decent illumination in survival setting is too big a trade off for me. A spare recharheable battery for an LED light isn't too bulky either, and can be rotated periodically. IDK how rugged your mylar space blankets are. Some are significantly stronger than others at expense of thickness/size/weight. It may be that two thinner ones might fit where one thicker one won't. Locally foraged insulation - leaves, small bush/conifer branches between two blankets would help. Or ground layer of leaves and brush, blanket, you, and 2nd blanket on top. In general if on the ground you need at least as much insulation under you as over you. Personally, I am blind without my glasses. I'd find a way to cram in a backup pair because I'd be dead without 'em. Finally: WHAT??!! NO tiny harmonica??!! Anyway, some thoughts FWIW, YMMV. Kind regards, John
Wow!! This is definitely record breaking. Lots of good food for thought. Thanks. I really should have explained the intended use of this kit in the video. It is supposed to be compact and easy to add to a backpack when going on a short hike or camping trip. I have a bug out bag for more serious survival scenarios but naturally I don't want to carry it with me when I go for a day hike. I probably will add either a AAA or a rechargeable flashlight. Because the hand crank one is rather inconvenient. Yeah... No harmonica in this kit. 😕🤣 Thanks again for sharing your thoughts!!
Thank you! This is supposed to be a super compact survival kit that I can add to a pack while hiking or anything like that. Basically in scenarios where I can not carry a full survival kit.
Really enjoyed the video. A really sound idea. Useful details in the comments regarding what could be added or changed. In addition to having access to a survival kit, how many of the viewers would already have useful items on their person? For example, I always carry an SAK, small torch and a Bic lighter in the right hand pocket of my jeans as part of my EDC.
Thanks so much for making this video! I especially liked that you demonstrated how to use the filter straw. One question though, how would you clean the bag with all the dirt?
Great kit! I'd add one thing, for pure amateurs like me, and that's a... List! Just to remember what you put in there lol in case you want to add anything inside.. Thx!
I just wanna point out, that for your wind up flashlight to last, you need to keep a lot of charge in it. It does have a battery in it. If you don't keep a charge in it, the battery will stop working, AKA it won't hold a charge. Better to have a small AA light and stick 2, 25 year energizer batteries in with it. Should take up about the same amount of room, and you'll have a better chance of the batteries working after sitting in this kit for years.
The gauze takes up too much room, I would eliminate it and put three times as much 550 cord. The matches should be in a small ziploc pill bag. The compressed towels could also be used as tinder. I also include a heavy duty quart Ziploc bag to put the gear in when I have to remove it from the bottle, and I include two 12" by 12" sheets of aluminum foil and two cone coffee filters to pre-filter my water. You could tie a bandana around the top or put it at the bottom of that pouch, also.
Stuff in there could seriously be improved, but the biggest flaw is the water bottle. Should be a stainless steel bottle, preferably with a nested stainless steel (or titanium) mug. Just because you have a Sawyer Mini doesn't mean you forego the need to boil your water. And you're already set up to fail, because without a bandana (or some other cloth), which you would use to pre-filter your dirty water before running it through the Sawyer Mini, it will clog up really fast. Plus, without the syringe to backflush the Sawyer Mini, which will clog up badly without pre-filtering your water using the bandana, your water filter is pretty much dead. And the jackpot question of the day would be: where does all the rest of the stuff go when your water bottle is full of water?
Agreed! I am already working on a 2nd version of this Survival kit. I hope to finish it up soon and review it. I will definitely take into consideration a lot of what you said. Excellent advice. 👍🏻 The bandana will be added for sure. And I already have a single wall steel bottle that I have ordered. Nestling the the bottle in a cup is brilliant too, I'll have to look around for one that will fit. Thanks again. 👍🏻👍🏻
excellent kit; maybe instead of the emergency blanket; have a look at the emergency ponchos with reflective inners; then you get some instant protection and cover. the ones i use are camo outside and reflective inside; and you can turn them inside out obviously. they are also slightly better quality and have more options for creating a shelter (due to the poncho hood) heres some extra ideas that might fit the form factor: also adding some sugar, salt, coffee satchels and a couple ibuprofen (as probably will need them in whatever disasters causing you to open the kit for real; to make your feet stop hurting etc) some of the bags for the products could also be swapped out with bigger bags (or an inner lined glad bag) to use for the pouch and extra waterproofing. would also try a single walled metal bottle/canteen instead; if can fit; some cash and a memory chip with photos of SO, kids, documents, maps, maybe a small sheet of paper with local radio frequencies, repeaters etc :)
Thank you! Do you think the emergency poncho will fit? If it would, that would be an excellent substitute. Lots of good advice! For sure I need to add the coffee and pain killers. And a metal canteen does make lots of sense. 👍🏻
@@FittoSurvive its tiny bit thicker than a regular one; i just got off amazon. the microsd card is a bigger one that I keep forgetting; ive got the entire of wikipedia on one; and photos of all my relatives in case need to do a missing person board etc can be just like "here you go survival people" or if possible get a crappy android phone to slot it in and have music; videos etc; good for trading aswell. I've also started including a medical dog tag in my kits; tiny; light and says your blood type and emergency contact and well; if someone finds your body way more likely others will be able to act on it.
(in portuguese Brazil): Achei muito legal! Falta um recipiente metálico para fazer algo exemplo sopa. Eu tenho comigo uma folha de alumínio que poderei formar um copo. _ Por um momento, achei que era um kit sobrevivência em local de trabalho. Eu colocaria mais corda fina para nós e construções com amarras. A proposta é um kit. Kit são pequenos, minimalistas. Nessa abordagem está bem construído.
Obrigado! Na verdade, acabei de terminar minha segunda versão. Eu tenho uma garrafa de aço de parede única e muitas outras melhorias. Aqui está um link, deixe-me saber o que você pensa. ruclips.net/video/LchvOEEG5hw/видео.html
@@FittoSurvive também tenho garrafa aço (modelo 02). Usei em alta montanha (cordón del plata - Argentina - cordilheira dos andes). Altitude 3.400 metros.
This is a good kit. Copper wire is a bad choice tho' as it's much much softer than brass. Those old Vietnam spec magnesium Ferro blocks are excellent ! Fresnel lenses are a great wallet backup. A lighter might be better than matches tho'.
That would make sense for the brass to be stronger. I will need to swap that out. Yes, these magnesium blocks are the best! They light super easy. A lighter probably would be better, would just have to find one that would be less likely to leak.
I basically like the idea of the firefly ferro rods; but they are so fragile. And I like to keep the toothpick. You can fit a 3/16” ferro rod under the saw. Fits perfectly with the SAK Alox Farmer & Camper, so I imagine it would also fit with your SAK Huntsman. It would be great if you could share the name/link of the small knife you showed at 13:10. Thank you.
You are right. The Firefly ferro rods are very fragile. Keeping a ferro rod under the saw is brilliant! Thanks. The neck knife is from AG Russell knives. I couldn't find a link for it online. They were selling them in their physical shop.
Those firefly ferro rods are one of those concepts of "Good idea poor execution" plus the asking price for them...bit steep if you ask me 41$ for 8 flimsy little ferro rods when you could put any other cheaper or preferred ferro rod alternatives just not justifiable (personally I prefer light my fire brand ferro rods cause Swedish fire steels are a solid option.) though that ferro rod under the saw trick sounds familiar i think i saw it in a Felix Immler video.
@@cecilm3720@Fit to May be overpriced but eh if people are willing to pay for it and it works for others so be it right? As for the ferro rod i think i tracked the video down it from the MeZillch channel on his part 2 video on 91mm swiss army knife mods.
Check those wind up lights. I had a couple in my gear for years, then when I went to check them NONE of them would light. OK, I'm an engineer, so I open one up. There were watch batteries in there. Just like many of the shake lights have a wound weight connected to nothing and there are 3-4 coin batteries.
Gracias. Siempre que necesites el agua, debes colocar el contenido en la bolsa en la que estaba la botella de agua. Es por eso que debes tener la bolsa con este kit. 👍🏻
Curious;;; see quite a few videos people using their water bottles for a survival kit;;; can't help but wonder how they plan to carry water with their bottle used to carry their kit
The miniSawyer...it is a great filter BUT as all filters if submit to freezing temp. will break inside. You will not know it but the water you will drink won't be purified anymore. So these filters are wonderfull when backpaking because you can carry them against your body in case of low temp. BUT in a survival idea it is a dangerous item, unless you live in tropical area of course...
Great Kit. Should be really helpfull in an emergency. But why did you chose a pencil and not Plus Scales for the Victorinox? You could have a pen with less space used. Also this set definitly needs a metal cup for cooking and boiling water
Thank you! The plus scales on the Victorinox is a great idea. 👍🏻 A metal cup would be awesome, but it won't fit. I have cooking utensils in my bug out bag.
@Rick Christopher Thank you again. Yeah, I plan on making a "SWB 2.0" soon, using some of the advice from these comments. I think it'll be a real good upgrade.
😅 After traveling around the world for a large portion of my life, I have picked up all kinds of bad pronunciations... In another of my videos I mispronounced "Acetaminophen" and had all kinds of people laughing about it in the comments. 😄
Good Kit, alothough I HATE "water bottle survival kits"! Reason being - if you are heading out, 10 out of 10 times, you should fill your water first! And you can't do that when your bottle is full of crap. Perhaps you should have a survival kit which includes a bottle?? Lastly... How in the heck did you fit that stove in the bottle???
I get one you're saying. At the beginning of the video I showed the bag that I carry the bag in. The concept is to dump the contents of the water bottle into the bag, then you can fill the bottle with water. The stove wasn't in the bottle. 🤣 I used it to demonstrate how solid fuel tab burns.
I am currently trying to build a spydernox sak deluxe tinker. I know you built one on camera before but could you do an in detail on how to disassemble and reassemble?
Hey, I planned to make a "how to mod your SAK" mini series, but haven't gotten to it yet. If you need help with your build, send me a message through Instagram and I can send you some videos explaining whatever you are having difficulty with.
This Kit makes me go …. Do he - want to survive because shtf after a car crash, got lost etc … or is it a military Stil kit, that makes him survive the way from a to b. 🤔 so many questions. If u want to be seen … no marker? No Chalk? No Orange Tape or 550 Cord? No whistles? And if don’t want to be seen, grey tape in a forest? Bright Blue Bottle and Bag. + the sawer bags always like to fail the worst time possible. If urs would, u couldn’t filter water anymore, except for drinking with the filter directly. So a Metal Bottle and Water purification’s Tablets would be a easy answer. And depending on ur preference can paint or let the Metal bottle be unpainted- low/ hi vis.
Good questions. 👍🏻 I use this kit when I am going wild camping or when I go hiking. Basically any time that I am out in the wild and I don't have space for a full bug-out bag, I add this to my backpack. My thoughts when making this kit was not being able for some reason to return to civilization for whatever reason, medical, getting lost, etc. And being able to survive for a couple of days while getting back. Maybe changing the mylar thermal blanket for an orange one would help getting seen in case of getting lost.
@@FittoSurvive wouldn’t be a Tier System then better? That way you could have survival, rescue and camping organized..Like .. Tier 1 .. altoid Kit + Victorinox (on person at all Time) Tier 2 … Clothing, Belt with Gear ( layered depending on time of year, what to do etc ) Tier 3 … Backpack ( a backpack 🎒 for E&E, BoB, Camping or pre packed pouches for everything. ) Tier 4 …. Car or other forms of transportation, to carry gear. But I don’t know ur situation, so … u know best 👍what will work
@@seductive_Octopus That is kind of what I have. I have my core EDC, my EDC pouch (goes with me when I leave my property), a car bag, a bug out/get home bag. So, kind of going up the tiers, like you suggested.
Can’t understand why you don’t use a metal bottle. Nalgene bottles are trendy, but you shouldn’t boil water in plastic. And that Sawyer filter is not going to take care of viruses
@@FittoSurvive Great to hear. Let's be honest - the current version is the next thing up from a kid's toy? It's garbage and I wouldn't rely on it - no way Jose
@@FittoSurvive I mean, in a survive mode I might want to use the water bottle to carry water - so no longer can be used as storage. So either own two bottle - or just keep one bottle and one waterproof clear plastic hard shell container (something like Pelican). In a world where such product didn't exist, this is a nice idea. But since the product exist, having small opening and spending lot of time packing is not preferred. Even if this issue was covered in the video (I watched it half-way ish) since the small opening already made me uneasy :-) , I think waterproof container with manageable opening right from the start is preferable.
the best part is that you not only show 'oh, look i have this and that' but you also display things at work which provides audience with a much better understanding
Thank you! Glad that you appreciated that. 👍🏻
I like finding Nalgene bottles (in good condition) at thrift stores and repurposing them for camping. First aid kits, dry or wet food storage, survival emergency packs, condiments, maple syrup, milk, etc. they’re really a great product.
Everyone needs this in every vehicle.. and Every family member needs one
Completely agree!
Excellent kit, but you need to have a proper signaling kit built in there (proper signal mirror, signal panel, whistle) and a sterilized bandana (you can dump the bandage and add all the things I'm telling you and it will fit) you can change the mylar blanket for a one who has orange in one side. And add a Steel who fits below the bottle and a couple of Bouillon cubes (some fats and electrolytes) and instant coffee powder, they're very small and excellent morale boosters.
Excellent kit above all! Keep the good work! Greetings from Venezuela!
Thanks, that is really some good advice. 👍🏻👍🏻
@@FittoSurvive you can make the inside of the lid a mirror to save space :D
@@ItsBoyRed Great idea.
I like all of the items you chose for this kit, my biggest qualm though is that you put the good knife, the matches, and the toilet paper all the way at the bottom
That is a good point. 🤔 I will try to reorganize it when I pack it back in the bottle.
Just an fyi: shelter, fire ,water, security, food! In that approximate order, n you won't survive,YOU WILL THRIVE!
Just a thought!
@@greywolfwalking6359 Thank you for that information. 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
@@FittoSurvive you have a good design n idea..it can be customized for each person , utilizing the basics that you have set down...
I particularly like the compact design, as a bowhunter.. it will work for me, with some adjustments for my particular needs!
Thanks for the help!
@@greywolfwalking6359 Thank you! Yes exactly, this kit can and should be adjusted to your personal needs. 👍🏻
Some thoughts to this already excellent kit:
1. I’d include a signal mirror and a whistle (e.g. acme slim or fox 40 micro).
2. Add some instant drink powder (coffee, electrolytes, bouillon cubes)
3. What about a mini-bic and reducing the amount of matches? Larger variety, more redundant and the bic will last longer.
4. Tie a short hank of Paracord below the little lip on the bottleneck and clip your carabiner there. The plastic might tear if the bottle get tangled up and then the lid could get lost or even the whole bottle. Also I wrapped some additional duct tape and some para-cord around the outside of the bottle to have it at hand.
If you decide to do so, think about swapping the Paracord inside the bottle against dyneema rope. Almost as durable, but you’ll be able to carry more rope with the same bulk.
5. Might consider also a small sheet of heavy duty aluminum foil to be able to make an improvised container foor boiling water or food in it (or even be able to char some cloth).
6. A small canvas needle could be included as well.
7. I’d consider to swap one esbit against a small candle / tealight
8. Maybe some ibuprofen, Imodium and caffeine Tablets in a small pillbox.
Just some quick ideas I came across watching your vid.
Hey! Thank you for the advice! Really some excellent tips.
I already plans to make a Water Bottle Survival Kit version 2.0. I will be making it with the advice and tips of many of the people who commented. I think it is going to be much better than the first one.
@@FittoSurvive I'd add a small piece of a glue stick (for glue guns). You can melt it and use it various ways. Glue sticks aren't really made of glue, they are made of plastic but they act like glue.
@@shadesofgray5476 Excellent idea! I can see how that would be really handy. 👍🏻👍🏻
I’ve been making those for years and the simplest thing is just to carry a 1 gallon Ziploc bag so you can dump the contents in the Ziploc bag dump it in your ruck while you use the bottle to collect water
If you use one of the single wall stainless steel bottles available, you now have the ability to boil the water in the same container, doubling it effectiveness
Presently KleenKanteen has a SS single wall bottle at Walmart for $30
Thank you for an excellent video -- really like that you demonstrated items. Simple suggestion -- line the bottle with a large ziplock bag so you can i) keep the interior of the bottle clean, ii) retrieve things easier, and iii) store small items in the ziplock bag once they are removed. The bag itself can be used to carry stuff, including water. Looking forward to your upcoming Version 2! Thanks again.
You are welcome! I am glad that you enjoyed the video!
Lining the bottle with a zip lock is brilliant! I am definitely going to do that in the second version.
The tiny flashlight with the crank is a dope gadget!
It really is cool. Not very bright though.
I have a similar kit, utilising a steel, single walled ( that was the hardest part to find) bottle, and also containing a rolled up 3L bladder totalling 4.5L ( a bit over 1USgal). Here in Australia, water is especially needed. The steel bottle can also be used to boil water, and is quite sturdy, to say the least. It has an oxygen absorber in it for long term storage in my vehicle.
That's cool! I plan on making a second version with a single walled bottle. The rolled up bladder is a brilliant idea too! 👍🏻👍🏻 Thanks
@@FittoSurvive I’ve been looking for a ‘parachute cloth’ bag ( satchel or messenger bag type) to put in as well. The satchel would be used to carry all the contents as well as foraged items, when in use in ‘survival mode’, but would be very light, and take up minimal volume when placed in the can. I have several reusable shopping bags, of a very strong polyester ’silk’ fabric which I might make one from.
@@andrewallason4530 That's a really cool idea too.
Thanks for demonstrating the Sawyer water filter. Really good kit.
You are welcome! Glad you enjoyed!
additions to the larger bag you showed as an option at the beginning: 8’x tarp or two 4mm contractors bags, touk style beanie, full size chems (saw signal) Cliff bars -great kit
That's a great idea. I am working on a 2nd version. I'll try to add as many new ideas that I can.
Switch out the plastic Nalgene bottle for a single wall SS Kleen Kanteen water bottle so you can boil water. Also, ditch the wire saw...marginal at best. You have SAK with the excellent saw. Just my two cents. Good kit brother! Thanks for posting!
Thank you! Yeah, I plan to swap over to SS on my 2nd version.
I would suggest a coffee filter or 2 as a pre-filter to remove the majority of sediment, before using the Sawyer mini. They are extremely lightweight and can fold down quite a bit. 😎
Brilliant idea. I will definitely add that to my second version that I am working on. 👍🏻
Great vid. Well presented. Two point. The Nalgene loop is not strong enough for long term use being hung from a carabiner. Broken a couple doing that. Second, like the filter demo. In the field use coffee filter or some kind of stainer with dirty water. Make the filter last longer and will not get clogged with dirt.
Thank you!
Oh, I can see what you mean about the Nalgene loop being a weak point. And the coffee filter idea is brilliant, definitely want to add that to the kit. 👍🏻
Great kit. The best thing about your videos is that you actually demonstrate many of the items in your kits. Other channels don’t.
Thank you! I am glad that you appreciate that! 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
I like this video, because not only tell us what you carry, but also demonstrate some gears. Thanks.
I am really glad to hear that!
This is a really good kit!!!! The only thing I would add is a few more first aid medications and wound treatments, and a little more of that emergency food ration! This is the best water bottle kit I’ve seen! 👍🏼
Thank you! I actually made some improvements to this kit. You can see the upgraded version here: ruclips.net/video/LchvOEEG5hw/видео.html
first of all great kit and great demonstration! Thanks or filming. Like others have said before me. Signal mirror and whistle and maybe a bag liner for the bottle itself so when you have all the items out you can put it in the bag and keep them dry while drinking from your bottle. Also the sawyer mini sp 128 comes with a backflush syringe. If you can find a replacement one smaller and fit it into there do it, because that filter will jam up and water flow will be very slow. Maybe stick the a mirror on the inside of a lid. Also You could upgrade and fins a comparable all 18/8 stainless steel container to replace the nalgene with wide mouth single walled, so you can boil water in the container itself to purify the water to a certain extent. Good stuff. I make EDC bags with a bit of emergency gear in mind too. thanks!
Thank you! Yes, definitely need to add the mirror and whistle. I will probably make a "Survival kit in a water bottle V2" with the metal bottle and some of these added ideas. It will definitely be more versatile.
And you can add a metal nesting cup with folding handles to the bottom of the stainless or even the Nalgene bottle, you can find em at Walmart.
Brilliant Kit - I would look for adding a foldable backpack - I scored a few from a Trade Show freebies give away pack & perhaps a few garbage bags (transpiration water gathering or just making a shelter on a wet trip. The idea below are very well thought out & maybe a small fero rod too.
Thank you! I appreciate that. Check out my updated version. ruclips.net/video/LchvOEEG5hw/видео.html
One of the best water bottle kits I have seen, very well thought out, Including a pouch is one thing many forget and like you say what you going to do with all the gear? I have a few suggestions that you might like to add, a nesting cup, great for cooking, making pine tea, couple of coffees, Oxo cubes, nice warm drink always makes life seem better ! wrapping duct tape around bottom section of the bottle (to suit nesting cup fit) also some around the top half under which you could trap a loop of para cord, this can be utilised as a carrying loop, but also you could attach a length of cord to lower into a well or a creek.
So glad to see the sawyer filter, anyone who as ever boiled water to purify will attest it’s often gag inducing to drink, the sawyer makes palatable safe water, you can of cause use the straw to drink from crevices and puddles.
Went camping with some friends, they were all lugging tents, when we got to the spot we were camping they asked where’s your tent? Pulled out a home made tarp from water bottle case (like the one you showed with pouch on front) it was a large tarp too, about 9x9 foot. That would make a fantastic addition to your kit👍
Thank you! I am pleased to hear that!
I am planning a second version of this bottle and will try incorporate that, thanks for the advice!
Yeah the Sawyer filters make drinking water much easier!
I have a similar setup with the bigger bag. The only difference is that I use a steel bottle so I can use it to boil the water as well.
Awesome! I am working on a second version. It will have the Nalgene steel single wall bottle too.
@@FittoSurvive nice...good idea
@@littlenel17 I will post a review of it after I get it together.
That was actually a cool idea and kids could get involved and make a game of it (Scouts). Something to consider would be a cotton cloth and a drum liner garbage bag both of which would take up to much room. might be able to stuff the drum liner garbage bag at the bottom of the bag and tie the cotton cloth to the water bottle bag? Thank you so much for sharing
Glad that you enjoyed the video! Yes, I can see this being a very exciting project for kids!!
Check out my updated water bottle kit video. You will probably enjoy that one as well.
Awesome kit! Loved the way you explain and demonstrate! Thank you.
Thank you! I am glad that you appreciated that!
the only thing I'd add is a steel cup for the bottle to nest in or change the cup to a steel one so you can boil water but otherwise it will work for short term survival.
Excellent idea. I actually posted a new video with an updated version. I used a metal bottle, but still no nesting cup. Working on that.
Really love how you demonstrated how each of these items work, ie the magnesium striker, the Esbit tabs, the Sawyer mini, etc. I built a similar kit but at a much larger scale. Imo I'd swap out the crank flashlight for a battery flashlight. It gets very very old quick using the crank imo. I'd also swap the medical supplies and have a more fleshed out one, unless of course this is just meant to be an EDC on the go with you and the medikit is its own thing. I'd add a Knipex XS in the bottle because the weakness of SAK are its weak pliers. I'd add a Bic Mini lighter - unless that's part of your EDC kit. I'm torn on the compass thing - it's likely never going to be used but it's also so lightweight and takes no footprint.
Thanks! I appreciate it!
Yes, the medical kit is supposed to be carried separately. I did make a second version of this kit with some upgrades.
You can check it out here:
ruclips.net/video/LchvOEEG5hw/видео.html
Another great job. Thanks for your time.
Thank you!
You might be able to use a plastic grocery bag to tote the contents once you empty the bottle. It folds up fairly small and has handles that can be tied or looped around the waist with cord or a belt. A bit of gum or hard candy is always a morale booster:)
Good ideas! I will keep that in mind for version #2.
Add mini bic lighter, fox 40 whistle and some 1 liter whirl pac bags for water and some yellow 3M earplugs can be used for bobber when fishing as well as insert in ears for extra warmth small packets of neo’sporen some tongue depressors and some kind of survival candy( cough drops/peppermints/charms candy) and if possible small packets of honey or peanut butter
Excellent advice! I will try to implement them in the second version that I am working on.
A good kit. I liked the fact that you demonstrate several items like the Sawyer, matches etc
To maximise it it would be better in a stainless steel Nalgene (or Pathfinder or any other brand) to allow for boiling water.
Survival is not mean to be permanent by definition so I would drop the MiniSawyer and add 50 water purification tablets, save space and weight. 50 liters will give you 25 days and you may also boil water from the steel bottle.
For fire, once you've master it the firesteel is enought, no need for matches (take space). So 2 firesteel (the main with magnesium and the backup Firefly, a great product) and the fresnel lense should cover all fire needs for a loonngg time.
Replace the gauze by a clean buff, so it has other uses if you do not have wound.
Regarding the crank light...you have to understand that it carry a samll battery in it to store the crank energy it so it will died. Unfortunately those little gadget are not made with quality in mind so I would not trust my life on it, I would rather carry a quality AAA flashlight with 2 lithium AAA. Won't last for eternity but some 100 hours with the same lumens as the crank one. Should be enought for survival.
Instead of the fancy Titan paracod, bring Dyneem cordage, much stronger and lighter so you can take more with you, cordage will help a lot to built shelter, traps etc etc. so the more you have the better. A 1mm dyneem rope have a 195 daN or kg breaking point and weight 0,09kg/100m when the titan paracord weight 1kg for 100m for a 250 daN. As for the multiwire...you already have tinder (magnesium and solid fuel) you have fishing line so if weight for weight you replace the paracord by dyneema you can have a lot more.
I would use the space and weight saved by the above changes to add another space blanket or any other kind of tarp to keep you warm and protected from rain.
As mentionned by Rafael from Venezuela who has good advices in his post :
A mirror is a must have, if you ever got something in your eyes when alone you know how much a miror is priceless and you can signale yourself too !!
And yes, weight for weight replace the ration by some coffee or tea and some Bouillon cubes, it will be worth it after some days to be able to drink a warm soup or a good coffee for morale booster.
Remember, after 3 or 4 days your body will enter in ketosis and use your body fat so you will not be as hungry but you will need your morale to be strong, survival is a mind issue, not a material issue.
Wow! Thank you! Lots of excellent tips. I am working on a 2nd version, there is a lot of what you advised that I will try to implement. 👍🏻 Again, thanks for the advice.
Wow I really enjoyed this! Thanks for demonstrating, you don’t see that a lot on these types of videos! Great kit and great recommendations from everyone. Thanks for the video!
You are welcome! I am glad that you enjoyed it so much. 👍🏻👍🏻
A list of contents visible in Bag is also great ..and any perishable items ..need a date
Excellent ideas.
Amazing !!!! Brilliant idea and organization !
Thank you! I appreciate that. I've made an updated version of it and posted a new video.
Nice kit I would for sure add a metal cup that could go over the bottle just to have a way to boil water or cook easier. Have fun be safe.
Excellent idea! I plan to make a second version of this Survival kit using a metal single-walled bottle that I could boil in. But, having a cup would be awesome too
Great video... everything you need in one go. Thanks! 👍
Thanks for watching!
Another good video. Love that you demonstrate the items. I suggest also including a coffee filter or 2. I would def strain the dirty water a time or 2 before putting it through the lifestraw filter. The coffee filters are good for many other things as well.
Thank you! The coffee filter is a brilliant idea! I will definitely be adding that in my second version.
I’d definitely switch to a metal bottle for the redundancy of sterilization option of boiling water
Thank you! I am working on a 2nd version. It will have the metal bottle and some other updates.
We like it.! Very functional mate.
Awesome! Thanks.
Hello, very nice and informative video. I don’t know if you heard about the german survival show “7 vs Wild”. The third season is going to be recorded this year and the nominees are already preparing for their time in nature. The basic concept of this year’s season is that seven teams consisting of 2 people are being dropped off in either Alaska or Canada and need to survive 14 days. There is no camera team, they have a camera kit consisting of several go pros powerbanks, memory cards and so on. There is also a flashlight in the film equipment. They also get a medikit and a defence kit against animals, these of course are not allowed to be misused. The last season was on an island in Panama but solo so no teams.
The equipment they are allowed to bring is, one sleeping bag for each person and one Nalgene bottle filled with anything they want (apart from illegal stuff and multimedia devices). The bottle is the exact same one you are using. (the metal version is not allowed)
The kit you are showcasing already seems to be very good for that purpose, but I really would like to know what you would bring in a bottle for that specific scenario. You could leave out the flashlight and maybe the medical stuff since that is included in the medikit and film equipment. Also you could add more items for catching food or building a waterproof shelter.
I would be very happy if you would produce a video with a survival kit for this scenario. And I am convinced that the video will be well received, you could also add the hashtag 7vswild to draw even more attention to it.
I have to add that this show is not a small show, it is the biggest youtube show in europe. Season 1 had like 80 Million views in total and Season too even over 110 Million. Link too the second season: ruclips.net/video/tbapalw2-Eo/видео.html
and yes the series is heavily inspired by ALONE
Thank you! Wow... That sounds like a great show. I'm curious if I somehow influenced their choice... 🤣😁
I will consider making a video showing what I would carry for a survival kit like that.
It is unfortunate that they can not use the metal Nalgene bottle, that provides cooking and boiling options.
@@FittoSurvive Nice, I'm excited about the video. I would be very interested in what you take with you for water purification and for water proofshelter. I've already seen that the Sawyer is clogging up after several uses. So it won't last for 2 people for 14 days. People also tried tinfoil or aluminium foil for making a container to cook stuff in. Doesn't seem to work very good. One guy on yt tried it with a thick copper which did last, but there is the risk of it breaking when folding it.
Not bad. I would add a nesting metal cup for your bottle to sit in. All the professional survivalists (Les Stroud, Mychal Hawk) base their kit around a metal container. Fire kit should be one handed since your hand might be injured. Utilize outside of bottle by wrapping in duck tape, maybe cordage.
Thanks! I am working on a 2nd version. I plan to use a metal single walled bottle for boiling water. But, I like the idea of nesting it in a metal cup. 👍🏻 Thanks for the advice!
Realy good, but one thing I would change: the light. Because the battery would not work alfter 3-5 years and you have to trash the whole lamp. A little AAA lamp is brigther and you can use (expecive) lithium cells, they will work after 10 or more years laying in the bottle :-) Greetings from Germany
PS.: Google displyed me your 2. bottle version, fine...
Thanks! Yeah, I ended up tossing the wind up flashlight for one that has a built in lithium battery and a AA battery in my 2nd version. 👍
Hey Cody!
It would be helpful to know up front the purpose of the kits. Hard to assess adequacy of contents if we don't know the goals. How long do you anticipate relying on this stuff? Lost on a hike? Bugging out on foot for a destination how far away? E&E? Do you want to be found or not want to be found?
Some thoughts anyway: Agree with redundant fire sources but small butane lighter seems an obvious first choice.
I am never without a SAK on my person except in the shower. It would be redundant in the kit. Let the lighter take that space.
That bottle can handle a bigger fixed blade. As it is, it appears your fixed blade isn't much bigger, if at all, than the long SAK blade. Again, redundancy good, but what exactly is the intended use of the fixed blade beyond what the SAK offers you? Consider a larger folder with locking blade if you need a bigger blade - less space required than large fixed blade.
Someone commented on a saw: you have 2, one on the SAK which is very good for its size, and the wire saw. Personally I wouldn't add a third unless it was a 2nd wire saw - so little space required. BTW you can improvise less painful grips for the wire saw by cutting 6-8 inch sturdy sticks with SAK saw to put through the rings for handles.
Even with the best gear I am not a good fisherman, and I have never snared anything in my life. Depending on where you are, there may or may not be fish to catch or game to snare. Having the items to do those things is fine, particularly if you have those skills, and they don't take up much space. However I think you have significantly underestimated caloric and macronutrient needs when working strenuously and under stress to survive. I would search out a better protein/fat/carb ratio bar and try to have at least 2400 cal/day. Hard to focus when hungry, hard to wait on snares and fishing to eat. Can set those and keep working to create/improve shelter, gather fuel, etc. or just keep moving if that is necessary depending on scenario.
I agree with commenter who expressed concern about the filter and bag fragility. I understand from reviews but not personal experience that some third party bags for the Sawyer are more durable. They also clog, and allowing sediment to settle before filtering is important. You have purification tabs as a backup - I would add more and use the 2 tab version that clears the iodine for palatability. Dysentery is a BAD thing and you'll need a sh - load more wipes than you've got - literally - if you get it. And more water, if you can keep it down.
Again depending on your surroundings and intent, carrying potable water to start with would be huge - say in a canteen. I know that defeats the purpose of the water bottle kit idea, but water is SO crucial to survival...
IDK if water bottles of this type come in stainless steel or not. If so, would consider because you could boil your water in that which is another tried and true back up for purification and can be used to make instant coffee or tea from packets or bags, which are a morale boost and minor stimulants - which I would include with sweetener/whitener packets in small ziploc. You would lose the transparency and view of bottle contents, but worth it imho.
Consider a small travel toothbrush/toothpaste/dental floss for hygiene also. I have small free brush/tiny 1-2 use toothpaste kits from air travel that would fit. Floss useful for a lot of stuff, especially if you include a good sized sewing needle or two.
I get the "no batteries - no recharging" idea of the micro lights, but really, do you want to rely on those in a survival setting other than to look in your kit for various items? Some small rechargeable lights will last over 40 hours on low setting, have beacon mode for rescue signaling and afford much brighter settings to evaluate the environment. Clip your Rovyvon or Nitecore to the bottle cap loop or bottle bag where it is readily available for emergency use and for top up charging periodically, or tape it to the inside of the cap if it has to be in the bottle to fit the theme.
While I like the idea of maintenance free grab and go kit, the lack of decent illumination in survival setting is too big a trade off for me. A spare recharheable battery for an LED light isn't too bulky either, and can be rotated periodically.
IDK how rugged your mylar space blankets are. Some are significantly stronger than others at expense of thickness/size/weight. It may be that two thinner ones might fit where one thicker one won't. Locally foraged insulation - leaves, small bush/conifer branches between two blankets would help. Or ground layer of leaves and brush, blanket, you, and 2nd blanket on top. In general if on the ground you need at least as much insulation under you as over you.
Personally, I am blind without my glasses. I'd find a way to cram in a backup pair because I'd be dead without 'em.
Finally: WHAT??!! NO tiny harmonica??!!
Anyway, some thoughts FWIW, YMMV.
Kind regards,
John
Wow!! This is definitely record breaking. Lots of good food for thought. Thanks.
I really should have explained the intended use of this kit in the video. It is supposed to be compact and easy to add to a backpack when going on a short hike or camping trip. I have a bug out bag for more serious survival scenarios but naturally I don't want to carry it with me when I go for a day hike.
I probably will add either a AAA or a rechargeable flashlight. Because the hand crank one is rather inconvenient.
Yeah... No harmonica in this kit. 😕🤣
Thanks again for sharing your thoughts!!
The longest comment on RUclips I have ever seen and I read it all. Thanks so much for your thoughtful comment
This is a cool idea. I like how you demonstrate how to use things. I’m guessing this is for basic or wilderness survival. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you!
This is supposed to be a super compact survival kit that I can add to a pack while hiking or anything like that. Basically in scenarios where I can not carry a full survival kit.
Really enjoyed the video. A really sound idea. Useful details in the comments regarding what could be added or changed. In addition to having access to a survival kit, how many of the viewers would already have useful items on their person? For example, I always carry an SAK, small torch and a Bic lighter in the right hand pocket of my jeans as part of my EDC.
I am thrilled to hear that you enjoyed the video. 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Great mini kit😀.
Thank you. 😁👍🏻
Thanks so much for making this video! I especially liked that you demonstrated how to use the filter straw. One question though, how would you clean the bag with all the dirt?
Great kit! I'd add one thing, for pure amateurs like me, and that's a... List! Just to remember what you put in there lol in case you want to add anything inside.. Thx!
Thank you! That is a good idea.
I always put a list right on top.
@@cardiacbob That is a good idea.
you add emergency contacts at the top or at the bottom of the list too just in case :)
@@alliedomingo18 Excellent idea. 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
I just wanna point out, that for your wind up flashlight to last, you need to keep a lot of charge in it. It does have a battery in it. If you don't keep a charge in it, the battery will stop working, AKA it won't hold a charge. Better to have a small AA light and stick 2, 25 year energizer batteries in with it. Should take up about the same amount of room, and you'll have a better chance of the batteries working after sitting in this kit for years.
Good idea, I will definitely be swapping that out in my next kit.
Cool Video 👍
Thank U for the Info and the Links 👍
U got a new subscriber...
You are very welcome! I am glad that you enjoyed it. Thanks for the SUB!
The gauze takes up too much room, I would eliminate it and put three times as much 550 cord. The matches should be in a small ziploc pill bag. The compressed towels could also be used as tinder. I also include a heavy duty quart Ziploc bag to put the gear in when I have to remove it from the bottle, and I include two 12" by 12" sheets of aluminum foil and two cone coffee filters to pre-filter my water. You could tie a bandana around the top or put it at the bottom of that pouch, also.
Thank you. Good video. Cheers.
Thank you for the advice! The foil and bandana are really good ideas. Need to add that.
Belay that. Not 550 cord. One Hank of 550 cord, and as much bank line as you can fit!
@@cardiacbob 👍🏻👍🏻
Stuff in there could seriously be improved, but the biggest flaw is the water bottle. Should be a stainless steel bottle, preferably with a nested stainless steel (or titanium) mug. Just because you have a Sawyer Mini doesn't mean you forego the need to boil your water. And you're already set up to fail, because without a bandana (or some other cloth), which you would use to pre-filter your dirty water before running it through the Sawyer Mini, it will clog up really fast. Plus, without the syringe to backflush the Sawyer Mini, which will clog up badly without pre-filtering your water using the bandana, your water filter is pretty much dead.
And the jackpot question of the day would be: where does all the rest of the stuff go when your water bottle is full of water?
Agreed! I am already working on a 2nd version of this Survival kit. I hope to finish it up soon and review it. I will definitely take into consideration a lot of what you said. Excellent advice. 👍🏻 The bandana will be added for sure. And I already have a single wall steel bottle that I have ordered. Nestling the the bottle in a cup is brilliant too, I'll have to look around for one that will fit.
Thanks again. 👍🏻👍🏻
This showed up in my feed within days of me getting the idea for a survival kit packed into a single wayer bottle
Google can read your mind... 🤫🤣👍🏻
Yes please were did you find the splint outer tool. I had one but daughter walked off with it.
I have links to all gear that I used in the description of the video.
Super clever!!
Thank you!
excellent kit; maybe instead of the emergency blanket; have a look at the emergency ponchos with reflective inners; then you get some instant protection and cover. the ones i use are camo outside and reflective inside; and you can turn them inside out obviously. they are also slightly better quality and have more options for creating a shelter (due to the poncho hood)
heres some extra ideas that might fit the form factor:
also adding some sugar, salt, coffee satchels and a couple ibuprofen (as probably will need them in whatever disasters causing you to open the kit for real; to make your feet stop hurting etc)
some of the bags for the products could also be swapped out with bigger bags (or an inner lined glad bag) to use for the pouch and extra waterproofing.
would also try a single walled metal bottle/canteen instead; if can fit; some cash and a memory chip with photos of SO, kids, documents, maps, maybe a small sheet of paper with local radio frequencies, repeaters etc :)
Thank you! Do you think the emergency poncho will fit? If it would, that would be an excellent substitute.
Lots of good advice! For sure I need to add the coffee and pain killers. And a metal canteen does make lots of sense. 👍🏻
@@FittoSurvive its tiny bit thicker than a regular one; i just got off amazon.
the microsd card is a bigger one that I keep forgetting; ive got the entire of wikipedia on one; and photos of all my relatives in case need to do a missing person board etc can be just like "here you go survival people" or if possible get a crappy android phone to slot it in and have music; videos etc; good for trading aswell.
I've also started including a medical dog tag in my kits; tiny; light and says your blood type and emergency contact and well; if someone finds your body way more likely others will be able to act on it.
folded piece of aluminium foil can replace the metal container.
@@ahillfromoz9572 Interesting. 👍🏻
@@ahillfromoz9572 I will have to try the poncho, I can see a lot of advantages.
I may add a Victorinox with the USB drive with a USB A and USB C port.
(in portuguese Brazil): Achei muito legal! Falta um recipiente metálico para fazer algo exemplo sopa. Eu tenho comigo uma folha de alumínio que poderei formar um copo. _ Por um momento, achei que era um kit sobrevivência em local de trabalho. Eu colocaria mais corda fina para nós e construções com amarras. A proposta é um kit. Kit são pequenos, minimalistas. Nessa abordagem está bem construído.
Obrigado! Na verdade, acabei de terminar minha segunda versão. Eu tenho uma garrafa de aço de parede única e muitas outras melhorias. Aqui está um link, deixe-me saber o que você pensa. ruclips.net/video/LchvOEEG5hw/видео.html
@@FittoSurvive também tenho garrafa aço (modelo 02). Usei em alta montanha (cordón del plata - Argentina - cordilheira dos andes). Altitude 3.400 metros.
The blanket is a Mylar blanket. I would put a Banda to filter water
Excellent idea. I actually added a bandana in my second version that I recently published.
This is a good kit.
Copper wire is a bad choice tho' as it's much much softer than brass.
Those old Vietnam spec magnesium Ferro blocks are excellent !
Fresnel lenses are a great wallet backup. A lighter might be better than matches tho'.
That would make sense for the brass to be stronger. I will need to swap that out.
Yes, these magnesium blocks are the best! They light super easy.
A lighter probably would be better, would just have to find one that would be less likely to leak.
@@FittoSurvive Butane lighters are fine if you protect the button with tape.
@@edwardfletcher7790 OK. Thanks.
@@FittoSurvive I'd really recommend one of those small electric arc lighters tho', that's what I've got in my kit. It charges off micro USB.
@@edwardfletcher7790 For this kit, I am trying to keep everything simple. No charging, no batteries.
Great survival kit!!!
Thank you!
Great kit 👍
Thanks! 👍🏻👍🏻
I basically like the idea of the firefly ferro rods; but they are so fragile. And I like to keep the toothpick. You can fit a 3/16” ferro rod under the saw. Fits perfectly with the SAK Alox Farmer & Camper, so I imagine it would also fit with your SAK Huntsman.
It would be great if you could share the name/link of the small knife you showed at 13:10. Thank you.
You are right. The Firefly ferro rods are very fragile. Keeping a ferro rod under the saw is brilliant! Thanks.
The neck knife is from AG Russell knives. I couldn't find a link for it online. They were selling them in their physical shop.
Those firefly ferro rods are one of those concepts of "Good idea poor execution" plus the asking price for them...bit steep if you ask me 41$ for 8 flimsy little ferro rods when you could put any other cheaper or preferred ferro rod alternatives just not justifiable (personally I prefer light my fire brand ferro rods cause Swedish fire steels are a solid option.) though that ferro rod under the saw trick sounds familiar i think i saw it in a Felix Immler video.
@@Horde334 Yeah, that is correct. They are way overpriced for sure.
@@Horde334 I saw this tip in a video too, but I don’t think it wasFelix. (I do like his videos though.) Light My Fire are my favourite ferro rods too.
@@cecilm3720@Fit to May be overpriced but eh if people are willing to pay for it and it works for others so be it right? As for the ferro rod i think i tracked the video down it from the MeZillch channel on his part 2 video on 91mm swiss army knife mods.
WoW amazing kit...
Thanks a lot!
Hello, can you please tell me where you bought your food bar? Thank you.
Hello! Here is a link to the food bar. amzn.to/3SkEwgd
Check those wind up lights. I had a couple in my gear for years, then when I went to check them NONE of them would light. OK, I'm an engineer, so I open one up. There were watch batteries in there. Just like many of the shake lights have a wound weight connected to nothing and there are 3-4 coin batteries.
Thanks for that advice! That is so wrong for them to put batteries in there. But rather comical. I will definitely check it out from time to time.
Having a good saw could be the difference between making it through the situation and being a missing body
That is true. 👍🏻
Buen kit de supervivencia ........pero si a la botella de echo agua donde guardo el kit......
Gracias. Siempre que necesites el agua, debes colocar el contenido en la bolsa en la que estaba la botella de agua. Es por eso que debes tener la bolsa con este kit. 👍🏻
Good info. Thanks for sharing!
You are welcome!
Curious;;; see quite a few videos people using their water bottles for a survival kit;;; can't help but wonder how they plan to carry water with their bottle used to carry their kit
The contents of the bottle are supposed to be placed into the carrying pouch.
@@FittoSurvive why not just carry in the pouch to begin with instead of your water bottle??? makes no sense to utilize water bottle in this fashion
Great kit. Can you leave a link for the neck knife?
Thank you! Here it is. agrussell.com/knife/A-G-Russell-Hunter-Scalpel--RU-T914-10A
Good kit complet bravo 🇲🇫.
Thanks!
The miniSawyer...it is a great filter BUT as all filters if submit to freezing temp. will break inside. You will not know it but the water you will drink won't be purified anymore.
So these filters are wonderfull when backpaking because you can carry them against your body in case of low temp. BUT in a survival idea it is a dangerous item, unless you live in tropical area of course...
Very good point and one that I must say I have not thought of before... Maybe I should add some iodine water purification pills as a back up.
Great kit when and where are they for sale
This kit is not sold pre-assembled. But I do have links to most of the gear found inside. It is in the description of the video.
Great Kit. Should be really helpfull in an emergency.
But why did you chose a pencil and not Plus Scales for the Victorinox? You could have a pen with less space used.
Also this set definitly needs a metal cup for cooking and boiling water
Thank you!
The plus scales on the Victorinox is a great idea. 👍🏻
A metal cup would be awesome, but it won't fit. I have cooking utensils in my bug out bag.
@Rick Christopher Thank you again. Yeah, I plan on making a "SWB 2.0" soon, using some of the advice from these comments. I think it'll be a real good upgrade.
@Rick Christopher Not sure why. I carry a GHB bag too in my car, I need to get around to recording it.
Hey, where's the fixed blade knife link?
Do we need to dry the water filter after each use?
Sawyer recommends back-flushing the filter with a syringe that they provide. After that you shake all the water out of it and it is good to go.
If shit goes down were all headed to the woods with our tinder sticks, and multi tools.
I wonder what percent of Americans have even a basic set of survival gear and skills...?
So what’s the benefit of having everything in the water bottle?
Whenever you need all of the gear you dump it into the pouch that I showed at the beginning of the video.
Never heard a carabiner pronounced that way but love the content
😅 After traveling around the world for a large portion of my life, I have picked up all kinds of bad pronunciations... In another of my videos I mispronounced "Acetaminophen" and had all kinds of people laughing about it in the comments. 😄
Good Kit, alothough I HATE "water bottle survival kits"! Reason being - if you are heading out, 10 out of 10 times, you should fill your water first! And you can't do that when your bottle is full of crap. Perhaps you should have a survival kit which includes a bottle?? Lastly... How in the heck did you fit that stove in the bottle???
I get one you're saying. At the beginning of the video I showed the bag that I carry the bag in. The concept is to dump the contents of the water bottle into the bag, then you can fill the bottle with water.
The stove wasn't in the bottle. 🤣 I used it to demonstrate how solid fuel tab burns.
I need to get me one of those furr-ose-um rods.
LOL I never can get it right. 🤣 I should probably just use the shorter name "ferro rod". 😝
@@FittoSurvive HAHA I prefer furroseum
@@DangolWhopper 🤣🤣🤣 👍🏻👍🏻
How about something to carry everything when you wish to put water in the bottle and then carry the bottle.
At the beginning of the video, I showed the bag that I carry the bottle in. I dump the contents into that bag when I need the bottle.
Put in an oven cooking bag. Use it to store stuff or collect water or cook in it.
I am currently trying to build a spydernox sak deluxe tinker. I know you built one on camera before but could you do an in detail on how to disassemble and reassemble?
Hey, I planned to make a "how to mod your SAK" mini series, but haven't gotten to it yet. If you need help with your build, send me a message through Instagram and I can send you some videos explaining whatever you are having difficulty with.
@@FittoSurvive thank you so much I appreciate it
@@coleosborn9334 You are welcome.
Substitute the plastic bottle with metal.
I am working on a 2nd version. I will be sure to do that. 👍🏻👍🏻
This Kit makes me go …. Do he - want to survive because shtf after a car crash, got lost etc … or is it a military Stil kit, that makes him survive the way from a to b. 🤔 so many questions.
If u want to be seen … no marker? No Chalk? No Orange Tape or 550 Cord? No whistles?
And if don’t want to be seen, grey tape in a forest? Bright Blue Bottle and Bag.
+ the sawer bags always like to fail the worst time possible. If urs would, u couldn’t filter water anymore, except for drinking with the filter directly.
So a Metal Bottle and Water purification’s Tablets would be a easy answer.
And depending on ur preference can paint or let the Metal bottle be unpainted- low/ hi vis.
Good questions. 👍🏻
I use this kit when I am going wild camping or when I go hiking. Basically any time that I am out in the wild and I don't have space for a full bug-out bag, I add this to my backpack.
My thoughts when making this kit was not being able for some reason to return to civilization for whatever reason, medical, getting lost, etc. And being able to survive for a couple of days while getting back.
Maybe changing the mylar thermal blanket for an orange one would help getting seen in case of getting lost.
@@FittoSurvive wouldn’t be a Tier System then better? That way you could have survival, rescue and camping organized..Like ..
Tier 1 .. altoid Kit + Victorinox (on person at all Time)
Tier 2 … Clothing, Belt with Gear ( layered depending on time of year, what to do etc )
Tier 3 … Backpack ( a backpack 🎒 for E&E, BoB, Camping or pre packed pouches for everything. )
Tier 4 …. Car or other forms of transportation, to carry gear.
But I don’t know ur situation, so … u know best 👍what will work
@@seductive_Octopus That is kind of what I have. I have my core EDC, my EDC pouch (goes with me when I leave my property), a car bag, a bug out/get home bag. So, kind of going up the tiers, like you suggested.
Excellent
Of you have room to spare I would put in some painkillers (like ibuprofene or acetaminophen)
Definitely need to add that. They wouldn't take harldy any space. 👍🏻👍🏻
Will it fit an ounce of coke?
😅 Coca Cola?
Can’t understand why you don’t use a metal bottle. Nalgene bottles are trendy, but you shouldn’t boil water in plastic. And that Sawyer filter is not going to take care of viruses
Yes, I agree with you. I am working on a 2nd version of this Survival kit using a metal single walled bottle.
Swap out that plastic water bottle for a stainless steel one so you can boil water to kill the parasites that the filter doesn't catch
Wonderful idea! I am planning to make a second version, and I will be sure to use a single walled steel bottle.
I recommend putting your first aid kit in a separate modular pouch - this is wasting the utility of the water
carrier
Too bad if it's an emergency and you need to get something out fast.
Yeah, definitely not a quick access especially with how tight everything is packed in there.
Excelente
Thank you!
So, every time you need something, you have to empty the bottle......
No, this kit is not meant to be an EDC kit. It is a survival kit. When it's needed you dump all of the contents into the pouch. 😉
Your idea is now copied for the next 7 vs. wild 3 show.
Probably. 😂😂😂
Macgruder has nothing on this guy
LOL Thanks.
As soon as I saw the bracelet and that wind up torch I bailed
🤣 Not durable enough? I'm working on a second version, maybe it will be more appealing to you. 😏😁
@@FittoSurvive Great to hear. Let's be honest - the current version is the next thing up from a kid's toy? It's garbage and I wouldn't rely on it - no way Jose
@@bigchiponmyshoulder7573 Looking forward to your opinion of my second version then. 😅
Interesting idea. But in a survival / emergency mode, I prefer to be a survivor and not a pack rat. Cool idea, just not my style.
LOL 👍🏻 Everybody has their own style.
@@FittoSurvive I mean, in a survive mode I might want to use the water bottle to carry water - so no longer can be used as storage. So either own two bottle - or just keep one bottle and one waterproof clear plastic hard shell container (something like Pelican). In a world where such product didn't exist, this is a nice idea. But since the product exist, having small opening and spending lot of time packing is not preferred. Even if this issue was covered in the video (I watched it half-way ish) since the small opening already made me uneasy :-) , I think waterproof container with manageable opening right from the start is preferable.
@@RealFableFox The contents of the water bottle are supposed to be moved to the pouch when the survival kit is needed.
Whistle…
Good idea. 👍🏻
Where does one put all the shit that was in the bottle once you put water or juice to drink in the bottle
At the beginning of the video, I showed a carrying pouch for this. You would have to dump the contents into the pouch.
3 weeks I would still probably be fat
LOL