Survival Trees - Chestnut, Pine, Willow
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- Опубликовано: 3 авг 2024
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This video was made and produced in Austria.
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Survival Lilly ji
The usefulness of wild plants, trees, lichens, fungi etc is one of my favorite subjects. Good job on the video Lilly
+Far North Bushcraft And Survival mine too Lonnie :)
Lilly, I've never seen so much pine resin in one place. You've collected so much. You could start 100 fires with all that. Great video.
Thanks for taking us along Lilly, great video, always entertaining and informative.
We have willow trees, pine trees, and the other tree you mentioned also here in the United States. There are several varieties of the pine trees here, and in Arkansas and all of the South we have the short leaf pines which is about like the one you showed in your video. My grandmother used the green leaves for making a tea which she would give us to drink when we got sick with a cold during Winter. As for hardwood we have the various types of oak trees, the hickory, and the walnut trees. I love the hickory nuts, and the black walnuts from those trees and when growing up we ate them regularly during Autumn along with eating the blackberries, mulberries, and other berries which grow in the wild here. I live in a rural area so we have no problem finding food to eat and we can eat polk salad which is like spenish except the leaves have to be rinsed three times (twice then drained and the third time you can cook it normally).
Another solid and informative video. I'm appreciating your professionalism through and through.
Lilly! Good to see you.. It's been awhile...
Always a pleasure and an education..
Great video, Lily. ...and I'll bet that your dog keeps you busy giving it baths. LOL
Sehr, sehr gut Lilly. Die Pfanne zum rösten hat ja auch was ;)) Cool. LG Sepp
this is real survival knowledge..
Fantastic bushcraft videos and fantastic bushcraft channel of the year
There are no Chestnut trees where I live, but Pine and Willow are in great abundance. Green Pine needles are one of the wild foods I use to feed my Meerschweinchen.
Thank you Lilly, great to know the potental uses these trees have. Very informative video, well presented too.
Another great video, Lilly! In addition, The cadmium layer of the pine (inner bark) can also be obtained for food. Toasted/fried and eaten in strips or ground after cooking and added to flour for bread, it will sustain one when meat is scarce. Too bad there are no chestnut trees close to me. I love marronen... I am envious.
Thanks Lilly, love these kind of videos!!!
More excellent content and delivered quickly and professionally. I always like the shots of the dog, too!!
I really love your videos- there is something so calming about you. I really am jealous of the private land you roam around. Keep up the good work please. :)
weide salicin hat mir schon mehr als einmal super dienste erwiesen :) tolles video :)
+Survival Deutschland Danke Stefan!
You rock Lilly. Great information and well done presentation.
Nature's pharmacy: Willow. Willow bark releases , on boiling, a precursor to salicylic acid , an analgesic or pain relieving compound. (acetyl salicylic acid-aspirin) Nice video Lilly. Appreciate all your work.
Thanks for the info. Its definitely something I need to work on, knowing my trees and uses.
well made video; I like how you added clips as you were discussing usage of each tree.
great video Lily thanks for sharing your knowledge!
You are such a treasure. As always, thank you! Be safe and happy!
great vid Lilly I've learned a lot from you I thank you for that keep it up!
Hi Lilly, very good and informative video, thanks for sharing, take care, Taro
To Lilly...This is my sunny hello to you
Your amazing lady. Your movies fill me with good hope to do with nature
From Mr White
UK.
You are so right Lilly you are so right
great job lily very well explained
Good stuff!
Thanks - Martin
A great video Lilly very informative and I love dax what a great dog and a great life he has with you
Thanks for the great info. Nice camera work and editing! The BO camp is getting a more "lived in" look...
Great video, very useful information, as usual...and always a pleasure to see Dax...he is my favorite dog on the internet...
Nice opening animation . Good video as usual !
Your channel is really interesting, and I love the way you speak. Definitely subscribing
Highly informative! Keep up the great videos!!! Don't FORGET Dax!!! Love U!!
Thats was awesome Lilly
Great instructional video.
Good Video , Lilly! I love Dax!
Great info! TY
Great video! Very informative
You are an inspiration Lilly. Keep up the great work! What are your thoughts on stratospheric aerosol geoengineering?
thank you for sharing that info could come in very helpful!
Very informative, Thank You.
Another great vid Lilly!.
I think the wood form Goat willow trees are known for making loud crackling noises when thrown onto the fire, good bit of info if you are trying to keep a low profile.
Always good advise. Keep doing what you do :-)
Loooove tree facts :) Absolutely gorgeous video...
no hush.
Dax always finds something nice to roll in ! - ATB
omg so waiting for this video!!!!! thanks
Great video. Very good information
Another great video, thanks
Thank you Lilly that was very informative and Dax must be one of the happiest dogs around, keep up the good work you should check out the green pharmacy it is full of good information.
Guten tag Lilly, With the Stone pine trees you can also eat the pine nuts that are inside the cones. They don't taste that great but are edible.
Always both enjoy and learn a lot from your informative postings. Thanks for sharing.
ATB. Greg
Good information, as always.
I have learned a ton from your survival/prep videos. I live in the deep southeast of the US. Any thoughts about making a video and/or trip to SE USA? We have few willows and less or no chestnuts. Our pines are southern pines, so I imagine they are similar. May water oaks and live oaks. Thanks again, Lilly!
Thank you for explaining what "fat wood" is, until now I thought when other bush crafters referred to fat wood I thought they were talking about another type of tree, thank you :-)
very valuable knowledge. I enjoyed this video very much.
I enjoy all your videos. You're doing a wonderful job! Kudos for that!
Where is located the area you're filming? Looks similar to the place I film my videos in Czech Republic.
+Mochileros I am from Austria :)
great video! luv your dog awesome
I should watch your videos more often, This was a good post.
Good, useful video. Thank you.
Lilly: Easily one of your best informative video, well made my they keep on coming, Question scots can the pinna of the pine be chewed, extracting of Vit C or is it to bitter? Cheers
+derrick ? you can chew it no problem. Cheers
i remember finding this seeds and crack it for the content
really good when roasted. i was collecting with my family and other people just gave this stares on us.
Still, its a pretty cool plants
Cool!!
Awesome videos... Ur very knowledgeable about all aspects of survival! Keep up the great work! Don't leave Dax out...please!
Hi,
Many thanks for the info, very interesting and really useful.
Dax, the comedic wonder dog..lol
If you roast chestnuts, cut into them a bit with a knife so the moisture can escape because otherwise they may explode.
great video and knowledge base is good thank you..
wieso kenn ich den channel erst seit 2 Wochen - aber besser spät als nie!
I found my first pine trees last week I and ever surprised about the fat wood . I just need to use it to start a camp fire next time I am out wild camping hopefully this weekend 😄😄
Is that a mora knife? Looks just like the one I just purchased with a carbon steel blade, very happy with it.
As far as pine trees go, how do you identify which ones to not make tea from the needles?
Can you do a "kitchen video" showing how you make soup greens? Seems like a staple pack item or prep item.
Da kann man nur sagen super
Vg Guido
Can you make tea with needles from every coniferous wood or just pine and spruce?
Nice video, very interesting thank you for the information. Dax was on form hahaha!! PEACE :-)
Thanks for the info Lilly..My question is when looking for fat wood on a pine tree, does the tree needs to have a damage to heal itself for the tree to have fat wood?
+Billy Quan most of the time yes.
+Survival Lilly ..Thanks Lilly..Great info..Now I'll look at pine trees more closely..
i love your videos lilly
great video
lilly , in the UK the sweet chest nut is known as the horse chestnut or conker tree.
+Eddy Wiggins I think you need to read up on your trees. The sweet chestnut is different to horse chestnut or conker tree. For a start the horse chestnut or conker tree which is poisonous has less spikes on its casing. They are thicker spikes where as the sweet chestnut the nut casings are more like a spiky sea urchin and very difficult to pick up bare handed without getting spiked.
just wanted to say your skills are great. I bought the 60 watt solar panel on your page, its wonderful.
I very much like your Videos and your extensive Knowledge of all things Outdoor Survival!!! I have SHARED your Videos with Friends!! I hav3 a Question...How long did it take you to Learn everything you present?? Were you always learning from a young age and spending time outdoors??
You are young yet have extensive knowledge!! Thank You for your work!!😊👍👍
love the spoon
I love your dog so much
Dax brought you some fire starter, very helpful.
Looking cuter everyday Lilly
Dax's a good boy!
Lilly, are there any additional reading sources, perhaps field guides a person can take with them in their packs, regarding this kind of information about trees? I will be checking out your other videos about trees. This really is an important video. Always a treat to hear from you. Keep up the good work. :)
cool,I personally enjoy pine tea
fascinating creams can protect against skin irretations
good video
also if you find a willow tree with silk worms in it the leaves will produce ASA as a defence against the worms it turns the leaves bitter
Now I am hungry for roasted chestnuts!!!
Vermisse das "stay tuned" :)
Is that a Silky saw?
I can't say I've ever had roasted chestnuts.
👍
i only just subbed about 20 mins ago