I’m so happy to see Mitch getting the notoriety that he deserves. He’s a SME in this stuff; was my SERE instructor when I went through SV-80A in 2016. You could tell them that he has a true passion for this.
Reminds me of airsoft games me and my buddies would have deep in the woods: there was an unfinished playhouse thing in one spot, and the guys on my team thought that it was odd that I opted against using it as our "base", instead favoring a small alcove at the top of the hill made from fallen trees, until I explained to them that nobody is going to want to trudge through several dozen yards of turned over brush and trees. Rigged up the man-made structure with cans and bottles to make noise, posted up on the hill about ten to fifteen yards out and waited for them to naturally wander up into our encampment the only way possible.
I really want to get into setting up traps like this for this reason! Why worry about a random SOB doing something unlikely when the real threat would be 30° right from there
@@SILENTGUARD90 No, no; we did. What we didn't do is hide in an obvious, man-made structure. My team set up shop in a quasi-cave obscured by fallen trees that had only one way to get to it. Made for a regular turkey shoot every time.
The fishing line is only susceptible to stretching depending on the line you use. Monofilament fishing line will stretch a lot. Fluorocarbon fishing line has very minimal to no stretch at all. I would recommend using fluorocarbon fishing line.
@@joelotroba546depends on application. Thin Fluorocarbon is great for “blinder” traps. Thin wire hooks dangled at eye level and break off after sticking in. When dry it looks like a common spider on its silk but wet the line and flouro can be basically invisible for 1-2 hours. Braid is too visible even at low poundage for this. A similar application can be used with mono line, utilizing its stretch by making a 3’x3’ spider net with about 100 hooks on it set on a spring branch. Once someone is caught in it the stretch of the line makes struggling that much worse. Lines that do not stretch make it harder for more hooks to grab and dig in. Of course both of these could also be tipped or dipped with additional “surprises.”
Just a tip, braided line doesn’t stretch and is cheaper than buying fluorocarbon. Love mono for it’s stretch when fishing but not for this application lol.
For years I carried the small, cheap brass fishing pole bells that have the clip made on them that you can likely still buy in the fishing section of Walmart for a few bucks. I painted them with the same spray paint as my rifle so they didn't shine. Really easy to set up on some fishing line and really easy to take back down fairly quickly. Each situation or terrain dictated how they were placed or how the line was routed. Just food for thought, it worked for me. Great video guys!!
At 10:06, that look after he says "I want to take them by surprise." That's strong. That look took me from watching a fun informative video to "Holy cow, this is real." This man knows what he's talking about and it's not something he learned in a classroom.
Started making these sort of things as a kid over 25 yrs ago. Loved it then and still do. I learned with time and a lot of trial and error. Different materials for different purposes and signal types. Love this video guys 👍🏼👍🏼
Man I love this channel. Never a bad video I swear. Braided fishing line would make for a better tripwire: less stretch than monofilament, smaller diameter than mono of the same tensile strength, and less reflective especially in green or black. Secondly, a mouse trap fitted with a .22 or shotgun blank, or any of the early detection kits sold online for cheap that utilize blanks, would be good options as well. I can see why that option was probably omitted considering how weird youtube monetization has gotten.
Set up your trip wire at a slight incline/decline to minimize the collection of rain drops and specially morning dew. Use dead vegetation and dry branches/twigs around your perimeter, at least 1 man pace deep, makes for great natural and unassuming perimeter alarms; make sure to rub dirt on the cut/saw marks to make it look natural. Empty plastic bottles under leaves works great for early detection. Also, range out and alpha numerically identify your sectors and engrain it into your group. Map out all of the alarm points, set up kill funnels, rally points, casualty collection points, resupply points, etc. You will not be encountering ST6 or a Ranger element, so prepare accordingly and understand your area of operation and those in it, identify your target and don’t be indiscriminate when engaging. Don’t forget deploying psychological warfare elements to cause them to think twice. Not a game, you are dealing with human beings, so be kind and be human.
I have multiple kits for this, electric alarms and shotgun primer alarms, both work very well and have their distinct advantages. The kits are primed so that very minimal effort is needed to set them up - 3 directions is the bare minimum, more is better. 4 is the best balance for a small lightweight kit. Keep in mind that it must be strong enough fishing line to activate your device, spectra/dyneema cord is what I use. Awesome video, thank you.
We used to make flashbulbs filled with black powder that could be set off with a battery. You could use them as a detonator for something larger but they were pretty loud on their own. A clothespin with two pennies glued to it with a Popsicle stick between them completed the trip wire. A triple A battery was enough to set them off. You did have to solder wires to the bulbs and to the pennies but that wasn't hard. We were just screwing around but did kind of want to do some war games up in the woods.
I remember seeing 3D print files for trip wire setups where you actually put a live cartridge in. Obviously the projectile isn't gonna fly anywhere but it will make a loud noise. The files had adapters for everything from 22lr to 12g and everything in between. The mouse trap with cheapo glow stick is a really cool idea
Some Friends and I thought of how to do Battlefront's Ewok Hunt in real life with airsoft guns and nerf swords. The glowstick traps would not only reveal locations, but would slowly begin to light up the woods we'd be running through. It's such a simple but brilliant trap
You can also bend the corners of the wire trap downward a little-- set it off once, make note of where the indentations are, then drill holes offset so you can stick .22 blanks in so they'll be struck on the rim. Use two for reliability. Might come in handy if your position is getting rushed and you need a distraction to buy you a few seconds.
When I was a youngster and I used to play in the woods.I would try to do things like this, It never quite worked out the way I wanted it too, Maybe this time now being older.I can get it right , especially if needed with the information from u three
Thank you guys for all that you do and info that yall give. Total game changer for me. Plus yall don’t have that I’m holier than tho.Because not everyone the capability to spend 10 k on a kit set up
For homes livestock guard dogs roaming, posted band dogs, guard geese, motion sensor lights, bell tripwires in the woods, Conibear traps in the woods, shopkeep’s bell, deer cams that send text, CCTV, driveway gates
@dirty-civilian you should do a spin-off of this for the home. How can you take a similar layered approach to your home and immediate property? What options are available that are less primitive; more permanent?
Honestly, a home security system is your best bet. Motion-activated infared cameras configured to monitor your yard/within your property lines. Ring doorbell camera. ADT window alarms. That kind of stuff.
Spectra / Dyneema line is great. A bit stiffer / less stretch depending on thickness. In addition to chem light, the cheap LED lights can be activated with a bit more sophistication. Keep um in a zip lock back wrapped in duct tape for added water proofing Brass or Stainless steel jingle bells = super cheap sound alert Air horn is also another useful tool Mini CO2 canisters could be useful.
I personally carry braided green spiderwire. Almost zero stretch, very hard to see in most terrain, and durable enough to use for a variety of different uses.
When are we gonna get another dirty civilian and Nova group collaboration. This channel and brass facts are a weekend staple. I loved the emp video you guys did and the cross pollination between preparedness community is awesome to see
So....I have always been fascinated by perimeter alarms home security etc.....fast forward a few years this last two months I have been playing with those meshtastic radios as a way of having off grid comms with my buddies in the city, I had watched some people put weather add on chips and motion sensors on their radios.... but I never made the connection untill watching this vid......im getting a couple km receiving range between radios and you can put a motion sensor on it.... the light went on, Holy smokes..........and literally he mentioned meshtastic 30 seconds later haha, awsome. I guess im buying more devices. Oh by the way, they just sound techno intimidating, they are really quite easy to work with.
I use fishing bite alarms, you got red and blue flashing lights for direction, plus a sonic alarm. And they're cheap. That's my outer ring. Since I'm more worried about bears, and 2 legged animals I sleep in a hammock, my buddy calls it bite height for bears.
That would be at least 3 felonies but if we're building these things anyway then society has collapsed to a point where we don't need to worry about silly laws😅
You can buy packs of surplus trip wire. It's very fine, almost impossible to see. A spool is smaller than a G17 mag, so it's very portable and comes with wire coated in green and tan for camo. I used to keep one in my butt pack back in my day.
Did this with just 550 cord guts up in bridge port during the winter against a ranger unit while I was in the marines and it was the best thing hearing them eat shit in the snow because of the trip lines I put out and get funneled where we wanted them to Go.
Love the content, can't wait for round 2 on the traps that "escalate force" against the target. However, I don't want y'all getting banned. May I recommend posting some sponsored links to some fine literature that you would recommend?
Ive made some traps befor in my old woods growing up i even tryed one like off predator with arnold where i put a trip line connected to a big log connected toward pther tree where when tripped it swung out hard and would not be fun to be hit with
Theres these specialized noisemaker traps that use blank ammunition (some variants may be modified to fire live ones. Eg, buckshot or birdshot) The issue with those is preparation and its too specific with its use. But I personally think a fixed tripwire is enough of a primitive warning/alarm trap because usually they either fall or start thrashing/cursing out.
I actually started thinking about this in case I need to scare off tweakers snooping around. The “Boobytraps” army field manual has some great ideas for triggering cheap battery alarms instead of... you know... electric blasting caps.
You guys should test if magician's "invisible thread" (e.g., "400Ft Invisible Thread" from Ellusionist, or similar) is strong enough for this application. If so, it would likely be even harder to spot than the fishing line. Might be too elastic, though...
I know it sounds silly but is it possible to do a future video on latrine/personal hygiene items for worse comes to worse event for an individual to a family/team?
Tip. To prolong detection. Set up where no one wants to go. 1. Swamps 2. Heavy thorny thick végétation. 3. Near stagnant water... insect infestations 4. And you best need avenues of egress... more than 1 5. If you are detected.... DO NOT assume it's a troop of girl scouts 6. Remember 2 bandoliers and seven magazines only last 5 minutes at the rapid rate a little longer at a sustained rate and if you make it through the night you'll be picking up the enemy's weapons
Yes, but only if it is well trained, you don't want it to bark at a squirrel or something and give away your location or wake you up at night for nothing
Under circumstances I won't mention, I was tasked with guarding about 100 acres of forested area for a long duration of time (commanding a team of 90-400 personnel, depending on threat level). Deer and coyotes tripped the trip wire so frequently that it turned into a full time job chasing down and resetting the trip wires. The trip wire idea was completely abandoned after only a few weeks. With the lack of more modern options, perhaps we would have stayed with that. There are much better options available now, on the cheap, that are far better. We've evolved a lot since Vietnam. Site security became very high tech with many things I'm not allowed to disclose. Easy options I can mention: Cellular enabled trail cameras, thermal drones, infrared trip wires, thermal monoculars, lots and lots of cameras, etc... If time and location permit, start putting up fencing.
Remember... your enemy has 1. Night vison goggles 2. Thermal scopes 3. Drones 4. Ground surface radar 5. Ground penetrating radar 6. Patrols 7. Blood hounds Last but not least... 8. INFORMANTS. When they put us on trains heading to FEMA RE-EDUCATION CAMPS... Save me a window seat 😊
This is kind of my specialty. A half dozen metal mouse traps, primers, bear bells for perimeter alarms. Primitive trap triggers and some bank line for defensive traps. Just be damn careful where you set them up and be damn sure to take them down. Also, traps set to injure are big time illegal. It’s good to know how, but don’t be stupid.
I’m so happy to see Mitch getting the notoriety that he deserves. He’s a SME in this stuff; was my SERE instructor when I went through SV-80A in 2016. You could tell them that he has a true passion for this.
I have a jerk of a goose that my wife raised. Nothing gets by him and its very helpful having him sound off when somwthing comes in my yard.
Geese are underrated as both a warning and a violent deterrent
@@BisonSkinner absolutely! Nothing messes with those assholes!
@@BisonSkinner I've never seen cobra chicken spelled that way.
Dogs got purched by romans because they didnt bark but the gooses did. After that they had guard gooses
Surprising how many people are afraid of geese I have a few in the yard
Reminds me of airsoft games me and my buddies would have deep in the woods: there was an unfinished playhouse thing in one spot, and the guys on my team thought that it was odd that I opted against using it as our "base", instead favoring a small alcove at the top of the hill made from fallen trees, until I explained to them that nobody is going to want to trudge through several dozen yards of turned over brush and trees. Rigged up the man-made structure with cans and bottles to make noise, posted up on the hill about ten to fifteen yards out and waited for them to naturally wander up into our encampment the only way possible.
I really want to get into setting up traps like this for this reason! Why worry about a random SOB doing something unlikely when the real threat would be 30° right from there
But that's the thing.. you want to hide where no one wants to go
@@SILENTGUARD90ah yes. The “bad guy evil lair” from cartoons strategy.
@@SILENTGUARD90 No, no; we did. What we didn't do is hide in an obvious, man-made structure. My team set up shop in a quasi-cave obscured by fallen trees that had only one way to get to it. Made for a regular turkey shoot every time.
Maaaaan you just made me really miss my childhood lol
The fishing line is only susceptible to stretching depending on the line you use. Monofilament fishing line will stretch a lot. Fluorocarbon fishing line has very minimal to no stretch at all. I would recommend using fluorocarbon fishing line.
Braided line also has no stretch and is easier to tie
Isn't fluorocarbon the expensive kind?
Braid. Way better and it usually comes in moss green, would blend in nicely
Some of the best DC content is with the Tactical Hippy. Good stuff, guys.
@@joelotroba546depends on application.
Thin Fluorocarbon is great for “blinder” traps. Thin wire hooks dangled at eye level and break off after sticking in. When dry it looks like a common spider on its silk but wet the line and flouro can be basically invisible for 1-2 hours. Braid is too visible even at low poundage for this.
A similar application can be used with mono line, utilizing its stretch by making a 3’x3’ spider net with about 100 hooks on it set on a spring branch. Once someone is caught in it the stretch of the line makes struggling that much worse. Lines that do not stretch make it harder for more hooks to grab and dig in.
Of course both of these could also be tipped or dipped with additional “surprises.”
Drew is unironically a great actor.
Just a tip, braided line doesn’t stretch and is cheaper than buying fluorocarbon. Love mono for it’s stretch when fishing but not for this application lol.
ABSOLUTELY
For years I carried the small, cheap brass fishing pole bells that have the clip made on them that you can likely still buy in the fishing section of Walmart for a few bucks. I painted them with the same spray paint as my rifle so they didn't shine. Really easy to set up on some fishing line and really easy to take back down fairly quickly. Each situation or terrain dictated how they were placed or how the line was routed. Just food for thought, it worked for me.
Great video guys!!
I use 3 of them when I go camping 😂
I love your guy’s videos. You guys plan how I believe I should. You guys also tell us to be ready with guns but not to be solely focused on the guns.
Best way to prepare for the fight is preparing to not get into one
At 10:06, that look after he says "I want to take them by surprise." That's strong.
That look took me from watching a fun informative video to "Holy cow, this is real."
This man knows what he's talking about and it's not something he learned in a classroom.
Started making these sort of things as a kid over 25 yrs ago. Loved it then and still do. I learned with time and a lot of trial and error. Different materials for different purposes and signal types. Love this video guys 👍🏼👍🏼
This is so cool. This reminds me of the time when I was living with my family in Vietnam. My uncles taught me some of this stuff.
Damn, knowledge came straight from the Vietcong Vets. Thats hardcore, they faught hard.
Man I love this channel. Never a bad video I swear.
Braided fishing line would make for a better tripwire: less stretch than monofilament, smaller diameter than mono of the same tensile strength, and less reflective especially in green or black. Secondly, a mouse trap fitted with a .22 or shotgun blank, or any of the early detection kits sold online for cheap that utilize blanks, would be good options as well. I can see why that option was probably omitted considering how weird youtube monetization has gotten.
Braided line might not break as well as floro if that's the intent
Set up your trip wire at a slight incline/decline to minimize the collection of rain drops and specially morning dew. Use dead vegetation and dry branches/twigs around your perimeter, at least 1 man pace deep, makes for great natural and unassuming perimeter alarms; make sure to rub dirt on the cut/saw marks to make it look natural. Empty plastic bottles under leaves works great for early detection. Also, range out and alpha numerically identify your sectors and engrain it into your group. Map out all of the alarm points, set up kill funnels, rally points, casualty collection points, resupply points, etc. You will not be encountering ST6 or a Ranger element, so prepare accordingly and understand your area of operation and those in it, identify your target and don’t be indiscriminate when engaging. Don’t forget deploying psychological warfare elements to cause them to think twice. Not a game, you are dealing with human beings, so be kind and be human.
I have multiple kits for this, electric alarms and shotgun primer alarms, both work very well and have their distinct advantages. The kits are primed so that very minimal effort is needed to set them up - 3 directions is the bare minimum, more is better. 4 is the best balance for a small lightweight kit.
Keep in mind that it must be strong enough fishing line to activate your device, spectra/dyneema cord is what I use.
Awesome video, thank you.
dont forget the vietnamese bullet trap as a last desort defense. Takes 1 Bullet, 1 nail, some wood and a shovel.
We used to make flashbulbs filled with black powder that could be set off with a battery. You could use them as a detonator for something larger but they were pretty loud on their own. A clothespin with two pennies glued to it with a Popsicle stick between them completed the trip wire. A triple A battery was enough to set them off. You did have to solder wires to the bulbs and to the pennies but that wasn't hard. We were just screwing around but did kind of want to do some war games up in the woods.
I remember seeing 3D print files for trip wire setups where you actually put a live cartridge in. Obviously the projectile isn't gonna fly anywhere but it will make a loud noise. The files had adapters for everything from 22lr to 12g and everything in between. The mouse trap with cheapo glow stick is a really cool idea
2:23 the mouse trap thing is cool
very cool, glow sticks are such a nice touch
Some Friends and I thought of how to do Battlefront's Ewok Hunt in real life with airsoft guns and nerf swords. The glowstick traps would not only reveal locations, but would slowly begin to light up the woods we'd be running through. It's such a simple but brilliant trap
You can also bend the corners of the wire trap downward a little-- set it off once, make note of where the indentations are, then drill holes offset so you can stick .22 blanks in so they'll be struck on the rim. Use two for reliability. Might come in handy if your position is getting rushed and you need a distraction to buy you a few seconds.
i would have loved to see an example of how visible it actually is at night.
Just a cheaper version of the true glowstick trap systems
I really appreciate this educational content and the format in which Yall deliver it.
One of my favorite things is wire with fishing hooks; at night it’s a game changer. Hear them scream 😱
This might be my favorite video yet.
well trips attached to para flares were amazing... also now we make up blank on rat traps ... use shotgun bangers etc... great video shared thanks
I just attach strap-ons to the trees with a motion detection device. I can easily see when Administrative Results enters my property.
LMAO
Please explain 💀💀💀
The Do's & Dildon'ts of the Strap On Motion Detection Device.
Takes tree hugging to a whole new level.
@@TropicalBones lmao
When I was a youngster and I used to play in the woods.I would try to do things like this, It never quite worked out the way I wanted it too, Maybe this time now being older.I can get it right , especially if needed with the information from u three
I appreciate the info that you guys provide. Thank you for teaching us this stuff Mitch. Hopefully it’s never needed
Thank you campsite Heyzus for dropping the knowledge on us👍
I use 12ga bear bangers, they screw rt into the tree. Point some #7 at the ground or some metal covered by leaves. They work great day or night.
Hide sight trying is fun
There is many alarms to build and quick cover shelters
Thank you guys for all that you do and info that yall give. Total game changer for me. Plus yall don’t have that I’m holier than tho.Because not everyone the capability to spend 10 k on a kit set up
For homes livestock guard dogs roaming, posted band dogs, guard geese, motion sensor lights, bell tripwires in the woods, Conibear traps in the woods, shopkeep’s bell, deer cams that send text, CCTV, driveway gates
Geese, man. People always underestimate geese.
Ghe big conibear will break a mans leg and your not getting it out while you are in pain. Nasty pices of work. U gotta open it with a special tool
@@Darthdoodoocan concur, hell a smaller conibear is almost impossible to open without the pryer
😂 shot gun traps. claymore mines😂😂😂 f16s😂😂😂 drones😂😂. horny lesbians😂😂😂 rabid unicorns😂😂😂
Guard geese 😂 freaking guard geese bruh this the best Christmas eve of my life
@dirty-civilian you should do a spin-off of this for the home. How can you take a similar layered approach to your home and immediate property? What options are available that are less primitive; more permanent?
remember Lock Stock & 2 Smoking Barrels? the gate🤭
Honestly, a home security system is your best bet. Motion-activated infared cameras configured to monitor your yard/within your property lines. Ring doorbell camera. ADT window alarms. That kind of stuff.
Wayne grow knows his stuff
Another very interesting channel and video. Subbed instantly. Thank you very much and greetings from Germany!
Love this channel.
Keep it up guys.
Hanging treble hooks from fishing line and treebranches
Spectra / Dyneema line is great. A bit stiffer / less stretch depending on thickness.
In addition to chem light, the cheap LED lights can be activated with a bit more sophistication. Keep um in a zip lock back wrapped in duct tape for added water proofing
Brass or Stainless steel jingle bells = super cheap sound alert
Air horn is also another useful tool
Mini CO2 canisters could be useful.
Love the hand chop edit. Definitely want a part 2 from ol dude
As always you guys are killing it, great work!
I love the Glow 🌟 stick set up
I personally carry braided green spiderwire. Almost zero stretch, very hard to see in most terrain, and durable enough to use for a variety of different uses.
Interesting, like to see which of these devices work best in an extremely rainy environment.
Excellent topic and fantastic presenter👍 love these types of videos.
I like the fith ops perimeter alarms. Reusable and maybe a step down from the from thermobaric bangs shown but still can get loud.
When are we gonna get another dirty civilian and Nova group collaboration. This channel and brass facts are a weekend staple. I loved the emp video you guys did and the cross pollination between preparedness community is awesome to see
So....I have always been fascinated by perimeter alarms home security etc.....fast forward a few years this last two months I have been playing with those meshtastic radios as a way of having off grid comms with my buddies in the city, I had watched some people put weather add on chips and motion sensors on their radios.... but I never made the connection untill watching this vid......im getting a couple km receiving range between radios and you can put a motion sensor on it.... the light went on, Holy smokes..........and literally he mentioned meshtastic 30 seconds later haha, awsome. I guess im buying more devices. Oh by the way, they just sound techno intimidating, they are really quite easy to work with.
I use fishing bite alarms, you got red and blue flashing lights for direction, plus a sonic alarm. And they're cheap. That's my outer ring. Since I'm more worried about bears, and 2 legged animals I sleep in a hammock, my buddy calls it bite height for bears.
Oh I do these but I just strap a sawnoff facing a block of tannerite and ball bearings. Same same, but difffferentt.
Front towards enemy 😆😆😆
That would be at least 3 felonies but if we're building these things anyway then society has collapsed to a point where we don't need to worry about silly laws😅
You can buy packs of surplus trip wire. It's very fine, almost impossible to see. A spool is smaller than a G17 mag, so it's very portable and comes with wire coated in green and tan for camo.
I used to keep one in my butt pack back in my day.
Did this with just 550 cord guts up in bridge port during the winter against a ranger unit while I was in the marines and it was the best thing hearing them eat shit in the snow because of the trip lines I put out and get funneled where we wanted them to Go.
Falling lime paint will make them easier to spot too!
Great video. You guys really rock
Thanks for this video! I'm currently hiding out in Daniel Boone National Forest and this will let me get some good sleep tonight!
Too soon?
@@aerldonathan4381 That's where I camp and backpack! Hope we don't run into each other 🤣🤣🤣.
Intro is amazing
Hell yeah man solid knowledge transfer y'all stay safe and watch your six ...
Love the content, can't wait for round 2 on the traps that "escalate force" against the target. However, I don't want y'all getting banned. May I recommend posting some sponsored links to some fine literature that you would recommend?
Love this channel. Lots of valuable information.
We use motion sensing fence lights also
Ive made some traps befor in my old woods growing up i even tryed one like off predator with arnold where i put a trip line connected to a big log connected toward pther tree where when tripped it swung out hard and would not be fun to be hit with
My 4 year old loved watching this with me, now he wants to setup a boobytrap around our house in the suburbs
Man its funny seeing this video cause i been researching this stuff in prep for some MSW games in yhe Future to practice it, learned alot today
Outstanding !
Theres these specialized noisemaker traps that use blank ammunition (some variants may be modified to fire live ones. Eg, buckshot or birdshot)
The issue with those is preparation and its too specific with its use. But I personally think a fixed tripwire is enough of a primitive warning/alarm trap because usually they either fall or start thrashing/cursing out.
I actually started thinking about this in case I need to scare off tweakers snooping around. The “Boobytraps” army field manual has some great ideas for triggering cheap battery alarms instead of... you know... electric blasting caps.
I already learned everything I need to know about this stuff from watching Home Alone.
*RevelRee!*
Almost got Mitch to crack at the intro. 😂
theres dollar store window/door alarms for like $1 each, tie them to some fishing line and they will loudly chirp when tripped.
Sound detectors also. People moving through the woods make a lot of noise.
You guys should test if magician's "invisible thread" (e.g., "400Ft Invisible Thread" from Ellusionist, or similar) is strong enough for this application. If so, it would likely be even harder to spot than the fishing line. Might be too elastic, though...
CAN you show on a vidéo how did you fix your ops core amp to your PGD helmet ?
Bouta be a strange uptick in mouse trap purchases 😂
The AirsoftFatty reference was money 😂
5:03 if you catch a puddy cat I would be impressed 😅
Another banger!!! Great work guys and the ending was hilarious. Keep up the great subjects and info.
I know it sounds silly but is it possible to do a future video on latrine/personal hygiene items for worse comes to worse event for an individual to a family/team?
Sterile gauze is great TP. Use a collapsible flask as a bidet if need be.
Excellent video!!!
Tip. To prolong detection. Set up where no one wants to go.
1. Swamps
2. Heavy thorny thick végétation.
3. Near stagnant water... insect infestations
4. And you best need avenues of egress... more than 1
5. If you are detected.... DO NOT assume it's a troop of girl scouts
6. Remember 2 bandoliers and seven magazines only last 5 minutes at the rapid rate a little longer at a sustained rate and if you make it through the night you'll be picking up the enemy's weapons
How about replacing mono filament with Kevlar line to greatly reduce stretch. It can also be used as fishing line.
Good stuff, thanks guys
Great instructions!
Awesome 👍, also dogs 🐕
Yes, but only if it is well trained, you don't want it to bark at a squirrel or something and give away your location or wake you up at night for nothing
Dags?...
Yeah, I like doges...
But the Chinese eat dogs!
@@demonetizationnationtm7316 Yeah true.
Under circumstances I won't mention, I was tasked with guarding about 100 acres of forested area for a long duration of time (commanding a team of 90-400 personnel, depending on threat level). Deer and coyotes tripped the trip wire so frequently that it turned into a full time job chasing down and resetting the trip wires. The trip wire idea was completely abandoned after only a few weeks. With the lack of more modern options, perhaps we would have stayed with that. There are much better options available now, on the cheap, that are far better. We've evolved a lot since Vietnam. Site security became very high tech with many things I'm not allowed to disclose.
Easy options I can mention: Cellular enabled trail cameras, thermal drones, infrared trip wires, thermal monoculars, lots and lots of cameras, etc... If time and location permit, start putting up fencing.
Pungy sticks come to mind.
I need this episode. 🙌🏻
Birds , squirrels, coyotes , deer etc are all gonna make u crazy
For a second I thought Mitch was Diego Luna with long hair. Like, what’s Cassian Andor doing in the woods? 😂
Andor is one of the best things to come out of Star Wars. Hands down.
❤ your content. Thank you.
"PLANTING CLAYMORE!"
3:13 you’re gonna have guys carrying mouse traps lol
A lot of people do...
I see you tying square knots in those loops like it’s second nature.
Vietnamese traps where you funnel the enemy.
Cheap,efficient and easy to make.
If you have time.
My earlier targeted ads were detection bangers even prior to this video. LMAO.
GUYS YOUR SPOT ON GREAT POST👍🇺🇸👍 NOW flying porcupines, Malaysian swing, tiger traps should be added
Remember... your enemy has
1. Night vison goggles
2. Thermal scopes
3. Drones
4. Ground surface radar
5. Ground penetrating radar
6. Patrols
7. Blood hounds
Last but not least...
8. INFORMANTS.
When they put us on trains heading to FEMA RE-EDUCATION CAMPS... Save me a window seat 😊
What about using pit fall traps, swinging log traps to punji stick traps for shtf?
Reminds me of the time the Amazon driver broke through my two lines of defense and lastly set off my trusty flashbang on the front porch. Poor guy...
A tall stack of rocks falling down is loud. Low tech too
This is kind of my specialty. A half dozen metal mouse traps, primers, bear bells for perimeter alarms. Primitive trap triggers and some bank line for defensive traps. Just be damn careful where you set them up and be damn sure to take them down. Also, traps set to injure are big time illegal. It’s good to know how, but don’t be stupid.
A real hunter always watches where he steps. - Kapkan
Awesome vid!
Grizzy bear leg trap
Think of the "1O D's" of DEFENSE! 1 is "Detect" And the last is: DEPART!