5 mistakes EVERY new camper makes COOKING

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  • Опубликовано: 21 май 2024
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    CAMPING MISTAKES. mistakes cooking dinner or lunch or breakfast at camp. Camping recipes. pooping at camp.
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Комментарии • 727

  • @jkarasta1
    @jkarasta1 2 года назад +1107

    Just a heads-up for everyone; when boiling water, it’s good to KEEP THE LID ON THE POT. A covered pot will boil 25% faster. That’s a lot fuel. Cheers!

    • @machbaby
      @machbaby Год назад +17

      With all due respect...doesn't everyone?

    • @jkarasta1
      @jkarasta1 Год назад +74

      @@machbaby he’s not using one in the video 🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @machbaby
      @machbaby Год назад +9

      @@jkarasta1 Yeah, bud. I know just to visually illustrate his point. Makes sense.

    • @annamcbride8004
      @annamcbride8004 Год назад +50

      ngl i didn’t know this and need to do this thank you

    • @IVIRnathanreilly
      @IVIRnathanreilly Год назад +20

      But you'll be lighter if you use the extra fuel

  • @theVTgrizzly
    @theVTgrizzly Год назад +378

    Part of food prep for the woods is calories per ounce. One of the things I always do is bring a couple ounces of olive oil. Olive oil is calorie dense, and adds great mouth feel back to freeze tried meals. Add the oil first, stir it in, then add the hot water. Good fat, extra calories, and much tastier food.

    • @bigpapa2195
      @bigpapa2195 Год назад +7

      I appreciated and will use this tip👍

    • @realfingertrouble
      @realfingertrouble Год назад +26

      It also makes a great butter replacement.
      I take salt/pepper/ olive oil and parmesan or those small powered Italian hard cheese pots with me - thing is, you can go ultra-light and be miserable, or actually take some light stuff that makes you happier and makes the meals taste 10000% better.

    • @nobodynoone2500
      @nobodynoone2500 Год назад +8

      @@realfingertrouble I prefer good butter. If hiking less than a week it keeps fine.

    • @jonathanshaw6784
      @jonathanshaw6784 Год назад +12

      peanut butter (or any nuts, whole or butter) is great too. Not as calorie dense as pure fats/oils, but not bad, and has about as much protein per gram as meat does.

    • @Rick-pl5ey
      @Rick-pl5ey Год назад +12

      If you ever get take out breakfast, ask them for butter on the side. They will usually give you those individual packs of butter, which will keep for weeks unrefrigerated.

  • @gerardogarcia-trio3572
    @gerardogarcia-trio3572 2 года назад +257

    After years of dehydrated food, this weekend I'm going gourmet and I will carry my Trangia and do real cooking. With starter and main course. And fruit. And ground coffee. Nobody can stop me.

    • @techguy9023
      @techguy9023 Год назад +3

      Trangia 27 is great. Not ultra light but useful. I like my diy Caldera Cone for light weight early Spring trips. It was too cold for my canister stove but the alcohol one worked fine. I did sleep with the canister but may have been the brand- still didn’t want to light.

    • @chrishansen5784
      @chrishansen5784 Год назад +1

      What kind of dehydrated food did you like to get? I love the brand "food for the sole"

    • @gerardogarcia-trio3572
      @gerardogarcia-trio3572 Год назад +5

      @@chrishansen5784 I don't remember the brands. The meals sold at Decathlon and other camping stores I have here. But the last years I assembled my own meals, I use the recipes of "The backpaking chef" and have some Spanish meals adapted to dehydration too. Once you get the method it's easy. They taste better, but it implies some work. You have to like to do it.

    • @dereinzigwahreRichi
      @dereinzigwahreRichi Год назад +4

      You're doing the absolutely right thing! Take care of your body after your adventures outdoors and treat it well with some real food. Also to me, cooking is part of the recrestion, too. :-)

    • @kishascape
      @kishascape Год назад +1

      I love packing extra food to chow down hard at camp.

  • @jenniferstewarts4851
    @jenniferstewarts4851 Год назад +3

    "meals and extra food". Ok when talking oz, carrying a few extra packets of lipton soup, chicken noodle, tomato, onion. In a sealed bag, with 3 in 1 coffee packets, a little esbit stove, and some tablets, is a great addition. Maybe even add in an SOS bar or 3, you can essentially create a very small, light weight, backup set of meals... that you won't need but will keep you going if you have to hunker down for a day or 2 extra.

    • @flowersafeheart
      @flowersafeheart 11 месяцев назад

      I like that idea though hear esbit are toxic but yes lightweight and said to work well

    • @jenniferstewarts4851
      @jenniferstewarts4851 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@flowersafeheart military units use them. They come in some MRE's. they are "toxic" so not made for indoor use. but in a tent, even in a camper with a window open.
      the catch is, the health organization rates or talks about exposures over 18 hours. so if you shouldn't burn tablets and breath the fumes for 18 hour straight.
      all this said... for emergency use, in a small double bagged baggy, with a separate baggy with soups, coffees, etc.. its a perfect little, light weight, emergency system and backup.
      cuz nothing beats, being stuck in the snow, and being able to make yourself a cup of coffee, and/or soup, while you wait for the tow truck.

  • @carsonhoward9489
    @carsonhoward9489 Год назад +68

    For a three day trip I bring 2 oatmeal packages one for each morning. 3 tuna packages one for each lunch. 3 trail mix sand which bags as a snack for each day. One dehydrated backpacking meal for dinner on night 2. Night one we bring a steak and potatoes and cook that. A little extra weight on the front end but it’s gone after the first night and well worth it.

    • @GUNNYCANUCK
      @GUNNYCANUCK Год назад +8

      "Night one we bring a steak and potatoes" This is the way. :)

    • @flowersafeheart
      @flowersafeheart 11 месяцев назад +4

      Sounds very tasty and easy except maybe not enough calories? Especially just tuna as a meal

    • @donttrickimtricky.8567
      @donttrickimtricky.8567 3 месяца назад

      I like to bring Jerseys mikes for lunch 1 ,then cold chicken nuggets for dinner, Polish sausage for bonfire every night. Thaw out my biscuits and gravy morning two, bust out my uncrustables for snacks, ramen for lunch, dinner will be thawed out protein and side. Then oatmeal last morning

  • @johncosby5529
    @johncosby5529 2 года назад +51

    Dan…one of the things I when camping in the winter, after I add boiling water to my freeze dried meal I put the bag inside my jacket while waiting for it to absorb the water. I get a good 10 minute warm up plus my meal doesnt cool while I’m waiting..

  • @AuburnAlum1977
    @AuburnAlum1977 2 года назад +51

    Just FYI, hand sanitizer does not kill norovirus or other "bathroom" viruses. Soap does though. I carry a tiny pack of Coleman soap "sheets" to wash my hands before eating.

    • @MG-ze3lf
      @MG-ze3lf 2 года назад +1

      Correct. All the Antibacterial sanitizers don't do anything. It has to be Antimicrobial. Regular soap breaks up the sequence of a virus and kills it.

    • @jamesking4225
      @jamesking4225 2 года назад +5

      I gringe when people just use sanitizer

    • @BacktotheOutdoors
      @BacktotheOutdoors 2 года назад +7

      You can also bring nitrile gloves for using the bathroom. They weigh next to nothing.

    • @garygoldstein327
      @garygoldstein327 2 года назад +1

      Very good advice. Hand sanitizer has an alcohol base and can be used in place of deoderant for the arm pits. And as a fire starter. But not for disinfecting hands instead of soap and water. Plus the water rinses away the bacteria loosened by the soap. Just using hand sanitizer as a disinfectant is like wiping one's hands with toilet paper after accidentally touching something nasty such as fresh dog poo. A hand sanitizer should never be confused with soap and water.

    • @davidcleveland4575
      @davidcleveland4575 2 года назад

      Wash your hands and your forearm

  • @MaggieValera
    @MaggieValera Год назад +7

    @DanBecker, the hack isn't tearing the bag lower, the hack is folding the bag in on itself! You don't need long spoon, because the walls of the bag on the inside or going to be clean, and by doing that you'll still retain the ziplock at the top of the bag.

    • @rockytopwrangler2069
      @rockytopwrangler2069 7 месяцев назад +2

      ... ✅✅ ... That's actually one I've never thought or heard of .... I usually just got messy fingers or cut the taller one's length wise ... huh ..

  • @modularcuriosity
    @modularcuriosity Год назад +139

    Here's one: If you use an alcohol stove, especially one of the super ultralight ones like a Fancy Feast stove, never use it on a picnic table. Only use it on the ground. If you knock the stove over then flaming alcohol will flow across the table and it's really hard for people to get out of a picnic table quickly. Put it on the ground in a shallow dugout hole and use a wind screen. It will be much more effective and vastly safer.

    • @thomasmusso1147
      @thomasmusso1147 Год назад +3

      👍👍👍.. good point.
      I have put 'Ceramic / Glass Wool / Fibre Glass' (Carbon Cloth works too but the former can be more easily salvaged from building sites etc) into all of my homemade Alcohol Burners. It doesn't appear to appreciably affect the burn but greatly reduces the spill hazard. I am busy experimenting with the fore-mentioned in my Trangia Alcohol Burner and so far, the results are encouraging.

    • @curtriceennis2924
      @curtriceennis2924 10 месяцев назад +1

      Sounds like you're speaking from experience. 🙀 Hope nobody was hurt, though. Sorry about that situation. 😻

    • @williamli8708
      @williamli8708 6 месяцев назад

      Though if in winter, don't set it on the snow - keep it off the ground then

    • @Im_With_Stupid
      @Im_With_Stupid 6 месяцев назад

      Way to suck all the fun out of using alcohol stoves!

  • @isabellahodge4162
    @isabellahodge4162 Год назад +45

    As a mother of three I can only say that these safety tips are the sort of thing you'd also tell an eight year old when they were learning to cook in a house kitchen, lol. As a longtime camper myself, both pre and after kids, I'd also say that finding or making any sort of wind shelter for your stove saves an impressive amount of fuel and also cuts cooking time down. So cook in the wind shadow of the tent, or simply use your body (at a safe distance) as a wind break.

    • @GUNNYCANUCK
      @GUNNYCANUCK Год назад +3

      That stove was turned way up too, thought that was odd...a good windbreak and the throttle feathered nearly all the way down boils water just as quick and there will still be fuel for daaaays.

    • @Jb-qn2xz
      @Jb-qn2xz 9 месяцев назад

      I've always been a Dakota fire hole kinda guy before kids and still solo. Never used the stoves and fuels. However after kids I am really looking for info on what others are doing to help me, help them. If you made or will make videos geared towards camping with kids (not glamping in an RV) I will watcha sub.

    • @rockytopwrangler2069
      @rockytopwrangler2069 7 месяцев назад

      @@Jb-qn2xz .. past couple of years ,, an open flame is not allowed in state and National forests across the US ,,,,,a Dakota fire (although sub ground level is "open flame" .. and too time consuming , to dig/construct/and properly put out cold to touch ,, while on trail ... nothing beats one of the many trail stoves on the market ... they must be able to shut off fuel/flame ,, so twig stoves are certainly great for emergency ,, or when no fire ban in effect ,, they are considered open flame ...

  • @sstorholm
    @sstorholm Год назад +49

    This is why I like my jetboil, it’s locked into the burner so it’s more stable, and it has the nice cozy so that you don’t burn your fingers. Another safety upgrade is to use the larger fuel canisters with it, bigger base and even more stable. And put it one the ground, I had one tip over me on a table, luckily I had 10 liters of water right next to me to hose down my pants with before it burnt me. Another great tip is to always check if something is hot with the back of your hand, you’ll feel the heat faster with the back of your hand, and if you get burnt you can still use your hands, if I remember correctly it’s an old navy trick.

    • @ChiefBerry
      @ChiefBerry Год назад +7

      Yep, day one of firefighting training.

    • @kristingenevich6649
      @kristingenevich6649 Год назад +1

      love my jetboil!

    • @kristingenevich6649
      @kristingenevich6649 Год назад +2

      its worth the weight for me

    • @BobJohnson-xg9ng
      @BobJohnson-xg9ng Месяц назад

      Likewise old powerplant trick. Back of hand hurts less if burned. AND if electric, it will clench your hand shut AWAY from the wire. If using fingertips it will clench your hand AROUND the wire, and you're toast. Not that we'd be poking our hands around electric circuits.

    • @tianikane3312
      @tianikane3312 22 дня назад

      Interesting... Most people we know that have jetboils have often managed to tip them over quite easily. A lot of backpackers won't use the orange stabilizing feet on their gas canisters. Jetboils tip very easily. If in the desert, and you lose half a liter of water, that is not good for personal hydration.

  • @itsmeagain1745
    @itsmeagain1745 Год назад +12

    A pair of good gloves is always a good idea to take with you. they can be used to pick up hot pots/pans/cups (my friend does this all the time).
    For cleaning, a pack of 'wet wipes' is a must for me along with hand sanitiser.

    • @sobolanul96
      @sobolanul96 Год назад +3

      This! I always have a pair of leather gloves in my pack. They are extremely useful with hot things, sharp things, wood cutting, and they also prevent blistering if you use a digging tool or an axe extensively.

    • @niclasericsson
      @niclasericsson Год назад +1

      Yep, I have some heavy duty leather work gloves together with my fire starting equipment. Great for easily adjusting logs on a fire too.
      That being said, recently I bought one of those lightweight aluminium pot holders on Amazon. Never liked the built-in handles on my titanium pots.

  • @Avacarho
    @Avacarho Год назад +3

    I’ve gotten 2nd degree burns from when I was pouring boiled water into a bag containing my meal sitting on a picnic table. I was sitting down and the side of the bag sagged spilling water which ran onto my stomach and legs. Luckily, I was where my daughter could come get me and took me to the ER. I now carry a small container of silvadine cream in my first aid kit.

  • @williamgothard9323
    @williamgothard9323 Год назад +31

    One reason for the zip lock on the meal bags is so you can add water to rehydrate the meal as you hike before meal time. You won’t need to boil as much water when cooking, saving time and fuel.

    • @marshallohio5512
      @marshallohio5512 7 месяцев назад

      Awesome,, 👍 ,, I've been hiking 🥾 for years, and never thought 🤔 of this .. thanks 👍

  • @CinkSVideo
    @CinkSVideo 2 года назад +24

    You haven’t camped until you watch your cook pot tumble off your stove with your only meal for the night. I bring one extra meal and stay clear of the pot.
    Another tip…better to cook away from your tent. A must in bear country, but the food also attract raccoons and rats, etc that can make a mess, damage your tent, and make for a sleepless night while they forage about.

  • @MrTangent
    @MrTangent Год назад +6

    One thing I’d add: do not use just hand sanitizer after wiping. Why? Sure, you may deactivate most germs in the feces, but do you still want feces on your hands??
    Best to wash with soap and water, then rinse. THEN sanitize. They make several portable, bio-friendly soaps like Campsuds. I suggest you buy a small bottle, and use in conjunction with hand sanitizer.

    • @Ogrematic
      @Ogrematic Год назад +2

      Ever use campsoap? It's paper thin sheets of soap. I bring it on trips. It works way better than just sanitizer. Or those medium size wipes.

    • @MrTangent
      @MrTangent Год назад +1

      @@Ogrematic That works, too. Lighter, as well.

    • @floydvaughn9666
      @floydvaughn9666 Год назад

      Are you wiping barehanded?

    • @MrTangent
      @MrTangent Год назад +1

      @@floydvaughn9666 No, but the fact remains that you randomly get some on you inadvertently. Not always. But it happens. And yes, even to you. It’s disgusting not to actually wash one’s hands if there’s even the remotest chance some feces transfers to your hands.

    • @flowersafeheart
      @flowersafeheart 11 месяцев назад +1

      Yep was gonna comment same thing. Camping videos sometimes say just sanitize after going potty. But sanitizer works on clean hands. Clean hands well like 2 happy birthdays, wrists, nails, all nooks and crannies, then rinse from wrists pouring that soap off so it fliws off finger tips, not back on arm. Like how surgeons do. If Covid gave me anything positive it was teaching me to wash hands right. Or guess could be thorough with reusable baby wipes homemade with Dr Bronners. For example maybe tiny spray bottle of soapy water then tiny bottle of water. Dry. Then put enough sanitizer to really get wet and let it air dry. But the sanitizer is optional. Can just wash hands very well. Sanitizer is flammable (dome even use it as am alcohol stove!) and should not be used near the fire! I'm not sure I'd want freshly sanitized hands near fire either. Also: bidet is gentler and cleaner and less to carry than tp. And reduces odor more.

  • @shawnr6117
    @shawnr6117 2 года назад +48

    Mistake 6. Taking food you don't actually like

    • @jamesrohner3792
      @jamesrohner3792 День назад

      Taking food you didn't try ahead of time!!

  • @jordanmansfield673
    @jordanmansfield673 Год назад +38

    I love that Jim started being a youtuber after the office 💚

    • @Omni11B
      @Omni11B Год назад

      Wtf?

    • @claymountain1300
      @claymountain1300 Год назад +6

      I'm glad I'm not the only one who sees this. This guy could be John Krasinski's dad.

    • @mattfinnigan8414
      @mattfinnigan8414 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@claymountain1300 would be perfect if the other dude filming looked like Dwight Schrute

    • @MrCozbanger
      @MrCozbanger 10 месяцев назад

      Haha was watching one of his other videos and thought this 😂

  • @casper3130
    @casper3130 Год назад +2

    I take leather gloves for handling hot containers and burning logs of my campfire. If the hiking terrain is bad or I have to climb, I also wear the gloves in case I have to catch my fall which will aid in keeping me from injuring my hand.

  • @ioandragulescu6063
    @ioandragulescu6063 Год назад +12

    for extra stability I use one of those small folding tripod stands to mount the gas canister on. It packs with the burner and it's really light but adds a lot of stability, especially on grass.

  • @suep9445
    @suep9445 2 года назад +58

    Many years ago when I'd come home to mom's place, with food leftover, she'd pick up one of the items and hold it to her ear; "What's that? You really enjoyed the trip? That's great! Oh, you'd like to go again? I'll let her know!" Then she'd tell me how much my extra food loved the trip and is eager to go again. Ok, mom, point taken...

    • @DanUtley
      @DanUtley Год назад +2

      LOL that’s amazing

    • @bettievw
      @bettievw Год назад +3

      That is so damn funny, tell your mom she's fantastic!

    • @FatDragon73
      @FatDragon73 Год назад +2

      Idk, this whole advice and attitude does seems off to me. I'm sure not many enjoy walking the emergency stairs or having a foam parties with the extinguishers. If your first aid kit haven't been opened - just be glad it's this way.

    • @IsabellaBurke
      @IsabellaBurke Год назад +1

      😂 Fair one. I want to remember this next time I pack anything for any trip... me and the kitchen sink along for the ride.

    • @suep9445
      @suep9445 Год назад +2

      @@IsabellaBurke That's the great thing about car camping - you can take everything AND the kitchen sink. Quite another story when I'm on a self-supported kayak trip, though.

  • @vistaww
    @vistaww Год назад +3

    Totally agree about the hand sanitation boo-boo. I carry poly gloves (deli-gloves) which weigh next to nothing and i then invert the TP in to them or if you are a non-TP person these work great for the bidet process or even a full cleanup.

  • @GUNNYCANUCK
    @GUNNYCANUCK Год назад +3

    I bring 2 days of extra food but it's dehydrated beans and rice, nothing fancy but will get you home in a pinch. I also do not eat out of bags ever, boil the water required and put the food in the pot that way you not only avoid the potential hand burns but you skip eating out of heated plastic.

  • @stephaniewaskoenig1387
    @stephaniewaskoenig1387 Год назад +4

    Oh my gosh! I laughed so hard I snorted at the pot handles! I had been looking at it thinking “what’s with the handle! Pop the handle!” Didn’t even catch it was on purpose I was so frustrated. Super fun video and genuinely helpful as well.

  • @bobsiddoway
    @bobsiddoway Год назад +2

    I always bring an extra 1.5 days food because I hike with my dog. 🤙 If we have issues, I’d rather have plenty for a brief search party or rescue or extra night due to weather.

  • @MichiganHiker
    @MichiganHiker Год назад +5

    My wife is always amazed when she sees my food load out for a trip. She's one of those people who is blessed with a thin body who can eat beyond comprehension. But yes you need to keep it light and not bring any more than you need. I always have one day emergency ration with me in case I get stuck but nothing more.

  • @MartinMMeiss-mj6li
    @MartinMMeiss-mj6li Год назад +23

    Here's a tip: Save one or two of those envelopes the meals come in to form a wind shield around the stove and pot. The foil can be wedged into splits in the top of little twigs whose other ends are pushed into the ground. This will decrease time-to-boil greatly on a day with even a little breeze. It works even better of the envelopes are lined with shiny foil.

  • @tahoemike5828
    @tahoemike5828 2 года назад +5

    The no 1 reason I became a rafting guide and not a backpacker is that the raft will carry about 2k lbs of gear, and I don't have to. I like taking fresh food, cold beer, a dutch oven and proper cooking gear along, and really Eating well four days out on the river.
    Old joke: A guy finishes his business in the men's room and starts to walk out... Other guy says, "Hey, didn't your mother teach you to wash your hands after you use the bathroom?"... First guy says, "Nope, she taught me not to pee on my fingers."

  • @andrewneilson227
    @andrewneilson227 Год назад +14

    I’m a chronic food over-packer. Not sure why I can’t seen to stop doing this. Also, the long titanium spoons are a MUST. Finally, I think it’s key to pack all meals that are cool-in-bag (boil water and then pour into the bag). Par-cooked (“instant”) oatmeal, rice, etc. make this possible. Planning to cook regular rice or oats requires you to cook in the pot, and takes way longer. This makes a huge mess and requires you to do dishes. Not having to do any dishes besides your spoon is a huge bonus when you’re tired

    • @ryand141
      @ryand141 Год назад

      You lost me. What?

    • @seeEricaRun
      @seeEricaRun Год назад +7

      ​@@ryand141 1. Long titanium spoon. 2. Don't cook your food in the pot (use freeze dried or par-cooked food instead). 3. This means fewer dishes.
      At least this is my interpretation.

  • @NosittapNomis
    @NosittapNomis 2 года назад +4

    Hand sanitiser is a great survival item highly flammable and takes a spark......

    • @clivenewton7609
      @clivenewton7609 2 года назад +1

      Not all sanitiser is alcohol based!

    • @flowersafeheart
      @flowersafeheart 11 месяцев назад

      Yes keep it away from fire or don't bring it. It's even used as fuel for alcohol stoves. Can wash hands very well instead. Using lots of sanitizer can also uncomfortably dry out skin.

  • @ianwatts7402
    @ianwatts7402 Год назад +7

    Re #4 hand washing. We did our annual first time backpack trip for our new Scouts one year, and one the boys asked to borrow the trowel and TP, and off he went. Shortly after, he returned, and presented the trip leader with a nicely wrapped package and asked what to do next ? We realised the "you need to dig a cat-hole" instruction needed to be a little bit more specific !! (Said Scout di d go and use his cat-hole after)

  • @mgillee1
    @mgillee1 Год назад +14

    Good tips! BTW, Titanium transfers heat a lot slower than stainless and much much slower than aluminum. This translates into it being a significantly less efficient use of your fuel.

  • @devinbraun1852
    @devinbraun1852 2 года назад +55

    Good vid, valid points. Exactly how much food to carry backpacking is something that has to be learned through experience, but even when I try to go minimal, I always have something left when I finish. As far as the short spoon-deep pouch dilemma…, try turning the pouch 90 degrees and cutting open on the long edge. 1) it’s much more shallow, 2) it opens up nice and wide like a bowl. This is an old and simple life hack soldiers learn eating MREs in the field - no more spaghetti sauce on your already nasty dirty fingers.

  • @northernmostsnapps
    @northernmostsnapps Год назад +2

    Leaving the handles in! This is when a multi-tool that has pliers would be a good idea. Grab the rim of the pot with the pliers and use it as a makeshift handle and ta-dah! You’re good

  • @joshheld4461
    @joshheld4461 2 года назад +25

    Titanium actually has pretty low thermal conductivity compared to other metals like steel and aluminum fwiw

    • @jameshaulenbeek5931
      @jameshaulenbeek5931 2 года назад +1

      That also means it has more heat retention and will take longer to cool down.

    • @joshheld4461
      @joshheld4461 2 года назад +3

      @@jameshaulenbeek5931 yea you're right, just calling out the handle comment it'd actually get less hot than most common metals

    • @MrTangent
      @MrTangent Год назад

      @@jameshaulenbeek5931 It doesn’t though. Titanium cools down remarkably quick.

    • @jameshaulenbeek5931
      @jameshaulenbeek5931 Год назад +2

      @@MrTangent comparing similar things of the same size, yes.
      Comparing things of the same mass, no.
      That is why titanium is great for hiking and backpacking.

    • @MDM1992
      @MDM1992 Год назад +1

      @@jameshaulenbeek5931 technically your right but your missing vital information that's very relevant, like the fact that there's a reason that stainless steel and aluminium cookware comes in much thicker because it is far weaker than titanium, meaning the titanium can be a fraction of the thickness whilst still being as strong, or often stronger still.

  • @octoberfox3399
    @octoberfox3399 8 месяцев назад +4

    Two tips that I can say are not having fun for your first night or two for dinner. The first night or two for myself, I always try to pack something fun for dinner. Just the other week, I packed steaks and bacon uncooked. Way better when you fry them up in the mountains. I also always end up packing a couple of frozen bottles of water with me in my pack, which helps to keep everything chilled. There is nothing better than ice cold water and something really tasty for the first night or two, depending on the weather.

  • @jeremysutherland8426
    @jeremysutherland8426 2 года назад +10

    I didn't sanitize after visiting the washroom in the woods, it's not pleasant having a raging case of pink eye in the woods! I wanted to claw my eye out! When I finally got to a doctor he just laughed and told me it happens more than he'd like to admit!

  • @ahp1336
    @ahp1336 Месяц назад +1

    These are just common sense, yet people forget. Thanks for the reminder!

  • @Oldsparkey
    @Oldsparkey 2 года назад +4

    I pack one extra meal and several instant Oatmeal and instant Grit packets. They are a great emergency meal. I like to make and bag my own meals so it's still home cooking out on the trail. I use the Freezer Bag method and clean up is licking the spoon. The used zip lock freezer bag becomes the trash bag for the rest. If I use the prepacked ( Manufactured ) dehydrated foods I repack them.

  • @TheDylls
    @TheDylls Год назад +9

    Speaking to "Carrying less food"
    3 buddies and I started backpacking for the first time a few years ago:
    Four days three nights, make camp every night and break camp every morning to hike 5K-10K between sites each time...
    First time around we all did the prepackaged rehydrate meals. One per person, per meal - Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner - per day...
    We had SO MANY left over at the end...

    • @Kerosene13
      @Kerosene13 Год назад +3

      Over the course of 3000+ miles of backpacking, I've found that my appetite is actually suppressed for the first 7-10 days of a hike (10-17 miles per day). Even so, I seem to *always* have food left over by my first re-supply, but I guess I can say that's my emergency buffer. After 10 days, however, my appetite skyrockets, to the point where a bag of gorp that used to last for 3 snacks is gobbled up for one lunch and it's not enough!

  • @mantiskf
    @mantiskf Месяц назад +1

    one of your best videos, and yours are generally more to the point than so many that claim to give guidance on products

  • @lemon-le5lb
    @lemon-le5lb Год назад +2

    This was probably one of the most funny videos i have watched, not because you are wrong, becuase you are totally right on everything. Its just funny to realize that these are things people dont think of.

  • @nickpapageorgio8529
    @nickpapageorgio8529 Год назад +3

    I like bringing MREs when I go camping. For some reason I have always liked the food in MREs for some reason. Especially the chili macaroni. So good and easy to make

    • @flowersafeheart
      @flowersafeheart 11 месяцев назад

      Years ago in AmeriCorps they fed us only those on one of our disaster relief work projects fixing rooves (roofs?). I remember them being not bad. And easy.

  • @pauletteskalko5909
    @pauletteskalko5909 2 года назад +35

    I like that Emmet is more included, he adds an extra fun dimension. Your Vlogs have always been a good source of info and are continuing to improve

  • @mason6883
    @mason6883 Год назад +3

    Love how you jump right into it. Totally guilty of too much food, but you are right on about being over cautious.

  • @ryancolpitts7248
    @ryancolpitts7248 6 месяцев назад +1

    First rescue I coordinated was a teenager who spilled boiling water on his feet. Blustering burns 17km from the trailhead is a bad day, luckily we were on the icean and able to keep his feet cool until the helicopter arrived. Maks sure your stove and pot are stable!

  • @vedranantunovic9131
    @vedranantunovic9131 Год назад +54

    2:02 props for bringing attention to that. Cooking like that in a position where the pot can tip over and burn you is most definitely overlooked too many times. I got a 2nd degree burn just like that, just 2 weeks ago while frying some fish. So props to you for bringing attention to that. Great video, I enjoyed it!

    • @kishascape
      @kishascape Год назад +3

      It’s overlooked because that’s true of any position you can cook in with that little stove unless your going to lean over a hole. Just set it somewhere steady and watch for wind and you’re fine.

    • @vedranantunovic9131
      @vedranantunovic9131 Год назад +2

      @@kishascape yeah exactly, I just put it further away from me and everything and wait for it to cook. But the hole is a good idea

    • @otyeK
      @otyeK Год назад +2

      I've got a MSR universal fuel canister stand and it really stabilizes everything. It also folds up small and is pretty light. Highly recommend.

  • @Robert-yp9zs
    @Robert-yp9zs Год назад +2

    Having the second person in your more recent videos is a very nice touch. Sometimes, the interaction can emphasize the point(s) being made.

  • @aligavriel9113
    @aligavriel9113 Год назад +6

    That transition from the poop kit to eating chocolate was great filming! 😂😂🌲

  • @LizzyNerd
    @LizzyNerd Год назад +9

    I absolutely love my Toaks 750ml pot with a bail handle. If the pot or handles get too hot I can loop a stick or utensil under that and lift it right off the burner, no problem. Also helpful to support the pot if it's windy or tipsy at all. And lastly it's removable if you want to shave off those ounces.

    • @rockytopwrangler2069
      @rockytopwrangler2069 7 месяцев назад

      ... totally agree ,, and if you have a pot without a bail it's easy to drill the holes and make one ,, also makes it possible to hang over small campfire coals ... a big plus for trail/camp metal cups/pots ...

  • @spencerburrows6260
    @spencerburrows6260 Год назад +13

    Also use a gas canister stand so your stove remains stable when cooking/boiling water

  • @a.ramosakadrumgrl6677
    @a.ramosakadrumgrl6677 2 года назад +5

    I’m new, but I have the Outdoor Element pot gripper, I don’t want my hands burned, plus I have one of those gloves to pick up hot things. I bought a long handled spoon and spork set from Amazon that are stainless steel.

  • @scottrbowler1959
    @scottrbowler1959 Год назад +34

    Recent studies by a couple of outdoor outfitters proved that shorter, wider pots are more fuel efficient than taller, skinnier ones. I use a 6 cup teakettle since I’m just making coffee, tea, and re-hydrating meals-it’s safer too, harder to spill.

    • @gardnerwebb3749
      @gardnerwebb3749 Год назад +3

      Cool tip. Here’s another. For cups with lids it retains the heat better being taller than wide but for boiling water I understand the surface area being faster at achieving boiling.

    • @Rick-pl5ey
      @Rick-pl5ey Год назад +1

      Also substantially more useful when trying to fry something. or use it in the fire.

    • @Biggiiful
      @Biggiiful 9 месяцев назад

      I mean, that just makes TOO much sense. Most of the water's surface area is closer to the heat instead of a tiny area being heated with most of the cold water resting on top.

    • @rockytopwrangler2069
      @rockytopwrangler2069 7 месяцев назад

      @@Biggiiful ... if it's important to you ,, there are stoves with different sizes of burners .. the larger dia. sizes are more efficient if you use a larger pot or skillet on trail ..i.e. - frying meats,,fish etc. .. a more recent model is the pathfinder stove and still uses canisters ...

  • @otway00
    @otway00 Год назад +2

    Make a list or spread sheet of every thing you are packing ( including the pack ) and I mean everything. Then you get back go thru the list / spreadsheet and check off every thing you did not use that trip. Do same thing every trip and compare to find those items you have been packing but not using... In the 70's Mt House food came in either a red or green package. Same meals, same size just different colored package. The red meal was the civilian version and was labeled meal for two. The green package was for the military and was labeled as a meal for one

  • @roaddog1m
    @roaddog1m Год назад +2

    I took a kayak trip from Ft. Benton to James Kipp (149 miles) in Montana. It is very remote with zero cell service for 90% and hiking up and out is not practical or safe. A Spot gps device is necessary (even tho I don't have one). Anyway, I did take 2 days extra of light rations. If getting stuck a couple extra days is a possibility then you can go with reduced rations for those days.

  • @DannaGesellchen
    @DannaGesellchen 8 месяцев назад +1

    Dan, really appreciate your videos. We're going on our maiden voyage (well, backpack) this month for our anniversary after begging for 10 years. Your videos have helped to prepare us. Thank you.

  • @Prtg1
    @Prtg1 2 года назад +4

    Wise advice on the hot water! I hiked the Superior hiking trail with a second degree burn on my leg because I wasn't paying attention to my water and pouring it into my food

  • @AdamHoytElectronmage
    @AdamHoytElectronmage Год назад +2

    I wear a pair of leather gloves that I build barb wire fence with. Great stove mitt and boiling water catcher. :)

  • @DonP_is_lostagain
    @DonP_is_lostagain 2 года назад +40

    Real problem with the handles on a Ti pot is they get hot regardless of whether or not they're folded in or out. MomentOfZen shared a suggestion about silicone covers, and I can endorse that suggestion. I've used the DipIt silicone stuff to dip my handles in and that helps keep them stay cooler to the touch.

    • @mysterylovescompany2657
      @mysterylovescompany2657 2 года назад +7

      As someone with a pot with sili- handles & one without, I can attest to the difference even on aluminium.

    • @blueeyeswhitedragon9839
      @blueeyeswhitedragon9839 Год назад +10

      I always have a pair of leather gloves...for canoeing, mountain biking, processing fire wood, etc.
      These gloves work also for handling hot cooking equipment.
      Everything you carry should be capable of two or three different uses.

    • @teutates619
      @teutates619 Год назад +6

      @@blueeyeswhitedragon9839 That was exactly the comment I hoped to read. Gloves are my hiking fetish item lol. Never a bad choice!

    • @Kerosene13
      @Kerosene13 Год назад +1

      I avoid pots with handles and use my aluminum foil "windscreen" to pick up the pot and pour water.

    • @bbingtube
      @bbingtube Год назад +1

      A hole near the top and an oldschool tent stake shaped like a check mark ✔️. Also replaced my big coffepot handle with soft copper and it allows me to tension the bend a little so the handle stays straight up during the boil, can bare hand it this way. 🖐️

  • @camping-k
    @camping-k 2 года назад +9

    There is instant food in Korea, but my friend's instant food looks more convenient and delicious.^^ Friend's video always gives me new good thoughts. 👍 👍 👍

  • @JK-yu7hj
    @JK-yu7hj 3 месяца назад +1

    Great tips overall. I think using a Trangia 27 vs a tall stove would solve a lot of problems with pot stability and the risk of burning yourself, although you need to be in less of a hurry to boil water and be respectful of the alcohol fire. One suggestion I would also make would be to practice using any new equipment before hitting the trails and also inspecting all gear setting off.

  • @pyronymph-868
    @pyronymph-868 Год назад +7

    I am always amazed how people don't know how to use those stand-up pouches. They are designed to be opened out at the bottom (cut the half-circle connecting the two bottom halves by the gusset). Once opened out, the pouch forms a wide bowl.

    • @rockytopwrangler2069
      @rockytopwrangler2069 7 месяцев назад

      ... well I'll be ,,, Never had a problem ,,Have been using them for 0ver 50 years and never knew that ,, have to go check one now ... Thanks .. ( any specific brands ??) ...

  • @elvismikel2271
    @elvismikel2271 2 года назад +17

    I also take some Reflectix and make a little "sleeping bag" for my "pour in water" bag meals. This allows me to hold that bag of hot water and increases the efficiency of the rehydration (less time till I eat). I already have the Reflectix and Gorilla Tape from other projects.

    • @danielwright9418
      @danielwright9418 2 года назад +5

      I also use mine for that frozen steak and cold beer for that first night.

    • @rockytopwrangler2069
      @rockytopwrangler2069 7 месяцев назад

      ... gee , you have to make millions from that idea ..... by the way they are called a" cozy or koosey to some " ... but making your own saves money for something else ...
      ... also , if you have a large enough piece of Reflectix ,, maybe , 3ft. x 6 ft. ,, border a hem on all sides with the gorilla tape and make an insulated ground pad for under your air mat or sleeping bag .... protects your gear and again saves money from buying one ... rolls up small and also works as a good sit pad ...

    • @caseyfox4414
      @caseyfox4414 Месяц назад

      Very handy. I've used reflectix as the bottom layer of my "sleep system" for years. A few years back i made a pot koozy, with a lid , and the lid even has a tape tab handle. On a particularly windy evening i used my reflectix sleep pad with a few sticks and rocks as a wind break for my stove .

  • @deborahhill3105
    @deborahhill3105 2 года назад +6

    Yes! I look at my food at the end of a trip and ask, could I have survived another day on that? Usually it’s a few snack left. Be if the answer is Yes, then I say, Good planning!

  • @moabfool
    @moabfool Год назад +18

    Mistake 4:12. You're next to your tent. Nearly everywhere I backpack has roving bears looking for yummy treats. Cooking that close and/or upwind of your tent is inviting serious trouble.
    Mistake 6:35. If at all possible don't poop while camp is set up. If you're in an impacted campsite chances are that you're not the only person to walk away to dig. Either make sure you walk far enough away from camp to keep the smell grom wafting in (seriously, hike 5 or 10 minutes from camp) or if you can hold it don't poop until you've hiked 15+ minutes from camp in the morning. This spreads out the waste concentration and gives your poop a better chance to not be found by the next person. I found a tampon applicator while I was excavating for a call of nature near a popular lake. Yuk!
    Side note: If you're camped by a lake and there is no water flowing out *don't go for a swim*!!! This is especially true if it's the only water source in the area. I don't want to cook my dinner or filter into my CamelBak from your sweaty bathwater. If you need to clean up take the water away from the lake. If the water is flowing take your bath. At least your funk will be washed away.

    • @Kerosene13
      @Kerosene13 Год назад +2

      I made the mistake of waiting to poop one morning until I arrived at an AT lean-to (in Virginia, I think). I encountered an incredible number of poop holes (and some not buried) within 50 yards of the shelter. Disgusting.

  • @steves9522
    @steves9522 2 года назад +17

    Put a lid on the pot, it will boil water faster and save fuel!

    • @tdiler12
      @tdiler12 Год назад

      and a windscreen!

  • @fiskmasadventures
    @fiskmasadventures 2 года назад +3

    Sanitizing wipes is a handy little thing to have in your poop kit, you can use it right away and burn it together with the toilet paper in the hole - just make sure the fire has gone out before refilling the hole, and that no fire ban is in effect at the moment (if so, only the toilet paper can be dug down).

  • @thecorporategypsy
    @thecorporategypsy 2 года назад +2

    I moto camp offroad and your vids are my “go to” for information. Great job. The dialogue between you to was a hoot btw,!

  • @Ryebread3325
    @Ryebread3325 Год назад +2

    I hike with a coworker who insists on packing group meals. I hate the concept because I prefer packing my own light weight food. One cool trick I picked up a few years ago was if you like to bring whiskey, pack it in one of those Sawyer water filter pouches.

    • @seeEricaRun
      @seeEricaRun Год назад +1

      The Sawyer bags are the best flasks on the market!

  • @kellymorris10342
    @kellymorris10342 2 года назад +2

    Get the Uco spork/knife one that's a 2 piece. Been using it bikepacking and adventuring, and it's making stirring in my Jetboil super easy.

  • @maxh4195
    @maxh4195 2 года назад +10

    Just left pictured rocks from a camping trip and was guilty of the #1 sin, taking way too much food. A car camping series might be nice on your channel btw. I go backpacking with friends but usually do a car camping trip with my dad once or twice a year and we started as complete amateurs.

  • @MicroFourNerds
    @MicroFourNerds 2 года назад +23

    I’ve watched so many hiking videos where people cook way tooo close to themselves, or too close to the tent. It gives me so much anxiety 😂

  • @regstrup
    @regstrup 3 месяца назад

    One thing I see a lot of people forget with these bags with freeze dried food, is to separate the lower corners of the bag, which gives a lot more stability to the bag, when put on the ground. It also makes it much easier to stir around the water, when preparing the meal. Even Dan forgets it 😊

  • @Flyanb
    @Flyanb Год назад +3

    In the group someone should always have a leather man or my personal favorite the ultra mini locking vise grip. They are great for stove repair or pack repair, and they lock on to your pot so you can take it off the heat and hold it safely!

  • @Muscovy7
    @Muscovy7 Год назад +1

    A lot of this is common sense to be honest. Easy to forget though after hoofing it all day so a PSA is always welcome.

  • @elishameeks1726
    @elishameeks1726 Год назад

    Love it! I have done 2 out of those 5 over the last 30 years, but only once. Great stuff, keep it it!

  • @michiganpathways7872
    @michiganpathways7872 2 года назад +5

    I bring 2 pounds per day on any trip that is an overnight. I also bring one emergency back up meal just in case anything should happen.
    For my stove if I can I put a couple large rocks around the base of my tank to help hold it in place.

  • @OffTheBeatenPot
    @OffTheBeatenPot 2 года назад

    Great video!
    Looking forward to watching it all this evening.

  • @jestopherson
    @jestopherson Год назад +1

    The 1lb of food rule is pretty individual based. I'm a 210lb bodybuilder. I need significantly more calories than a person of similar weight but with less skeletal muscle. I usually have about 2k calories just for my dinner. Breakfast is 600-800 cals. Lunch is about 500. Then I have 3 cliff bars through the day. About 2-300g of beef jerky. Then a ziplock full of gummy candies and salted pretzels to keep my blood sugar and sodium up. Last I checked it averages at about 4500-5000 cals a day when hitting 15-20km days

  • @edjones8231
    @edjones8231 Месяц назад

    Dan--very funny and accurate video. RE hacks: I like to repackage all boil in bag meals into ZIPLOC quart freezer bags and lose the 3/4oz dead weight (see "freezer bag cooking" by Sarah Kirkonnel), use a cannister base to stabilize stove, build a COZEE pouch out of "reflectix" to contain meal and rehydrating contents during cooking. It keeps things very hot for up to 15 minutes hands free until food is reconstituted and cool enough to enjoy. No dishes, except empty ziploc bag.

  • @bretb8799
    @bretb8799 Год назад +1

    Hiking with my 3 boys 3 nights calculated with jetboil needed one 4oz fuel. Saw a couple on same trip carrying 3 x 8 oz canisters or about 32oz extra weight and waste of money. :)

  • @Jack-wi5qr
    @Jack-wi5qr Год назад +1

    I use a modified tarp style tarp tent. Make an A frame, roll ground sheet over lower braces,then main tarp over top with edges under ground sheet. Can’t really explain it how I do it,but myself and partner sleep comfortably and dry with way I do it.

  • @ryugraphix
    @ryugraphix 2 года назад +7

    What about cooking by your tent? I always try to follow that triangle between tent, cooking/eating, and food storage… thoughts?

    • @jimhill715
      @jimhill715 2 года назад +5

      I was hoping to see this comment. I never cook next to my shelter as I don’t want it to smell like food. I do like stories of animal encounters in shelters… other peoples stories!

  • @-desertpackrat
    @-desertpackrat Год назад +1

    I still use my old raggedy pot holder from my home kitchen lol but I'm gonna get a pair of heat proof gloves so I don't have to worry so much about grabbing handles. Some of those pots even if you extend the handles it can burn you, like with my Stanley french press I use camping, sometimes the handles don't get hot but one time they burned me a bit and I had to use the pot holder so now I do every time.

  • @Oklahomastream
    @Oklahomastream Год назад +1

    finally some bathroom humor i love it

  • @ozyankee4403
    @ozyankee4403 Год назад +1

    Mistake # 2. Stove placement…. Too close is only part of the problem….
    Secure & Steady base. Many don’t consider uneven ground, or clearing an area of flammable debris (grass, twigs & sticks). Ensuring the stove and pot don’t tip over. Adding to the pot, or clumsy move reaching for something, anything that might cause pot or stove to fall can be mitigated by ensuring a flat sturdy cooking area is used.

  • @scottrbowler1959
    @scottrbowler1959 Год назад +1

    And recent studies have proven that wide pots boil faster and use less fuel than tall skinny pots. I use a 6 cup teakettle, since I’m only making coffee and re-hydrating meals. safer too-doesn’t spill.

  • @joeweaver9913
    @joeweaver9913 Год назад +3

    8 minutes of how to not get burned by hot pots or boiling water
    Solid advice

  • @scrum5atk1
    @scrum5atk1 Год назад +1

    I boiled half a pint of water in my living room, was turning the heat down and bang,all over my leg,
    Big blisters,quite a bit of pain,
    Be careful people, especially with tall narrow stoves with tall pots,
    I was using a pocket rocket and Stanley cookset

  • @sebastien3351
    @sebastien3351 2 года назад +1

    As a snow camper, one meal I use for breakfast and emergency food are packets of ! A couple of ounces of oatmeal provides nutrision for many hours of strenous activities.

  • @Aestheticnerdlife
    @Aestheticnerdlife 2 года назад +1

    I use a backpacking kettle for water boiling I only eat dehydrated meals and it makes it easier to pour and is less top heavy

  • @deimon1976
    @deimon1976 2 года назад +2

    i was gonna carry extra water and buy some fancy dehydrated food ,but i ran out of time so i just grabbed a can of chunky soup on the way out the door,(hope i survive),cheers great vid !
    :)

  • @AnthonyOMulligan-yv9cg
    @AnthonyOMulligan-yv9cg 3 месяца назад

    The best pot kit i ever had was a Gal & 1/4 pot, with a kettle that stored within, the flat lid was a 7' fry pan, a single clamp handle for both, thick base's, was Norwegian (1980) and weighed 1.4 Kg. So about 3 Lb.

  • @steemteem4437
    @steemteem4437 2 года назад +5

    So I actually did the exact opposite. Hiker hunger consumed all my snacks on the first day of a 3 day trip and was left with only my "meals" for the other 2 days

  • @PingHansen
    @PingHansen Год назад +1

    Thank you. Some things need to be said again and again.
    p.s. Use a windscreen with your stove - I use aluminum foil or carbon felt for that - and put the lid on

  • @michaeljames8534
    @michaeljames8534 2 года назад

    As someone new to wild camping, this is a great video 👍😉

  • @-desertpackrat
    @-desertpackrat Год назад +1

    I really don't wanna eat out of a bag, I'm gonna get a collapsible bowl with a lid if I ever do those camping meals, but currently I just do cheap packaged stuff from the store, like Knorr sides, and cook it in the pot and wipe it out when I'm done. I've eaten out of bags, it's a chore imo, also you can't even get the last bits out because how the bag is folded, it's easier to dump the dried food out and cook in a container that you can eat from cleanly.

  • @tbm1995
    @tbm1995 5 месяцев назад

    I like the dehydrated food, light and makes it easy

  • @thecorporategypsy
    @thecorporategypsy Год назад +1

    I motorcycle camp in the backcountry and your site is my go to for gear, how to, what not to do etc. as I am new to camping. I am hoping you will do a film on sleeping bag liners as there is no good info on this subject.

  • @vincentkrause7097
    @vincentkrause7097 Год назад +2

    Tip 5 so important! That ja the reason why I always carry extra Hand sanitizer for my partners because the often don't carry it ( they think Its too heavy😷). After they take a dump I always have the sanitizer at hand to sprinkle it on there hands). Best is to have a mini dropper bottle which can be operated with one hand like the nalgene mini Dropper bottles! Carry aprox 3ml sanitizer per day