Russian Foot Wraps, Портянки, Fusslappen. A Lost Art Of Soldiering

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
  • How To Make Foot Wraps As It Have Been Done Since WW1 and WW2.
    -►Facebook: / survival-russia-160148...
    -►Instagram: / survivalrussia
    -►Twitter: / survivalrussia
    -►MyBlog: survival-russia...
    -►Subscribe: www.youtube.com...
    The Survival Russia Channel is about "The Reality Of Survival". I live on a Homestead in far away Russian wild nature and here are no room for "TV" Survival.
    Only Reality counts here. Survival Russia promotes the philosophy of always carrying equipment and never to be parted from equipment which will affect chances of Survival.
    So did the old timers and pioneers of both the East and the West.
    Get Out and Train and Get it Done!
    All Content On The Survival-Russia Channel is Reserved and Copyrighted By: Survival Russia
    Regards, Lars

Комментарии • 538

  • @kyrg
    @kyrg 8 лет назад +127

    When I saw Kyrgyz soldiers wrapping their feet like this in 2002 I thought , "My God what a poor country, can't even give the soldiers socks" Little did I know ha ha.

    • @DieEineMieze
      @DieEineMieze 4 года назад +2

      :'D

    • @dustinalecxander8647
      @dustinalecxander8647 3 года назад +9

      Little did you know it's better than socks

    • @MikeOxlong-
      @MikeOxlong- Год назад +2

      Yea, they are pretty poor out that way comparatively speaking... 😂

  • @zzip0
    @zzip0 7 лет назад +109

    Actually this is not only Russian. It was used by my grand-grand-father during his military service in the start of 20-th century even before WW1. I learned to use it from my grand-father who was working all his life in the forests in Eastern Europe, later in Komi in Russia and also in desert in Mongolia. The idea can be found also in many traditional village foot-wears in Eastern Europe, which did not have shoes, but put a very thick leather on the walking part of the foot, and this is on top of a tussue wrapped around the leg, maybe not with cotton tissue, but with something different. I am quite sure this can be traced millenia back. It could be that similar idea can be found in North American indians.
    I used it also during my miltary serice when I had to walk a lot. And yes, there is nothing better than this when you have to walk long distances and time. Nothing comes even close. Any sock will damage your foot especially with crude miltary shoes, while this will be working like a charm. The secret is that the shape magically accomodates the shape of your foot and your shoes, or boots.

    • @impaugjuldivmax
      @impaugjuldivmax 4 года назад +8

      this kind of 'socks' used since ancient rome actually

    • @andreialexa3516
      @andreialexa3516 4 года назад +1

      In cental Europe use also this type of wrasps, in Romanian is "OBIÁLĂ" !

    • @kondrashovoleg
      @kondrashovoleg 4 года назад

      Where are you from?

    • @annoyed707
      @annoyed707 Год назад

      He mentions Norwegian army socks.

    • @Megalochoerus
      @Megalochoerus Год назад +1

      There is such a thing as progress! even in Russia trekking socks are now used. There is nothing better than a good trekking sock. portianki will kill your legs.

  • @confiscator
    @confiscator 8 лет назад +58

    Good timing. I wore my last clean pair of socks yesterday.

    • @SurvivalRussia
      @SurvivalRussia  8 лет назад +11

      LOL :)

    • @portjanka
      @portjanka 8 лет назад +3

      I can wear my footwraps for months between washings and they won't stink as bad as socks after 2 days.

  • @JesterRace139
    @JesterRace139 4 года назад +223

    My wife is pissed.. Our dish towels smell like feet now.

    • @ScooterFXRS
      @ScooterFXRS 4 года назад +8

      hahaha tell her to learn to do laundry correctly.

    • @11kungfu11
      @11kungfu11 4 года назад

      better then smelling like semen.

    • @DeuceGenius
      @DeuceGenius 3 года назад

      wash ur feet next time :)

    • @lupusdeum3894
      @lupusdeum3894 2 года назад +2

      You have small feet, tovarishch! 😎🐕‍🦺

    • @georgipetrov307
      @georgipetrov307 3 месяца назад

      Who care?

  • @goofeymaloofey
    @goofeymaloofey 8 лет назад +54

    I never thought I would see that done again! In the late 70's I worked in a nursing home and had to learn to do this wrap since a large number of the older men still wrapped their feet with them. I have done it in the winter as well using old wool neck scarves. I would be going out to milk the cows in those cold over-boots. Now I know where the practice originated! Thanks! (shared this with my brothers. haha...It was their big old boots I was wearing!) I sure enjoy your videos! Thanks!

    • @SurvivalRussia
      @SurvivalRussia  8 лет назад +10

      Awesome. Thank you very much for a great comment friend.

    • @portjanka
      @portjanka 8 лет назад

      Cool, where was this?

    • @agricolaregs
      @agricolaregs 2 года назад

      I’ve never seen this before. Thanks so much for your insight!

  • @fand8947
    @fand8947 6 лет назад +9

    Shortly after the second World War, my grandmother used to turn my Grandfather's "Fußlappen" or "Schuahfetz'n", as they where colloquially called in austria, in a vest called "Lempatschek", where two Fußlappen were sewn together along the sides and knitten sleeves were attached to form the vest.

  • @hootiebubbabuddhabelly
    @hootiebubbabuddhabelly Год назад +3

    Worth taking the time to learn and practice, I think.

  • @williamofy6376
    @williamofy6376 5 лет назад +4

    Having worn combat boots most of my adult life(retired Army Vet), in a survival situation, hygiene is important and taking care of your feet is probably a close second. Anyone who has had foot injuries, it might as well be an amputation, LOL . I buy crazy expensive wool socks(they don't have to be expensive socks BTW, wool is hands down the best boot socks though. Rotating your socks is important. I have never used foot wraps, but may try it now on my next hiking trip. Though most of my hiking may only be 6-10 KMs max LOL
    Side note, in the US Army we were better equipped, but I think that the Soldiers in the US were spoiled and would have never thought of wraps. I always like to see what other countries do and I always learn a lot.
    Lars, LOVE this channel!

  • @funkyprepper
    @funkyprepper 8 лет назад +56

    very interesting lars, thanks so much for making this video and sharing good field skills like these.
    historic tips like these are very important before they get lost.
    well done mate

  • @williamshakespeare4013
    @williamshakespeare4013 8 лет назад +23

    Great video. This is how it was done back in the days. The good thing is that, while you would have gone through a pile of socks, you could simply adjust the position of the heel in the foot wrap, and the part that was beginning to wear out would not be in the heel area anymore.
    Socks are, of course, a lot more convenient to use, but I think foot wraps are far more practical when resources are scarce. I've heard the big drawback is - if you don't know how to do them right your feet will turn into two big blisters after first 10km.

  • @Helsinkipop
    @Helsinkipop 8 лет назад +81

    The Finnish army stopped issuing these in the 1990's. But I belong to the generation who experienced these foot wraps. Everything you said about them is true. Also foot wraps were very cost-effective for the military: one size fits all, virtually no wear and tear, last "forever". And I didn't like fiddling with these :-)

    • @SurvivalRussia
      @SurvivalRussia  8 лет назад +26

      Russians stopped using them in 2009/2012 or so. I have found out most Russian soldiers/ex-soldiers have a special loathing for socks :) I got curious about foot wraps because so many here use them. I thought they were a thing of the past wars. To my surprise i found out they work great. I hope all is well in Finland :)

    • @portjanka
      @portjanka 8 лет назад

      I am not trying to be picky, but in one sentence you write "Russians stopped using them in 2009/2012" in another "so many here use them" I understand "here" as being Russia now. That is a contradiction!

    • @SurvivalRussia
      @SurvivalRussia  8 лет назад +18

      I meant the Russian Army. The Army officially switched to socks in 2012 i thin but many still use Portyanki of course.

    • @Infinite_Jester
      @Infinite_Jester 4 года назад +1

      I was wondering when they got phased out in the FDF.
      When I served (2/14) there was a guy in my platoon who switched out the issued socks for footwraps whenever we had a longer march and he never seemed to have any problems.
      He taught the wrapping to us, but I never used it until after the military because I found it easier to just throw on some socks.

    • @Megalochoerus
      @Megalochoerus Год назад

      ​@@SurvivalRussia did you really use it on a hike, in the field? I don't think it's any better than good trekking socks. take care of your feet.

  • @MrSmith336
    @MrSmith336 8 лет назад +54

    I can't wait to tell my wife that from now on we are going sans socks and wearing fusslappen instead.

  • @buffaloroams2
    @buffaloroams2 8 лет назад +132

    Very cool, I feel like as a US Vet that I could learn a lot from Russian Soldiers who had to do more with less resources.

    • @myronallen3010
      @myronallen3010 7 лет назад +20

      I agree. There's so much more to soldiering than kicking in doors. Our younger counterparts don't seem to get that.

    • @savagecub
      @savagecub 4 года назад +14

      “More with less resources” ........sounds like the Marine Corps !

    • @pentuplove6542
      @pentuplove6542 4 года назад +4

      @@savagecub USA mittary more resources and still lose.

    • @savagecub
      @savagecub 4 года назад +2

      Pentu Plove
      And yet everyone still wants to come here........

    • @buzzle-actual
      @buzzle-actual 4 года назад

      @ he had a good point just poor execution

  • @RusZugunder
    @RusZugunder 8 лет назад +24

    Ha, i remember doing this 10-12 years ago, working on construction. Old army boots, this instead of socks, and you good to run and jump around of all sorts of bad-for-your-feet stuff all day. Nice vid.

    • @SurvivalRussia
      @SurvivalRussia  8 лет назад +4

      Thank you for that :) Yes Portyanki is a good thing!

    • @DeuceGenius
      @DeuceGenius 3 года назад +1

      i do construction. buy some good quality work boots NOT army boots :) and buy quality socks. your feet will thank you. so will your back.

  • @tidypog3272
    @tidypog3272 4 года назад +2

    I tried hard to learn this a few years ago - but only russian videos were available.
    Thank you for this excellent instruction

  • @ozdavemcgee2079
    @ozdavemcgee2079 4 года назад +11

    Read a Day in the life of Ivan at age 10. Took me seconds to realise this was a good option for wellington boots. I also used old ( but good quality) bedsheets cut about 6 inch wide and bind the foot and used under sox in GP boots. Worked well.

    • @chris-terrell-liveactive
      @chris-terrell-liveactive 3 года назад

      I read that book too and always wondered what "foot cloths" were, I'm glad to see this at last. I may try this with my winter walking boots, new ones, which have been chafing my heels and giving me blisters for the first time ever. Thanks for the video, Survival Russia!

  • @fanman8102
    @fanman8102 4 года назад +9

    If I am not mistaken there is a reference to Gen “Stonewall” Jackson’s troops using this method after putting axle grease on their feet before going on long marches. They had a reputation for quickly covering many, many miles.
    Thanks for helping bring this practice back to life!

  • @DavidSmith-ss1cg
    @DavidSmith-ss1cg 6 лет назад +5

    Great video! Thanks for the information. I can remember seeing a demonstration on TV in the 1960s, and the Soviet demonstrator said that socks wear out, but the wraps, by changing position of the cloth, would last far longer, and like you said, the cloths could be washed out and dried, just about anywhere - they are very versatile. I have read that they were used by the soldiers of Frederick the Great, so they have been around for a long time...but I bet every European army will claim to have invented them. Good work!

  • @genegarren833
    @genegarren833 8 лет назад +11

    Hello again. I bought several pairs both flannel and regular cotton. I also have The smaller German foot wraps. I was able to learn how to put on both watching RUclips. Your method is exactly the way that I learned. It works, as I have tried it and even wore pull-on boots all day with foot wraps. I like the high pull-on boots, and feel that even today in certain conditions and situations, they are the best for soldiers, especially in Northern temperate zones in Spring, Summer, Fall. In winter also with high pull-on winter boots. Great video.

  • @yvonnepaulovicqueen1677
    @yvonnepaulovicqueen1677 8 лет назад +3

    This is very practical. Did this as a kid growing up in poverty during the winter. Also plastic bread bags over the shoes while walking in snow. Didn't last long though and there were never enough bread bags. Thanks for the reminder and the proper way to apply.

    • @SurvivalRussia
      @SurvivalRussia  8 лет назад

      Thank you for a good comment Yvonne and for watching too :)

    • @portjanka
      @portjanka 8 лет назад

      Where were you growing up?

  • @seanreynolds7369
    @seanreynolds7369 3 года назад +4

    Just made a pair, and tried them in my gumboots, love them. they actually fit better than socks as the material around the ankle helps prevent the ankle moving as much. Great video, love these

  • @bruc33ef
    @bruc33ef 8 лет назад +11

    One of the most useful and important survival videos I've seen in a long time. Thank you, Lars.

    • @SurvivalRussia
      @SurvivalRussia  8 лет назад +1

      Thank you very much for that comment! :)

  • @Roller822
    @Roller822 8 лет назад +38

    Very impressive. Thanks for keeping some of the old ways alive. That common sense, and practical knowledge is being lost every day. Atb, John.

  • @gypsymanjeff2184
    @gypsymanjeff2184 4 года назад +2

    My folks taught me this ..as well as a thousand more life hacks..they were born in the 20s in CZ & HUNGARY..i thank them still daily for all they did for us..let alone the ability & skills to survive..i pass these n more on to my kid and grandkids..can only hope they never need but if so ..where I'm around or not..least they have it in Thier tool box..

  • @kenhadley6039
    @kenhadley6039 8 лет назад +11

    They will work perfect here in the Canadian climate. I will most defiantly make myself some foot wraps for my next hunting trip. Thank you for sharing the info with us. I really enjoy watching your videos and the wilderness of Russia.

    • @SurvivalRussia
      @SurvivalRussia  8 лет назад +10

      They work great but practice first how to make them work for you :) The standard Size is 90x35 cm and the fabric is cotton twill or flannel at 220-250 grams per square meter. Good luck and i hope you will find them useful!

    • @guineapig9567
      @guineapig9567 7 лет назад

      Ken Hadley Fleece or polartec work as well

  • @intothenight756d47
    @intothenight756d47 4 месяца назад

    Thank you so much. I think this helps explain why in WWII photographs dead Soviet soldiers had bandages on their feet instead of boots. Of course they did have boots, but boots are no longer of use to a dead man. Learn something new and useful every day.

  • @KosmonautKong
    @KosmonautKong 8 лет назад +2

    Cool shit. I'd always wondered about footwraps as a fallback option. It'd definitely be easier to get ahold of or even make a footwrap than a sock. It can't be too bad either, they were used for a couple thousand years.

  • @madogmedic
    @madogmedic 4 года назад +3

    Great information. Thanks.
    I am a retired U.S. Army Combat Medic, and spent most of 2004 in Iraq.
    I am a student of history, and this kind of information is quite useful.
    Thanks

  • @niamhneevekinsella7951
    @niamhneevekinsella7951 3 года назад +1

    Brilliant! Thanks for sharing Lars

  • @richardlimes9698
    @richardlimes9698 Год назад

    I kinda rediscovered this yesterday after I got my feet soaked at my friend's house. He didn't have any spare socks so I took a clean dish towel and I came up with the first few steps shown in the vid. Surprised to find it more snug then my darn toughs. Glad to know how they did it properly

  • @thearchibaldtuttle
    @thearchibaldtuttle 4 года назад +4

    Personally I prefer food wraps but those foot wraps are great too!

  • @Hollylivengood
    @Hollylivengood 4 года назад

    This is what the neighbors were talking about. Neighborhood I grew up in had a lot of Slavic people. Thankyou.

  • @MrDynamitd
    @MrDynamitd 8 лет назад +5

    Always a thumbs up for your knowledge and experience,thanks for all the videos.

  • @seewaage
    @seewaage Год назад +1

    I think it's great to know how to do this, even if for emergencies. One time I lost a sock and I wrapped my foot in a bandana to replace the sock. I was riding horses and it would have been pretty bad to not have something in my riding boot to protect my foot.

  • @PipoZePoulp
    @PipoZePoulp 8 лет назад +30

    Saved many a soldier's toes.

    • @SurvivalRussia
      @SurvivalRussia  8 лет назад +3

      Indeed.

    • @user-ld6kp4bo6q
      @user-ld6kp4bo6q Год назад

      How? ....I mean do they protect toes from sliding and hitting the solid front part of the boots ?

  • @BlackDogBlues4961
    @BlackDogBlues4961 6 лет назад +11

    Would love to see more "Lost Art of Soldiering" type videos. This was very neat! I also had a quick question: Have you ever done any metal detecting in or around Napoleonic era battle fields in your country?

    • @SurvivalRussia
      @SurvivalRussia  6 лет назад +2

      I actually have :) Those areas are littered with remains from WW1 and WW2. You can get lucky though.

  • @philipblackmore6028
    @philipblackmore6028 4 года назад +2

    So simple, but so interesting. I love this guy.

  • @SamuliR89
    @SamuliR89 8 лет назад +4

    In WW2 and later soldiers here in Finland wore footwraps to keep they feet dry. Forgotten skill though...

  • @MorganBW53
    @MorganBW53 8 лет назад +6

    This is perhaps a frostbite saving technique, I will watch again. Damn good info.

  • @sharrell64sh
    @sharrell64sh 8 лет назад +5

    out freaking standing! (that's a complement) Thank you for this lesson

  • @iboarshock7059
    @iboarshock7059 8 лет назад +1

    I've known about these for years, but this is the first time I've seen how it is done. Thank you. I'm going to practice it a bit... it's one of those skills that come in handy when you least expect it.

  • @americanpig-dog7051
    @americanpig-dog7051 4 года назад

    A trash bag or old plastic grocery bag is what I use when it's cold and wet. Wear a pair of comfortable dress socks on your foot. Put a trash bag on top, put your boot socks on the outside and then your boots on.
    Your feet will stay completely dry because the outside sock will protect it from the boot ripping it, and it does a decent job of insulating your foot.

  • @RVM451
    @RVM451 4 года назад +1

    Friend,
    Many years ago, they showed us a brief movie contrasting the Soviet Military with our own, when I was in the US Army.They mentioned using rags instead of socks, and I've often wondered how that worked, since the movie didn't show that part. Being able to make do with a rag, when there are no socks to be had, in A SURVIVAL situation could be very handy.
    Thank you so much!
    …..RVM45

  • @octaviathz
    @octaviathz Год назад

    This helped me fix a big proboem i had. The only shoes i have at the moment are a pair of boots but i bought them on the wrong size and don't have the situation to buy new ones. This size problem leads to them sanding my socks on the heel, just like he showed, after a day or two of wear and then sanding my foot. I have already went through multiple pairs of socks until i hear about portyanki in a video about kirza boots. I then bought a cloth i found in my local supermarket and wore them using this method. It's imediately 200% better than it was with socks, i can not recoment this method if you have a problem eith the heels of your boots

  • @lulutileguy
    @lulutileguy 4 года назад +1

    i love the lawn ornaments no little gnomes here those wraps better come in black lol

  • @dickvarga6908
    @dickvarga6908 7 лет назад

    heard about these but never seen the proper technique, used to use something like this in rubber boots when irrigating crops, would exchange socks for these and then dry my feet after & put my dry socks on in my leather workboots for dry ground work, didn't know where it came from for years until I saw them in a magazine but there were a lot of Poles/Germans around here from 1920's and 1940's so I guess they showed the guys who I worked with when I was a teenager.

  • @CheekyMonkey1776
    @CheekyMonkey1776 3 месяца назад

    There is a winter version of the foot wrap used with mukluks by the Inuit tribes in Alaska and Canada. I tried them on a winter camping trip once in Northern Minnesota. The wraps were much, much warmer than the heavy wool socks I had packed in… no idea why they are so much warmer but I’m a convert.

  • @canadianbushman8982
    @canadianbushman8982 8 лет назад +1

    I've heard about this but have not seen it done. Thanks.

  • @huddunlap3999
    @huddunlap3999 4 года назад +6

    My Dad did this when he was growing up in Vermont in the depression. He didn't have a pair of shoes until he was eight and he made them in the mill he was working in. The only thing he didn't do is cut the leather.

  • @fumasterchu12
    @fumasterchu12 8 лет назад +5

    Very interesting technique, I don't know if I'll be trying it though. I wear pretty heavy wool socks year round, even here in Oklahoma where it stays hot. I got used to the wool socks after my tour in the Infantry and just stuck with them. Thanks for the information, it's always good to have options.

    • @SurvivalRussia
      @SurvivalRussia  8 лет назад +3

      I use wool socks all the time as well :)

  • @seandepoppe6716
    @seandepoppe6716 4 года назад +1

    Good to know! Thanks!

  • @keithfillinger3182
    @keithfillinger3182 8 лет назад +1

    Cool video! Thanks for sharing!

  • @oliversmith9200
    @oliversmith9200 4 года назад

    Thank You Survival Russia. I've wanted to see more about the Russian foot wraps since I saw them in the films, "October, Ten Days That Shook The World", and "Come And See".

    • @oliversmith9200
      @oliversmith9200 4 года назад

      My Dear Mother, she taught me to darn socks, but, your Norwegian Army wool socks are a very bad case.

  • @WMDTVIDS
    @WMDTVIDS 4 года назад +3

    Outstanding video my friend!
    This answers some questions ive had regarding stovepipe/jackboots for years.
    This is a concern that is extremely practical and functional, as the modern.." outdoorsman's" real skills these days are buying crap they do not need.
    Here in Maine in the US, it might not be AS cold as Russia...but still gets pretty cold, and this method will come in mighty handy. Thank you!
    I subscribed to your channel, as you and I seem to have the same appreciation for simple, durable surplus gear, particularly the Swedish wool gear- I love their rubberized wool gaiters.
    Keep up the great work!

  • @OKBushcraft
    @OKBushcraft 8 лет назад +5

    Well, after learning it would take about 40 man hours to knit a pair of socks this is a very practical item before the advent of mass produced socks. I see this could be of use again should one bust their bunions through their last pair of socks should another great depression ever occur. (More like when another great depression occurs.)

    • @MadNumForce
      @MadNumForce 8 лет назад +2

      40 MAN hours maybe, but probably 3 to 8 experienced grandma hours depending on the yarn. :-D
      It's actually much easier to transform raw sheep fleece to knitted socks (it only requires carding, spinning and knitting), than to turn it into woven fabric (which requires finer carding, much finer spinning, loom setup -which takes a looong time- and actual weaving). But mass produced fabric appeared relatively early, at the beginning of the modern period. It would take a few more centuries to develop tubular knitting machines, which are much more complicated than a "semi-automatic" loom.

    • @mikuhatsunegoshujin
      @mikuhatsunegoshujin 4 года назад

      @@MadNumForce 20 yards linen is one coat. No exceptions.

  • @mikuhatsunegoshujin
    @mikuhatsunegoshujin 4 года назад +1

    I was getting blisters every time I walked more than a mile. Thank you for this nifty trick. I hope it will do better than the wool socks I have.

  • @agricolaregs
    @agricolaregs 2 года назад

    Absolute brilliant share!!! Thanks so much.

  • @thenotorioussk
    @thenotorioussk 8 лет назад +1

    you are a champion! wealth of knowledge on this channel, please never stop surviving and/or teaching!

    • @SurvivalRussia
      @SurvivalRussia  8 лет назад

      Thank you a very much. That's a great compliment :)

  • @vgrdesign
    @vgrdesign 7 лет назад +6

    Ларс, ступня должна быть на весу... в воздухе, при намотке портянки...
    Полотно портянки растягивается разведёнными руками под подошвой, в натяг. Если нужно перемотать портянки в грязи или снегу - этот метод единственно верный... не всегда есть под рукой кусок поролона или бересты, а сбившуюся или пропотевшую портянку - нужно перемотать сразу же... чтобы не получить потёртости на ноге.
    Удобнее наматывать портянки сидя, но "высший пилотаж" - стоя в луже поочерёдно на одной ноге.
    Можно прислониться спиной к дереву, например... для устойчивости.))
    И в ролике не отражено самое главное; смещая точку под ступнёй, переворачивая портянку - получаешь замену 4-6 парам носок. Последнее преимущество - удобство стирки и сушки.
    Привет и слава вятичам!!!

    • @SurvivalRussia
      @SurvivalRussia  7 лет назад

      Очень верно Victor)) Этот метод лучше подходит для демонстрационных целей, конечно. В другом видео я показать и объяснить о превращении портянку. Я знаю парня, который использовал один комплект в течение двух месяцев)))

    • @vgrdesign
      @vgrdesign 7 лет назад

      ***Я знаю парня, который использовал один комплект в течение двух месяцев)))***
      Ещё скажи - без стирки...)))
      Но был у меня случай в армейской командировке под Ярославлем-Залесским (объявили карантин по холере, притащили ребята после стрельб в Средней Азии) , когда негде было сушить портянки... и подмены не было. Так я приспособился после стирки сушить их во сне, обматывая вокруг ляжек. Не очень приятно, но - если отжать как следует - терпимо... и к утру - практически сухие.
      Не два месяца, но две недели в таком режиме - было.
      (прятное слово "байка"... но - многозначное))))

  • @TheVespap200e
    @TheVespap200e 8 лет назад +1

    Thanks Lars for demo of the foot wraps! Very interesting! Time tested and no BS approved! 👍

  • @jjjvclub
    @jjjvclub 8 лет назад +1

    What a cool idea, thanks!

  • @allendaves2001
    @allendaves2001 4 года назад

    My grandpa use to ware the foot wrap whenever he wore rubber boots. That brought back sweet memory. Thank you.

  • @edi9892
    @edi9892 4 года назад

    Socks existed since the early middle ages, but they were difficult to make (without rubber, they need to be form-fitting and yet possible to put on and off). Footwraps and gaiters were in use up to the 20th c. In Europe. Similarly, some wrapped their underwear, or didn't even bother wearing them at all...

  • @PNWOverlander
    @PNWOverlander 7 лет назад +1

    Just found your channel this morning, the foot wrap is brilliant! new Washington State subscriber.

  • @loonyTlu
    @loonyTlu 10 месяцев назад

    My father was a Russian Army officer in WW2. He always wrapped his feet when wearing boots, even as an old man. If done properly, the fabric doesn’t shift and move as one is walking so it prevents chafing and blisters.

    • @SurvivalRussia
      @SurvivalRussia  10 месяцев назад

      Yes, it is quite comfortable for wearing rubber boots and forth, if you know how to wrap them )))

  • @ronbutler6526
    @ronbutler6526 8 лет назад +1

    You sure do your research and give plenty of facts, I like that. Homestead in the background looks pretty cool and I'm sure is keeping you quite busy. Thanks very much for the history lesson, that was awesome. Take care brother : )

  • @stealthop
    @stealthop 8 лет назад +1

    This channel is awesome

  • @DerkleineMannRap
    @DerkleineMannRap 8 лет назад +2

    Cool. I never need Socks again. Ok, it may look a little bit strange when i wear my Sandals over it in the Summer :-)

  • @FargoNDRoland
    @FargoNDRoland 8 лет назад

    I am from that part of the world. This really works great, used for many years. Thank you

  • @raywalter3992
    @raywalter3992 8 лет назад

    wow cool seeing funky prepper here !!

  • @simonflett125
    @simonflett125 3 года назад

    Thank you for demonstrating pchanki. Read about them in Solzhenitsyn's A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich aged 14 and wondered about them for over forty years since. Will try them.

  • @hallard069
    @hallard069 8 лет назад +3

    just fascinating, thank you for the demo and history lesson.

  • @jornjacobsen3945
    @jornjacobsen3945 8 лет назад

    That, in my eyes ,that is valuable information that I will download for training purposes. Extra insulation and protection on top of a wool sock during the winter is always good option. Good for over sized boots etc, etc, etc,....
    At the moment, I am making ballistics charts for a AR-50. Gotta sight in a new scope. Hope to get this done today.

    • @SurvivalRussia
      @SurvivalRussia  8 лет назад

      It's a very good concept once you get a hang of it. AR-50, that sounds interesting indeed.

  • @montanastephenson9212
    @montanastephenson9212 8 лет назад +1

    i would like to see more russian gear if you can i like this channels very much

    • @SurvivalRussia
      @SurvivalRussia  8 лет назад

      I will do that of course. Thank you very much :)

  • @scruff_uk
    @scruff_uk 8 лет назад +1

    I think I remember seeing this kinda wrap in a survival manual or such like.
    Thank you so much for explaining them to us properly!
    All the best
    Thom

  • @satellite2696
    @satellite2696 8 лет назад

    I can't believe I didn't know about this. I'll definitely will be trying this next time. awesome!

  • @JEEROFUKU
    @JEEROFUKU 7 лет назад +1

    Use to wear it for almost 3 years during my service :) Awesome stuff :)

  • @volgalas6070
    @volgalas6070 8 лет назад +16

    Укатайка. Портяночки. XDDDD
    Теперь призывникам выдают только носочки.)) А зря.)

  • @GargoyleZoo
    @GargoyleZoo 4 года назад +7

    Using a lost art of soldiering?
    Now that's what I call soldiering.

  • @TrollDragomir
    @TrollDragomir 8 лет назад +3

    People underestimate how important dry, warm and comfortable feet are. I used this with tall leather boods, these footwraps are called "onuce" (read onootse) in Polish :D Funny enough, what is just as good in my opinion is using loose crude leather shoes and lining them with dry grass. Even better insulation, even better air circulation and less restricting. not sure how well that would do with rubber boots though (which I use as rarely as possible, if my foot is to get wet from my own sweat anyway I might as well go barefoot).

    • @SurvivalRussia
      @SurvivalRussia  8 лет назад +2

      Interesting. It seems like many countries use these. The grass also sounds like an interesting idea. Yes rubber boots can be unpleasant for sure, but if i go to the forest often they are useful compared to leather boots. It's irritating to clean and maintain them everyday :)

    • @TrollDragomir
      @TrollDragomir 8 лет назад +1

      Survival Russia
      The terrains you hike through in the videos seem much more muddy/swampy than what I'm used to anyway, so rubber boots are probably a must over there ;)

  • @ninjabeatz905
    @ninjabeatz905 8 лет назад

    when the sock heel wares out I darn them with a sack needle and wool thread. Thanks for the portyanki demo.

  • @yvonnepaulovicqueen1677
    @yvonnepaulovicqueen1677 8 лет назад +1

    I grew up in south east PA. Bucks county. It was still country and very beautiful. Lot's of farms. Mostly the farmers and family were of eastern European decent. There were a few horse farms. My big brother had a fondness for hunting and trapping. He would sell the furs and we would eat what was left if eatable. No Skunk thank you. My brother would ask me to help him so I learned how to be in the woods hunt. We always had many guns. Guns are fun. There were rules that we had to follow. My father said this only once. Don't shoot anything that you don't intend to eat. Never point a gun at anything living. Most importantly, a gun is always loaded even when you think it's empty and hanging on the wall for years. In those days we had many guns. I liked guns better then dolls. My dolls were usually made from corn husk. I only hunted for food or picked up deer road killed. My favorite rifle was a Winchester 32-40. No longer have it. Lost to time. I would like to get a Mosin nagent. I also like the 30-06. I am old now so that be a kicker. How did you grow up and where in Russia did you grow up.

  • @BluntedZephyr
    @BluntedZephyr 4 года назад

    You know what may work 'better'? wool socks and lose fitting plastic bag. The friction between the wool and bag, when walking, generates heat. I have used this for decades.
    Greetings from Canada, eh ;)

  • @WorldSurvivalist
    @WorldSurvivalist 8 лет назад +1

    Brilliant video

  • @survivalcomms
    @survivalcomms 8 лет назад +1

    I was always curious how those were done. Thank you for sharing !

  • @GeorgeSemel
    @GeorgeSemel 4 года назад

    This made my day. Where I live in the States it gets cold, not as cold as Russia because we are not as far to the North as they are. Yet this little trick can be very very useful to me. I wear LLBean boots 100% of the time. I think instruction on how to make these would be useful not only to me.. You mentioned a hunting trip, I would like to know the game in question and well were you successful. It's whitetail deer season now, The General Rife season just opened, been Bow hunting since mid-Sept. Got venison in the freezer. I would like to know what you and the locals have for guns. Here in the States the only real limitation we have is what our checkbooks and support.

  • @edvinrapp330
    @edvinrapp330 2 года назад

    I use swedish surplus footwraps made of wool when it's cold, works great 👍

  • @tactical8842
    @tactical8842 8 лет назад +1

    Thanks for sharing, Simple but effective footwear. Keep up the great work. Atb

  • @nightwalker5278
    @nightwalker5278 8 лет назад +1

    Amazing. That was an incredibly useful tutorial.Thanks for sharing this.

    • @SurvivalRussia
      @SurvivalRussia  8 лет назад

      Thanks! I'm glad you found it interesting :)

  • @derrickfelix503
    @derrickfelix503 8 лет назад

    Brillant video, in the making of foot raps. The sock really need redesigning thanks and Cheers

  • @artyom_zdanek
    @artyom_zdanek 8 лет назад +1

    Man, I was looking for a channel like this, and some sort of footwrap technique, this will definitely save my socks, thanks chuvak!

  • @neanderthaloutdoors9202
    @neanderthaloutdoors9202 8 лет назад +1

    That's different I've not seen that done before but cheers for the demo Lars and the little history lesson, your homestead is looking very nice in summer time, cheers, atb, Paul.

    • @SurvivalRussia
      @SurvivalRussia  8 лет назад +1

      Thank you Paul. I tried and tested method :)

    • @neanderthaloutdoors9202
      @neanderthaloutdoors9202 8 лет назад +1

      +Survival Russia I think I'm gona have to raid the wife's linen cupboard for material and give this a try

  • @alextorres_2023
    @alextorres_2023 8 лет назад +2

    Awesome video!! Keep up the good work. Thanks for the info.

  • @TyrannosaurusDVM
    @TyrannosaurusDVM 8 лет назад

    That looks awersome!!! Here in México it is very hard to find socks longer than 27 cm and I need 30 cm lengh. Then I am going to use "parkas" the way you teach us. Thank you very mucho my friend

  • @captaincrunch6803
    @captaincrunch6803 4 года назад

    Your homestead is beautiful. Your so blessed

  • @ChrisBrown-kh9wz
    @ChrisBrown-kh9wz 4 года назад

    My grandfather would not wear socks but would wrap his feet like this and insisted that we do the same. My grandfather said that stockings were for women. I still wrap my feet before putting on my boots in the winter, my feet stay warm and I have not experienced problems with blisters. (However I can also kick sparks from flint rocks.)

  • @stanleyqc2244
    @stanleyqc2244 4 года назад

    My father told me they would often use these in winter. Bulgaria, artillery, 1982.
    During the night they would stretch the fabric and let them dry as far away as possible in the tent. The new guys would sleep around the stinky wraps and the old "wolves" would have the prime spots next to the firestove :D

  • @youngsey
    @youngsey 4 года назад

    Thanks,great video.

  • @opalprestonshirley1700
    @opalprestonshirley1700 8 лет назад +2

    Enjoyed this video very much. I've heard of the foot wraps but never saw how they were done. Appreciate it Lars. atb Opal

  • @tballstaedt7807
    @tballstaedt7807 8 лет назад

    An old Swede showed me this. He said his grandfather, a old cavalry man taught him this. Very cool indeed. He called them almost the same "footlappen".