I know you guys talked about integrating ads recently and I wanted to say that yall did it flawlessly in this video! The Infrared camera was way more applicable than I would've expected and it was awesome to see you guys find ways to use it!
I still don't have it 100% nailed down how some Kampers' names are spelled, but I just gotta say I *adore* Emily. Slowly catching up to present-day Project Kamp content! What a joy it is to binge watch!
Hello from California, little suggestion for your metal working space. As a welder, you should make an outdoor work bench for metal working. Save yourself time on clean up and also save your ears from the echo but also lungs. Don’t want to weld inside if you don’t have to. Much love 👍🏽
Thank you for another fantastic video. I struggle to appreciate incremental change and slow moving projects at our place. Everything you share helps me remember to be more of a human with a human pace, than trying to do everything quickly and big.
"it's hammer time" and then the intense music got me 😂 and also when eemeli started spotify and then the video's music started. some very clever editing on this one! great job Project Kamp team!
Hey Project Kamp, thanks for the updates! I have been enjoying seeing new faces and work progressing. BTW, I just wanted to mention that when burying cables its generally a good idea to put several cm of gravel underneath the conduit. This will prevent soil compaction and settling from putting stress on the wires themselves. Since you've disturbed the soils they will settle down a bit and with a flexible conduit, there's a good chance that problems could arise from burying the cables without this additional step. It seemed to me (from the video) that the soils have a high amount of organic materials in them which increases the settling issue as they decompose. In the future I strongly suggest taking my advice so that the power systems can continue serving the community! Cheers!
Project Kamp made me realize that not only do things in our life need to be practical, but it also needs to be pretty, and artistic choices breathe so much life into this project.
Nice work on the rack. Here's a tip... When you have to drill a big hole, start with a SMALL hole... drill a pilot of 3/16" (maybe 2mm) or so first. The reason is that large drill bits have a large web connecting the two flutes, and that web effectively forms a chisel shape at the center of your hole. Forcing a big drill bit without pre-drilling a pilot hole generates a lot of heat, and this wears out your expensive big drill bit a lot faster. A 3/16" drill bit is very cheap in comparison.
You speak of standardizing lumber sizes for future recycling. I wish to suggest standardizing the method for delineating native trees to be protected. Air dried mimosa posts about 35 mm in diameter and 1.5 meter tall with the skinny end pointed and the fat end painted with a standard 30 cm band (white?). The standard pattern is two stakes per tree. Each stake is pounded into the ground approximately approx 20 cm from the trunk. Each of these trees will have a mulch ring approximately 8 cm thick X 1 meter in diameter. the chipped mulch will be held back from the tree trunk by 5 cm all around. The purpose of the mulch is to: 1) Protect the root zone from compaction 2) retain soil moisture 3) regulate soil temperature 4) simplify watering 5) provide nutrients and 6) Create beneficial soil biota via decomposition. If you standardize your delineation in this fashion (or an iteration that works for you) the development of your native volunteers will be greatly enhanced and there is reduced likelihood of accidents and/or oversights. 😊
more than 40 minutes of watching PROJECT CAMP, it's very good time of video. I really like films where I can watching it for a long time to finish my lunch after the job. Very relaxing
As a young man ,I was a soldier serving in the Falkland Islands. A squad (8men) lived in a shipping container for 2 weeks .Like an oven during the day and like a freezer at night. Great content .All my best for your futures.
Nailed the ad read! Cool product and I think helping to cook pizzas/bread would be my every day use of that aha, make sure the oven is as hot as it should be.
Honestly, to protect against further corrosion, you should have cleaned up the rust, and put on several coats of a good industrial quality paint prior to any additions.
Containers like these are made of COR-TEN steel or weathering steel. The buildup of rust protects the material underneath and will never rust through. Only reason to paint them is for aesthetic reasons and even then you encounter some environmental issues with metal paint and the cleanup/leftovers of it.
I agree with the OP. Any lick of rust anywhere on a ship we went to battle with it in the Navy & Coast Guard. Corten steel became standard issue in military, we needle gunned it down to bare metal, sanded the rest, and reapplied the proper coatings. Don't ignore rust anymore than you'd ignore a fox in your henhouse if you want it functioning properly.
@@reversetec7703 false. It will continue to rust through, particularly on the flat roof where standing water is allowed to form. A galvanized can with dings will also rust for the very same reasons. No dings, no rust. If what you were saying were remotely true the container manufacturers would have no reason or cause to lay any coat down from the beginning.
That ad was totally pain free. It felt like an actual part of the project and not being sold something. Seems like a good product. Also I was going to pose a question about the waste system, so fun to see that addressed. Cheers.
Sorting metal waste is a neat "hobby" for all of us to do at home. We've been separating Alu, Iron, Cables, clean Copper and other material for two years now. In a "normal" household it will not be great value, but - in our scenario - every other month it at least pays for a crate of beer. We are lucky, as we have a little scrap yard in walking distance and sometimes we can scavenge materials at work. Anyhow: Love the waste station! It's good to have it in sight.
Im loving seeing the Mimosa furniture and i hope you so more and more! Id love to see some Mimosa Archways or pergulas built as well. Awesome way to put a fast growing invasive species to use
The camp is coming along very well this year. I must say I like the video style this year compared to Season 2 which was not so enjoyable. Its quite the evolution as I have been watching since early in Season 1. As water is such an precious commodity, will you be adding a gutter and water storage tank to the new container storage building ?
I want to say that this video feels like a perfect example of all the work you have put into find the balance between the different viewers. Everything is on point I loved the music representing the different actions. The product intergation was great, the level of detail, humour thrown, etc. Great view from a viewer that has been with since the start of season 2
Flawless ad implementation - continue this. I thought you got a FLIR for a minute until I realised what it was. Absolutely looking into it for my own stuff, so success. Keep it up guys :)
You can make string/rope from the plastic bottles using a couple of razors. It is usually pretty strong too. You can find loads of tutorials online and the tools don't take much space. (edit: This for the hard plastic)
Lmao, these guys are the ones that really popularized plastic recycling, from extruders to sheet presses to molds, they have entire classes worth of information about how to recycle and use it in a variety of sources.
If I didn't know you were going to integrate ads into your videos, I may have not even caught that the Infrared Camera was an ad. Well done! I continue to support ad placement in these videos.
Mimosa tops as a resource! I really like the idea of using the mimosa tops to form the base of on contour berms. Hybridization of Hugelkultur, water infiltration, adaptive reuse. and topsoil retention. That is a grand slam home run ♥ If you make bundles of the mimosa tops with a strong just or hemp cord (mimosa top "logs"), you will be able to pack a lot more mimosa into your berms. The on contour berms will be a great place to plant fruit and nut trees. For that purpose, space your on contour berms 10 meters apart to allow for the trees canopy to come to maturity without interference. If you plant chestnuts, they need to be 15 meters apart in all directions because they will grow to be HUGE trees. Do you have some ravines on the property? I think I see one in the background at 1:03 in the video. Low areas that flow with rainwater during storms can greatly benefit from what we call in the US "beaver dam analogs". The only material required is fresh brush that can be woven and pointed wood posts that can be driven into the ground. The purpose is twofold: Slow the velocity and control the release of the volume of water moving across the property to reduce downhill erosion, increase infiltration and act as a sediment trap to clean the water from uphill. Here's a "how to" & "why" RUclips: ruclips.net/video/63ji0XFPwBQ/видео.html
Considering the amount of earthworks you could be doing on the land (and perhaps the amount of mimosas and their trunks to thin out too) to create fire barriers and water retainment systems, it might be an idea to look at a small tractor or a bobcat.. just saying! If you buy a decent second hand one they retain their value pretty well so you could do a lot of work and then sell the machine without much loss of capital (by renting something similar for example) this would also enable you to upgrade roads and pathways beyond what is possible by hand even with a large group. Give it some thought! I'm sure we would all like to enable the funding of such a thing as well.
Super nice music in this one! not as repetitive as previous tracks have been 😅 it would be cool to have a list of great tracks that re-occur in episodes so we all associate the music with this channel. I see a lot of channels do this and it always makes me feel a sort of nostalgia to hear the songs again and again. Amazing Episode. Love Emilié
The product advertising was nicely integrated. Not at all disruptive and added to the video. Also the editing team is getting so good. Thumbs up to them. 👍
@@CimberMaticThere are many videos online of how to make DIY plastic filament extruders that will recycle plastic bottles into filament for use on 3D printing. It's worth a look if they need to print some bestoke parts such as hooks and kitchen utensils.
would need to know very specifically which kind of plastic it is and exactly what its extrusion characteristics are, and experimentation for any given piece to see how manufacturing additives have changed it. also needs to be thermoplastic. Also needs significant effort to calibrate and maintain even with known off the shelf printing filament. Not impossible, but the cost in human effort needs to be considered.
I saw recently that someone was using a very small solar panel and thin plastic stripes made from bottles, and turning it into reusable 3d printer rolls. The process was slow, but super clean.
You should bend all the mimosa in the mimosa forest to make a whole lot of natural igloos which will grow constantly = Cheap housing + mystic forest view
@@EmyrDerfel Every wood structure is a fire risk. Here you can just leave enough space between the igloos, that if a fire starts it won't spread. It will be like a natural tent which gives shadow and mostly protection from wind and rain. I think it would be lovely.
Current research shows that wax worms consume plastics and produce an organic waste product. Maybe you can cultivate these worms and use them to consume your waste plastics. Great episode and awesome music!
Not enough science about the byproducts. It may only be a ways and means of smearing microplastics around faster into the ecosystem. The research I found was way too generic, calling the excrement 'glycol' or outright calling it toxic. Crickets are also eating plastics, but it's not digesting completely. In a perfect world, we'd distract wax worms with mounds of plastics to keep them out of bee hives, and sequester their excrement into something more tame than microplastic concentrations.
Thank you for the videos, I’m currently sick and spend most of my days in bed or in my Hang-mat in the garden I’m very glad you’re videos are back on and I got something to do; it’s very nice to see all the fun things to do and that you document it in the way you do. Don’t forget to love each other and the product placement was nice and well placed I didn’t mind at all keep it going Love from Germany
At the end of the screw, there are two numbers, in many cases 8.8 to calculate the strength you say 8x8 = 64 times with Diameter. if you screw an M8 it is 8x3.14= 25.12 and then multiply that by the 64 = 1,607.68 KG in pull for an M8 ;-) thank you, greetings, the blacksmith
really interesting to see what you come up with. and also teaching normal people like myself how to reuse products and recycle them. and i hope this project will bring new discoveries that can help the planet in the long run.
I love little moments like the one at 11:50 with the video editing fitting the beat. Such moments and others show so much creativity and really add to the pleasure of watching the process!
loveeee the bench and the pathways feels all starting to get together and cutesy LOVE IT! as a virgo the storage system was amazing, would love to see more flowers and colors around basecamp!
I always like the music yall pick but todays intro music I really enjoyed. Keep up the amazing work. Your videos are always a great start to my week. Thank you.
Honestly this channel is incredible ! I'm French and I understand perfectly without subtitles, moreover we clearly saw that every people in the projet Kamp are happy ! I would love to make things like this in the future ! Congratulation to all of us !
This shows you have very good English comprehension. I know several English people who would have trouble understanding everything spoken here simply because of the various accents.👍
This is a great infrastructure update. These are my favorite videos. I want to suggest that you add larger washers to the bolts attaching the shelving to the container. It is possible over time that the bolts might start to warp the container walls and possible pull through. That would take a lot of weight over a long time though. Also, the "spikey wire" is called barbed wire. I love your videos and always look forward to them.
You don't stop impressing me. That metal work and soldering was super professional. You are so lucky to have such a great diversity of talent. Mimosas are kind of a problem, but you should try to get the most out of its wood. Catching its resin could be useful. And don't forget that during winter, you might need some dry mimosa wood for the fireplace.
Another great video! Music was great also. It is so satisfying to have a nice neat place to store things. I have spent a lot of time in my garage doing this and it makes me happy to have a place for things. The product placement was great and a good tool for the Kamp. can't wait to see what wildlife you guys see at night!
That mimosa bench is beautiful. Can just imagine the colors if stained. Benches, chairs, hammocks, stools, railings, retaining walls, berms, bridges, roofs or shade covers, troughs, stalls, mixed with mud irrigation ditches. Storage area looks neat and organized. Could fabricated metal shims or washers be used as spacers to help level the bolted posts? Any plans to rustproof the inside and outside the container? Any intentions for separate solar or wind power sources? Lots of opportunity to collect roof rain water runoff for cleaning, watering plants, irrigation, pond/well/stream storage. Or filter, pump to storage tanks for later use. Possible storage for dry season. Or underground piped irrigation to stream/pond/well/river.
oh my goodness!! I've seen lots of building stuff videos from all over but Project Kamp is fun, funny, inspiring, lots of laughter and smiles and thumbs up sign, ..I really appreciated and enjoy the should be ok attitude!! your video should be post under the therapy category too!! you made my week!!😆😃🙏!!
I know you guys talked about integrating ads recently and I wanted to say that yall did it flawlessly in this video! The Infrared camera was way more applicable than I would've expected and it was awesome to see you guys find ways to use it!
I didn't realize that was an add. LOL
Yeah, no-one is going to complain when the thing you are advertising is TOTALLY AWESOME! Lol
I agree. The ad was integrated perfectly. It was actually pleasant to watch and learn about the different applications that the product can be used.
Totally agree, integrating an ad this way works really well. Not annoying for the viewer, and helps your project.
Anybody else think this group needs to make their own bell 🛎️ for inches and dinner calls and such
Also with charcoal you’ll be able to blacksmith
Drill a hole in the mimosa-stumps and put in mushroom. The mushroom will provide food and will eat thro the stump. 1-2 Years, but Mushroom-Years :)
Mimosa has anti-fungal properties, no?
@@blackduckfarmcanadano, you are thinking of eucalyptus. Mimosa wood is suitable for mushroom growth.
great idea!
Love the idea but what mushrooms grow in Portugal?
@@DerFreiegedanke chanterelles, boletus, pine mushrooms season is Nov to Feb.
I still don't have it 100% nailed down how some Kampers' names are spelled, but I just gotta say I *adore* Emily.
Slowly catching up to present-day Project Kamp content! What a joy it is to binge watch!
I love us Finns represented with that little "oho", when something surprising happens. Keep up the good work!
Gotta love the straightforwardness of the finns
Hello from California, little suggestion for your metal working space. As a welder, you should make an outdoor work bench for metal working. Save yourself time on clean up and also save your ears from the echo but also lungs. Don’t want to weld inside if you don’t have to. Much love 👍🏽
The wind is a problem with welding.
Sparkles would be a risk of starting fires during the dry season
The best video so far imo.
"They just don't show it to you" rules 🤣🤣🤣❤️❤️❤️
Thank you for another fantastic video. I struggle to appreciate incremental change and slow moving projects at our place. Everything you share helps me remember to be more of a human with a human pace, than trying to do everything quickly and big.
I don't mind the sponsorship plug. I can not become a parteon so by watching the ad I feel like I am helping just a little bit.
"it's hammer time" and then the intense music got me 😂 and also when eemeli started spotify and then the video's music started. some very clever editing on this one! great job Project Kamp team!
I would love to see a rainwater collecting system on that Container.
Would double as first responder firefighting water too. Well worth the investment.
Hey Project Kamp, thanks for the updates! I have been enjoying seeing new faces and work progressing. BTW, I just wanted to mention that when burying cables its generally a good idea to put several cm of gravel underneath the conduit. This will prevent soil compaction and settling from putting stress on the wires themselves. Since you've disturbed the soils they will settle down a bit and with a flexible conduit, there's a good chance that problems could arise from burying the cables without this additional step. It seemed to me (from the video) that the soils have a high amount of organic materials in them which increases the settling issue as they decompose. In the future I strongly suggest taking my advice so that the power systems can continue serving the community! Cheers!
Project Kamp made me realize that not only do things in our life need to be practical, but it also needs to be pretty, and artistic choices breathe so much life into this project.
yess, exactly! very inspiring :)
I love how they always make an effort to make the ground pretty, and build paths, and such. Makes such a huge difference.
The product placement was perfect! On brand, useful for people renovating as well. Keep it up 😊
The Zone of Accumulation is inspiring. Well done.
If this thermal cam ad is a look at how you integrate 3rd party ads, I'm all for it. Well done guys
Perhaps you should store the doors and windows on top of the container, because they are resting on the ground and can still absorb moisture.
im not a part of nothing but just want to tell u that ur a smart ass boi haha, really good idea and thinking
40:40 - the windows are on top of beams above the ground and get air from underneath - so I can see no Problemo
@@vomKuckucksfelsen I didn't notice the wood under the windows and doors,
Nice work on the rack. Here's a tip... When you have to drill a big hole, start with a SMALL hole... drill a pilot of 3/16" (maybe 2mm) or so first. The reason is that large drill bits have a large web connecting the two flutes, and that web effectively forms a chisel shape at the center of your hole. Forcing a big drill bit without pre-drilling a pilot hole generates a lot of heat, and this wears out your expensive big drill bit a lot faster. A 3/16" drill bit is very cheap in comparison.
Great work Emily! Also, great cartwheel :-D
I love how you feature different team members in each video 🥰
Video was longer then usual, but still interesting. Editing was great :). Integrated product demo was very nice :). Good luck for the summer.
You speak of standardizing lumber sizes for future recycling. I wish to suggest standardizing the method for delineating native trees to be protected. Air dried mimosa posts about 35 mm in diameter and 1.5 meter tall with the skinny end pointed and the fat end painted with a standard 30 cm band (white?). The standard pattern is two stakes per tree. Each stake is pounded into the ground approximately approx 20 cm from the trunk. Each of these trees will have a mulch ring approximately 8 cm thick X 1 meter in diameter. the chipped mulch will be held back from the tree trunk by 5 cm all around. The purpose of the mulch is to: 1) Protect the root zone from compaction 2) retain soil moisture 3) regulate soil temperature 4) simplify watering 5) provide nutrients and 6) Create beneficial soil biota via decomposition. If you standardize your delineation in this fashion (or an iteration that works for you) the development of your native volunteers will be greatly enhanced and there is reduced likelihood of accidents and/or oversights. 😊
Could you imagine how much these guys could get done with a little bobcat or backhoe haha. Awesome work
Now imagine they had a dozer
It’s good they’re not Compressing the earth, germ economy and water retention etc
What! - and miss out on all the drudgery?
And a stump grinder
more than 40 minutes of watching PROJECT CAMP, it's very good time of video. I really like films where I can watching it for a long time to finish my lunch after the job. Very relaxing
As a young man ,I was a soldier serving in the Falkland Islands. A squad (8men) lived in a shipping container for 2 weeks .Like an oven during the day and like a freezer at night. Great content .All my best for your futures.
Glad you made it home.
The ad was pretty interesting! Keep sponsoring, brands! :D
Nailed the ad read! Cool product and I think helping to cook pizzas/bread would be my every day use of that aha, make sure the oven is as hot as it should be.
Honestly, to protect against further corrosion, you should have cleaned up the rust, and put on several coats of a good industrial quality paint prior to any additions.
Containers like these are made of COR-TEN steel or weathering steel. The buildup of rust protects the material underneath and will never rust through.
Only reason to paint them is for aesthetic reasons and even then you encounter some environmental issues with metal paint and the cleanup/leftovers of it.
@@reversetec7703 I don't know about never rust through: I've seen some containers scrapped that have some pretty impressive "tin worm attacks"
@@reversetec7703 Is COR TEN steel designed to have dozens of holes and sheer forces
I agree with the OP. Any lick of rust anywhere on a ship we went to battle with it in the Navy & Coast Guard. Corten steel became standard issue in military, we needle gunned it down to bare metal, sanded the rest, and reapplied the proper coatings. Don't ignore rust anymore than you'd ignore a fox in your henhouse if you want it functioning properly.
@@reversetec7703 false. It will continue to rust through, particularly on the flat roof where standing water is allowed to form. A galvanized can with dings will also rust for the very same reasons. No dings, no rust. If what you were saying were remotely true the container manufacturers would have no reason or cause to lay any coat down from the beginning.
That ad was totally pain free. It felt like an actual part of the project and not being sold something. Seems like a good product.
Also I was going to pose a question about the waste system, so fun to see that addressed. Cheers.
Sorting metal waste is a neat "hobby" for all of us to do at home. We've been separating Alu, Iron, Cables, clean Copper and other material for two years now. In a "normal" household it will not be great value, but - in our scenario - every other month it at least pays for a crate of beer. We are lucky, as we have a little scrap yard in walking distance and sometimes we can scavenge materials at work. Anyhow: Love the waste station! It's good to have it in sight.
Im loving seeing the Mimosa furniture and i hope you so more and more! Id love to see some Mimosa Archways or pergulas built as well.
Awesome way to put a fast growing invasive species to use
Also put guttering on all of the roofs so you can capture the water for reuse, like watering plants or washing
There is hope for humanity when I see what you guys do 👍👍👍 Greetings from Denmark 🇩🇰 BTW the editing style of this video is spot on 👍👍👍
Comment on spot 😀
Now if only we could scrub greed from our DNA and we'd be flying!
That was one of the best product placement i have ever seen on RUclips!
Love the fact that the episode was over 40 min long. Keep that up.
The camp is coming along very well this year. I must say I like the video style this year compared to Season 2 which was not so enjoyable. Its quite the evolution as I have been watching since early in Season 1. As water is such an precious commodity, will you be adding a gutter and water storage tank to the new container storage building ?
I liked both video stiles. Season 2 was more meditative.
But great idea with the water!
I can't contain my excitement about this storage system.
I want to say that this video feels like a perfect example of all the work you have put into find the balance between the different viewers. Everything is on point I loved the music representing the different actions. The product intergation was great, the level of detail, humour thrown, etc. Great view from a viewer that has been with since the start of season 2
What a marvelous shelving system! Flexible and attractive.
take care of yourselves in whatever way possible. the audience will be there
PROJECT KAMP IN FULL SWING!!1.. THE BEST, REALLY LIKE THE LONG EPISODES, AND SUPER KOOL UPGRADES AT THE KAMP THIS WEEK, BRAVO!!!! BE BLESSED.
Flawless ad implementation - continue this. I thought you got a FLIR for a minute until I realised what it was. Absolutely looking into it for my own stuff, so success. Keep it up guys :)
I always love it when product placements or advertisements are marked as such.
You can make string/rope from the plastic bottles using a couple of razors. It is usually pretty strong too. You can find loads of tutorials online and the tools don't take much space. (edit: This for the hard plastic)
Lmao, these guys are the ones that really popularized plastic recycling, from extruders to sheet presses to molds, they have entire classes worth of information about how to recycle and use it in a variety of sources.
@@Finding_Arcadia have yet to see them use PET plastic as straps for stair binding or any other kind of project. I guess they have their reasons.
I love the wood chipper pathways. Good use of the trees.
Shelving system is perfect. I really loved how you use aluminum waste. This aluminum wrapping and carving technique is amazing.
I dont know how they manage to work with cans, bare handed! Amazing work!
You have so many talented and hard working young folks. Great work!🇨🇦❤️
One of my favorite episodes yet! Upcycling, organization and waste audit! What a great episode! Loving the new system :)
Great workmanship, great editing and great music..................Extremely enjoyable content!
lovely people doing a great job! love to follow along
Feed rate, amperage, travel speed...finally! - someone that knows how to weld.
I just love to see a good fabricator at work
great work Eemelie !!
kudos to all of y’all in project kamp ! inspiring to see everyone’s efforts pay off each project
If I didn't know you were going to integrate ads into your videos, I may have not even caught that the Infrared Camera was an ad. Well done! I continue to support ad placement in these videos.
Maybe a water harvesting project with the roof on the container? Keep it up!
This was a really really great video! Three beautiful projects in one update. Really cool!
The video also was great edited. Thank you! ❤
....And we can't forget the music! Always really well done, agreed.
I absolutley loved the music choices and editing style of this video! You guys killed it editing team!!!
Mimosa tops as a resource! I really like the idea of using the mimosa tops to form the base of on contour berms. Hybridization of Hugelkultur, water infiltration, adaptive reuse. and topsoil retention. That is a grand slam home run ♥ If you make bundles of the mimosa tops with a strong just or hemp cord (mimosa top "logs"), you will be able to pack a lot more mimosa into your berms. The on contour berms will be a great place to plant fruit and nut trees. For that purpose, space your on contour berms 10 meters apart to allow for the trees canopy to come to maturity without interference. If you plant chestnuts, they need to be 15 meters apart in all directions because they will grow to be HUGE trees. Do you have some ravines on the property? I think I see one in the background at 1:03 in the video. Low areas that flow with rainwater during storms can greatly benefit from what we call in the US "beaver dam analogs". The only material required is fresh brush that can be woven and pointed wood posts that can be driven into the ground. The purpose is twofold: Slow the velocity and control the release of the volume of water moving across the property to reduce downhill erosion, increase infiltration and act as a sediment trap to clean the water from uphill. Here's a "how to" & "why" RUclips: ruclips.net/video/63ji0XFPwBQ/видео.html
Another job well planned and executed. KUDOS, Project Kamp……😉❤️😉❤️😉
Considering the amount of earthworks you could be doing on the land (and perhaps the amount of mimosas and their trunks to thin out too) to create fire barriers and water retainment systems, it might be an idea to look at a small tractor or a bobcat.. just saying! If you buy a decent second hand one they retain their value pretty well so you could do a lot of work and then sell the machine without much loss of capital (by renting something similar for example) this would also enable you to upgrade roads and pathways beyond what is possible by hand even with a large group. Give it some thought! I'm sure we would all like to enable the funding of such a thing as well.
I thought similar, a bobcat or something would do the work of dozens of diggers whose skills could be better spent on other things.
They've been saving for a tractor since season 1.
Great job. Grounds, and storage shed.
The sponsor part was pretty seamless. Well done.
Super nice music in this one! not as repetitive as previous tracks have been 😅 it would be cool to have a list of great tracks that re-occur in episodes so we all associate the music with this channel. I see a lot of channels do this and it always makes me feel a sort of nostalgia to hear the songs again and again. Amazing Episode. Love Emilié
The product advertising was nicely integrated. Not at all disruptive and added to the video. Also the editing team is getting so good. Thumbs up to them. 👍
You could use some of the plastic for a 3d printer.. 3D printers are amazing and very useful so if anyone in the kamp knows it it's a good option
well they also require a special plastic thqat comes in thing strands so it would be tough to use the plastic for that. cool idea though!
@@CimberMaticThere are many videos online of how to make DIY plastic filament extruders that will recycle plastic bottles into filament for use on 3D printing. It's worth a look if they need to print some bestoke parts such as hooks and kitchen utensils.
would need to know very specifically which kind of plastic it is and exactly what its extrusion characteristics are, and experimentation for any given piece to see how manufacturing additives have changed it. also needs to be thermoplastic. Also needs significant effort to calibrate and maintain even with known off the shelf printing filament. Not impossible, but the cost in human effort needs to be considered.
I saw recently that someone was using a very small solar panel and thin plastic stripes made from bottles, and turning it into reusable 3d printer rolls. The process was slow, but super clean.
Yes a new one! Greetings from the Netherlands!
Very good job beautifully recorded
that thermal camera is such a cool addition!
You should bend all the mimosa in the mimosa forest to make a whole lot of natural igloos which will grow constantly = Cheap housing + mystic forest view
Mimosas are a fire risk, I wouldn't want to sleep in a structure made of undried Mimosas.
@@EmyrDerfel Every wood structure is a fire risk. Here you can just leave enough space between the igloos, that if a fire starts it won't spread. It will be like a natural tent which gives shadow and mostly protection from wind and rain. I think it would be lovely.
Always love watching these updates. :D
Thank you for the update. I love watching what you do. And the ad placement is totally fine.
Current research shows that wax worms consume plastics and produce an organic waste product.
Maybe you can cultivate these worms and use them to consume your waste plastics.
Great episode and awesome music!
Not enough science about the byproducts. It may only be a ways and means of smearing microplastics around faster into the ecosystem. The research I found was way too generic, calling the excrement 'glycol' or outright calling it toxic. Crickets are also eating plastics, but it's not digesting completely. In a perfect world, we'd distract wax worms with mounds of plastics to keep them out of bee hives, and sequester their excrement into something more tame than microplastic concentrations.
Great episode, Lot of work done - especially considering it was almost onemanshow :) And the mimosa bench looks stunning! Keep it up.
Thank you for the videos, I’m currently sick and spend most of my days in bed or in my Hang-mat in the garden I’m very glad you’re videos are back on and I got something to do; it’s very nice to see all the fun things to do and that you document it in the way you do.
Don’t forget to love each other and the product placement was nice and well placed I didn’t mind at all
keep it going
Love from Germany
At the end of the screw, there are two numbers, in many cases 8.8
to calculate the strength you say 8x8 = 64 times with Diameter.
if you screw an M8 it is 8x3.14= 25.12 and then multiply that by the 64 = 1,607.68 KG in pull for an M8 ;-)
thank you, greetings, the blacksmith
Well done you are doing a fantastic job!.
Great job, and developing new presentations skills too. Win win.
really interesting to see what you come up with. and also teaching normal people like myself how to reuse products and recycle them. and i hope this project will bring new discoveries that can help the planet in the long run.
Another 'one of the best' videos from you.
Again, thank you!
I love little moments like the one at 11:50 with the video editing fitting the beat. Such moments and others show so much creativity and really add to the pleasure of watching the process!
Well done the Project Kamp's busy bees!
I loved the editing of the music while you were levelling the walls of the container. Two good jobs, levelling and editing!!!!
Really enjoying all the new, incredibly talented people. Great episode.
loveeee the bench and the pathways feels all starting to get together and cutesy LOVE IT! as a virgo the storage system was amazing, would love to see more flowers and colors around basecamp!
love your rainwater retention work! it is one of the most important tasks in the work to a good future
Awesome integration with the Infrared camera! Glad you guys are diving into getting more sponsorships for the Kamp.
I always like the music yall pick but todays intro music I really enjoyed. Keep up the amazing work. Your videos are always a great start to my week. Thank you.
The product placement was perfect. I would not be bothered to see more of them.
Honestly this channel is incredible ! I'm French and I understand perfectly without subtitles, moreover we clearly saw that every people in the projet Kamp are happy ! I would love to make things like this in the future ! Congratulation to all of us !
This shows you have very good English comprehension. I know several English people who would have trouble understanding everything spoken here simply because of the various accents.👍
This is a great infrastructure update. These are my favorite videos. I want to suggest that you add larger washers to the bolts attaching the shelving to the container. It is possible over time that the bolts might start to warp the container walls and possible pull through. That would take a lot of weight over a long time though. Also, the "spikey wire" is called barbed wire.
I love your videos and always look forward to them.
You don't stop impressing me.
That metal work and soldering was super professional.
You are so lucky to have such a great diversity of talent.
Mimosas are kind of a problem, but you should try to get the most out of its wood.
Catching its resin could be useful.
And don't forget that during winter, you might need some dry mimosa wood for the fireplace.
Great work! Enjoyed from Texas!
Good shelf design! Kemppi power!
You guys should build a small forge. You could then melt the aluminum and make tools or utensils, and use the mimosa scraps to fuel it.
Another great video! Music was great also. It is so satisfying to have a nice neat place to store things. I have spent a lot of time in my garage doing this and it makes me happy to have a place for things. The product placement was great and a good tool for the Kamp. can't wait to see what wildlife you guys see at night!
That mimosa bench is beautiful. Can just imagine the colors if stained. Benches, chairs, hammocks, stools, railings, retaining walls, berms, bridges, roofs or shade covers, troughs, stalls, mixed with mud irrigation ditches.
Storage area looks neat and organized. Could fabricated metal shims or washers be used as spacers to help level the bolted posts? Any plans to rustproof the inside and outside the container? Any intentions for separate solar or wind power sources?
Lots of opportunity to collect roof rain water runoff for cleaning, watering plants, irrigation, pond/well/stream storage. Or filter, pump to storage tanks for later use. Possible storage for dry season. Or underground piped irrigation to stream/pond/well/river.
The production this season has been incredible!
The teamwork and work ethic are awesome!! What a wonderful group of people you have attracted to your project.
oh my goodness!! I've seen lots of building stuff videos from all over but Project Kamp is fun, funny, inspiring, lots of laughter and smiles and thumbs up sign, ..I really appreciated and enjoy the should be ok attitude!! your video should be post under the therapy category too!! you made my week!!😆😃🙏!!
Thank you for the tour inside the storage system
One of my favorite topic
Please consider more of that topic. Huge help for other projects too