Watching this feels like it happened 5 years ago, not 13-14 months ago. It was so gut wrenching to lose all the footage, but so glad this one copy of the original edit gets the light of day finally. Couldn’t believe it was just there in the archives for so long. We were scrambling like crazy when we first went independent, so I have such a muddled memory of those first few weeks and when this video was shot. The excitement and fear is what I remember most! How far we’ve come in just a year, and how far we will go THIS year! Best is yet to come!
For those wondering - when you edit a video you edit the raw footage, but the video that is uploaded to RUclips is a compressed export of that footage. A copy with all the edits you made and music and graphics and text added, etc. The amazing editor, Chelsea, alerted Miranda and I to the technical problems in the footage for this video last January after we shot it, and she did the best edit she could from what Miranda shot. I think she did a brilliant job. Then she exported that edit that she did, and uploaded it to our file sharing platform where we review videos, called Frame. Then, when we decided to delay the video due to technical problems, the original footage on a hard drive was returned to me and I stored it away to return to at another date. Somehow, I have no memory of doing this, that hard drive was cleared to make space for new footage from a different video, therefore deleting every bit of footage from this first solo winter cabin adventure other than that single exported initial edit uploaded to Frame. When that happened, we figured it was all lost for good and had forgotten about that initial edit. Then, recently, Miranda and I went through some archived edits on Frame, and found this video sitting there. Miracle! Fun to be able to put it out now! The camera Miranda used, which was a very old Sony A7sII, we retired after this shoot, and bought a proper camera that works a lot better. Live and learn!
Also, Miranda has shot two solo adventures for the channel since this first failed one (which, by the way, I consider my fault for not checking the camera and also deleting the footage) and they’re awesome. Great lessons learned from this first unreleased solo trip went into making those other solo videos awesome, IMO!
Thanks for the peek behind the producer curtain; it’s really interesting to hear the backstory! To the whole team - thank you and keep up the great work!
Watching this video I see great personal growth: you went from not being able to split wood and not being able to lite a fire to being able to save yourself in the middle of the winter by making a fire and splitting logs to keep the fire going. In a relatively short amount of time you learned a life-skill. That is really impressive!
When chopping wood, put your primary hand up near the head and your off hand down towards the base, line it up where you want to chop, bring it up over your head and as you swing down, slide your primary hand back towards your off hand and let the weight of the head do the work and chop into the wood.
Those morning yips and howls were coyote(s). They are not always in packs and one coyote has the ability to make themselves sounds like two. A wolf’s howl will be consistent and often lower in pitch than a coyote. So. An easy way to tell…if you hear laughs, it’s a Wiley coyote.
Boiling water by braid timer. You suck at chopping, but you adapted and overcame. I think you did a wonderful job with your first video. I like your honest outlook you bring to your videos. It's the child eye things that you find interesting, and entertaining. It's your character that we as viewers like to see. Thanks for finding, and sharing.
I am so glad you found this. The camera / filming wasn't that bad. You really do need to learn how to chop some wood. If you've ever watched Lost Lakes you could get some tips by watching Erin and about comfortable hammock camping! Thanks for the vids!
So a failure I have learned from, a lot, was about sleeping pads. I sort of knew there were insulated ones but I thought that was just for winter camping or at least as long as you're off the ground in the summer and inside your sleeping bag you're fine, right? Well after spending 3 very cold nights, shivering, cuddling my fiancé I looked it up and learned about R-value. I'm not a very experienced camper, I love nature and being outdoors but tents are new to me, my family were sort of wild camping but with our caravan instead. Lots of young siblings, safer and easier with a caravan :) The past 2-3 years I have been consuming so much camping via youtube in tent form, and I want to start hiking and seeing MORE nature, that I am now learning about it and have slowly starting the actual doing part as well. ^^ Two higher R-value sleeping pads are in my/our future now for next season!
Miranda, This was a great video, I’m glad you found it love the editing. You have always been a pretty camper, but girlfriend in your sponsor part with your hair down you are absolutely beautiful!
Love your hat, my mom loved using variated yarn. I miss her. Since we moved to oregon I havnt worn knit hats because of the rain. Now they seem to be a in thing.
If you have a stove, start a fire like Steve Wallis, stick the wood in the stove flame til it burns. (Steve often uses a propane burner to start his campfires)
Hey! I miss Pam! Is there possibly another backpacking video with your Pam!? Lol I loved those videos, and they were so heartwarming. Also, ps, btw, love the mushroom shirt. 🍄 😊
After hiking all day on the first day of a seven day solo backpacking trip in the Wind River range, I discovered I had forgotten my spork and had no other utensils. The prospect of spending seven days eating with my dirty and Deet covered fingers was decidedly unappealing. So I did what any red blooded former Girl Scout would do and carved one. Although I retired the spoon after that trip, I still have it 24 years later. I learned that improvisation and resourcefulness are as important as preparation.
I'm a retired GS volunteer outdoor adult educator. One of the things I stressed to the troop leaders I was teaching was that something always goes wrong. Something is forgotten. Something breaks. Someone brings the wrong thing. Improvisation is your friend. You will still survive and even have fun. Those are the trips that make the best stories. The way I backpack and camp has changed so much since the early 1970s. I mostly day hike and car camp these days, but I'm hopeful that I will be able to backpack again
I love Annie Dillard! I read that book in High School because I wanted to be a naturalist. I didn't know what a naturalist was but I was reading Aldo Leopold (A Sand Country Almanac - highly recommend), Rachel Carson, and Thoreau, and just wanted to be in nature... and I named my goldfish Ellery Channing after the less famous transcendentalist. Thanks for the flashback. And it's good to see you out in the wilds of the PNW. I'll be up there next month for some tree-hugging. Stay healthy, Miranda, and enjoy the book.
Thats a great reminder. As a Mom who is often camping with kids, the idea of bringing something "just for me" is almost never on my mind, but would really make the time more rejuvenating.
A good fire warms you twice. Once when chopping the wood then when you get the fire started. Fire starting is an important safety skill to learn and practice. Great video!
A couple of those swings with the ax looks like they could have really been dangerous. I'm sure you have heard many times by now you need to have your feet wide apart! I would love to see some more solo vids
What was your gear list for this trip? Was there anything you wished you would have brought but didn’t? I’m headed there this winter and so excited. Thanks for the information and inspiration!
The advice my dad's given me for chopping wood is to think about it like trying to slam the ax through the wood and into the chopping block underneath, as opposed to hitting the wood with the ax. That being said, it is a skill that requires strength, coordination, and practice, and I am still terrible at it.
Seems like this finally captures everything I love about backpacking! The sounds, the sky, the warm things in the cold world. 10/10 thank you for rescuing this footage
I failed on a solo overnight trip. I took a tent that I hadn’t used in a long time, and when I got to camp, the shock cords in the poles had completely stretched out. I made it through the night using tension from the stakes and rain fly to hold the poles together and the tent up. Fortunately, it wasn’t rainy or windy.
While it’s great to have high quality standards, remember that most people watch RUclips on mobile devices covered in fingerprints lol. So if there are clips or whole videos with dirty lenses that you want to show anyway, it’s no problem to do so!
Nice video that reinforces - you don't know what you don't know, until you try it. And then you learn! No shame in learning. For viewers new to things like starting fires and splitting wood, there are often groups to help - like Washington Outdoor Women (there are similar all over the country).
No worries Miranda on the firewood splitting it takes time to learn the skill and do it well and it was honestly kinda adorable to watch. If have trouble swinging the maul hard enough sometimes you can just get it to stick in the log and then use another log or mallet to hammer it in to split the log. Once you get the hang of swinging the maul though it makes much quicker work of those small logs doing it that way.
Haha the wood chopping, I feel ya! If you haven’t figured it out already, here’s my best weak girl tip: I take a smaller piece of wood. Then my first chop I hold the axe pretty far in by the blade and just try to chop/press the blade into the wood. When it’s stuck, I lift the ax (with the wood hanging stuck on the blade) and smash it all down like the hulk. Takes 1-3 hulk smashes and your blade is through! Way easier 😂🙌🏼
My mother used a wood burning stove to heat her house when I was young. If you want the fire to burn all night, you want those bigger pieces of wood. The larger pieces burn longer, and when you close the air vents down to just slits the log will burn all night.
The fire reminded me of my 13 years heating only with wood in a remote cabin in Northern Pennsylvania. It’s a lot of work to gather and split 6 full cords every year but it’s a cherished memory.
This is how I did my very first backcountry trip. In Duck Mountain Provincial Park there’s a network of trails with 4 or 5 cabins that you can overnight in. My favourite is the one on Moose Lake which sits on a peninsula, so you’ve got water on three sides which makes it feel just a little safer!
Love the video! It reminded me of a camping trip my husband and I took where we had stopped to get gas, and I gotten in the back of our vehicle to get some stuff and had to move the tent. We got to our campsite a couple hours later to realize that at that gas station, I had set the tent on the ground behind the vehicle and forgot it 🤦🏼♀️. We ended up sleeping in a Walmart parking lot until they opened to buy a new tent, but it was still one of the best camping trips we’d taken. We’re looking forward to when we can start backpacking though!
Fun adventure. Glad you opted to share it. I have never built a fire while backpacking, but last year, I bought a used chiminea for the back yard and I've been enjoying evening fires in it. I cheat when I'm building my backyard fires because I often use cardboard or paper to get things going. I need to try to use natural kindling, at least sometimes to practice building a fire in the wilderness. It's definitely a skill worth developing.
First, I would have never guessed this video wasn’t high quality! Second, it was like watching myself trying to start a darn fire. Why is it so hard? Even after backpacking and camping by myself multiple times, I still can’t live down my awful fire starting skills. Maybe one day we’ll get it!
This was a great video! You showed us you are not afraid to try new things. Totally not a fail! You actually did it! It was great watching your excitement after you got your fire started! It looked like you had fun as well. What a beautiful view too! The creek was so peaceful! I loved it. 🥰
Oh my gosh my wife and I love watching you and your crew. We are huge fans and we are both so proud of you. I’m a logger by trade and I was cheering you on as you became a lumberjack in this video. Keep up the amazing work gosh darn!
OK ... I am a new subscriber and LOVE your channel ... my daughter's mom is from Utah and Washington, she moved to where I live is in Indiana ... she is the one that got me hiking, but when she moved, she had those huge ass snow shoes, I went and quote, wtf did you bring those for ???? She went ... winter hikes ... I went ... we have freaking corn fields, you won't need them LMAO .... but anywho, I did start a hiking/photography vlog on here to keep the good memories going, because they had to move to Washington and I stayed in Indiana .... and I am going back to Washington to visit and I want to hike at Mt. Rainier !!!! and again ..... love your channel
There's always something to learn on every trip, no matter how experienced you are. The video was absolutely fine, you notice these details as an editor but as a viewer we miss most of these and following the story is what we focus on, as long as the audio is clear then all is good! Just to add, as an amateur astronomer. When it's that dark and you see something that bright, close to the moon, it's probably Jupiter.
My friend and I “failed” at our first backpacking trip together-but won at the same time? 😅 Essentially what happened was that neither of us remembered to bring fuel. 🙃 So there we were with an empty fuel cannister and dehyrdrated meals that weren’t going to cook themselves, the sun quickly setting in the background. We quickly scrambled to collect some firewood and tinder, and long story short, we managed to start a fire & actually ate a hot meal that night!! It was harrowing for a few minutes there, but we learned (by trial and error lol!) how to build our own fire and cook over it, which was awesome & a great bonding experience. Yay for learning experiences out in nature with good friends!! 🙌❤️
"if" you don't know... The next time you walk into a trail, as soon as you hit the trail head, look for birch bark or tulip poplar (aka yellow poplar) bark or even cedar bark. Grab as much as you can carry. It doesn't weigh anything and when you need to start a fire, that stuff will burn like it's soaked in kerosene in just about any conditions (high winds, damp out, etc...). Also gather a lot of twigs. A twig bundle is more important than fuel (split logs). About a pillow's worth will ignite just about any split log or the right branches from the right trees (especially conifers like pines). Once you got that goin', stack hardwoods on that especially maples or oaks which will burn a long time and produce little if any sparks while putting out massive BTUs.
This was a year ago and clearly it didn't end up poorly for you, but I felt the need to say that folks should always be a little careful eating snow that hasn't recently fallen. While backpacking a few years ago in late spring on the TRT, I ended up accidentally eating some living critters. Learned my lesson. 😅
Miranda, I absolutely adore your bubbly personality. Funny enough my name is also Myranda. 😊 I have been watching your videos for a few years. You helped inspire me to give backpacking a try. My 12 year old daughter now goes on trips with me, too. Getting out on the trails has helped me cope with my depression and anxiety. Thank you for taking us with you on your adventures. And please know that you help so many people just by being you! ❤
I love it. Love your continued smiles and enthusiasm. I love your honesty of not being awesome at everything. You are human just like so many of us. Humble. Another great, fun video..
Honestly my monitor is dusty anyway so I wouldn't have even noticed the black specs 😂 I'm going on my first solo backpacking trip (with my dog) tomorrow so this video is hyping me up! I'm so excited 🤩
I'm a little late to the comments, but I would argue that it is worth knowing how to process firewood and having tools THAT WORK FOR YOU to do it (even if that means bringing your own saw and hatchet). I'm not going to trust a random axe because it might be dangerously dull and/or too heavy for me to manage. The better bushcrafting channels (i.e., the ones by actual instructors at reputable schools) all have videos on the best ways to process wood safely. I prefer a saw and batoning with a belt knife than a hatchet, but a small hatchet is also fine if you know how to use and sharpen it. My comment on all the axe/hatchet videos though is to use eye protection. That is not a problem you need to have in the woods. And the most unrealistic part of Gary Paulsen's "Hatchet," is that he was able to survive without a way to sharpen the thing.
I recently set out to test my limits and tried to climb my first 6,000m (20,000ft) in Bolivia. I did not achieve the desired outcome, but it wasn't a failure. I set out to find my limits. I found a limit, two of them actually. So task failed successfully! I told my family and friends when I wrote to them to not say "sorry you failed" or similar, but rather "congratulations on trying!", because of all the things I did on that mountain -- trying it in the first place was the hardest, and I did that successfully.
I was dying watching the wood chopping. You actually slowed the axe down before hitting the wood. -tink- I'm pretty sure I've seen you chop vegetables with more force. 😅 You can do it!! Maybe Rainer can organize a wood bootcamp weekend for the team. Split 50 logs and start 50 fires. You'll be pros in no time! I was really worried you weren't going to get the stove going in time. So lucky someone left you some miracle wood. Loved the video!
I love teanaway. It’s my go to dispersed camping spot in Washington. My friends and I keep talking about going snow camping up there as it’s so peaceful. Now that I’ve seen the inside of the cabin we drive by in summer, I’ll suggest that as an alternative to tent camping. Thanks for the info.
Nobody is born knowing how to split firewood! A little instruction would make a world of difference, and you could totally learn this skill and be a whiz! Also, a splitting maul is not the right tool for creating kindling, so that part was sort of doomed from the start… Nevertheless, you persisted! ❤️ And you get a gold star for tenacity and cheer, as always! (Way out in the woods all alone is… perhaps not the safest situation in which to launch a new career as a newbie spitting maul wielder, tbh. I’m so torn between applauding your tenacity and cheer, and suggesting that others maybe don’t follow this exact plan…) I heated with wood for 15 years in a cabin not much bigger than this one. Your description of the smell of wood and smoke and hot metal made my heart happy. Thanks for this lovely video!
The famous choreographer George Balanchine would push his dancers high until they fell because he believed that you couldn’t find your true limit/potential until you pushed yourself so far that you fell/failed. Only then would you know your true limit, and from there you could do it on the regular.
GREAT video!!!!! I loved the cabin, and I am so glad you got the fire going (Next time, take some fire starters--I make my own from melted paraffin wax mixed with saw dust; smash the warm mixture onto a cookie sheet and cut into small brownie size pieces). Yes, it's best to have friends with you, though I definitely appreciate alone time in the forest. I loved the Hair Braid Jazz Music!!! This video was anything but a failure!!!! It was, in my humble opinion, a wonderful success! And, YES, you were right, Amanda--sorry, Rainer! Thanks for the Joy you always bring to us, Amanda and Rainer! You are the best!
Honestly the woodchopping was my favorite part lol. Would you collab with those lumberjack YTers for a tutorial on how to chop wood? Oh! and fire starting, because man I had that same issue with a woodfire stove this weekend. Thought I was gonna freeze to death
Fantastic! Creepy woodshed is no joke. I raised my son’s in a not so remote, but kind of, in the Sierra. The wood shed was certain to have a bunch of spiders and other creepy crawlers + rodents, and you never knew what else you may encounter when you walked in, in the winter. There was only one way in and out, so if you were the one blocking the exit, well….Skunk, opossum, bobcat, raccoon, coyote, bear, cougar, serial killer, alien? It was too scary for me in the dark so it was my sons’ job to get the wood. 😊
Loved this video, to be honest didn't even realise it was that low-res cause I was too busy looking at the beautiful scenery and cabin. Great advice about solo hiking/camping for those of us reluctant to stay overnight alone. Thanks for another awesome adventure!
Fantastic, bring it on ❤ Keep it real and keep on keeping on … never had a plan work as planed, but always turned out for the best 👍😎 Give us Al ya got 🍎🌺🌸🌺
Location recommendation - Boundary Waters of Minnesota! Probably not suited for a beginner backpacker, but it’s an amazing experience. I did my first solo overnight paddle trip last year and loved it. No cell signal, didn’t see anyone else for three days, and the QUIET. Portaging from lake to lake with a canoe kind of qualifies as “backpacking”, doesn’t it? I know this’d be a huge investment for your channel, involving flights, rental car, outfitting, etc, but it’d be fun to see 😀
Watching this feels like it happened 5 years ago, not 13-14 months ago. It was so gut wrenching to lose all the footage, but so glad this one copy of the original edit gets the light of day finally. Couldn’t believe it was just there in the archives for so long. We were scrambling like crazy when we first went independent, so I have such a muddled memory of those first few weeks and when this video was shot. The excitement and fear is what I remember most! How far we’ve come in just a year, and how far we will go THIS year! Best is yet to come!
For those wondering - when you edit a video you edit the raw footage, but the video that is uploaded to RUclips is a compressed export of that footage. A copy with all the edits you made and music and graphics and text added, etc. The amazing editor, Chelsea, alerted Miranda and I to the technical problems in the footage for this video last January after we shot it, and she did the best edit she could from what Miranda shot. I think she did a brilliant job. Then she exported that edit that she did, and uploaded it to our file sharing platform where we review videos, called Frame. Then, when we decided to delay the video due to technical problems, the original footage on a hard drive was returned to me and I stored it away to return to at another date. Somehow, I have no memory of doing this, that hard drive was cleared to make space for new footage from a different video, therefore deleting every bit of footage from this first solo winter cabin adventure other than that single exported initial edit uploaded to Frame. When that happened, we figured it was all lost for good and had forgotten about that initial edit. Then, recently, Miranda and I went through some archived edits on Frame, and found this video sitting there. Miracle! Fun to be able to put it out now! The camera Miranda used, which was a very old Sony A7sII, we retired after this shoot, and bought a proper camera that works a lot better. Live and learn!
Also, Miranda has shot two solo adventures for the channel since this first failed one (which, by the way, I consider my fault for not checking the camera and also deleting the footage) and they’re awesome. Great lessons learned from this first unreleased solo trip went into making those other solo videos awesome, IMO!
Thanks for the peek behind the producer curtain; it’s really interesting to hear the backstory! To the whole team - thank you and keep up the great work!
I can only imagine Rainer!! I love tis channel you guys do such rad videos!!
Love Miranda's fun and genuine personality.
Watching this video I see great personal growth: you went from not being able to split wood and not being able to lite a fire to being able to save yourself in the middle of the winter by making a fire and splitting logs to keep the fire going. In a relatively short amount of time you learned a life-skill. That is really impressive!
Low quality video doesn't really matter when the presenter quality is so high!
Ahh thank you so much!!
Absolutely! 😊
Yeah, I didn’t even notice. I was just having a good time watching the video!
Yea I could not even tell that there was poor video quality. It was just so fun to watch. You have such a great spirit.
This is the most adorable thing, watching you trying your best to split that wood. Keep on keeping on.
When chopping wood, put your primary hand up near the head and your off hand down towards the base, line it up where you want to chop, bring it up over your head and as you swing down, slide your primary hand back towards your off hand and let the weight of the head do the work and chop into the wood.
I loved it, you need to watch Nicole Coenon for how to split wood. I learned from her videos, it's a good skill to have. That's a great cabin.
I was going to make a camping video, left camera turned off until I got there to save the battery. Forgot to put battery in camera 🤦♂️
Those morning yips and howls were coyote(s). They are not always in packs and one coyote has the ability to make themselves sounds like two.
A wolf’s howl will be consistent and often lower in pitch than a coyote.
So. An easy way to tell…if you hear laughs, it’s a Wiley coyote.
Boiling water by braid timer. You suck at chopping, but you adapted and overcame. I think you did a wonderful job with your first video. I like your honest outlook you bring to your videos. It's the child eye things that you find interesting, and entertaining. It's your character that we as viewers like to see. Thanks for finding, and sharing.
I am so glad you found this. The camera / filming wasn't that bad.
You really do need to learn how to chop some wood.
If you've ever watched Lost Lakes you could get some tips by watching Erin and about comfortable hammock camping!
Thanks for the vids!
So a failure I have learned from, a lot, was about sleeping pads.
I sort of knew there were insulated ones but I thought that was just for winter camping or at least as long as you're off the ground in the summer and inside your sleeping bag you're fine, right?
Well after spending 3 very cold nights, shivering, cuddling my fiancé I looked it up and learned about R-value.
I'm not a very experienced camper, I love nature and being outdoors but tents are new to me, my family were sort of wild camping but with our caravan instead.
Lots of young siblings, safer and easier with a caravan :)
The past 2-3 years I have been consuming so much camping via youtube in tent form, and I want to start hiking and seeing MORE nature, that I am now learning about it and have slowly starting the actual doing part as well. ^^
Two higher R-value sleeping pads are in my/our future now for next season!
Miranda,
This was a great video, I’m glad you found it love the editing. You have always been a pretty camper, but girlfriend in your sponsor part with your hair down you are absolutely beautiful!
Love your hat, my mom loved using variated yarn. I miss her. Since we moved to oregon I havnt worn knit hats because of the rain. Now they seem to be a in thing.
If you have a stove, start a fire like Steve Wallis, stick the wood in the stove flame til it burns. (Steve often uses a propane burner to start his campfires)
Such a rad adventure. Thank you for sharing! And soooo glad you found the footage again!!
Love your channel ! I’m only a beginner hiker, but plan on trekking across Costa Rica next year. I’m gaining lots of wonderful advice.
Love this video!! So glad it wasn’t really lost🎉
Hey! I miss Pam! Is there possibly another backpacking video with your Pam!? Lol I loved those videos, and they were so heartwarming.
Also, ps, btw, love the mushroom shirt. 🍄 😊
So cool! Great video! Thanks for it. 👏🏽
This was great. I appreciate that you leave your struggles in the video. Also you should get with Nicole Coenen.
Came here to say this!! That’s a RUclips creator collaboration that would be delightful :)
@NicoleCoenen is THE lesbian lumberjack.
Would die for this collab
I was just going to say the same thing!! They would vibe so well!
Miranda doubling down and summoning the fire totally made my day. Way to go!!!
Great, honest video. Thank you.
After hiking all day on the first day of a seven day solo backpacking trip in the Wind River range, I discovered I had forgotten my spork and had no other utensils. The prospect of spending seven days eating with my dirty and Deet covered fingers was decidedly unappealing. So I did what any red blooded former Girl Scout would do and carved one. Although I retired the spoon after that trip, I still have it 24 years later. I learned that improvisation and resourcefulness are as important as preparation.
I'm a retired GS volunteer outdoor adult educator. One of the things I stressed to the troop leaders I was teaching was that something always goes wrong. Something is forgotten. Something breaks. Someone brings the wrong thing. Improvisation is your friend. You will still survive and even have fun. Those are the trips that make the best stories.
The way I backpack and camp has changed so much since the early 1970s. I mostly day hike and car camp these days, but I'm hopeful that I will be able to backpack again
❤️
I love Annie Dillard! I read that book in High School because I wanted to be a naturalist. I didn't know what a naturalist was but I was reading Aldo Leopold (A Sand Country Almanac - highly recommend), Rachel Carson, and Thoreau, and just wanted to be in nature... and I named my goldfish Ellery Channing after the less famous transcendentalist. Thanks for the flashback. And it's good to see you out in the wilds of the PNW. I'll be up there next month for some tree-hugging. Stay healthy, Miranda, and enjoy the book.
Real or polished? Both have their place. I vote for more REAL! You pull it off with such grace and joy! Thank you.
Thats a great reminder. As a Mom who is often camping with kids, the idea of bringing something "just for me" is almost never on my mind, but would really make the time more rejuvenating.
What a great video Miranda!!!
A good fire warms you twice. Once when chopping the wood then when you get the fire started. Fire starting is an important safety skill to learn and practice. Great video!
Fail = First Attempt In Learning :)
Omg I love that
I’ve never heard this!! I love it 🥰
A couple of those swings with the ax looks like they could have really been dangerous. I'm sure you have heard many times by now you need to have your feet wide apart!
I would love to see some more solo vids
If you never would have mentioned the dust on the sensor, I would have just thought there was schmutz on my screen.
Came to literally say the same thing.
The use of of the word schmutz. Love it
Yeah, jut let the vid run, kid, don’t stop to point out problems.
Not a failure! It's a great example of a solo trip that will encourage others🙌
I barely even noticed the problems in the video. I really likes the video. I enjoyed watching you learn your way around cutting wood
What was your gear list for this trip? Was there anything you wished you would have brought but didn’t? I’m headed there this winter and so excited. Thanks for the information and inspiration!
More Miranda splitting firewood now!!!!
so glad to see this. it looks pretty put together. i think you did a great job.
The advice my dad's given me for chopping wood is to think about it like trying to slam the ax through the wood and into the chopping block underneath, as opposed to hitting the wood with the ax. That being said, it is a skill that requires strength, coordination, and practice, and I am still terrible at it.
I literally cheered outloud when you split one log! I needed this reminder today to not take myself so seriously 🥰
Seems like this finally captures everything I love about backpacking! The sounds, the sky, the warm things in the cold world. 10/10 thank you for rescuing this footage
Your initial effort “To Build a Fire” reminded me of the Jack London short story. You had a better outcome.
I love all your videos!
That book choice during the first video was so cool to me because that was where i first went backpacking!
I failed on a solo overnight trip. I took a tent that I hadn’t used in a long time, and when I got to camp, the shock cords in the poles had completely stretched out.
I made it through the night using tension from the stakes and rain fly to hold the poles together and the tent up. Fortunately, it wasn’t rainy or windy.
Not a fail--you made it through the night. I have had the same shock cord problem ;-)
Hey people we need to hit the subscribe button and of course the like button! It really helps the channel and doesn't cost you a thing🎉
Oh my gosh you are so cute! So fun to watch.
While it’s great to have high quality standards, remember that most people watch RUclips on mobile devices covered in fingerprints lol. So if there are clips or whole videos with dirty lenses that you want to show anyway, it’s no problem to do so!
I didn't even notice till she pointed it out..definitely watching for content over image quality.
Absolutely. I didn’t even notice the focus problems even though she warned me about them 🤷🏻♀️
Amazing.
Nice video that reinforces - you don't know what you don't know, until you try it. And then you learn! No shame in learning. For viewers new to things like starting fires and splitting wood, there are often groups to help - like Washington Outdoor Women (there are similar all over the country).
No worries Miranda on the firewood splitting it takes time to learn the skill and do it well and it was honestly kinda adorable to watch. If have trouble swinging the maul hard enough sometimes you can just get it to stick in the log and then use another log or mallet to hammer it in to split the log. Once you get the hang of swinging the maul though it makes much quicker work of those small logs doing it that way.
Haha the wood chopping, I feel ya! If you haven’t figured it out already, here’s my best weak girl tip: I take a smaller piece of wood. Then my first chop I hold the axe pretty far in by the blade and just try to chop/press the blade into the wood. When it’s stuck, I lift the ax (with the wood hanging stuck on the blade) and smash it all down like the hulk. Takes 1-3 hulk smashes and your blade is through! Way easier 😂🙌🏼
Thanks for taking us out there, with you. The sunrise was so peaceful 17:22
My mother used a wood burning stove to heat her house when I was young. If you want the fire to burn all night, you want those bigger pieces of wood. The larger pieces burn longer, and when you close the air vents down to just slits the log will burn all night.
"People generally make me feel more comfortable."
I can't relate.
The fire reminded me of my 13 years heating only with wood in a remote cabin in Northern Pennsylvania. It’s a lot of work to gather and split 6 full cords every year but it’s a cherished memory.
This is how I did my very first backcountry trip. In Duck Mountain Provincial Park there’s a network of trails with 4 or 5 cabins that you can overnight in. My favourite is the one on Moose Lake which sits on a peninsula, so you’ve got water on three sides which makes it feel just a little safer!
Love the video! It reminded me of a camping trip my husband and I took where we had stopped to get gas, and I gotten in the back of our vehicle to get some stuff and had to move the tent. We got to our campsite a couple hours later to realize that at that gas station, I had set the tent on the ground behind the vehicle and forgot it 🤦🏼♀️. We ended up sleeping in a Walmart parking lot until they opened to buy a new tent, but it was still one of the best camping trips we’d taken. We’re looking forward to when we can start backpacking though!
This was great!
Didn’t even notice the specs at first until you highlighted it 😂
it would be awesome to know what foundation makeup you used in your sponser spot for Lmnt.
Fun adventure. Glad you opted to share it. I have never built a fire while backpacking, but last year, I bought a used chiminea for the back yard and I've been enjoying evening fires in it. I cheat when I'm building my backyard fires because I often use cardboard or paper to get things going. I need to try to use natural kindling, at least sometimes to practice building a fire in the wilderness. It's definitely a skill worth developing.
First, I would have never guessed this video wasn’t high quality! Second, it was like watching myself trying to start a darn fire. Why is it so hard? Even after backpacking and camping by myself multiple times, I still can’t live down my awful fire starting skills. Maybe one day we’ll get it!
This was a great video! You showed us you are not afraid to try new things. Totally not a fail! You actually did it! It was great watching your excitement after you got your fire started! It looked like you had fun as well. What a beautiful view too! The creek was so peaceful! I loved it. 🥰
Oh my gosh my wife and I love watching you and your crew. We are huge fans and we are both so proud of you. I’m a logger by trade and I was cheering you on as you became a lumberjack in this video. Keep up the amazing work gosh darn!
Great video
I'm sure everyone else would agree - I would be happy with this level of content on a regular basis. Perfectly acceptable because you are so awesome!
Not just saying this, this is my favorite video on your channel
OK ... I am a new subscriber and LOVE your channel ... my daughter's mom is from Utah and Washington, she moved to where I live is in Indiana ... she is the one that got me hiking, but when she moved, she had those huge ass snow shoes, I went and quote, wtf did you bring those for ???? She went ... winter hikes ... I went ... we have freaking corn fields, you won't need them LMAO .... but anywho, I did start a hiking/photography vlog on here to keep the good memories going, because they had to move to Washington and I stayed in Indiana .... and I am going back to Washington to visit and I want to hike at Mt. Rainier !!!! and again ..... love your channel
The kids milk box is waxed cardboard...
Fire🔥starter.
There's always something to learn on every trip, no matter how experienced you are. The video was absolutely fine, you notice these details as an editor but as a viewer we miss most of these and following the story is what we focus on, as long as the audio is clear then all is good! Just to add, as an amateur astronomer. When it's that dark and you see something that bright, close to the moon, it's probably Jupiter.
Always bring fire starter granules - super light safe fire starter. Plus you need a fire when it is cold.
My friend and I “failed” at our first backpacking trip together-but won at the same time? 😅 Essentially what happened was that neither of us remembered to bring fuel. 🙃 So there we were with an empty fuel cannister and dehyrdrated meals that weren’t going to cook themselves, the sun quickly setting in the background. We quickly scrambled to collect some firewood and tinder, and long story short, we managed to start a fire & actually ate a hot meal that night!! It was harrowing for a few minutes there, but we learned (by trial and error lol!) how to build our own fire and cook over it, which was awesome & a great bonding experience. Yay for learning experiences out in nature with good friends!! 🙌❤️
Nicole Coenen is in BC, Maybe you could road trip and she could give you some pointers on wood chopping. :)
"if" you don't know...
The next time you walk into a trail, as soon as you hit the trail head, look for birch bark or tulip poplar (aka yellow poplar) bark or even cedar bark. Grab as much as you can carry. It doesn't weigh anything and when you need to start a fire, that stuff will burn like it's soaked in kerosene in just about any conditions (high winds, damp out, etc...). Also gather a lot of twigs. A twig bundle is more important than fuel (split logs). About a pillow's worth will ignite just about any split log or the right branches from the right trees (especially conifers like pines). Once you got that goin', stack hardwoods on that especially maples or oaks which will burn a long time and produce little if any sparks while putting out massive BTUs.
This was a year ago and clearly it didn't end up poorly for you, but I felt the need to say that folks should always be a little careful eating snow that hasn't recently fallen. While backpacking a few years ago in late spring on the TRT, I ended up accidentally eating some living critters. Learned my lesson. 😅
When did you notice?? In your mouth or bowels😂
Miranda, I absolutely adore your bubbly personality. Funny enough my name is also Myranda. 😊 I have been watching your videos for a few years. You helped inspire me to give backpacking a try. My 12 year old daughter now goes on trips with me, too. Getting out on the trails has helped me cope with my depression and anxiety. Thank you for taking us with you on your adventures. And please know that you help so many people just by being you! ❤
I love it. Love your continued smiles and enthusiasm. I love your honesty of not being awesome at everything. You are human just like so many of us. Humble. Another great, fun video..
Honestly my monitor is dusty anyway so I wouldn't have even noticed the black specs 😂 I'm going on my first solo backpacking trip (with my dog) tomorrow so this video is hyping me up! I'm so excited 🤩
I'm a little late to the comments, but I would argue that it is worth knowing how to process firewood and having tools THAT WORK FOR YOU to do it (even if that means bringing your own saw and hatchet). I'm not going to trust a random axe because it might be dangerously dull and/or too heavy for me to manage. The better bushcrafting channels (i.e., the ones by actual instructors at reputable schools) all have videos on the best ways to process wood safely. I prefer a saw and batoning with a belt knife than a hatchet, but a small hatchet is also fine if you know how to use and sharpen it. My comment on all the axe/hatchet videos though is to use eye protection. That is not a problem you need to have in the woods.
And the most unrealistic part of Gary Paulsen's "Hatchet," is that he was able to survive without a way to sharpen the thing.
I loved this video, so fun! And now I feel better about that whole wood chopping thing 😐
I recently set out to test my limits and tried to climb my first 6,000m (20,000ft) in Bolivia. I did not achieve the desired outcome, but it wasn't a failure. I set out to find my limits. I found a limit, two of them actually. So task failed successfully! I told my family and friends when I wrote to them to not say "sorry you failed" or similar, but rather "congratulations on trying!", because of all the things I did on that mountain -- trying it in the first place was the hardest, and I did that successfully.
I was dying watching the wood chopping. You actually slowed the axe down before hitting the wood. -tink- I'm pretty sure I've seen you chop vegetables with more force. 😅 You can do it!! Maybe Rainer can organize a wood bootcamp weekend for the team. Split 50 logs and start 50 fires. You'll be pros in no time! I was really worried you weren't going to get the stove going in time. So lucky someone left you some miracle wood. Loved the video!
I love teanaway. It’s my go to dispersed camping spot in Washington. My friends and I keep talking about going snow camping up there as it’s so peaceful. Now that I’ve seen the inside of the cabin we drive by in summer, I’ll suggest that as an alternative to tent camping. Thanks for the info.
Looks just fine on my cell ohone where i watch all RUclips
The wood chopping made me feel so much better about how much I’ve struggled before. Thanks for sharing the lost footage!
Right. Im a terrible wood chopper. But i can light it!!
I would love to see a collaboration with Miranda and Nicole Coenen. Nicole knows how to chop.
I love your Mushroom TSHIRT!! Where did you buy it please
Nobody is born knowing how to split firewood! A little instruction would make a world of difference, and you could totally learn this skill and be a whiz!
Also, a splitting maul is not the right tool for creating kindling, so that part was sort of doomed from the start…
Nevertheless, you persisted! ❤️ And you get a gold star for tenacity and cheer, as always!
(Way out in the woods all alone is… perhaps not the safest situation in which to launch a new career as a newbie spitting maul wielder, tbh. I’m so torn between applauding your tenacity and cheer, and suggesting that others maybe don’t follow this exact plan…)
I heated with wood for 15 years in a cabin not much bigger than this one. Your description of the smell of wood and smoke and hot metal made my heart happy. Thanks for this lovely video!
Hey, that was fun!
Totally enjoyed. Well done ! ! ! We need more like that. You did a Good Job
TAKE CARE and ENJOY EVERY YOU CAN ON THE TRAIL
The famous choreographer George Balanchine would push his dancers high until they fell because he believed that you couldn’t find your true limit/potential until you pushed yourself so far that you fell/failed. Only then would you know your true limit, and from there you could do it on the regular.
GREAT video!!!!!
I loved the cabin, and I am so glad you got the fire going (Next time, take some fire starters--I make my own from melted paraffin wax mixed with saw dust; smash the warm mixture onto a cookie sheet and cut into small brownie size pieces).
Yes, it's best to have friends with you, though I definitely appreciate alone time in the forest. I loved the Hair Braid Jazz Music!!!
This video was anything but a failure!!!! It was, in my humble opinion, a wonderful success! And, YES, you were right, Amanda--sorry, Rainer!
Thanks for the Joy you always bring to us, Amanda and Rainer! You are the best!
Honestly the woodchopping was my favorite part lol. Would you collab with those lumberjack YTers for a tutorial on how to chop wood? Oh! and fire starting, because man I had that same issue with a woodfire stove this weekend. Thought I was gonna freeze to death
A colab with Nicole Coenen would be awesome. Ngl, her chopping technique was scaring me
Did you do the drone footage? Impressive!
Fantastic! Creepy woodshed is no joke. I raised my son’s in a not so remote, but kind of, in the Sierra. The wood shed was certain to have a bunch of spiders and other creepy crawlers + rodents, and you never knew what else you may encounter when you walked in, in the winter. There was only one way in and out, so if you were the one blocking the exit, well….Skunk, opossum, bobcat, raccoon, coyote, bear, cougar, serial killer, alien? It was too scary for me in the dark so it was my sons’ job to get the wood. 😊
Your videos are never failures. I love watching your adventures and your gear reviews. I have learned so much from you.
Loved this video, to be honest didn't even realise it was that low-res cause I was too busy looking at the beautiful scenery and cabin. Great advice about solo hiking/camping for those of us reluctant to stay overnight alone. Thanks for another awesome adventure!
Fantastic, bring it on ❤
Keep it real and keep on keeping on … never had a plan work as planed, but always turned out for the best 👍😎
Give us Al ya got 🍎🌺🌸🌺
Location recommendation - Boundary Waters of Minnesota! Probably not suited for a beginner backpacker, but it’s an amazing experience. I did my first solo overnight paddle trip last year and loved it. No cell signal, didn’t see anyone else for three days, and the QUIET. Portaging from lake to lake with a canoe kind of qualifies as “backpacking”, doesn’t it? I know this’d be a huge investment for your channel, involving flights, rental car, outfitting, etc, but it’d be fun to see 😀