Stone Shelter Camping in a Snow Storm

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  • Опубликовано: 26 дек 2024

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  • @erickornberg4571
    @erickornberg4571 3 года назад +848

    I'm 66 and in poor health. I have only a few regrets in life. ONE of them is that I did not backpack more than I did. Thank you for sharing your trip. I am along with you in spirit.

    • @ricatoni2
      @ricatoni2 3 года назад +39

      @Eric k..dont forget to make peace with your maker .jesus..amen..

    • @mpaulo6222
      @mpaulo6222 3 года назад +26

      @@ricatoni2 weirdo

    • @ricatoni2
      @ricatoni2 3 года назад +21

      @@mpaulo6222 why am I a weirdo?..you don't believe in jesus?

    • @crusaderkiller5816
      @crusaderkiller5816 3 года назад +3

      @@ricatoni2 Jesus was a prophet of God.. Not God himself. Regardless, may peace be with you.

    • @crusaderkiller5816
      @crusaderkiller5816 3 года назад +8

      @@mpaulo6222 He's wrong in aspects but please be respectful

  • @sicktodeath0_0
    @sicktodeath0_0 2 года назад +125

    When I was a teenager during the '80s, we were cross country skiing and got caught in a snowstorm on Mt. Ashland, in Southern Oregon. We were headed for Wagner Gap (about 8 miles away), but we were only halfway there when we were caught in a whiteout. Luckily we had a good Scoutmaster who knew what he was doing, and he found a place that looked like the shelter in this video. The only difference was our shelter had a large fire pit in the middle, and someone had stocked it with enough firewood to keep us warm long enough to get ourselves more. We built up a wall of snow to cover most of the opening and spent the night there, warm and safe. We restocked the firewood in the morning and made it home safely.
    ✌️❤️

    • @loridoolaghty3453
      @loridoolaghty3453 Год назад +2

      Very cool story!

    • @sicktodeath0_0
      @sicktodeath0_0 Год назад +2

      @@loridoolaghty3453
      Thanks.
      It’s funny, I’m 54 years old, disabled from my time in the Army, and I still remember that night from time to time, and think about just how badly that trip could have been without that shelter, and a leader who was prepared and familiar with the area. 🙂
      ❤️✌️

    • @edmoala
      @edmoala Год назад +2

      What a dream! A story you'd never forget.

    • @joanies6778
      @joanies6778 Год назад +3

      Proper etiquette... someone left dry wood for you, and you left wood for the next person. Awesome!

  • @richardmansfield8817
    @richardmansfield8817 3 года назад +1287

    I don’t know what the bush walking etiquette is there, but in Australia, when you stay in a public hut on a trail, it’s customary to reset a fire ready to light for the next person who uses the hut before you leave and to leave a small pile of firewood in a dry place ready to go. When it’s snowing, raining and bitterly cold, the last thing you need is to start a fire from scratch with possibly wet or limited firewood close by.

    • @zachsqatch123
      @zachsqatch123 3 года назад +135

      Generally speaking it is the same around the USA. Just some people don’t follow it or others steal from it. Unfortunately because of that people learned not to expect it anymore.

    • @R-BURQUENO
      @R-BURQUENO 3 года назад +104

      That's ACTUALLY a really cool idea🤔👍👍. Glad I heared it here from you guys because I've never thought of that. I'll definitely do that next time I go camping. It's the least a person can do to help the next person!✌️

    • @hevelincabrera4977
      @hevelincabrera4977 3 года назад +6

      Could you please let me know how is about walter in this case?

    • @fireside9503
      @fireside9503 3 года назад +49

      Yeah, we’re cunts here in the states. A great idea but not customary here unfortunately

    • @johnl.8616
      @johnl.8616 3 года назад +50

      All depends on the people hiking. Some leave something for the next and others don't care.

  • @juanitamatlock7001
    @juanitamatlock7001 Год назад +9

    Thank you for taking all of us along on your hike: I have been home bound for 4 years now due to a 😢 stroke.

  • @mistabrisky5790
    @mistabrisky5790 3 года назад +2

    seeing someone backpacking to a camping spot with a mtn dew in their pocket reminds me of why I love America.

  • @JarodARed
    @JarodARed 3 года назад +7

    The thumbnail on this video is what attracted so many people to this video. Beautiful thumbnail. People that make videos, thumbnails are very very important. It sells the video.

  • @johnkarmann4708
    @johnkarmann4708 4 года назад +303

    I miss backpacking, but at 63 and sporadic health, I tend to stay close to home. I love standing around a fire under the stars.

    • @donwyates
      @donwyates 4 года назад +21

      I do as well. I'm 64, retired, and love living out of my SUV, tent camping on BLM land. So far, I've been pretty damn lucky, health wise.

    • @bryanyrogirog7605
      @bryanyrogirog7605 4 года назад +2

      O.k.

    • @bertcochran1770
      @bertcochran1770 4 года назад +3

      @@donwyates me too.

    • @kannibiskat4208
      @kannibiskat4208 4 года назад +16

      When I first read this comment.. 😆 my mistake.. 😆 I thought it read, "under the stairs" I apologize!! I thought I'd just share my giggle !! 😜😁

    • @Th3Mavr1ck
      @Th3Mavr1ck 4 года назад +9

      Ain’t no other way to live 👌🏽 heck it’s still fun in the backyard!

  • @Fuzzy_Spork
    @Fuzzy_Spork 4 года назад +167

    YT has been recommending this video to me for 2 weeks now and I finally bit, because I was like "An hour 20 minutes?! No way." Yet I sat here and watched the whole thing completely entranced. haha. Good job!
    This reminds of when I was a kid living in Vermont. We lived in a VERY rural area and had hundreds of acres of forest as our back yard. I was the oldest at only 8 years old, and my two sisters and I would often pack a few peanut butter sandwiches then run off into the woods for a whole day of exploring. This was back in the 70's, so my hippy parents thought nothing of their 3 young daughters disappearing into the wilderness for hours on end! Anyway, it was a beautiful Saturday morning in October when my sisters and I decided to go exploring the woods again. We packed some snacks and took off. By midday the clouds had rolled in, and an hour later there was the occasional snow flake drifting down. By mid afternoon it was a full blown blizzard.
    Of course we were not dressed for snow OR freezing temps. After attempting to backtrack our sneakers were soaked through because of the mounding snow and the temperature had dropped to seeing-breath-range and even our young, underdeveloped brains understood that we couldn't make it back home under the current circumstances so we attempted to shelter in place. We crawled under an ancient cedar tree because we knew from past experience that even rain couldn't reach the ground through the thick upper branches. All the lowest hanging branches were pretty dead and broke away easily creating a sort of cave, and sure enough the ground underneath was dry as a bone. We huddled together and the deepening snow helped insulate our tiny shelter.
    It was starting to get dark when we heard the faint call of our names through the snow and branches. Dad had managed to track us straight to our cedar tree shelter because of a habit my sisters and I had adopted when we started exploring the woods. We tied small lengths of yarn to tree branches as we went along so we could follow our trail backwards to get back home. It wasn't anything someone told us to do, we just figured out early on that it was easier to get back if we marked our trail! Dad had brought snow boots and warmer coats for us, so we managed to make it back home in a few hours. It was dark and snowing and cold and I remember that trek back home seeming to take forever so it was hell for my kid self. Yet it could have been a LOT worse! Thank goodness for those little pieces of yarn!

    • @irenedavo3768
      @irenedavo3768 4 года назад +5

      Fuzzy Spork wow!

    • @mrichards7849
      @mrichards7849 3 года назад +16

      That would make a fantastic short film. Oh the early 1970s!

    • @Chefjjdecker
      @Chefjjdecker 3 года назад +6

      As soon as I seen the length of the video, I put it on 1.25x playback speed.

    • @margocaldwell8109
      @margocaldwell8109 3 года назад +9

      Yes.,.in the 70's as a youngster I spent ALOT of time alone in the woods... Friday thru Sunday and making shelters under hemlock trees...

    • @jeanburk9539
      @jeanburk9539 3 года назад +15

      Great story and a lesson for all. I used toilet paper while mushroom picking for years. It was easy to put your pack down and forget where you put it. After getting lost and late getting back a few times, we took the dog who stayed with the pack and made sure we got home in time for dinner. Dogs are wonderful.

  • @fjeepers
    @fjeepers 3 года назад +32

    All I could think when I saw that beautiful fiery sunrise was, “Red sky at morning, sailor take warning; red sky at night, sailors delight.”
    I see it still holds true. Glad to see you got back with all your toes.

    • @mountainlace7618
      @mountainlace7618 3 года назад +9

      My dad was a navy man & this was his favorite weather prediction saying. I still use it to this day & I'm 66 yrs 🤗

    • @deb8105
      @deb8105 3 года назад +5

      We use the saying- red sky at night, shepherds delight, red sky in morning, shepherds warning.

    • @nattycat14
      @nattycat14 3 года назад +3

      I've heard it as "red sky at 'morn, sailors take warn. Red sky at night, sailors delight"

    • @andrewbond1683
      @andrewbond1683 3 года назад +1

      @@nattycat14 That's funny, I always heard it as "Red sky in the morning, the weather will be bad later so be careful, red sky at night, the weather will be good so don't worry about the weather and actually just enjoy it"

  • @DrRudyScarfalloto
    @DrRudyScarfalloto 3 года назад +62

    OMG! That shelter was my favorite place to camp when I used to go hiking in Harriman in the late 1970s. This is such a treat, Thank you .

  • @mmoroz4433
    @mmoroz4433 4 года назад +61

    Hi! Watching you from Moscow Russia. Always keeping my smile when seeing you and listening your comments. Thanks for bringing so positive mood in our life.

    • @derekrohan9619
      @derekrohan9619 3 года назад +8

      What’s up Russia! How are you? Are there good places to hike in Russia? We have a lot here in the U. S. My ex girlfriend is from Russia, well she was born here in the states but her parents came from Russia. She spoke both languages and when I got her mad at me her Russian accent would come out haha. I would go to their house all the time and hang out with her family and they would teach me some Russian and give me Russian food and cigarettes.. and vodka of course. Also I grew up in New York and played ice hockey, one of my best friends on the team was from Russia , and he told me my first Russian word.. suka!. ( not sure of the spelling) anyway I’m Derek hope your having a good day over there.

    • @mmoroz4433
      @mmoroz4433 3 года назад +3

      @@derekrohan9619 Hi Derek. So nice that you responded. Do you have Instagram profile? Mine is gt_st_photo. If you do not mind we may use Direct for correspondence. I will be glad to share news there. I visited US many times in the past. I have a lot of good friends in your country.

    • @alexgawthrop1748
      @alexgawthrop1748 3 года назад +4

      @@mmoroz4433 come to you England we have lots of places to hike

    • @mmoroz4433
      @mmoroz4433 3 года назад +1

      @@alexgawthrop1748 woulld be pleased to go one day. Thanks!

  • @TheAjpathecreature
    @TheAjpathecreature Год назад +24

    I keep coming back to this video every couple of months. It's because, though I don't camp, these videos give me the next best experience. There is something about crackling fires, sleeping out in the open and fresh air that seems to be relaxing to me.

    • @spectralhorizon8618
      @spectralhorizon8618 Год назад +1

      That’s thousands of years if ancestors speaking up to ya. I feel the same my man

    • @joanies6778
      @joanies6778 Год назад

      One of my favorite things to do. It's been too long since I've had a campfire. Getting ready to start camping soon, though, with my new pup.

  • @TheOffGridHunter
    @TheOffGridHunter 4 года назад +38

    Beautiful country! Dont know why anyone would live Manhattan when there is so much beautiful country in the state! Love the stone shelter!

    • @mariebernier3076
      @mariebernier3076 2 года назад

      We all would love to live in this area but there's no way to make a living! We have to live in or really close to the city to survive.

    • @TheOffGridHunter
      @TheOffGridHunter 2 года назад

      @@mariebernier3076 hear ya.

  • @timfronimos459
    @timfronimos459 Год назад +1

    One of my favorite videos. i watch again and again.

  • @dirtisbetterthandiamonds
    @dirtisbetterthandiamonds 3 года назад +160

    The rocks in the chimney were probably used by someone to keep their bed warm. Let them warm near the fire while you cook and then wrap in a small towel or shirt and place in your sleeping bag. Sooooo cozy and it lasts for hours 😊

    • @davidcox3076
      @davidcox3076 3 года назад +15

      We used to do this when we lived in the country. Put bricks on the hearth to warm, then wrap in a towel and put under the covers. Primitive electric blanket. : )

    • @mrdark9916
      @mrdark9916 3 года назад +5

      I make straight up Jeremiah Johnson beds. I pack up 2 bear rugs no matter how far in im going... and I wrap up in them bitches laying on a dirt covered coal bed. Lol at least that's what I'll tell my kids.

    • @pattycake9183
      @pattycake9183 3 года назад +2

      It's the same as bricks. Before the invention of hot water bottles.

    • @mariebernier3076
      @mariebernier3076 2 года назад +1

      @@mrdark9916 Jeremiah Johnson...yup.😄

    • @janh5199
      @janh5199 2 года назад +1

      @@mrdark9916 “Didn’t put enough dirt down. Saw it right off.”

  • @JMWOLFORD82
    @JMWOLFORD82 4 года назад +109

    That stone shelter was epic.

    • @elvinadhludhlu5380
      @elvinadhludhlu5380 4 года назад +7

      Would definitely love building one.

    • @BradleyBrothersBushcraft
      @BradleyBrothersBushcraft 4 года назад +3

      Agreed 👍

    • @williamgrimberg2510
      @williamgrimberg2510 4 года назад +3

      Cool to see the glacial carved rock . It’s said that the glaciers were so high that they depressed the land and at one time these old mountains were as high as the Sierras. Don’t see much of that on the west coast because the mountains are much younger.

    • @BeautifulWorld-zx9nb
      @BeautifulWorld-zx9nb 3 года назад

      Correct

  • @patrikhjorth3291
    @patrikhjorth3291 4 года назад +343

    There's a russian proverb: "Travel for a day, bring bread for a week". I guess that saying was inspired by situations like this.

    • @terribelle3
      @terribelle3 4 года назад +12

      Patrik thats exactly how I think 😉

    • @vladimirtrachenko60
      @vladimirtrachenko60 4 года назад +7

      I'm russian and I'm not sure we have such a proverb :)

    • @patrikhjorth3291
      @patrikhjorth3291 4 года назад +9

      @@vladimirtrachenko60 Well, I've seen that expression referred to as a russian proverb, but since I'm not russian myself I can't be certain.

    • @vinny5638
      @vinny5638 3 года назад +16

      @@vladimirtrachenko60 I'm sure you havent heard of every proverb that your culture has ever produced lol

    • @RedDragon-dm5sz
      @RedDragon-dm5sz 3 года назад +2

      Больше слушай, меньше говори.

  • @mazzozzy8218
    @mazzozzy8218 3 года назад +7

    I'm here in the UK 1am in December loving this, and I'm a 66 year old lady.. loved it 😊

    • @alleyse1
      @alleyse1 3 года назад +1

      Greetings Mass. I’m 72 yo in western Pennsylvania and I’m loving this vid!

    • @mariebernier3076
      @mariebernier3076 2 года назад

      57 in NYC. Thinking that I'll join our local Appalachian Mountain Club chapter this Spring so that I can do this hike with others who know what they're doing. I'd like to retire in this area at 65.🙂

    • @karencarpenter7894
      @karencarpenter7894 2 года назад

      2/15/22 /// 67 Young l o l . Can't believe I found this again love this hike it's just awesome. Thank you for sharing. I just want to see everything camping hiking dugout and more keep on keeping on. Stay safe and warm.

  • @steved9515
    @steved9515 Год назад +1

    Oh shit! new sub. Im south jersey here. Been camping in the pines for years growing up. Doing bush camping with as least as possible. Always in the winter and fall. Love the vid!
    Also tip in winter camping.. Grab an eagle hammock. You can strap it to those two post or two trees. THat and a tarp with some 550 cord to string along the trees and you got your self an OFF the ground seat and sleep. Give you about 10 degrees warming sleeping cause the ground wont suck the heat out of you. Also weighs tons less that carrying a bed or tent. You can wrap the tarp around the hammock when you sleep and tie it up. keeps wind out and your off the ground. do you dont need to find a flat surface either. I slept in a frozen ceder bog. What a crazy place to sleep in

  • @TheStuffMade
    @TheStuffMade 3 года назад +25

    Love this format, a man on his own out in the wilderness without exaggerating everything.

  • @slowjamcdub
    @slowjamcdub 4 года назад +207

    All jokes aside that Stone shelter with the double fireplaces was pretty cool

    • @markschisler7874
      @markschisler7874 4 года назад +14

      Im thinking alot more firewood and have that shelter like a sweat lodge...

    • @patriciavyce1993
      @patriciavyce1993 4 года назад +5

      Very cool.,I like it too.”👍🏻”

    • @macmurfy2jka
      @macmurfy2jka 3 года назад +2

      @@markschisler7874 one of the oldest ones in the park.

    • @Blackwater_House
      @Blackwater_House 3 года назад +2

      Old Celtic trick; build Two Fires and Sit between them.
      Works best when your not Solo Camping, because it requires more Firewood than a single Fire.

    • @CPBP44
      @CPBP44 3 года назад +4

      I’ve slept in that shelter a few times over the years. Visited many more. Somewhere I have a photo of an old Buddy, wearing a kilt, puking over the edge of that giant stone in front of the shelter. Good times!

  • @charlesnicholson5715
    @charlesnicholson5715 4 года назад +333

    Here's an old army tip. But your boots in a bag, place inside your sleeping bag with you overnight. Warm boots in the morning.

    • @af.7992
      @af.7992 4 года назад +29

      Lol, you beat me to it! I was just remembering that trick when he complained about cold boots, lol. It definitely makes a difference in keeping you from losing important body heat through your feet when you're out in the elements and it matters. Great tip that works!

    • @missioncontrol9424
      @missioncontrol9424 4 года назад +29

      I just toss a small warm rock from a fire in mine and put them in the sleeping bag with socks stuffed inside. Toasty boots and socks with a nice warm sleeping bag.

    • @Swervxo
      @Swervxo 3 года назад +1

      😂😂

    • @sayit-sayit
      @sayit-sayit 3 года назад +6

      We keep our boots and gloves by the fire all night. {North Dakota}

    • @chas2can124
      @chas2can124 3 года назад +9

      In the our Army we sleep with one boot on so you only have one cold foot in the morning... and sleep with your wet clothes in the sleeping bag so they are at least warm in the AM.

  • @Jude74
    @Jude74 4 года назад +152

    I’m jealous I think I would just stay in that stone hut for the remainder of the year.

  • @ozyankee4403
    @ozyankee4403 3 года назад +2

    Collect firewood during daylight..
    Collect sticks and logs.. during daylight
    Keep dragging back to shelter… during daylight
    When you think you have enough wood… go collect more
    No need to waste daylight cutting and sawing…
    You can never have too much firewood in the winter…
    Collecting wood keeps you warm
    … best done in daylight
    Cutting wood keeps you warm
    … can be done in dark near fire in the fireplace
    Avoid leaving shelter after dark… especially in the winter….
    ….nobody wants to twist an ankle because of a snow covered hazard…or fall in a snowstorm..
    and then find themselves unable to return to the shelter … and 🔥
    I enjoyed the video

  • @charleyl264
    @charleyl264 3 года назад +203

    You brought back many memories with this. My oldest son and I hiked many of the trails in Bear Mountain and Harriman Park, and much of the Appalachian trail from the Delaware Water Gap to N. Mass. about 35 - 45 years ago, but most of it was in the Spring and Fall. Although I did some Winter camping and hiking, I more preferred the above freezing hikes. At the time I was living in Dutchess Co. but moved to NC near Charlotte about 38 years ago. Although I did some hiking in this area, age and a few old injuries caught up with me and they forced me to end my hiking days. I'm 79 now and can only hike in my dreams or with guys like you who post videos for me to watch. Thank you.

    • @MitchellChilds
      @MitchellChilds 3 года назад +3

      How's the weather in NC? Not bad here below you just across the border. I hope 2022 finds you well.

    • @charleyl264
      @charleyl264 3 года назад +3

      @@MitchellChilds A few below freezing nights recently, but not bad at all this Winter. I keep thinking "We are going to pay for this". If you are that close to me, your Weather should be almost the same.

    • @MitchellChilds
      @MitchellChilds 3 года назад +3

      @@charleyl264 yeah we are pretty close. The mountains can really make it feel a lot colder than it does around the Greenville area where I am.

    • @cynthiaennis3107
      @cynthiaennis3107 2 года назад

      I live in S. Mass. Wishing you well, CharleyL. 😊

    • @bethdunn7969
      @bethdunn7969 2 года назад

      I did a few hikes when younger but I have joined you in spirit in many hikes and camping trips on RUclips.

  • @ozreality
    @ozreality 4 года назад +32

    We go up in the dacks all the time. I canoe for weeks at a time in the lake placid region camping under the stars or small tent. I took 4 kids myself on an overnight canoe trip and they forgot their iPads existed and really soaked it up like sponges... really proved to them that life is happening all around them if only they set their tech down and are willing to see it! Now they cant wait to go again and talk about our trip often...

  • @markschisler7874
    @markschisler7874 4 года назад +26

    Harriman is one of the most beautiful parks in the Hudson Valley. That was the better choice of shelters. Great video. Thanks.

  • @wynflaeth
    @wynflaeth Год назад +9

    If you're going to be doing winter hiking in heavy snow, or anytime below-freezing, you should *always* carry a lightweight four-season tent. No exceptions.
    If you're a seasoned camper/hiker you would know this. This is the first time I've ever watched you, so maybe you do have a small tent in that backpack of yours that I don't know about.
    You know the old saying, hope for the best and prepare for the worst.
    *Never* get caught without shelter!

    • @alcoholya
      @alcoholya Год назад +1

      he said he had a one man tent in the video.

    • @wynflaeth
      @wynflaeth Год назад

      @@alcoholya I would have rather stay in the tent!

  • @MaxMax-uu3bs
    @MaxMax-uu3bs 3 года назад

    Best camping video on RUclips. 3 days seems like days days. Other people say 3 days camping but they make a 20 minute video.

  • @jessn7034
    @jessn7034 3 года назад +2

    I have zero interest in hiking and camping but for some reason RUclips put this in my feed and I watched the whole video, I liked it. Thx for posting.

  • @morethanamazed8210
    @morethanamazed8210 4 года назад +11

    Glad you made it back safe! Thanks for taking us along.

  • @ronniepirtlejr2606
    @ronniepirtlejr2606 4 года назад +131

    I had a good friend who passed away about or 5 years ago he lived up there in the Adirondacks. He was a Trapper, one of the best in his days! His name was Johnny Thorp. I met him when I was a teenager living in Needles California. He was one of the last true mountain man!
    There used to be a lot of trapping videos and books about him teaching. Right before he passed away he autographed a book sent it to me as a gift. ( 50 YEARS A TRAPPER and treasure hunter by Johnny Thorp. You should get that book if it's still around. it's a small thin paperback only 113-114 pages but well worth the read! It tells a little about his life.
    Happy New Year& be careful out there partner!

    • @jimmartin7881
      @jimmartin7881 4 года назад +12

      I learned coyote and fox trapping from him and my friend mike, legend is an understatement when talking about Johnny. I moved to the ADKs because of the time I spent with those guys, still here and sure miss those days. He was the last of a dying breed up here, I remember questioning if we were allowed to do something and he said it's nature, nobody can tell you where you can and cannot go, nobody owns the land and never will. Nice to hear he meant so much to so many and we were lucky to have known him.

    • @ranmarelg
      @ranmarelg 4 года назад +9

      It's out of print. I'd love to have a copy...any ideas?

    • @jimmartin7881
      @jimmartin7881 4 года назад +8

      @@ranmarelg Ebay, 20 bucks or so.

    • @ronniepirtlejr2606
      @ronniepirtlejr2606 4 года назад +8

      @@ranmarelg I'll check into it. He has family that lives in New York I think they run a store? It's where Johnny hung out during his last days. I'll look on my book & see if there's any information on it

    • @ronniepirtlejr2606
      @ronniepirtlejr2606 4 года назад +13

      @@jimmartin7881 it sounds like you lived a pretty excited life to Jim! yeah that sounds like Johnny. He really was a rare breed. I'm glad you learn to fox & coyote hunt from him. I remember hearing on the news a few decades ago. Somewhere Out by Wyoming or out west. They were having a hard time trapping some wolves that were attacking their cattle. It was apparently a big job & was all over the news. Since they're endangered they weren't allowed to shoot them so, They called Johnny & he was able to take care of the problem for them.
      I used to go over to his house listen to him tell stories for hours. when he was done He would bring out some Treasures & pictures to show that he was telling the truth!
      His stepson Donnie and I were pretty good friends back then while he was married to Patty living in Needles, Ca.. after I move to Southern Illinois I lost touch with him for a while but eventually looked him up and we kept in touch time from time.
      After about 5 years of moving to Southern Illinois. I was working in a wood shop with a bunch of hunters. They started talking about trapping. I spoke up and told them I know of a Trapper but, they probably didn't know him? I told them that he was not from around here in Southern Illinois. At the time he was still living out in Needles,Ca.. My five co-workers who were all older than me, asked me who it was? I told them Johnny Thorp. They all looked at each other and told me I didn't know him. I said what do you mean? He lives in Needles. His son and I are good friends. I used to go to his house all the time! Well, they didn't believe me but it really doesn't matter to me anyways. Lol. They were big fans of his and proceeded to tell me how famous he was. I told them I never knew that he was famous, he never acted that way toward me. he was just a good friend. He lived a very exciting life, outside Trappin & treasure hunting. I love listening to his stories!

  • @freeholdtacticalmed
    @freeholdtacticalmed 4 года назад +105

    As a young teen, I solo backpacked frequently in Harriman State Park. I recognize the shelter!

    • @steves3760
      @steves3760 3 года назад +1

      Am I the only one that noticed the paw prints on the second shelter fireplace?

    • @josephmiller6677
      @josephmiller6677 2 года назад

      @@steves3760 Yikes.... good eyes !!!

  • @ashenverdict
    @ashenverdict 3 года назад +3

    That was great. When you were trudging through the snow and blizzard i couldn't help thinking about all the animals that live there. You get to go home to a warm house, comfy bed and hot food but those poor animals have to live in that cold environment and struggle to find food and shelter every day. We're so lucky.

  • @brucec2635
    @brucec2635 3 года назад +2

    Glad he had a good sleeping gear with no fire. Brings back my memories playing in the upper NY mountains in 1957.

  • @jasonmoon2942
    @jasonmoon2942 4 года назад +13

    Freaking Epic!!! Loved watching every minute!! Double Fire pit shelter, Epic Snow Storm and night hiking all bundled into one video!! Outstanding!!!

    • @markc6207
      @markc6207 4 года назад

      He did not get enough wood lucky he had good gear or he would have froze

  • @Edzherenow99
    @Edzherenow99 4 года назад +76

    I pretty much spent every free moment I had in that park as a kid and young adult back in the mid 70's to the early 90's . One year I spent almost the whole summer just living in the park. Used the shelters during the week (Lot less people in the park back in those days) and tented on the weekends. There were less rules back then about where you could set up a tent. I occasionally go back now, but it's way too crowded for my tastes now! Now I live in remote Maine! You were blessed to have such a quiet solo experience! Brought back a lot of memories!

    • @TinyIslandMaine
      @TinyIslandMaine 4 года назад +3

      Edzherenow I like Maine too but I’m not so remote 😀

    • @yongkim2088
      @yongkim2088 4 года назад +2

      Maine can get real remote.

    • @Edzherenow99
      @Edzherenow99 4 года назад +2

      @@yongkim2088 definitely!

    • @Edzherenow99
      @Edzherenow99 4 года назад +2

      @@yongkim2088 Just the way I like it! :)

    • @XJonAye
      @XJonAye 4 года назад +2

      That sounds like a great life. If I didn't have so many responsibilities I'd probably be doing the same thing, but kids come first, for now, until they can get out with me.

  • @jerseyjeeper1575
    @jerseyjeeper1575 4 года назад +12

    Thanks for this I camped there when I was 17, 55 now! What a blast to see it again..

  • @robertgutheridge9672
    @robertgutheridge9672 3 года назад +1

    From a search and rescue member.
    If you choose to go hiking anytime. And winter even more so.
    Take a couple of days extra worth of food and supplies if at all possible.
    Almost every search I have went on during winter the person has been out of food and water.
    Yes its extra weight but it very well could be the difference between you living and being found or a recovery mission.

  • @garynedbal9909
    @garynedbal9909 3 года назад +26

    I grew up in Harriman State Park. I've stayed at both shelters many times. so awesome to see you enjoying them.

  • @gracesmith6199
    @gracesmith6199 4 года назад +24

    1st time I've watched you , i enjoyed it from my nice warm bed in Scotland .

    • @sintax77
      @sintax77  4 года назад +3

      Thanks, Grace! Glad you enjoyed it :)

    • @astridaden8536
      @astridaden8536 4 года назад +2

      Me too, Grace........in Germany.....🤣

    • @doreendaykin6693
      @doreendaykin6693 3 года назад +1

      👏👏. Enjoying from my nice warm bed in Halifax, Nova Scotia...Blessings Scotland ❣️

    • @foxonrunspotoneverywhere795
      @foxonrunspotoneverywhere795 3 года назад

      First time I'm watching and it's from my warm bed here in USA VIRGINIA.
      This looks so fun but most of all, it looks to be a soul lifting meditation time to get in touch with the inner self. And to keep the body in tip top shape in the event it's needed to this level of survival tactics.

    • @chelsealouise2925
      @chelsealouise2925 3 года назад

      Also watching from my warm bed in Scotland Grace! Love to watch these vids I don’t ever camp though lol too much of creature of comfort,

  • @A.C._Taylor
    @A.C._Taylor 3 года назад +11

    The wind you talk about at the beginning is what we like to call a 'lazy wind'. This is because it likes to go through you, rather than around you.

  • @jeremybelcher6681
    @jeremybelcher6681 4 года назад +15

    Two fireplaces, one shelter...
    I think that's the most beat I've seen you at the end of a hike!

  • @JB-zo7ln
    @JB-zo7ln Год назад +6

    I wish I did stuff like this. Seems like the most peaceful and relaxing way to spend the day in the wilderness albeit on top of a mountain with great views all around. I need to do more things like this. It would greatly increase my happiness and well-being.

  • @raymondwhelan2395
    @raymondwhelan2395 3 года назад +5

    Stumbled across your channel. Glad I did! Listen, that view at about 1:17:36 and having the mountaintop to yourself, worth all the effort... My age and health are now an issue for weekends or short trips like this, but I'll live vicariously. Thanks for sharing!

  • @3TPreppingandGardening
    @3TPreppingandGardening 4 года назад +16

    Great vid...my kids and I love camping...next adventure won’t be until Spring...food cooked out in the woods seems to be the best meals ever....

    • @bradleyogden5688
      @bradleyogden5688 4 года назад +4

      I dug me one of those Dakota firepits in my back yard and throughout the summer I collect loose firewood for use once it gets cold. Now this is the time to cook those hobo dinners, no bugs, no kids, and get the fire started at dusk, get a lot of coals and enjoy cooking dinner without those pesky bugs or the summer heat. I know it's still home, but being outside in a white-out cooking up your grub is something else.
      Like I said, I really enjoy cooking a lot more in the colder months instead of like everyone else that like to cook in mid summer...bees, flies, hornets.
      Give it a try! You'll like it.

    • @BeautifulWorld-zx9nb
      @BeautifulWorld-zx9nb 3 года назад +3

      Agreed

  • @lushpaw1
    @lushpaw1 4 года назад +135

    Just a few ideas for winter hiking.. buy a collapsible nalgene.. then you can fill it and carry it inside your coat so you're not drinking freezing cold water. Also.. you need a walking stick.. hiking in snow over uneven ground can be treacherous and a walking stick can save you from being broken.

    • @janwoodward7360
      @janwoodward7360 4 года назад +21

      Amen on the walking stick...or two. And get a better winter hat.

    • @patlsmith404
      @patlsmith404 4 года назад +9

      I firmly believe in my walking stick. I have one with a light on it for just in case.

    • @BradRLeBeau
      @BradRLeBeau 3 года назад +3

      it ends up being pretty tough to film and use a trekking pole

    • @smilenepal3493
      @smilenepal3493 3 года назад +2

      💙🌎💚

    • @homersimpson001
      @homersimpson001 3 года назад +3

      He should have dried his boots and put them in the sleeping bag... never a cold foot:)

  • @cybrarian9
    @cybrarian9 4 года назад +17

    My parents used to take my 3 brothers and me up to Lake Sebago in Harriman State Park in the early 1970's for a week of cabin camping. We stopped in the mid-1970's. We never went around the larger part of the park, just stayed around Lake Sebago. We would cabin camp in Cabin A-6 if my aging memory (now 53) serves me right. It was always a lot fun to fish for Sunnies and row the boats on the lake and just enjoy being with family living a bit rustic life in the cabin with a Coleman stove, a Coleman lantern, Kelloggs cereal in the small boxes that you could eat out of the wax paper lined box with your milk. And animal life aplenty, especially chipmunks, skunks, deer, and squirrels. I miss those days.

  • @jstephenallington8431
    @jstephenallington8431 3 года назад +12

    This is the New York that I remember from my year there back in the 70's. I spent hours climbing through the mountains alone just where the Appalachian Trail cut into Bear Mountain State Park. Absolutely beautiful country, and I would hike until I was miles from nowhere. I'm fortunate that nothing bad ever happened, because no one would have even known where to begin to look for me!

  • @jimoconnor6043
    @jimoconnor6043 3 года назад +8

    I was raised in that area. Went boy scout winter camping/tobogganing/sledding with my dad & scout troop. This was back in the 50's. The view has been the same for hundreds of thousands of years. Glad you enjoyed my backyard!

  • @troygriffith4981
    @troygriffith4981 4 года назад +21

    hard to beat a shelter in the winter
    Sintax is a real one

  • @strickysbackpackingadventures
    @strickysbackpackingadventures 4 года назад +18

    Tough trek in that snow. Another great trip! As always, thanks for taking us along!

  • @capsoutdoors
    @capsoutdoors 4 года назад +16

    Practically my backyard. Harriman is my go-to backpacking destination. Good to see ya here, hope all is well.

    • @DaddyRabbit411
      @DaddyRabbit411 4 года назад +1

      Yea me to Im on the Plateau. Cumberland County myself.

    • @campchairchris
      @campchairchris 4 года назад +2

      He walked right past the stealth spot from one of your videos.

    • @halabujioutdoors
      @halabujioutdoors 4 года назад +1

      Caps Outdoors
      I was gonna mention that this is almost identical routes you did not so long ago.

    • @oldunion
      @oldunion 4 года назад +1

      me three, I am up there every available weekend.

  • @Blackwater_House
    @Blackwater_House 3 года назад +2

    I once went into the Mountains of Tasmania (Australia) for a Week of Solo Camping.
    Ended up spending Three Weeks in the Mountains of Tasmania because of Blizzards and Snow Storms.
    Fortunately as a Member of an Elite Search and Rescue Team I had Communications with the outside world and told the local Mountain Search and Rescue Group that I was absolutely OK and didn’t need or desire to be Rescued and that they could just Stay Home.

  • @A83-A83
    @A83-A83 2 года назад +2

    Had you of packed a tarp and some rope you could have tied it up over the opening and have stayed a lot warmer! Idk why people don't think of these things when they go hiking. Heck you would have even been warmer if you popped up your tent inside the area. *i wrote this before the video is over but still.

  • @pechacekcp
    @pechacekcp 4 года назад +8

    Great video sir, can’t wait until the next one.

  • @mvl9591
    @mvl9591 3 года назад +27

    Many years ago, I hiked up a”trail less “ peak in the Adirondacks. There were over a hundred people on top!

  • @the1burf
    @the1burf 4 года назад +12

    The most amazing thing about Harriman State Park, is that you are only about 40 miles from the George Washington Bridge. It's a different world. That is why I love living here.

    • @eveostay
      @eveostay 3 года назад

      Also the Long Path (which sintax hiked on) starts on the Manhattan side of the George Washington bridge -- so you can walk from there if you want :D

  • @lspthrattan
    @lspthrattan 3 года назад +84

    Thanks for taking us with you--the scenery was great! Bit of unsolicited advice: take a walking staff with you on a hike like this one. It would have come in handy when walking through fresh snow, to test the depth as you go. Accidentally stepping into a hole or something could really ruin a hike!

    • @JeffoJonJ
      @JeffoJonJ 2 года назад +5

      ..& for hitting bears too
      😆

    • @kennethgardner3310
      @kennethgardner3310 2 года назад +2

      @@JeffoJonJ and one with clothing on...lol

  • @instinctivechannel6668
    @instinctivechannel6668 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for memories here is nice story I stayed in that shelter on summer trip to the state park when I seen it I said to my brother look the shelter we stayed at wow...
    Nice double fire pit the outside small one also and no wood to pick up(no wood then either) but summer is restricted open flames I used it in 1986 it been there A very long time real long thanks a bunch✌️

  • @dirtbagoutside
    @dirtbagoutside 4 года назад +16

    Harriman is great! Plenty of ups and downs and many miles of great trails!!!

  • @jeffvandam874
    @jeffvandam874 4 года назад +13

    Not even done watching but have to comment...I've said it before but I love your videography style. It's little things like filming scetchy crossings or footings without undue commentary... Just showing and filming what the experience is like.. it works so well compared to those who constantly talk about every footstep. Very cathartic. Keep up the good work.

    • @jeffvandam874
      @jeffvandam874 4 года назад +3

      To add, your actual commentary is great. Love how it's edited over your various clips along the way. Can't wait for the next trip.

    • @morethanamazed8210
      @morethanamazed8210 4 года назад

      I concur.

  • @DragonRoams
    @DragonRoams 4 года назад +6

    Great trip can't beat some nice snow and feeling like you have the whole place to yourself.

  • @nikkirobinson2543
    @nikkirobinson2543 3 года назад +3

    I lived in a cozy cabin on Norma Mountain in Tennessee. Backed right up against the woods we had all to ourself. When it snowed it was the most refreshing and beautiful walk I ever took.

  • @lindachandler2293
    @lindachandler2293 3 года назад +15

    You'll never know how much I wanted to reach through the screen and tell you instead of cutting that log up, you could have just put the end in the fire and fed it in as it burned.

    • @Cherilen83
      @Cherilen83 Год назад

      Oh my god Im a feeder too!!! Like duh right,save yo energy

  • @oldunion
    @oldunion 4 года назад +16

    This is my local backpacking grounds! I know it VERY well, I am excited to watch this :) !

    • @twochordcool
      @twochordcool 3 года назад +1

      I'm in Peekskill...you ever looking for new backpacking friends? I have been backpacking a few times a year in the Adirondacks for a few decades.

  • @dhooter
    @dhooter 4 года назад +46

    Blows my mind youtube backpackers or campers stay out there unarmed. Especially around the Apalacha Trail. All kinds of looney tunes in those woods.

    • @timothycontreras8424
      @timothycontreras8424 4 года назад +2

      If they're from the city, like you!

    • @Sam-xr8ne
      @Sam-xr8ne 4 года назад +1

      Apparently not.

    • @analee3299
      @analee3299 3 года назад +9

      no ones going to admit they are armed.

    • @Copeandseethe822
      @Copeandseethe822 3 года назад +7

      @@timothycontreras8424 I'll take the city over the meth haven that the countryside has become.

    • @briarrose29
      @briarrose29 3 года назад +1

      @@Copeandseethe822 agreed.

  • @raven8420
    @raven8420 4 года назад +5

    I'm from New Zealand and as my country is in early summer, watching these kinds of videos takes my mind off the hot muggy conditions. This vid came up in my recommended list, had to watch it. Love the stone shelter though.

  • @richardteuten4435
    @richardteuten4435 2 года назад +3

    Great trip. I hiked Harriman as a scout and loved those leanto type shelters. Grill cheese and duel fire places! Nice!

  • @tomortale2333
    @tomortale2333 Год назад +2

    this guy is fun to watch n listen to....he's soo casual bout everything....reminds me of ''''no worries mate'''' kinda a comic ....kind of guy.... roll on''

  • @mobilewintercamp7515
    @mobilewintercamp7515 4 года назад +29

    I’m glad you went there, it’s an underestimated gem. Great trail markers , rock formations and it’s a very open in places. There’s a lot of history there, an actual community and graveyards, iron mines and such.

  • @thursdayafternoon7015
    @thursdayafternoon7015 4 года назад +5

    This was great. Thanks for taking us along.

  • @djgreen8
    @djgreen8 4 года назад +6

    First morning of 2021 and I’m watching this (in the UK) - really enjoying it. Looked like a great trip.

  • @stephenr9194
    @stephenr9194 2 года назад +4

    I grew up in Rockland County and often hiked the Harriman Park area with friends. Our family picnicked there throughout the 60's and 70's. Watching this well done video brought back a host of memories of great times....Thanks so much for a fine piece of work.

  • @shaesantiago1188
    @shaesantiago1188 3 года назад

    Love when he said I'm awake now. Lol. Spices of life my friend

  • @brianhike5357
    @brianhike5357 4 года назад +15

    This is definitely one of your best vids... it’s authentic and really neat.

  • @patrickjacobson2261
    @patrickjacobson2261 4 года назад +25

    I think I would have tried to scrounge up more firewood for sure and used just one of the fire places.

    • @jasond1433
      @jasond1433 3 года назад +7

      This is all I was thinking when he was at the stone shelter. There'd have been a small mountain of firewood before dark came, given the time he had available, if it were me.

    • @adrianmacklin418
      @adrianmacklin418 3 года назад

      No need really hes by himself so when he gets cold get in his sleeping bag and hangout. It would be different if he was out with friends.

  • @chriscon8463
    @chriscon8463 4 года назад +9

    I just started snowshoeing recently. A good aluminum pair doesn’t weigh too much & straps right to the pack. They’re a big advantage in deep fresh snow!

  • @gen81465
    @gen81465 Год назад +1

    That first shelter (the all metal one) you stayed in, perhaps affectionately called "the fridge" looked to be very chilly. You should have set up your tent inside the shelter to at least keep out the wind.

  • @veejennings5449
    @veejennings5449 3 года назад +1

    Thank you, I Definitely Like The Second The Shelter Because You Can See It's Very Cozy With Two FirePlaces,
    Awesome Winter Spot.

  • @fatherofkayos
    @fatherofkayos 4 года назад +22

    New subscriber here, and I want to thank you for taking me back to the days when my own dear Dad would take me for walks in the woods.

  • @mrichards7849
    @mrichards7849 3 года назад +6

    When I was a child my father had built a small house in the upstate New York woods. I've been around the world, to the Pacific Northwest, Europe, and now live in Colorado, but I have never seen a more spectacular woods than New York State's.

    • @StuckInNy
      @StuckInNy 3 года назад +1

      😃

    • @mnash5007
      @mnash5007 3 года назад +1

      Like they say.
      "I love New York"
      The countryside that is.
      The city, not so much.

    • @StuckInNy
      @StuckInNy 3 года назад

      Upstate NY here 👋

  • @AdventureswithSpackmann
    @AdventureswithSpackmann 4 года назад +4

    That shelter with the stone chimneys is awesome! Great video man!

  • @russday1400
    @russday1400 10 месяцев назад

    Fantastic vid. Watched it all the way through. Something different about ur story telling. U have a gift. God bless brother. Thankyou.

  • @YankeeWoodcraft
    @YankeeWoodcraft 2 года назад +1

    My proverbial backyard. I drive thru Harriman every day on my way down to New York City to work (I live in the Catskills). I once saw what's known as a "Grand Slam" in hunting; Turkeys, deer & a bear all at the same time at Harriman.
    Every time I drive under the Appalachian Trail overpass, I think to myself, "I should be on that bridge". 95.5% of New York is "not" New York City. We have an embarrassment of riches when it comes to the woods here. You caught the essence of a New York State park perfectly.

  • @denali9643
    @denali9643 4 года назад +36

    And just as this horrid year is about to crawl across the finish line, here comes Sintax right on time making 2020 great again!!

    • @sintax77
      @sintax77  4 года назад +7

      Squeezed one more out for 2020. Still got your Mt McKinley book taunting me on the coffee table, but I don't know if Alaska will let me in me in quite yet, haha.

    • @denali9643
      @denali9643 4 года назад +4

      @@sintax77 Wow, very good memory!! You have to go to Denali in honor of Denali. (And the Mail Call segments were fantastic)

  • @rxiinebree
    @rxiinebree 3 года назад +18

    The steadiness of the video while you're walking is EVERYTHING. 😍✨

  • @douglasdearden4879
    @douglasdearden4879 3 года назад +22

    Having done a fair amount of desert camping, that moment of putting on boots without a boot-check made my heart skip a little beat. Great video.

    • @bfranco1519
      @bfranco1519 3 года назад +8

      Not a lot of snakes, scorpions, or spiders in the cold snow...

  • @marcdee4427
    @marcdee4427 3 года назад +1

    We only have foxes 🦊 badgers 🦡 rabbits 🐇 squirrels 🐿 here in England, you on the other hand have 🐻 bears wolves 🐺 and cougars wolverines etc . Are you not concerned 😟 at all that something might want to eat you? America 🇺🇸 is so vast and wild 😜 unspeakable beauty I’d love to go out to the parks like Yellowstone and do a wild camping trip, but have a few armed guards with me . Or il have nightmares about the film deliverance or the river wild . Great 👍🏻 video fantastic adventure. One of my favourite films is Jeremiah Johnson with Robert Redford . Great 👍🏻 stuff , thanks for doing it. . I visited the USA 🇺🇸 in 2002 Boston, didn’t have bears there lol 😂 love America 🇺🇸

  • @spallaxo
    @spallaxo 3 года назад +1

    As a NYer i'm happy when you come here and make videos!

  • @JaredHikes
    @JaredHikes 4 года назад +18

    Those are some amazing shelters. We need more of those on the west coast trails. 🤠

    • @Velshard
      @Velshard 4 года назад +1

      My thoughts exactly. I can't recall seeing any that nice in Oregon, and I've been all over the state. Then again all the big/old money is on the east coast so it's not too surprising.

    • @ChipSecco
      @ChipSecco 4 года назад +1

      Get building them then. A lot have been built by outdoor clubs like the AMC.

    • @Velshard
      @Velshard 3 года назад

      @kbail Cool, hopefully I'll stumble upon it one of these days.

    • @debs7411
      @debs7411 3 года назад

      @kbail MN state parks have some pretty fancy shelters built by FDRs CCC program, too. The nicest ones are along the north shore of Lake Superior, where the weather can turn pretty quickly.

  • @JacobE-23
    @JacobE-23 4 года назад +6

    I've stayed in this exact shelter a few times. One of my favorites in Harriman. The stone shelter that is, I'll have to visit the other one sometime

  • @spincitynyc809
    @spincitynyc809 4 года назад +7

    Wow...He went to Harriman. The favorite destination of us weekend warriors of NYC

  • @aaronmourning434
    @aaronmourning434 2 года назад +1

    Waited all video to see the mountains. Foothills is what I saw.

  • @dondearie3693
    @dondearie3693 3 года назад +7

    This hike brings me way back. I grew up just over the border in Jersey and me and my friends would hike an camp all through out that park during high school days in the 60’s. Good times. Enjoy!!

  • @upfactoryracing4148
    @upfactoryracing4148 4 года назад +10

    That was a nice relaxing hike to watch. Thanks for your endeavors!👍

  • @JoshHerodOutdoorAdventures
    @JoshHerodOutdoorAdventures 4 года назад +11

    Winter camping in a shelter is fun. Those shelters looked great. Enjoyed this video

  • @peter_kelly
    @peter_kelly 4 года назад +11

    Great park! I've spent years driving by this on my from NYC to the Catskills and never stopped by. Definitely going to check this out.

    • @Dominick_Francione
      @Dominick_Francione 4 года назад +1

      You won’t regret it. Harriman is a great place.

    • @twochordcool
      @twochordcool 3 года назад

      @@Dominick_Francione It's alright, it's not the Adirondacks, and the Adirondacks aren't Yellowstone, and Yellowstone isn't Banff, and Banff isn't Denali!

  • @jamesraymond1158
    @jamesraymond1158 Год назад +1

    So cozy. It reminds me of a time many years ago when we got caught in a whiteout in Antarctica, with howling winds and snow drifts. But we had a fish hut with an oil stove to keep us warm for the night. One of the best times in my life.

  • @kristophersteele1596
    @kristophersteele1596 2 года назад +1

    I love how calm you are at lunch on day 3 and just being in the moment. At testament to your confidence in your skills.