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zakruti.com » Travels » TA Outdoors
10+ Outdoor Survival Skills & Bushcraft Tips

10+ Outdoor Survival Skills & Bushcraft Tips

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Rating: 4.5; Vote: 2
Here are 10 outdoor survival tips and bushcraft skills that you can add to your survival knowledge. From lighting fires with obscure items, to keeping warm in winter camping conditions. MutsPub: Good stuff! I would suggest a BIC or Cricket lighter and soaked cotton balls wrapped in a baggie in your pants pocket AT ALL TIMES! This is not 1822! Carry a tube of any combustible ointment. It can be rubbed on trash or leaves to make fire. Use it for small wounds, rust prevention, chaffing, chapped lips, bites, stings, lubricant, etc.
Play with and learn flint and steel, friction embers for sure!
Use a LIGHTER!
Am I going to carry a half-mask respirator with cartridges in the wild to not breath in the smoke from lead? - Nope.
We can't get people to wear safety glasses in the wild to prevent eye injuries! Especially at night!
They'll wear 200 sunglasses while walking in the concrete jungle but won't wear 10 clear safety glasses while brush hopping, chopping, dodging fire embers, grease spatters, and gnats!

Date: 2022-12-31

Comments and reviews: 11


Top tips yet again Mike! Great to see you back pal. I've never seen inside a shotgun slug. Very interesting to know that all of that shell could be used for something.
A decent sized magnifying glass that too, also a great way to use it to get a closer look at wild edibles.
I've not seen the needle for a compass idea before either. All excellent tips and tips for not only beginners. Thank you Mike

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Old tobacco tins are great for keeping things in like fire lighting gear, and zip lock bag are good for keeping a spool of line and other fishing bits and bobs like hooks, weights and small rubber lures as you can use both in the sea and rivers and ponds for trout, salmon, perch and pike and most sea fish will take them.
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Would love to see another video of you and Paul Kirtley in your woodland. I consider the two videos you produced with Paul to be the standard by which other extensive bushcraft skills videos are measured.
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I keep a shotgun shell in my belt pouch for emergencies. If you have a buckshot shell, you can use the buckshot as ammunition for a slingshot. I use the powder, and the primer to start a fire.
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Vaseline in your gloves doesnt sound so bad. Would leather gloves absorb vaseline?
Also, theres such a thing as waxed twine. Ill bet it makes a good fire starter.

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When I was in the military we would pull off the heads of our 5. 56mm rounds and pour the gun powder over our kindling. Mind you, this was only used as a last resort.
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Mike, thank you not only for the great tips, but all so for being a stable in my life many years now. Your videos always ignite my passion for the outdoors.
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and that explains why his accent sounds so cool!
i m from America and 1 we don t sound that good and we have plastic wads in our shells. :(

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Merry Christmas, Mike. Thank you for posting. I hope you and your family are doing well. I look forward to a new year of TA Outdoors. Great video.
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quick question where'd you get your compass and how effective is it because i need a good compass and i don't really trust what maufacturers say
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Wasn t aware that there are still leaden shots available. Didn t manufacturers switched to steel for environmental reasons?
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