
Survival Skills: Firemaking in Snow, Part 2
PART 2 of 5:
A complete series of videos by Nutnfancy and my friend chronicling firemaking in cold and snowy conditions using backpacking equipment only. The series shows the scenery, adventure, survival philosophy, gear observations, our standard joking around, and the good times with long time friend BuggetNuster (YouTube name) and Allie the Mountain Dog. We hiked into the snowy and cold Rocky Mountain bivouac location I had chosen earlier for my Wilderness Lean-To series of videos. A few shelter mods are discussed and shown but the focus of these vids is the making of the fire. I used few edits in the video making because I needed to demonstrate the work needed to create a sustainable fire in these conditions. I have found no shortcuts in the wood preparation for wilderness fire making. Several blades including the Ontario RTAK II, Ontario RAT-7, and KaBar Heavy Bowie are used to strip limbs and baton the logs into burnable pieces with the advantageous sharp edges. They performed exceptionally well in the outing and withstood some real tough use in 15ºF cold (shown of course!). The Sawvivor backpack saw again proved its worth as an accurate and indispensable wood cutter, lubricated with frequent sprays of WD-40. Fire tender used this time was Trioxane solid fuel cake and REI Stormproof matches. The resulting fire was quite manly and heated the Lean-To to incredible levels. We had planned to also build a fire reflector and maybe some other structures but as usual the winter fire prep proved to be quite time consuming and high effort. And we wanted to kick back and enjoy our work afterwards. The outing and fire prep was lots of work but resulted in another great memory made with TNP subscribers and my buddies, BuggetNuster and Allie. Thanks for coming along!///////////////// Please Note: Generally you will have to have an interest in Survival blades, skills, outdoor gear, and maybe learning more about them to find these videos interesting. They intentionally show a lot of detail of the fire process (with lots of discussion thrown in) so as to completely teach and prove the Nutnfancy winter firemaking method. In this respect they function as TNP Foundation videos (I will refer to them a lot).
Duration : 0:18:29
I had agreed with …
I had agreed with you about the saw instead of an axe, but even a small hatchet sure would make tree cutting a lot easier, sawing that hard in the cold can exhaust your muscle to the point of needing days to fully recover, leaving you in a bind. So my mind is changed, for real wood work, a hatchet is worth its weight in gold
If your out in the …
If your out in the woods, I think there’d be enough dead wood lying around (unless your in a popular spot). Then I find that breaking limbs into kindling is done fairly quick and easy by smacking dead limbs, across a rock of stump (especially when done at their joints ).
yeah, i stopped …
yeah, i stopped using saws a LOOOOONG time ago
did u knotch that …
did u knotch that tree to make sure it didnt scissor?
i am a hatchet dude …
i am a hatchet dude but i wouldnt mind trying a saw viverwhere do you buy them
Push 4-6 old trees …
Push 4-6 old trees over, cross them all and start your fire in the middle where they all join. As fire burns them in half, keep placing them on the fire. All that work for nice short pieces of wood…NUTS!
you guys can wear …
you guys can wear yourselves out with the saw , i will use my axe. three good swings of my axe and id be through that tree. good vids though keep them coming.
LNT
LNT
You don’t want to …
You don’t want to be depending on fuel and oil while surviving, it makes a of allot of noise, you’ll need tools to maintain the chainsaw. I don’t know if you’ve ever lifted a chainsaw, but they’re allot heavier than a handsaw. Chainsaw accidents tend to be more severe than hadsaw ones, which is bad when you’re a long way from help. There are allot of parts that can break. Cold may freeze the gas, or make it difficult to start and well, I could go on, but i hope you get the point
Knife for limbing.. …
Knife for limbing…. once you handle a cold steel gurka, you won’t need to test anything else.
for as much as you …
for as much as you guys are taking might as well take a small chainsaw. most tree top trimmers are like 6 lbs now.. with hand saw
lube
lube
What are you …
What are you spraying on your knives?
WD40, try to pay …
WD40, try to pay attention ,p
He is right handed, …
He is right handed, and left eyed, which is pain in the when firing weapons!! In all right handed!
Like your knife. …
Like your knife. Dude, thanks for making these videos. I cancelled TV and all I do now is watch youtube. I’ve learned tons and am saving money. Yeah, most don’t know how to get by if they had to.
Is nutnfancy left …
Is nutnfancy left handed or is the video mirror reversed?
at 7:00 should he …
at 7:00 should he be holding the other side and sawing it becuz the way he is holding it, it would grab the saw
i think that saw is …
i think that saw is too little
Great, I’ll check …
Great, I’ll check those out
Dude! ROFL! — …
Dude! ROFL! — Veri (Nutn’s sister)
Nutn doesn’t have a …
Nutn doesn’t have a Kukri review or demonstration, I’ll bring that up to him. Its a good idea. However, our good friends Tacticalgearhead and cutlerylover have good videos about them..and more. — Veri (Nutn’s sister)
what about the …
what about the cheap coldsteel kukri?
I can split any …
I can split any lenth log with my axe, by impacting the lenth, and useing wedges. Its very low energy. works really well for anything 4″ and smaller. then all of my chopping is cake.
Ive been out in -10 to -30 quite a bit. fire and shelter are both critical. Killing the wind is vital. wind blows away your heat. a large rock works well for a heatwall, and rocks around your fire will hold heat. A good fire will burn anything you throw on it
8:07 i was think …
8:07 i was think the same thing.