Natural Navigation | Royal Marine & Bushcraft Instructor's Tips to NEVER GET LOST AGAIN
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- čas přidán 19. 05. 2021
- My top tips for finding your way using the natural landscape.
Helping you to make the right choices when using natural navigator indicators.
Sorry guys! the Great storm was actually in 1987.
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Natural navigation
Land navigation
land navigator
nature center
natural navigator tristan gooley
bushcraft
bushcraft skills
Dude, my 4 year old daughter keeps asking to see the “Prince go camping again”. Playing this video and she says “there’s the prince”. I think it’s that awesome accent my man.
With the beard he has an uncanny resemblance to Prince Harry! 😂
Brilliant video and channel and thanks for service your nation 👍
Never call a soldier sir ! They have a deep set dislike of officers, not sure where a Prince falls in this, but my money is on officer !
Dont call them rupert either haha@@robthompson1399
You explain that in an easy, logical and entertaining way.
Made me laugh, my Dad taught me 'Never eat shredded wheat' as a nipper, he was a Para like Grandad, who fought at Arnhem Sept 44. I meet a girl Christmas who lives on a boat like me and helped her with a few things, a couple of weeks later a old girl who everyone looks up to on the moorings and asks her for advice stopped for a chat and started talking at me like I was a kid, when I put her right on a few facts, she looked at Clare bemused and said, who is this guy, she stared at me for a while and said, he's sort of a Ray Mearsie sort of fella, the old girl smiled at me as if to say, ain't gonna try and pull the wool over your eye's again. Top Channel Nick, love it. God Bless.
Discovered your channel the other day whilst searching for poisonous plants. I'm 40 and a outdoors person but my actually knowledge of the things around me are limited , stinging nettles sting , dock leaf helps is about all I knew . I have a 4½year old son I would love to go camping with him in the future so thought I'd start learning a bit more . Great video's thank you .
Hiking along the coast, it's often necessary to know what the tides are doing. One way I do this is to examine any ships moored out at sea. The bow of a moored ship will always be pointing into the flow of the tide. So the stern points in the direction the tide is travelling.
DAMN!! I was just out on a hiking trail and noticed all the trees had fallen in the same direction but I didn’t make the connection to the points on a compass. DAMN!!
One of the land navigation/ orienteering points I remember from long ago was a tendency for right-hand dominant folks to pass objects on their left-side and southpaws' tendency is the converse. The tendency can cause an unintentional drift off course. Once aware of the tendency, it can be corrected.
Very informative and easily understood, i was taught by my nan as a child in North Wales plus foraging through the seasons when I used to stay there. I had forgotten some aspects of navigation over the years, but seeing your video has brought it back to me, so now I can show my grandson. Thank you
I did exactly what you preach the very first time I entered the "woods".
After getting out of that bush, I immediately created a fool proof method of never ever getting lost in the bush.
I said to myself: "Don't you ever dare do that again !!!"
And so I never went back to that bush !
However, I created navigation systems years later, sun, magnetic many types of compass, BUT THAT BUSH WALK STILL HAUNTS ME and I will stay out of it. I try to listen to people like you and those that go to the Amazon jungle, for a fool proof method, or atleast a guaranteed escape plan like having a homing pigeon in my rucksack !
Another favourite! My first ever orienteering instructor was in the 5th grade and he taught us Never Eat Sea Weed. Stuck in my head ever since. My 7 year old is excited to try these out!
That's one of the best explanations I've ever listened to on this subject, informative and clear instructions from start to finish. Thanks for the video.
Fascinating video. Will definitely be trying this out on my next hike. Can't belive all my years of hiking I've never noticed this stuff! Keep it coming please.
for back up reading read The Natural Navigator
Amazing video my friend! Super useful and very educating. Thank you for sharing this knowledge with us!
Just throwing in and idea, to make a video where you went on a day hike and got lost, it's dark and you can't go back to your car and need to survive the night with whatever you've on you/in your backpack with the emergency gear you've and all. Make shelter, fire, find food etc... can be awesome!
Great video 👍
Don't forget to reverse directions in the southern hemisphere
1:20 that branch loves you, it travels with you 😂
I must say you are much calmer than Ant Middleton, great video. Thankyou
Thank you for reminding me of Never Eat Shredded Wheat. It brings back fond memories of my Granfer. He taught me how to read a map and use a compass.
Kinda like my Dad And Grandpa's taught me when I was a kid in the 1950's. Never hurts to review the basics. Good info well put.
Nice work Nick. As an instructor who has taught this stuff in Aust for years, it's good to see info on natural methods. When I was a soldier we always learnt reading signs, map to ground etc.
One thing I would add; Teach folks to turn around and observe the way they have come at critical points. Then it is recognizable on the return journey.
Cheers, good vid
Haven't tried it since 1989, year I left the Army. Knew about the tree moss (clean & dirty sides). Learnt how to navigate at night via star and constellation position. Great video. Love your channel
When a video starts with 'Whuo erp binned it!'
I know it's going to be useful...
14.05 Geez look at that lovely long straight beam, shelter gold :-D
End comment, situational awareness as always is a massive beneficial asset.
Fantastic channel that involves the British countryside
Very informative and brought so many memories back, when my father (also a soldier) taught me so much about nature and the moss on the trees, our compass walks through the forests and his pride, when in the age of 8 I navigated us to the exact place, often interesting things like old stone formations, hill graves, ruines, caves...
I enjoy your videos for many reasons. Thank you.
@@hiddenvalleybushcraft5683 Absolutely. I loved my father, this grumpy old man, so much. We two went on adventures all the time and he just let me be and supported my need of liberty. When I watch your videos, I always enjoy such lovely memories and of course the informations you provide. Thank you. again.
Great video. BTW, there is a good book on this subject called the The Natural Navigator by Tristan Gooley
great video, took me back to my days in the Scout movement where we learned a lot of this valuable information
Some of us live in desert-like areas. How about some tips for surviving the heat, afternoon siestas, bringing all of your water, or whatever else your travels have taught you? Great Videos! Thanks. I am not saying that you have to travel to the desert to make a video, you could just do it indoors at the table like a conversation.
My missus calls me the homing pigeon, no matter how far we travel my instinct always gets us back to the starting point. Probably years of total luck but I swear I have an internal compass 😆
YOUR VIDEOS, IN GENERAL, ARE VERY HELPFUL, SIMPLE, TARGETED, STRAIGHT FORWARD AND KNOWLEDGABLE. KEEP GOING. THE WORD HELIOTROPE IS A GREEK WORD ΗΛΙΟΤΡΟΠΙΟ. HELIO IS THE SUN AND TROPE IS THE WAY. THE WAY THAT SUN MOVES. THANKS FOR THE KNOWLEDGE.
You give a lot more information than other bushcraft videos. 👍🌲⛺🌲 Toronto Ontario Canada.
One afternoon i set out from camp to go for a short walk in the bush. At some point i had put down my camera and had set off without it.I tried retracing my steps but to no avail. I set out again next morning and managed to retrace MOST of my old route. However, there was a spot that, although familiar, didn't "quite" make sense. Couldn't find the camera so i had an idea. To go BACK at the same time as my first trip. This put the afternoon sun in the same place. MUCH easier. EVERYTHING looked as i remembered including a tree covered in orange fungi that had "glowed" in the afternoon sun. Of course being in shade in the morning meant it just looked grey and was all but unseen. I followed my old trail with ease and,,,,,found my camera. You are quite right about looking around you and looking at nature. The COLOUR of things at different times also helps
Great instructional video. Here's a useful but obscure navigational tip from the Yup'ik people of Siberia. if you are lost in fog, and you have a knife or other shiny reflective flat surface on you, wet it so there are drops of water on it. Hold it in front of you, upright at eye level. Now turn around 360 degrees. As you turn, the droplets will sparkle at the point where the sun is directly behind you.
I really appreciate your cancel on CZcams.
It explain your learning so strate and om point.
The explanation from buchkraft/military go so well .
And it's a good reminder for may time in the military,and what i do Whit buchkraft/hunting now . To Agen tack you so much for your efforts you give us all .
Ty from Sweden .
Thanks so much. Things you brought up I learned from scouts but few more things about really looking at surroundings and watching sun movement. I did not realize to look at which tree branches are growing. In one of your other videos you carry a black book to write notes. Great tips.
Your humbleness is refreshing. Thank you for sharing your knowledge 😊
Thank you. Really enjoyed this video. Getting lost in the Canadian bush can be a real slog and every bit of knowledge can keep you on track.
Phenomenal video sir.
Great knowledge of the environment.
Thanks for sharing your knowledge. 😎👍
Nuff respect to the both of you good luck best wishes thanks for your service great content educational and interesting
Great explanations, I've used "indicators" for years to supplement other forms of navigation but never seen anybody try to explain or teach them. Please make more of the same.
Excellent. Simply interpret things you see everyday.
storms of 87'
loving the content,
might be worth mentioning that some of these methods by themselves can be misleading (moss, wind) and your best bet is to always carry a compass and a map of the area (even if its a rough hand drawn sketch with the main details).
Thanks Nick. Excellent piece. I love the way you bypass the US style macho/survivalist stuff and teach real skills for a very real world. Also I very much appreciate the way you incorporate tne psychological into the living
world.experience. Wonderful. Thanks. Peter.
So true. I hate that zombie apocalypse angle from the US shows.
@@elmarobberts5128 hah, yes the "Preppers'....
Good vid mate..i am ex Mob too.....another tip is that if you see a Scouse Bird in High Heels Crop Top and tight shorts that doesnt mean its winter in the UK and you could very easily lose which direction you are facing by keeping a close eye on her.... I am a Manc and i once got lost Christmas shopping in Liverpool and didny fnd my way home until late Febuary
For all the Muslims out there, satellite dishes face Mecca, to find the direction of prayer! Great video. Thank you.
Really like this video. The stuff you talked about is not really new to me but you did it in a way that made think about it again. The things I do intuitively I will now try to do more consious and other things I know and talk about a lot, I didn't think about using to navigate.
Thanks a lot and greetings from Austria
I’m always grateful for the sun. The route is easy.
Thank you. That was great fun.
If you fell out of a plane and landed in the middle of no where, then you would of been a Para LOL, Really enjoy these vids and who better to teach than an ex Marine, (or Para) seems like so much information you explain it very well. 👍🇬🇧👍
Thank you, Nick. That's awesome
I am having to do mental reversals in my head throughout the whole video. I live in Australia The sun is to our NORTH.I did do the Duke of Edinborough award in my youth in Cardiff, during the mid 60's. Still great to know
Greetings from Oregon brother Nick thanks really enjoy your vids and thanks for not editing out normal human things that happened during filming 😀
This took me back to the Cub Scouts aged 7. I didn’t appreciate it back then - when am I ever going to need this I thought.
Fast forward to the LRRRPS school, blindfold off in the middle of a forest at 2300hrs and ‘crack on’ I wished I’d listened more closely!
Map and compass basics, orientating the map to the ground, resections, intersections, pacing on a bearing at night/in bad weather, orienteering tricks/hacks may seem boring but may help some folks out there who end up in trouble. A small series of lessons in bite sized chunks I think may be a hit.
Enjoyed this very much Nick, we’ve all been a tad confused now and then.
Brilliant video and thanks for your service 👍
‘Heliotrope’....... yip, I’ll be using that lol - If I can slip that into conversation 3 times today it’ll be mine to keep 🤞🏻🤣
Heliotrope is also a purple colour , one of the few colours I like but nothing is ever called that anymore , it's all just purple or lilac
Thanks for sharing this! 🙏
I use “Never Eat Shredded Wheat” too 😆 I once got very lost in the Black Mountains of Wales. I completely underestimated the poor visibility, and after a couple of hours of walking, certain that I should come across a road, it started to get dark. That’s when I started to feel very disoriented and not exactly panicked, but certainly very uneasy. In this state, it’s easy to make bad decisions, but it was a great lesson in making sure that I’m well prepared and practiced in navigation, because what seems easy when you’re doing it for fun, is much harder when you get a dose of reality 😂 Great video and tips, Nick. Cheers 👍🏻
Thanks, Nick. That’s a great little video.
Thanks Nick for this video, very informative.
Great video Nick, thank you
Naughty, Elephants, Squirt, Water lol. love the vids Nick really enjoying them mate
This is great and invaluable Royal thank you👍
I love what you are doing and will definitely pass on
Great video - thanks Nick
good video always good to keep the basics up together and the rest will follow
Thank you for this , really useful information and will be something I’m going to try next time I’m in the outdoors 👍
this has been a most informative video. my hat is off to you sir.
Amazing tips! Thank you very much for the information in this video! These tips are going to be very helpful
Really good. Thanks for some very useful and helpful tips.
Very useful. Thank you very much!
That was really great!!!
As Always Nick , Great Video , Excellent Presentation , and Enjoyable ! . Best Wishes To You and All , Keep Up The Good Work . Many Thanks , Allan .
Loved this! I was taught this 40+ years ago but had completely forgotten about it, graduated to map and compass which I am probably rusty (at best) with through to tech. Thanks Nick, the old brain just woke up 😀
A very generous lesson thanks again for sharing your skills and knowledge. Right, I’m off out to practice!
Brilliant video and topic dude! Il never see the landscape in the same way. Those bits of knowledge almost ads a 4th dimension to the world around you. Fascinating and empowering stuff 👍
Informative, well presented and full of handy tips and tricks. Well done 👍👏👌
Great video, a big eye opener there! Keep up the great content!
Don't know how I missed this when it came out. Really good info. Thanks for sharing my friend, and I wouldn't mind more land nav training 🤠
I love shredded wheat....I taught my kids( they still remember)...Never Eat Soggy Waffles...lol thanks for making the video.
Top video. Amazing skills
Great video. Its always useful to see how lime gauged brickwork chimneys on older buildings tend to lean towards the sun. The warm side loses moisture first and shrinks and water evaporates from the joints. The shaded side holds moisture longer and expands which creates a curve. The prevailing wind may also influence the curve but much less so. But, I suppose that's why you included the image of the chimneys.
Never eat shredded wheat...brilliant mate😂great videos nick👌✌️
beautiful channel, brother. i love your approach. thanks for all the exceptional content.
Very useful vid - many thanks (once got seriously lost in the Highlands - could have done with this then!) 👍
Excellent information.
I once got very turned around in the middle of Seoul Korea, for at least and hour was more than a little irritating, so many tall building, where I was at I couldn't get my barring on the big tower or surrounding mountains.. finally found a subway station I recognized..
Terrific video, once again. I like the fact that you treat different subjects, navigation being one of them. Certainly because getting lost sneaks up to you 😀.
Really helpful, many thanks!
HOPE YOU & FAMILY ARE WELL THANK YOU FOR YOUR TIME AND YOUR VIDEO HAS HELPED ME IN MORE EDUCATION WHICH IS ALWAYS A GOOD THING GREAT VIDEO NICK HAVE A BLESSED DAY...😁🙏
Really interesting as always you explain things so very well .
ATB Graham
This was a very informative video Nick. I am a member of a local search and rescue team and we are always training on navigation. More tools in the toolbox for sure. I also spend a great deal of time in the woods on my own, and am looking forward to becoming more observant to nature's clues... :)
Great video, one of the best videos I have seen on natural navigation indicators. Always better to look all around you so that you can see nature. Not just head down and walk on a path. I love a good wander.
before the pandemic collapsed the gym I went to, my best training partner in Muay Thai was a Royal Marine, also an old school mate is a Royal Marine, always so humble, polite, pleasent, and a reassuring confidence about them. Nothing but love for our Marines, the world's finest. Top class mate. I'm wondering if you are going to do any courses once these restrictions dissipate? I was looking into doing John "lofty" Wiseman's courses before but I believe he has retired now. Would be a great experience with someone such as yourself at the helm..
Probably the best vid yet, informative yet fun. I like the reference to the cross over from survival skills to normal life challenges 'I know I can get through this'. Perhaps more vids on facing fears? controlling breathing, positive affirmations etc . The reasons why we don't do stuff, 'What if this happens! it will be a disaster!' No it'll be a bit shit but if I do these things Ill make it. Keep it up, it's important stuff these days.
yes I liked that about it too, great video and good comment :) I love that about those crossovers and how you can learn about one from the other, and those internal skills as well as the external ones. I reckon its like 'mindfulness': learning how to keep paying attention when you are out navigating, both from positive and negative distractions from your mind - you get a quick 'learning experience' when your mind wanders and suddenly realise you now have to spend a bunch of time getting re-orientated and those internal things you mention Stuart are as vital at those times as the technical skills arn't they, and like you say that translates directly in to other areas of life
According to the ent Treebeard, "going South - somehow it feels like going downhilll...".
I wouldn't rely on that...
brilliant video Nick
Top tip. Raise a pigeon from an egg, when it can fly, take it with you when you go out. When you get lost, fasten a length of paracord to it's leg, tie one end to your belt and let your feathered friend take you home! Natural navigation right there! ;)
Apart from my tip, some excellent things to try next time I'm out. Thank you
Hello Nick! I appreciate learning new ways on how to find directions, N E S W, I will store n my mind about the trees, moss and flower blooms, as for using the sticks to make a shadow caused by the sun can be just as iffy as what I learned if I don’t have anything to tell the time of day (watch/ cell phone) I learned that if I wake to the sun coming up n the morning, facing the sun will tell me that I’m facing East, that my back is to the West, making my right arm facing South, and left arm facing North, without a way to tell time, both ways r great for giving directions, but there has always been a question nibbling at the back of my brain on knowing my way of directions, and now learning ur way ( without having a watch or cell phone for the correct time of day) let’s just say that for some reason I, someone follow these directions, and when the sun is positioned between sunrise and straight up (noon) the between could be around 9, 10 am, the problem that bothers me is, what if for some reason the person passes out due to a head injury, a foggy brain due to illness and wakes up when it’s now 3,4pm, thinking it’s still a.m. time, (no time to make note of a land mark, or the brain functioning enough to say hey, I need to make a mark of direction before I passed out) it would be a shame to head back n the direction from which one came if the person thought that they were out for only a moment. What would u do???? I also know another way to tell directions at night, but only if the moon is out and shaped like a fingernail, the point at the bottom always points South. Thank u
Tolles Video, gut und verständlich erklärt. Danke fürs zeigen! Gruß Torsten
Superb instruction again Nick, I especially liked the examples of Heliotropism, I had never thought of why there would be more branches on one side vs the other, really good ahhh moment for me
Very keen to see more of this nav stuff, it really is my Kryptonite 🙄
Seriously cool channel, thank you .
Yeaaaaah!!!!!!!!!!!!! Damn!!!!! Excellent stuff you mentioned about urban aerias!!! I decided to sub after that tip. And it actually logic but one doesnt think about it always
That was very interesting - thanks. I look forward to future nav videos, but in the meantime I'd better get practicing!