INCH Bag: What to bring when you're never coming home!

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  • čas přidán 5. 09. 2024
  • If you look back throughout history, the mountain men, trappers, men, and women that went west in cover wagons had more than what they carried on their backs. nonetheless, it is an extreme and interesting concept.

Komentáře • 40

  • @BobJohnson-xg9ng
    @BobJohnson-xg9ng Před 5 měsíci +9

    I think the TV series Alone is an eye-opening tutorial on remote living. Of course, gear is limited to 10 items, with no seed or tools for long-term habitation, but it does graphically illustrate the difficulties (near impossibilities) of long-term survival even by seasoned experts

    • @theaveragewoodsman6002
      @theaveragewoodsman6002  Před 5 měsíci +1

      Agreed.

    • @saggot420son
      @saggot420son Před 5 měsíci +1

      100%. I believe this concept of an INCH bag would do well to be focused almost entirely on tools to help yoy build stuff with natural material

    • @spatialinterpretations449
      @spatialinterpretations449 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@saggot420son Carry seed in INCH bag is a good idea

  • @apepex1464
    @apepex1464 Před 5 měsíci +2

    I believe in the BTB (back to basic), KISS, and three use rules. I remember watching a documentary about a Canadian Indian who carried one large axe and the clothes he was wearing. He was able to make shelter, produce fire, make a trap and catch a pig, and also carb a canoe with paddles. All the gears you have are still considered luxuries, the final and best test for being prepared is the skills needed when all physical equipment is lost or stolen.

  • @Neckbeard-lt8mi
    @Neckbeard-lt8mi Před 5 měsíci +3

    Seeds will be worth gold.

  • @donalddicorcia2433
    @donalddicorcia2433 Před 5 měsíci +5

    I’d add a few things if you’re really serious about living in the wilderness. Think tools. A medium to full size axe (or at least an axe head), a small draw knife, a good hoe head, a small shovel head. A pound or two of open-pollinated, heirloom vegetable seeds can feed you forever without having to spend the energy ranging over miles and mikes to forage edibles.

    • @theaveragewoodsman6002
      @theaveragewoodsman6002  Před 5 měsíci

      An axe is something that I don't need in my area, so I chose not to carry one. I thought about a shoved, my Cold Steel but I don't want the pack to way too much. Seeds aren't a bad idea.

    • @h.nicolejorgensen2077
      @h.nicolejorgensen2077 Před 5 dny

      But who would really be going into the “wild woods “ to do this? What is your logic? We need each other and nobody is an island. I don’t think this is sustainable or realistic. I think we would do better to make a stronger community and not try to live off the land as a lone wolf. Just saying it sounds exciting but I don’t think many will be able to do this.

  • @Joshcooper21
    @Joshcooper21 Před 5 měsíci +2

    Appreciate you being thorough and explaining why you choose each item. I’m a Kentucky boy so mine is setup a little differently but many of the same tactics. Great vid!!

  • @apollo9356
    @apollo9356 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Good video I have similar setup, biggest difference is cold weather sleep system, food and weapons system. I went with just vacuum sealed bags of rice, trail mix, and a bottle of multi vitamins. Ar15, and a .22 pistol.

    • @davidturner3014
      @davidturner3014 Před 5 měsíci +1

      A groundhog sleeps in a hole and are delicious... A bird sleeps in a nest, well... Not exactly. And fish travel in schools, not herds. (But they are delicious too.)

  • @mikelgeren149
    @mikelgeren149 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Yip , food is #1 prioty .
    Got seeds ? Garden tools ? One could make garden tools , but of steel ? Need soap , bucket , cleaning kit for firarms .
    I've got most everything needed , but time has run out for me , there is no way that I could hack it .

  • @pennsyltuckyreb9800
    @pennsyltuckyreb9800 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I've gone back and forth over the years over the INCH bag. While it is unrealistic.... it could also be very necessary depending on the situation.
    Obviously, it's an absolute last survival resort option.
    But I've been through several major SHTF events in my life and the reason they were was because we had no choice but to permanently bug out and leave to never return (house fire, house flood, tornado, etc).
    Mine is minimalist, but also "tool heavy" to be long-term sustainable and bombproof. For a full winter setup in Northern woodlands, it's hard not to hit around the 40lb mark, even being minimalist about it.

  • @RUreddynow
    @RUreddynow Před 5 měsíci +4

    Holy moly... how much does that weigh? I mean, i like all of it, but how far are you gonna get? You need a smaller pack with just the necessities. In case you have to ditch that big one. Thx for the vid.

  • @kevinroberson1985
    @kevinroberson1985 Před 5 měsíci

    I'm a backwoods old country boy in rural southern Georgia and my backpack and equipment is pretty much the same as yours but I have a 22lr conversion cmmg for my 5.56 223 caliber AR and the reason I choose the 22 cal is I can take any game with it even deer if you place your shot in the right place like the head and I can carry one or two bricks of 22lr that's 500 rds. In one brick and that's if I'm not coming back home and staying in the wilderness for a long time and I always have a small cleaning kit for my rifle and spare parts like fireing pin cotter keys shell extractors and springs and a magnet incase I drop a part and can't see it I'm pretty sure the magnet will be glad big help and I carry salt and pepper and other seasonings in my packs other than that I have pretty much the same as yours and a bivy bag and ranger roll sleep system and tarp

  • @liveyourtruth88
    @liveyourtruth88 Před 5 měsíci

    That’s awesome man! Who knew so much could fit in that pack! Great video 😁

  • @davidturner3014
    @davidturner3014 Před 5 měsíci

    Shelter, water and food. Repeat. Shelter, water and food. There are those guys... Just a knife. Can do. (I cheat, big ass butane lighter, a berry pickin' pot that I bought at Walmart to boil water, nuts... And two knives, one for cutting. One for digging.)

  • @danieldille8676
    @danieldille8676 Před 4 měsíci

    Would need seeds to plant a garden

  • @danielgrubb9668
    @danielgrubb9668 Před 2 měsíci

    Impossible task…but you have to try.

  • @ZakiShiyam
    @ZakiShiyam Před 5 dny

    Bro at one point you are going to run out of the amo you would have brought a good bow and arrow

  • @user-McGiver
    @user-McGiver Před 5 měsíci +1

    good thing this is mental exercise because you pack too light!...
    I've done it before, for 4 years, turning a cave in the mountains into a home... just for the experience 30 years ago [in my 30s] and I went there with my truck full of everything...
    what I would leave behind?... the radio first of all... the rifle second, [the pistol for self-def. would be enough] self-bow and arrow building skills, 50 arrowheads, and 3-5 spearheads would be enough for many years [you need 3 arrows to go hunting] also nets!... you can make traps for birds and animals, also catch fish... multiple spares for filtering water, and much more...
    In a real scenario, trapping, foraging and scavenging will be the daily routine... why scavenging?... because most likely I'm not the only one ''gone''... most unlucky ones are ''gone forever''... If that's not the case [seciaty's gone] then I wouldn't be running away... I did it as an experiment once already!

    • @theaveragewoodsman6002
      @theaveragewoodsman6002  Před 5 měsíci

      Well, if I don't have connivance than it all has to fit on my back (which was the point of the video). I put the items that would help ME survive for long-term in my pack.

  • @alnath2749
    @alnath2749 Před 4 měsíci

    The batteries are not going to last forever. I have a small portable solar panel in my backpack.

  • @davidturner3014
    @davidturner3014 Před 5 měsíci

    How many layers (Puffers...)are you wearing under your "Frogg Toggs" Other... "Rain Gear"?

  • @jason7033
    @jason7033 Před dnem

    How many feet do you have on the yoyo reel? How pound line is it?

    • @theaveragewoodsman6002
      @theaveragewoodsman6002  Před dnem

      The Yoyo comes with around 10 feet of nylon line on it, and I just add about 2 feet of 12-pound mono leader.

    • @jason7033
      @jason7033 Před dnem

      @@theaveragewoodsman6002 would u think of off adding sas takedown bow or crosman 1322 for long-term hunting? Both weight lil over 2 pounds

    • @theaveragewoodsman6002
      @theaveragewoodsman6002  Před dnem

      @@jason7033 A takedown bow is definitely an option. I have a Sage Takedown Recurve bow that I use every year during bow season.

  • @mountainman.4478
    @mountainman.4478 Před 5 měsíci

    Really awesome video! What part of Florida do you live in? Im in orlando. If you want to make contact, let me know. We can talk survival and EDC...ect. my wife keeps telling me to reach someone with the same interest.

    • @theaveragewoodsman6002
      @theaveragewoodsman6002  Před 5 měsíci

      Thanks! I live in the Tampa Bay area. I'd like that. Message me on Instagram. instagram.com/anthonyhale1984

    • @mountainman.4478
      @mountainman.4478 Před 5 měsíci

      @theaveragewoodsman6002 Thanks I just did. I'm following you on Instagram now

  • @dieselfrk13
    @dieselfrk13 Před 2 měsíci

    If I did a inch bag I would have a bow. Edit in addition to what you have.