It Took 9 Months to Complete This Jungle Survival Micro Pouch
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- čas přidán 14. 06. 2023
- Urban Knife Guy shares his latest updated jungle survival micro pouch that has evolved over a 9-month period.
This self-contained kit is carried on his belt and covers a wide variety of tools, gear and equipment to help with 24-hour to 48-hour survival situations.
This survival pouch was designed for his specific skillset and environment which is tropical jungles.
The kit was designed to be as compact as possible. So everything is limited to a Maxpedition Micro Pouch. It is small but not light. However, it is very compact overall considering the items inside.
The survival pouch for hiking was put together using Dave Canterbury's 5Cs of Survival but also includes other functionality.
The 5Cs of Survival are:
- Cutting
- Coverage
- Cordage
- Combustion
- Container
Some other functions this survival pouch has include:
- Illumination
- Signal
- First Aid
- Power
- Repair
- Navigation
If you like the content, you can support the channel by shopping at the Urban Knife Guy Amazon Store and Bashcraft Gear store to buy the knives, gear, and kits for urban EDC and jungle survival that I use and discuss in my videos as well as swag and merch. Thanks!
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Urban Survival Tin for Disruption, Disaster & Attack
Check out Urban Knife Guy's take on a survival tin designed to increase chances of survival and rescue or escape specifically in an urban environment should things go bad.
• How to Build an Urban ...
Download the free Urban Survival Tin guide with details, photos and product links for the different items inside the tin at urbanknifeguy.com
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If you like the content, you can support the channel by shopping at the Urban Knife Guy Amazon Store and Bashcraft Gear store to buy the knives, gear, and kits for urban EDC and jungle survival that I use and discuss in my videos as well as swag and merch. Thanks!
Great! I also live and work in jungle (Amazon) areas, and I sure did learn from your kit! I'd comment on a few things:
- you could lose the duct tape roll, and have heavy duty tape rolled around all other round items you have.
- perhaps some of that tinder could make room for other things
- flashlight and powerbank could be combined on a single unit, that could have a small solar panel equipped on it.
- I would carry another small but dedicated and more sturdy compass
- I would trade that multitool for a SOG Powerpint, equally equiped but more compact.
Just a few ideas. Great work!
Thanks for all the good suggestions! Nice! I think the Amazon is a little harsher than Southeast Asian jungles. But with my high-level skill and experience, I am confident I can survive for a whole 13 minutes alone in the wild.
i like the little light for navigating the pouch, i could use one of those for my vehicle edc trunk
Very nice kit, but as you said, you definitely have to upgrade the pouch to mini. The seams seem too stretched out...
Thanks. Now I know how a girl feels when she is told she looks fat.
For a small kit it’s packed with essentials
Thank you and thanks for watching!
Really good video 👏👏👏
Thank you! Thanks for watching!
That small light hanging is a nice idea thanks!
You are welcoming. Thanks!
Really enjoy your channel. Excellent reviews
Thank you very much! Glad you like the content!
An excellent and well thought out kit. You might want to consider a couple water purification tabs to go with the ziplock bag. They're small and don't take up much space. And are good in case you are unable to boil water.
Thanks so much! Yes, Puri Tabs are in that small ziplock bag with basic first aid items.
So to add on to the idea of the steril pad, you should put a little thing of ointment you can use for bug bites, burns or cuts
I do have a full first aid kit in my pack but doesn't hurt to have more. Thanks!
Very cool
Thanks!
I'm not sure, maybe it's in your med kit, but living in the jungle, the FIRST thing I pack is some kind of bug juice. I went through Jungle Warfare School in Panama a couple times when I was in the military, and I lived in the swamps of Louisiana, and mosquitos were all unreal.
I use large perfume sample vials I bought new ones online and filled them with my favorite bug juice. These are basically enough for one application just to get you through the night or whatever but can be refilled of course. I also wrap the vials with some duct tape, because even though those are a tough heavy-duty glass, but nevertheless, they're still GLASS. I've never broke one, but glass is GLASS.
I also took an empty eye drop bottle, Visine, and filled it with bug juice for kits where I have a little more room. That bottle holds a half ounce and is good for a few days of applications. Just pull the tip out, clean it out, refill it, snap the tip back on and you're good to go. Keep up the great work.
Thanks. This is not my med kit. I have a separate kit and FAD for that. This is an all-in-one redundancy pouch that is on my belt - along with military issued bug spray! czcams.com/video/-VmJi2JcUuE/video.htmlsi=u5lCxzoFg44SH-o1
An excellent presentation in content and delivery. Your selection of items is balanced and utilitarian. Great Big Monkey suggests a bright blue color is better for identifying objects that have fallen especially among deciduous leaves which, themselves, may be red and orange. 'Great job again!
Thanks for the kind words. Yes, bright blue makes sense. I guess in the jungles I am in, in this geographic area, we don't really have orange/ red leaves since we don't have distinct seasons. But we do get red and the occasional orange flowers. But yes, blue will stand out more. Thanks for watching.
@@urbanknifeguy You really do great work and I appreciate it. I would also love to enjoy your environment!
@@brucermarino thanks again. You won't love the humidity and commando-trained mosquitoes 😅
@@urbanknifeguy 🦟 :)
Can you link all or most of the items that you have in the kit in the description please thanks. Cool kit btw
Thanks. OK. I will work on that. Thanks.
@@urbanknifeguy thanks dude I am going to try and make a kit like yours
In the jungle, you can't remember your name!
I can't remember a lot of things in the jungle.
Im sorry, but, I take issue with this entire video.
Every single item in that bag looks brand new and unused.
How can you make a video,about any tool, if you have never used that tool for the intended purpose?
I honestly do not believe you have ANY experience with anything you are talking about, and I invite you too prove me wrong.
I believe you are just restating things that you have seen on other channels, hoping to get views.
Again, I invite you to prove me wrong.
For myself, I am a retired Infantry NCO having served in Airborne light Infantry units like the 503rd and Heavy Armor units like 3rd ACR.
Ive served in most NATO nations from Asia to Western Europe. I have had multiple schools, JUNGLE WARFARE EXPERT is one of the badges I wear.
Again....I invite you to prove me wrong, show us yourself using these items in the jungle, and how well they work in different environments and inclement weather.
Nice! While no experience in airborne light infantry, once armour, always armour. Being cramped up in an APC with your FBO or, in my case, M113 at the Battalion HQ level, is something I honestly don't miss 😅. But, we were spoiled, at least we had vehicles and walked way less than infantry. Whether it was operating in the Southeast Asian jungle (our home ground) or deserts in Australia, we still had to dismount and practice fieldcraft. However, when it rained, we didn't have to sit in the rain in ponchos but could stay dry inside enduring leaks through hatches, unless you were on sentry duty. And, the bonus was combat rations could be heated up in the engine compartment without firing up the esbit stoves and mess tins. I just got flashbacks driving closed hatched with NVDs hearing the 0.5 calibre rounds going off overhead while the static chatter rings through my CVC *shudder*... But, long gone are the days of bringing service-issued equipment out field and OVM that needs to be condemned and reissued by the CQ. After years of section, company, battalion and division level training/ exercises, gear takes a beating, and I admit, I did not take as good care of my kit as I do now. Which is kind of ironic as the stakes were much higher then. Well, now, I get to pick my own gear for pleasure, use, maintain, and replace them as I need and am not answerable to anyone. Ah, the beauty of being a civilian. I apologise that the content does not appeal to you and I'm sure there is much better alternative content available elsewhere. Thanks!