Channels and videos about outdoor/bushcraft/survival?
Ever since I saw the first season of 7 vs Wild on YT, I've been hooked on the topic and I'd be interested to know which good and informative channels and videos you know or can recommend on the topic of survival.
For my taste the main focus would be on areas similar to Germany/Austria, as that is more relevant to me than a rainforest as an example, but I'm open to anything as long as you can learn a lot from it, which is the most important thing.
I don't care whether German or English is spoken.
By the way, here is a very good and relevant preparation video for 7 vs Wild Season 2, from which you can learn a lot, if anyone is interested:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kLDNEm7ARNU&ab_channel=SaschaHuber
I'm looking forward to your suggestions. 😊
If you want to learn something, I don’t understand why you keep “7 vs. Wild” so high, but no matter what, this is not about…
Which channels I feel as informative and instructive (or have felt, because some in the meantime have actively stopped creating new content):
This was just a small selection that came to my mind spontaneously. You can discover many more channels if you simply search the search words on YouTube “bushcraft german” search.
Then, of course, there are also “individual savings” from these themes which are covered more by certain channels:
This, too, is only a few that I have taken out of the great mass of the channels I know. What could be of interest to you and what you want to see in more detail is what I do not know.
Here’s another candidate, the whole thing as a satire in which: Outdoor Illner. Is something special…
Well, because 7 vs Wild was virtually the great initiator with me and I still find it extremely interesting to see how the people there are all who are mostly not experts… Like myself.
Especially as a beginner, I’ve been able to learn a hell of a lot in Staffel 1. So even the very rough basics, so what is even a tarp, etc. 😄
But also how important, for example, is a sleeping bag and what things you don’t even have on the screen, which can be dangerous, etc. How little tools you actually need to survive. To the people themselves, of course, a connection is also partly established, etc.
As a result, I also became a Fritz Meinecke and SurvivalMattin Subscriber, whereby I came to Marc Lehmann, Survival Germany, Wandermut, Naturensöhne, Otto (Bulletproof). So I am currently quite fresh in this bubble on the way to this topic, but even without any significant experience regarding “Survival”. Just keep so little things that you can stop as someone who has almost always lived in the country, surrounded by forests and meadows. With Bear Grylls and Co on DMAX you have grown up, which was probably the first significant survival point of contact with me.
However, I find very good that with 7 vs Wild this theme is so honed compared after I feel that now as very important related to much.
I realize, however, that it was a good idea to ask this question here after a lot has already come in with 3 answers, which I absolutely do not know. In the sense, thank you! 😊
I understand.
OK, you always see things differently depending on the perspective you look at them. 👍
Thank you for your detailed answer and apologise when it came to you as a “demand” that was not directed against you.
If you like “7 vs. Wild”, then look on the net or on corresponding partition channels on the TV, there is a series called “Alone” (is a series from the American History Channel), where Fritz looked there. His series is “alone for arms” if I can call it that.
In Alone you can see people of whom some really have on it and who can stand out somewhere under significantly more extreme conditions for an unlimited time(!) (so not “only 7 days” with previously known end date). And the one who is completely alone on the longitudinal side won.
All right, I won’t take you mad.
I heard about that. I’m sure I need to look in good quality. Sounds extremely interesting. ECT
I can understand your interest very well. Also I watch when ironing or so like to see Vanessa Blank (“Outdoor Bavaria”) or Lonny (“far north bushcraft and survival”). There are many others. But make sure that you don’t hang under the tarp with the drought-five millionth overnighter, or you’re getting rid of Gear-junkies. Always make sure that you get either good information (Sacki and Ben were already mentioned) or that the videos are at least aesthetically sophisticated (Vanessa, Azze of the Buschpirat).
More importantly, something else. At the last time, in the forum, I pushed someone to blame and helped him that the real life of the unsharp area is outside his phone display. And I’d like to invite you to this real life. That’s why: Youtube is very nice if you’re sick in bed or what you have to do, where you can watch something. Or if you are looking for a very specific info, for example how to make a certain node. But otherwise:
Get out!
Let’s go.
Reini Rossmann Survival Art
Survival Lilly
Sacki-Survival
Forester Brehm
Natural Sons
The Sons of Nature will take you to the wrong track. They’re building and wringing what that means. But the most important thing they can not: leave the forest as it is. You don’t have real forest runners. But many think they have to build the forest with huts and something like the natural sons. They only take the Zunft in Verruf and the forest looks like the Vosges in the First World War. 🙁
Turned at a lake where you had to watch it wasn’t a street or even houses in the picture.
Narten Lake ;
Where most of this is about what Bushcraft is going to be banned anyway. No wonder it’s not liked to see in D. There are too many people who exaggerate.
If you do this in Scandinavia, the Romanian Carpathians, or the need somewhere in Poland.
You can forget all the self-actors there. Read some good books on the subject and is good. This is how you experience the subject for yourself and not only do what others have already done: https://www.asmc.de/other/buecher/abenteuer-survival-buecher/
Doesn’t matter if streets or houses are nearby.
The process was not affected, apart from a few finds like Heringe(for tent or tarp) there.
We are not talking about the right survival if you want to take it literally. It’s just a challenge if you’re staying through for 7 days in such a situation that’s not that easy for someone who’s not a professional.
Nevertheless, for beginners very interesting and exciting, whether as a viewer or a participant. For some professionals, too. The perspective you have for yourself. The fact that the topic of Outdoor/Bushcraft/Survival is brought more into generality is also very important.
Do not pretend that I am in a forbidden way in D or Ö, but if then with permission of the owner or in my own forest and quasi in a correct way. As someone who grew up in the countryside and lives there, surrounded by forests and meadows, you know how to behave there, etc.
Don’t think I’m doing a hardcore experience, including a castle, with everything. I don’t even know if I do this voluntarily. It is primarily intended for extremes and pure interest to make the whole smart, so minimalist as possible.
But I can imagine that this can generally make problems, especially as a owner. Ideally, leave the forest the way it was. Keeping your own tracks as small as possible would be very appropriate and should be of course.
I understand the subject of books what you mean, but I don’t think I’m doing the subject of Survival to the main focus in my life and I’m not on books. I like to do what others do. Not all of a person, but much of some people. There are many approaches to everything you have already indicated. I don’t have to reinvent the wheel, but I’d like to turn acquainted. In addition, it is still not excluded that you are experimenting around and doing various things in your own way. There is even one thing that I would do differently myself, as seemingly everyone else feels. Go to the fire after the Tinder burns.
As I said, everything will take place with me with a high probability on a small scale, or as good as not at all.
But thank you for your opinion and the link.
Backpacker Wilderness
Azze of the Buschpirate
Mountains
Man in the forest