24 Hour Overnight Camp - Part 1

This video is Part one of a two part series.
In this episode, we set off into the NSW bush for a 24 hour overnight camp. We look at what equipment I'm using, how to pack it, sourcing and filtering water, fire preparation and management and a variety of bush skills. See part two for setting up and packing down a hoochie, sleeping in the bush, fishing, making a bush toilet and camp craft. (coming soon)
Hope you enjoy the episode and thanks for watching.
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Bushcraft Survival Australia (BSA):
Gear and Merchandise: www.survivalsupplies.com.au/b...
Try one of our courses: bushcraftsurvivalaustralia.co...
Learn about Gordo and BSA: • About this channel
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Insta - / bushcraftsurvivalaustr...
FB - / bushcraftsurvivalaustr...
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Links to other products used in the episode can be found below:
Fjallraven Kanken Pack - alnk.to/e70gZnA
Dragons Breath Ferro Rod - www.survivalsuppliesaustralia...
Bushcraft Survival Australia t-shirt - bit.ly/3J0U1Wv
Klean Kanteen stainless steel water bottles - bit.ly/3nSvys4
Fjallraven Vida Pro Trousers - alnk.to/60TpSzj
Bushcraft Survival Australia Bandanas - bit.ly/3nQ8iem
550 paracord - bit.ly/3nQeK5b
Sleeping Bag - www.survivalsupplies.com.au/s...
Sleeping Mat - www.survivalsupplies.com.au/s...
Dry Bag - www.over-board.com.au/product...
Poncho - www.survivalsupplies.com.au/h...
Tarp (Hoochie) - altongoods.com/products/3mx3m...
Saw - www.survivalsupplies.com.au/b...
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This video is presented by Gordon Dedman, founder of Bushcraft Survival Australia (BSA). Bushcraft Survival Australia is an outdoor bushcraft survival school dedicated to teaching genuine and authentic modern and traditional outdoor living skills through carefully designed educational courses.
Gordon Dedman is currently the survival/bushcraft consultant for the “Alone Australia” TV series.
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This video was filmed and edited by Alex Ugarte - www.alexugarte.com
#survivaltips #bushcraft #survival

Пікірлер: 60

  • @EamonWanders
    @EamonWanders5 күн бұрын

    Bloody awesome, a million times better than the majority of the bushcraft/outdoors videos out there. Bout time you made something like this, Gordon. Super informative and takes me back to doing the course with you last year. Keep it up. All the best.

  • @BushcraftSurvivalAustralia

    @BushcraftSurvivalAustralia

    3 күн бұрын

    Glad you enjoyed it. Thanks for watching

  • @lukefeain1836
    @lukefeain18368 күн бұрын

    That was the most educational overnight camping video I’ve ever seen. The whole video was great, I especially liked navigation tips. I’m looking forward to part 2.

  • @susrev88
    @susrev884 күн бұрын

    this is a great video. great sound, great shots, great presentation, tons of actually useful information with demonstration. great balance of shots, talk, info and demonstration. no bs, no gimmick, etc. you're onto something with this concept!

  • @BushcraftSurvivalAustralia

    @BushcraftSurvivalAustralia

    3 күн бұрын

    Much appreciated, thanks for watching

  • @Maryland_Kulak
    @Maryland_Kulak8 күн бұрын

    One trick I learned along the way was to break of a length of dead twig and hold it in front of my face as I walk along when there are a lot of spider webs. It works even better if the twig is forked. When I was in the US Army, I would hold the barrel of my rifle out almost at “present arms” while patrolling through webby areas to achieve the same effect. I also feel bad about messing up the poor spiders’ webs! You’re a kind person.

  • @williammurray7632
    @williammurray76328 күн бұрын

    Great skills,thank you from South Africa.

  • @toxicq2677
    @toxicq26778 күн бұрын

    Very thorough very comprehensive thanks for sharing your wealth of knowledge

  • @maxmouche
    @maxmouche2 күн бұрын

    Did Module 1 a couple of months ago and whilst full on, it was perhaps 4 of the most fun days I've ever had. Gordo is an absolute legend of Bushcraft Australia and it felt humbling to be taught so much great knowledge by the man himself. Thanks again guys.

  • @cavegarden
    @cavegarden7 күн бұрын

    Gordon that's really entertaining and informative. Great to see in action, and something that struck me was the difference in perspective from bushwalking / being a "tourist in the wild" to bushcrafting / being a participant in nature - the same needs to survive and be comfortable, but one focusses on skills + gear, the other on skills + the environment. I'd love to see some more on some of the plants and other resources you use!

  • @mulza
    @mulza7 күн бұрын

    He's back!

  • @stephans.3107
    @stephans.31074 күн бұрын

    Hey Gordon that was very educational, especially for beginners. The Millbank Bag is typical Commonwealth Gear not very well known in germany...but i got my hands on a old one from 1945 and will test it next time. I would recommend one piece of gear that you did not mention: a emergency whistle around the neck can be very helpful..if anyone hears your call of distress 😂

  • @BushcraftSurvivalAustralia

    @BushcraftSurvivalAustralia

    3 күн бұрын

    Glad it was helpful! Thanks for watching

  • @stephenrogers2616
    @stephenrogers26168 күн бұрын

    Great tips and very well presented. Thank you for producing this.

  • @bushcraftbasics2036
    @bushcraftbasics20367 күн бұрын

    I always enjoy your informative and well done videos. Particularly enjoyed the piece on identifying North by the sun.

  • @user-fy9gd9ki6t
    @user-fy9gd9ki6t8 күн бұрын

    Good to see you back Gorden,love you videos mate

  • @balirelated1510
    @balirelated15108 күн бұрын

    Always great to see you posting a new video mate. I really enjoy watching your content.

  • @hermitonthelake
    @hermitonthelake8 күн бұрын

    Good day Gordon! Great to see you, keep pumping out the vids brother!

  • @voidtype
    @voidtype8 күн бұрын

    Please go on "Alone Australia" mate you'd kill it!

  • @craigshugg2332

    @craigshugg2332

    4 күн бұрын

    Some needs to go on that show with a bit of excitement in them. Alone is a dull show with the Australia version by far the worst of them. It's more about who can out starve each other.

  • @MTwoodsrunner
    @MTwoodsrunner8 күн бұрын

    Excellent Gordo...as always...looking forward to part 2...MTwoods

  • @matthewmahoney999
    @matthewmahoney9998 күн бұрын

    Great to see your videos again

  • @donaldfollan70
    @donaldfollan708 күн бұрын

    Thanks mate for such a good and informative video not enough here in Australia

  • @koalachili8719
    @koalachili87198 күн бұрын

    Thx for a very well made kind of tutorial... shown in an easy way, well done!

  • @needtokeepwalking
    @needtokeepwalkingКүн бұрын

    The legend is back 🇦🇺❤

  • @craigshugg2332
    @craigshugg23328 күн бұрын

    Hi Gordon, was great to see a video from you show up in the subs alerts.

  • @Maryland_Kulak
    @Maryland_Kulak8 күн бұрын

    Great video. I live on the east coast of North America, and it’s interesting to me how similar the wildlife is. Our Virginia white tail deer do the exact same thing with antlers and the trees they rub look the same. The turtles dive off the rocks and logs the same. We have orb weaver spiders too. I’m sure the exact species are different but the niches are the same. Think how ancient their ways of life must be!

  • @picnichamper4483
    @picnichamper44838 күн бұрын

    Great video. Very informative. Looking forward to more of these.

  • @karvi6310
    @karvi63108 күн бұрын

    Great video, keen to see part 2!

  • @andrewgorden1041
    @andrewgorden10417 күн бұрын

    Always great stuff. I really like your fishing with the hand reel bits of your videos! I’m from the United States, but I am a subscriber from way back. Love your KISS approach and your teaching technique. I always am reminded of something or pick up new tricks from your videos. I am wondering why people like the bottle and nesting cup better than the canteen and canteen cup. ( Even Mr. Canterbury seems to use the bottle and nesting cup more). Is it because of a wider mouth? Keep up the great work, and I’m looking forward to part 2!

  • @mikewhatley9783
    @mikewhatley97835 күн бұрын

    Great video thanks for sharing- such a different environment to where I am in the Pacific North West and as we are starting to warm up you are heading into autumn really enjoyed looking at the different trees and environment you are operating in

  • @BushcraftSurvivalAustralia

    @BushcraftSurvivalAustralia

    3 күн бұрын

    Glad it was helpfull. Thanks so much for watching

  • @mickme8914
    @mickme89148 күн бұрын

    Gday Gordon. Always looking forward to the new videos mate.

  • @CragDawgs
    @CragDawgs8 күн бұрын

    Perfect timing

  • @keredspangle4754
    @keredspangle47548 күн бұрын

    Yay. It’s been a while.

  • @mattrees466
    @mattrees4668 күн бұрын

    love your your work Gordon cheers

  • @nelistheron83
    @nelistheron837 күн бұрын

    Good stuff. Thank you sir.

  • @AlexGoochUgarte
    @AlexGoochUgarte8 күн бұрын

    There's so much good information in this vid! Thanks Gordy!

  • @johnbennett3708
    @johnbennett37085 күн бұрын

    Great stuff as usual Gordon .

  • @BushcraftSurvivalAustralia

    @BushcraftSurvivalAustralia

    3 күн бұрын

    Glad you enjoyed it!

  • @vinightshade6026
    @vinightshade60268 күн бұрын

    What an amazingly detailed video! Thank you for explaining even the small things like putting away the knife - my first thought would be to drop in the ground cause my attention would be in the fire lol Thats how stuff gets lots and how injuries happen

  • @medved6093
    @medved60937 күн бұрын

    Thanks!

  • @budget-adventure
    @budget-adventure7 күн бұрын

    Great video man

  • @davef5916
    @davef59168 күн бұрын

    great video mate! Very informative. Good to see you back on the tube.

  • @davef5916

    @davef5916

    8 күн бұрын

    loving the paint job on the troopie too mate, blends in nicely. Hope I can buy one some day. I might steal your colour :)

  • @CragDawgs
    @CragDawgs8 күн бұрын

    7 W's is great For the last one maybe walkable? But I kind of like without slope makes it easy to remember with that condition

  • @jasonporter5747
    @jasonporter57472 күн бұрын

    A Master Class. Thank you.

  • @tywilliams6530
    @tywilliams65308 күн бұрын

    Love this camp videos

  • @oldbloke204
    @oldbloke2048 күн бұрын

    I guess this isn't the place to say how much gear we take when we go away for a week then? Great video and very clearly set out. Thank you.

  • @scottangel6462
    @scottangel64625 күн бұрын

    Awesome video!! I have been a sub of your channel for several years now and get excited when you post a new one. Even tho I do not live in Australia, I am in the US, I find your channel intriguing and marvel at your beautiful country. Along with this channel, I have been a longtime sub of Scotty's Gone Walkabout 's channel to. If I did live there, or even visited, I would definitely take your courses as I believe you give excellent instruction in survival and bushcraft. I did notice that you were using the new Mora blade and was wondering, from your professional experience, how does it stack up against the Garberg? I know here in the US they are quite pricey. I have about several dozen Mora's all of different models, including the Garberg, which I truly love, and was just wondering if the expense was worth it? Also, you did answer a question about the Milbank bag that I had, concerning the use of it, so thank you for your valuable time, instruction, and most importantly, the video. Can't wait for part two!!

  • @tdk5507
    @tdk55078 күн бұрын

    mate keep up the great videos

  • @fatmanfaffing4116
    @fatmanfaffing41168 күн бұрын

    Interesting how much redundancy you have in your loadout, say compared to those 'thru-hikers' that shed every single gram and basically go with no spare clothing or doubled up items. Being ex-army myself I never go without a dry set to get into at night if I've gotten wet through during the day. I also tend to follow the 'two is one, one is none' mindset and have backups for stuff but I'm trying a 'less is more' approach after my last overnighter where I took stock of every item I actually used versus what I carried. I tend to carry more water and just boil to sterilize. I like how you have covered so much, so many basic field craft skills and packed a ton of info into the video.

  • @Galkac
    @Galkac8 күн бұрын

    Cool

  • @hudsonelmer710
    @hudsonelmer7107 күн бұрын

    Hi mate, love your work! Are ticks, snakes or mozzies ever an issue when just sleeping in a bivy and sleeping bag?

  • @justinthompson4029
    @justinthompson40298 күн бұрын

    The 6th w is wevel.

  • @jimmyrecard6021
    @jimmyrecard60218 күн бұрын

    perhaps I missed it, but I didn't see any mention of a PLB or any other emergency device?

  • @7purse
    @7purse8 күн бұрын

    What is the weight in kilograms of your pack and kit. I have hiking clothes and sleeping clothes because i sweat a lot when hiking. Do you sweat? If not. What's you secret for not sweating? I could save some kilograms in pack if i didn't sweat😁

  • @QUEEN_Donut
    @QUEEN_Donut6 күн бұрын

    Hour more like 10 minutes

  • @TDXAV
    @TDXAV2 күн бұрын

    I wouldn't be able to enjoy this hey - I'd be too worried about leaving my troopy out in the bush overnight.

  • @dombarton2483
    @dombarton24838 күн бұрын

    This is not outback survivaĺ. Do it without anything. That is what true survival is about..knowledge before equipment as you initially stated. You seem to know alot, so make it real.