We are Scotland's National Outdoor Training Centre located in the heart of Cairngorms National Park. Learn, develop or qualify in an adventure sport of your choice. Our goal is to inspire adventure by teaching beginners, coaching intermediate/advanced and delivering training and assessment courses for leaders and instructors.
Our role is as a national resource to the outdoor industry and community. Whether you are an individual, company, freelancer or offical body, we are here for you.
Unless stated, our UK residential courses are fully inclusive of instruction, accommodation the night before your course commences, full board and accommodation during the course, course transport & equipment.
The Films are produced for this channel by www.perfectviewproductions.co.uk
Пікірлер
I learned rolling from Gerd Kleinert ('65s World Champion) in the late 70's - It's so refreshing to find a YT video series that focusses on the important bits that really help! love you guys
MUCHAS GRACiAS!!! EXCELENT SERIES!!
This is a real life saver!
Could you explain how to choose the right lenght of the axe for this purpose?
Why make a knot for the anchor master point as you did for the second anchor? Wouldn’t it be wiser to not knot so as to not lose rope strength, especially because there is no redundancy there as opposed to a quad or sliding x. Would like to hear your thoughts Thanks for the video
They are Hexentrics........nothing new used them for 40 years
Final step…. hands only roles
This looks so much fun. Ive never tried but will. I am new to kayaking and paddleboarding a year almost to the day. Its the best hobby ive had in my life. I moved to Cornwall and sea and rivered paddling. Its amazing. Love love love it. Great video some good shots
self arrest*
👍👍👍👍👍
Simple yet very instructive. Thanks... 5 years later still relevant.
I used to have a P&H surf ski back in 1974-77 when I lived in St Ives bay Cornwall-used to get out in the waves pretty much every day down there, and we used to surf the rescue ski’s as well-great fun. This made me realise how much I miss it-live in Cambridgeshire now.
Really helpful, thanks!!
Toppen : Great and I'll try tomorrow / Namaste from Sweden
thank you 4ur video
Excellent work. Best I have seen on the Eskimo roll.
remember when i have capsize and yes i roll back in good order i was so happy i made it i lost the paddle out of laugheter and i go to river again - still laughter ;))
I was expecting a 4th demo of a bum-slide start. I suppose you just turtle onto your stomach and do the #1 method.
He said "bum". Yay! Not the ubiquitous Yankee "butt".
For someone living in Nordics, it is a bit fun to see how that it in fact needs a bit of thinking for people who dont live here, how to walk in snow. Second nature after long winters here :)
This looks like hell on your back?
Sharp tips of poles right behind your head? No thanks…
Thanks man
I would like to be able to use a thumb compass...but i have ergonomic and eyesight issues. trying to hold the compass straight ahead in my body center due to my wrist does not work for me...trying to make it point forward requires me to hold my arm forward, placing the map out of focus...with the 10 companies that make these youde think one of them would make one with an adjustable strap location...its not too much of an issue however due to our local event sites that are so feature-rich i can keep my compass in my pocket 90% of the time...
😮😮 nice video
I like that point about using the altimeter's rate of ascent.
I like drawing the inverted T in the snow first and then using that as a template to dig the ledge out.
Sighting objects along the line you've walked on a bearing can act as good markers if taking a back bearing too.
I’m here because I’m a huge George Fell supporter. Go George!
i know this was a long time ago but looks like the map is oriented as map is up side down whilst taking a bearing. any help on this issue please.
tbh I think this is the basics of winter kit, I personally would have more kit
kzread.info/dash/bejne/in14r7VvlaW5hNo.htmlfeature=shared
Very informative, many thanks!!
Thanks for the three great videos on rolling a kayak. I'm hope to attend your introduction to sea kayaking courses next spring and am spending the winter improving my confidence in the water. Having joined my local canoeing club. These videos really helped and also demonstrated what a professional setup you have.
Love how you run everywhere, brilliant video of navigating thanks for sharing 😊
Bravo pour ce rolling-triptyque vraiment instructif et attrayant !
Toujours aussi attractif...
J'ai déjà envie de connaître la suite !
Really helpful video thanks and a great reminder of the superb instruction I received from you on the 2 day mtb trail riding skills course at Glenmore Lodge. Would highly recommend this course if anyone thinking of doing similar.
Glad to hear that your course was helpful!
nice vid. where is the trail in the vid and is it open to the public?
Just a note: there's no chance you'll put enough kN onto the sling to break it from a 2' fall from setting up the belay. 'Shock loading' seems to be largely a myth and was tested by HOWNOT2. Also ALWAYS always tie stopper knots into the end of the rap line so you don't rap off the end of the rope by accident.
That is not true for static material without anything dynamic in the system, and not what HowNot2 has been telling you. See the latest videos for more detail about falling on static attachments to anchors.
Bunch of eejits in the comments who think they have more experience and knowledge than trained mountain guides with decades of practical, hands on experience. Utterly mindblowing. The video was perfect for me - just the right bridge between experience I already have from climbing and how to adapt that for a scramble situation.
Once i get my first kayak im going to deploy a strat called ''f*ck around and find out''.
What's the name of that crag where you are filming and climbing?
It's Cummingston Crag on the Moray Coast
Great Vid, whats the location ?
Cummingston Crag on the Moray Coast
P R O M O S M
fajne
mam więcej subów
sory myslalem ze masz 27 tylko
Yeah this is really not best practice
👍👍👍
So, I was out buying a second engineers compass for Satellite location and I set it on the counter away from the electronic tag zapper and said, "we don't want to set that on the zapper". The lady laughed, proceeded to check out my items then grabbed the compass and ran it over the zapper, to which I said, "now I don't want that one". She looked confused and I said, "you can't run a compass over a giant magnetic zapper to disable security tags, you ruin the compass". "Oh", she exclaimed, maybe that's why everyone keeps returning these compasses saying they don't work". "Yeah", I said. So, when you're out buying a compass, be sure the person at the check isn't zapping your compass to disable a security tag. To be fair, I'm careful with compasses as my brother kills every compass he touches, strangest thing, if he picks one up, it never works again.