Added: 2 years ago
From: locke6206
Views: 43,225
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  • where did you get the lid from? and what are they called?

    thanks

  • @funkyprepper I think you mean the Heavy Cover lid for my canteen cup. Look up Heavy Cover canteen cup lid. They have a new metal one now that is even better!

  • Ok...Who nutted all over my pine tree?

  • @erpiv lol

    bollock yoghurt

  • That's great information. Thank you for sharing and Happy Thanksgiving! ;) c

  • Would it be okay to share this video with our members?

  • @cowboy12765 Please feel free to share with anyone you would like to. Thats why I made the video to help others learn little bits at a time. And hopefully they do that.

  • I would like to personally thank you for this video. I, along with some friends have a FB page on survival, camping, etc. As said by some with lesser minds, this video covers a lot of basics. But without the basics you have nothing to build on. As for idiot boy, ignore him. Anyone with the tiniest amount of intelligence would go to a new video instead of whining. He spent an hour complaining about "wasting" 8:30. Apparently someone wasn't taught manners. Keep up the good work. Happy Camping.

  • Excellent knowledge on the uses of the pine tree, thank you for the video.

  • Yeah, great way to add them to stuffing, for turkey. Grocers want a high price for them. So I decided to collect my own for free. BUT, I always ASK the tree if I can have it. If it's willing to sacrifice it, they usually drop off in my had without having to pull them. Call it coincidence if you want; but I've always believed that because these are living organisms it is respectful to ask or at least 'tell it.' They do communicate, but if you ask, that part of the branch will become unconscious.

  • I used to just walk by pine trees until I found out all the uses for it now I love em.

    Also one question is pine tree wood good for making fire or is not?

  • arent the pine sappling roots edible as well?

  • uh hey guys uh guys hey uh guys hey guys uh yea but hey guys uhh but yea.

  • this guy took almost 9 minutes to tell you 3 things that most survivalists already know.

    1. tea from pine needles

    2. seeds from pine cones

    3. use pine resin for glue etc.

  • @cawkazn Hey buddy if your going to hate this video for him giving good information then why did you say anything?

  • @ucncalmemom to save other ppl from wasting 9 minutes of their life.

  • @cawkazn You could have stopped watching the video... Because I thought the video was really good.

  • @ucncalmemom you could have read my comment, and not watched the video. than used 8:30 min to watch another video and learn even more!

  • @cawkazn Look I wasn't trying to start a fight I'm just saying that if this guy took time out of his life to benifit others then why hate on him for it?

  • @ucncalmemom its a waste of time, and the stuff that he said is pretty basic and common knowledge. quick and to the point is better then long drawn out yapping especially about something so basic. this video could be edited and get the same point across in 30 seconds. you can easilty waste a few hours surfing youtube for knowledge. and if you come across a few videos like this, its a waste of time because they are so drawn out. when they are telling basic stuff.

  • @cawkazn I didn't even take my time to read your comment... your wasting my time...

  • @ucncalmemom the time it took you to type that. is how long this guy could have got his point across. instead of hearing some douche ramble on blah blah blah blah blah. we dont give a shit about your opinions. teach us some shit or stfu. and Im out FTW. this page has turned into a entire waste of time. both watching it, and arguing with you.

  • @cawkazn DUDE QUIT TALKING TO ME I DON'T WANT NOTIFICATIONS THAT YOUR HATING ON THIS VIDEO!!!

  • @ucncalmemom i wanted to take 30 minutes of your time to tell you..............

  • @cawkazn Wow!! I am honored to have stumbled across some actual communication from the King of Video Critics. How kind of you express your opinion in such a superior and perfect way. I feel sorry for those closest to you, if that's how you interact with them. I'd hate to be your child. I appreciate the fact that this guy even took the time to try to sahare his knowledge with us in the first place. He was in THE woods, not HOLYWOOD.

  • there pine nuts havent grown!!!! wht hahaha this makes no sense to me

  • just put your knife in near boiling water to clean pine resin off it. Then oil.

  • if u remove piece bark fr dead tree will u still get pine resin? i have prob cutting live trees if not necessary. thx karen

  • pine nut flour it is

  • I'm ignorant? No one said anything about botany not including all plants especially not me. I own quite a few Field Guides on Wild Edibles and Medicinal Plants. Read up and you will see that everything I said in this video is correct as it concerns Pines.

  • @locke6206 if you use your knife to collect pine resin, you can take some gun oil (i recommend "rem oil") and it takes it right off plus it protects your knife as well. nice video, keep em coming!

  • Sorry, no offense to anyone, but... this guy is ignorant! They (apparently the Pathfinder school) that taught him this information, needs to take a real botany course! Botany is NOT just about flowers as some may think. It goes into trees, wood, aquatic and land plants, algae and so on. You ALL could learn alot, especially for your own survival! I suggest purchasing Petterson's Field Guide on wild plants. or any field guide by the Audubon Society.

  • vitamin C also

  • lol sry to say but u kind of sound like kenny rodgers, hahahaha great vid

  • if you add yt:crop=16:9 to the videos tags, youtube will remove the letterbox and zoom in on the active area so you'll lose that black border around the video.

    Cool videos by the way

  • thx for sharing ur knowledge

  • Pine sap can be boiled then cooled and pounded into a powder for soldering flux. Works well!

  • Good video brother!

  • just a small question...is there any option other than eating pine? an alternative? my kids and i are deadly allergic to pine..pine sol makes us wheeze an go into a chest cold allergic reaction type thing.

  • @SpikesScarletWitch just so you know pinesol has alot of other chemicals in it regular pine without chemicals shouldnt effect you like that and you definantly dont want to gasify pine in a closed quarters it is caustic

  • Remember that the Yew tree looks line Pine and Yew is deadly poisonous...

    even if just a few needles are crushed for a cuppa...

    (always good to warn of similar plants/trees that are poisonous)

  • reminds me of Bill from King of the hill

  • nice vid, good info.

  • In truth there really is no need to take that much bark off. You could take less that a 3" square & still have enough "damage" for the tree to repair itself (that is one of the purposes of pitch). If the tree shows signs of stress, making a wound that big can send it over the edge & kill it. The cambium layer is what bears look for because it is sweet. I have seen many trees killed from bears & from antler rubs.

  • informative i just want to know what happens to the pine tree once you cut off its bark for the resin does the tree die?

  • @TEEWEE01 actually that removal wouldn't kill the tree. You'd lose a lot of growth for that injury. If you take the bark off like that and don't scrape it it'll live. NWBushman is right on the money. I think a bear would take you up on that, so try not to scrape up the trees about 1 mile from camp.

  • @TEEWEE01 So long as you don't go 360 degrees around the tree it should regrow its bark over a season.

  • acorn coffee... I need to try that

  • Great vid. Good info!

  • people who know nothign about nature say stupid things on these comments. In nature animals create wounds in trees for various reasons, bears mark territory, buck dear sharpen their horns, elk,moose etx etc. anyways the point most trees can repair a bearswipe that shreds the bark. If you do bigger damage its likely youll harm the tree. Cutting a ring around the entire tree is a sure way to kill the tree. Just dont make gaping wounds like that remember the tree is helping you by its wound

  • This was really informational, since I live in the Pine Tree State! I already knew about the pine needle tea, and about the resin and cones from watching Man Vs. Wild so much, since I am a survivalist. But I never knew about the edible inner bark, and some other "tips and tricks" that you said!

    The resin has so many uses, like sealing, gluing, and to get a better, hotter, and longer-lasting fire. It's amazing of how many things Nature can provide for you, especially from just one [pine] tree!!

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  • @branni79 absolutely. This video has inspired me a bit to show a little more of the importance of right now. The relaxed tree scraping is also a bit much for me. In a rough house situation maybe. I guess a mental equation of need / time available / and risk would help balance your actions.

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  • GREEN BEAN RULES!

  • thank you for the info....

  • I use pee to clean my bk2 from resin in the woods (seriously) it works ok

    and you dont want to have sticky resin in the sheath

  • Another great thing about the pine tree is that (On Most) the pine cones themselves are edible (In spring when just sprouting) and also act as an appetite suppressant

  • pine nuts are great cuz they're everywhere and they're high in fat and protien and taste good roasted

  • I've used pine resin to cover open wounds, make a pine-tar glue, seal seams and

    cracks, temporarily water-proof things.. Even made a few fishing-flys with the pine-

    tar glue. Stuff stinks..but it works. Nah, shouldn't use a good knife, better to get a

    scrap of wood, shave it to form a small scrapper--saves ya resources that way. :)

  • common rubbing alcohol will clean pine resin too we used it when i was logging

  • @ifukbak WD-40 works better.

  • are all pine needles straight or are some curvy too???

  • how about putting ziplock baggies on the pine cones and check them once and awhile then when they do drop their nuts remove the baggies ?

  • EDIBLE PINE!!???!?! YUMMY!!!!

  • Great vid mean well done!

  • Have you eaten eney of the pine

  • Great vid. Thanx for the tip on the pine cones. Never heated them up to get the nuts out before. And nice knife, a fav. of mine.

  • Thanks man I appreciate it.. Yea thats one heck of a work horse knife.

  • @KURGAN44

    They are not "nuts", they are seeds. A red squirrel favorite! Take a botany class or search online for coniferous tree botany.

  • Comment removed

  • @QueenCogswell Pine nuts are the edible seeds of pines (family Pinaceae, genus Pinus). About 20 species of pine produce seeds large enough to be worth harvesting; in other pines the seeds are also edible, but are too small to be of great value as a human food. I agree that a field guide to a region's edible plants is an incredible resource and having the opportunity to take a botany course would be an invaluable tool in survival. Thank you for the recommendation. Hope this finds you well.

  • @QueenCogswell If the electrical grid ever goes down and SHTF, this guy will know more about surviving in the country than your book worm botany class will ever teach you.

  • I was wandering what kind of jacket you are wearing in this video? I have a army rain jacket with the linner in it that looks like your jacket.

  • It is the Gore-tex Army issue Extreme Cold Weather System Jacket.

  • @locke6206 i have one of those with the high altitude sleeping bag with gortex liner,Pine resin can also be used on wounds

  • Glad to see a new vid. 5/5

  • Thanks bud I appreciate it! When I actually get days off work in the near future I will have alot more posted.

  • is this the same for any pine? i have bruce-spruce by my house. there are long needle pines at my paintball field. so...

  • Nice video Chris 5*

  • Thank you very much!

  • nice as always

  • Thanks buddy!

  • 5/5

  • Nice one Brother! Don't use your PF Knife for resin collecting when you get it! When are we going back to Granny's Pizza and Bait?

  • Yea I will make sure I DONT use that knife for collecting resin.. lol And I hope we get to swing by Grannys again very soon!

  • Thanks man!

  • Excellent vid Chris, great info. 5 stars.

  • Thanks bud I appreciate it!

  • lots of good info...nice vid

  • hay man great vid looking foward to more vids

  • Thanks man I appreciate it!

  • Pine has lots of uses great video Chris

  • i feed my goats green pineneedles once a week. the turpintine in the needls helps with belly aches and helps thier immune system.... i wonder if it does the same for people?......never thought about it..

  • Let us know if it is people friendly...I don't really think it would be harmful because people make tea with it, although they may be a little sticky...

  • nice job bud, i too having been working like a dog

  • Thanks buddy! Maybe soon we will have a couple days off!

  • great job buddy!! i like that becker knife

  • Yea that thing is a Beast! Thank you man!

  • No.. The Pine resin protects a damaged tree. Pine trees are extremely resilient and will continue to grow and branch off any damaged part. They tap pine trees every day just like they do Maple trees to make Maple Syrup out of.

  • Will that not kill the tree?

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