The Amazing Fleece Poncho LIner-7 ways to use it
Description
This video covers not only 7 ways to use our Fleece Poncho Liner, but also tips on air filtration, hammocks, even a little about if you will fit as a customer of ours. Our gear is not for everyone. A fleece Poncho Liner can be a life saver or it can simply make life a little better. Check out all our gear at http://wildernessinnovation.com
Tags: camping,outdoors,shelter,fleece,poncho liner,poncho,bushcraft,hunting,hammock,bedroll
Video Transcription
well we're right off to Huntington River here in the late winter time it's a great time to be out camping really nice I want to show you a few things today having to do with our fleece poncho liner our fleece poncho liners are able to be worn by themselves or with a poncho and they're designed to do a lot more than just be a that just be a poncho liner let me show you a bunch of different ways that you can use them today our fleece as as you can see there - the third design to be able to be worn by herself now the poncho can be snapped into the fleece the fleece has two sided snaps and so you can snap it in you can snap them right together so they become one unit alright so I highly recommend that you get the hammock kit for Poncho's if you plan on using the poncho quite a bit for a hammock the kit makes it much easier gives you everything you need for setting up a hammock in a very quick easy fashion and one of the things that gives you is some Dyneema runners these are rated five thousand pounds it also gives you a couple of aluminum tent stakes that we use as Marlin spikes in the set up which I'll show you now one other thing I've discovered is because the steak or the Marlin spike because it's because it's got a shock cord on it right here you can just put the two of those together like that and now it can assist you in threading through this the cord tube that's on your poncho now this is a real tree ultralight poncho you stick your finger through the through the loop before it gets all the way in there and every so often you just pull back the slack and usually what I like to do is point the tent stake down because that way if it's like this it may have a tendency to catch somewhere it doesn't really matter most everything except the ultralight Poncho's because the fabric is so it flexes over so easily you might not notice what you're doing okay so here we are out the other end when you get to there you can just stick that through the end just to hold it in place till you get ready to hang it up that's all there is to hanging this darn thing up because I made the shuttle part of it out of a blue Dyneema cord instead of black that way you can see the two pieces easier so all I got to do to tighten this up and I grab the end of the the tag end of the static line that's the one that goes around the tree and I just grab right here right here where that line comes out of the blue one and I just push up like that and I've tightened up my hammock and that is literally all there is to it alright so to let it down I just push down on the far end of the line of the shuttle closest to the tree I'm on the ground I want to raise it up I just pull it up so I'm wearing my fleece while I'm setting up my hammock and now if I want to use the fleece as part of my hammock which I can do in several different ways I just doesn't snap it and then I can just remove it good alright so now I've got the I've got the fleece taken off man that breeze a little chilly I didn't really notice it while I had this on Oh everything is interchangeable you don't have to match the fleece color isn't in like that okay so so now I've got the fleece in here and basically all I got to do now is I just take and snap the fleece to the snaps on the poncho now see these these fleece snaps are double-sided so it allows me a lot of different options and one of the nice things about snapping a fleece into a poncho is depending on different weather conditions and stuff like that sometimes you just need a tiny bit of edge and just that fleece liner in there just as kind of cozy feels good to have against you that nice soft fleece right against you instead of a seda poncho which I don't mind either one but in some weather conditions you really kind of prefer maybe having a fleece or something in there that your let that's laying against you all right I've got the fleece all snapped into my poncho so when I spread that out you see there's all that nice soft fleece inside your poncho works nicely now there's something else that you can do with the fleece as well and it's something not many people I don't think think really think about but I can take and tie me uh I can tie me a ridgeline up here I'm just gonna go I'm just gonna go right here where my Marlinspike is right there just right above that our you don't have to have a lot of tension on it or anything like that you can just kind of throw you a couple half hitches in there whatever just let her go like that right so now I can just grab the fleece here now I can just drape it over top of that Ridge line right here okay and there's actually multiple way she can do when you start thinking about it there's a lot of different things you can do here so the first thing is you're just gonna get it draped over so it's pretty well even one thing I like to do is snap at least just a double sign it snaps I can snap it to itself this way okay and that will that'll keep the fleece from ever rolling and coming off and stuff like that it just keeps it in position so now you might want to ask why would you throw a fleece over top of a poncho like this I mean what's the point of that well I mean there could be a couple reasons it will help block the wind it will help hold some heat in you could after what I've just done here you could throw a tarp over at the top of that so the tarp will give you ain't rain and wind proofing and the fleece will give some thermal protection which will help which will help make the climate inside your hammock that much more mild because it does have some insulating value rather than just a tarp blocking the wind and because we're letting it lay close to us in the hammock it also can help retain some some of the heat that's in there some of the warmth and it won't be quite as cool it could make you know could make five ten maybe fifteen degrees difference in comfort to you so ideally what you want to have is the middie that's the the larger when it opens a little bit wider so just pull your fleece up onto that cord just a little bit give it a little click and you're held in place now the fleece can't slide on you know I've came out up my panic was something totally different when I can just in here breathing in here I can really I could already feel some warmth inside of here aside from a little bit of you know you're helping to retain a little bit of heat by not letting your body heat come up out of the hammock so much by having this on top of you so it really is another tool to help keep you warmer there's another use for it that you might have never thought of so there's another reason to to put this put this fleece over your head in a hammock from a Ridgeline and that's really the way I very first came into using it over my head like that and that is because a couple years ago I was out with the Boy Scouts and we were out on the west desert in send sandy sand dune II area and a sandstorm came up during the evening just as we're getting ready to go to bed and and so and so you know everybody you're wrapping stuff around your faces the scarves or whatever to breathe through say not suck it in so much then I get ready to go to bed and I'm like I'm like man I got to lay something over me so I can breathe through the night got the idea of putting up a Ridgeline draping it just like I did just now I got in there that was perfect because the wind would blow a little bit the sand and get kind of flipped off of the off of the fleece because it's kind of you know the ace a frame shape and and so I'm man I slept right through the night I woke up in the morning I didn't have clogged up lungs or anything like that I felt great worked really really nice so in a sandstorm or a dust storm something like that
this this little flea set up like this might just save your bacon so what we do is we just just snap into the poncho here so you see we're just we're just snapping onto here so you see the because we're snapping to the outside we're taking the Poncho's snap when I just flip it over to the outside like that and then we just snap them together so now I have snapped up now I snapped up my fleece onto the outside of my poncho so it becomes kind of like an under quilt so now you might wonder well what do you do with it on the outside is an under quilt well believe it or not it's actually it actually does give you more warmth just snap like that could get you by in a pinch and it's acting as kind of a wind blocker and helping to contain some of the heat inside it's not the ideal situation but it does do in a pinch but there is a way that you can take really good events advantage of it and make a really nice little setup out of it let me show you that so what I want to show you now is something totally different we're talking radical now this right here is one of our super you I'll still nylon punches it's like the similar it's ultra light similar to the real tree that I'm using as my poncho slash hammock here but oftentimes I'll keep one of these in and some of my backpacks and stuff just as just as an emerge they they pack up really small I just throw it in the bottom and forget about it yeah and so I have some of these just laying around in different places just for emergency and but in this case it means I have a second poncho so I can add this poncho to this setup right here and make it even better okay so so normally we don't ever talk that much about which direction the hood faces when you're setting up a hammock it doesn't really matter when it's just a hammock
but when you're adding accessories sometimes it does matter because that means you can gain some advantage and how everything snaps up by which way you turn it now when we put the neither the hammock itself the hoods facing that way towards the camera towards you the fleece that we put on is facing away back towards behind me that way it gave me that way it gave me an extra snap position right here that I could use for this for this poncho so that's that's the reason I did that if I was putting the fleece on and wasn't going to put the poncho on there it wouldn't matter which way I put it on at work either way but since I wanted another snap position I just reversed it and that gives me another position so now I just come along here and I snap everything up just like that ok so now I've totally transformed my setup and where I was using my poncho as a hammock and my fleece as an under quilt for the hammock now adding a second start a second poncho to that what I've now done is I've given wind proofing total wind proofing to the setup and I've got a layer of insulation between me laying in the hammock
and the outside I used this setup one time I was up way up on a ridge on top of the mountains and I had I'd found a little hardly any trees up there I found a little a little grove of some pine trees and I got into there but during the night the wind just came up man it was blowing like crazy and now wind was just whipping through there and I just had I just had a fleece snapped as a underquilt like I just showed you I went to my truck and I grabbed another poncho and that's the first time I ever did what I'm showing you now I snapped it underneath and unzip that up tight and I'm gonna tell you what that made a difference not really I totally cut out the wind and I laid in there and I was comfortable all right so so now I've added my wind proofing to my hammock so now all I've got to do is take that same shock cord now if you didn't have a shock cord there is a way to do this the tube but the tube right here that you that you use in the poncho that goes all the way around this end to hang that up as a hammock if I were to put a piece of parachute cord or whatever through there then when I got done I could just pull right here and I'd just draw it draw it right up like clothes on the top of a bag so that's another way I could do it if I did not have the I did not have the shock cords but since they do that closes this in then so you see that seals the end right here so there's no draft that can get into you now something else I could mention to you also just think about the possibilities here what I just showed you now let's say you had two fleeces with you I could put to flee I can snap I can keep snapping stuff overtop of stuff on here I could put another fleece on there and then put the punch over there I have two fleeces as insulation and a poncho for wind proofing on the outside I could also snap the fleece on there like I did I could add an under quilt over top of the fleece and enclose that in and then I could add the poncho too if I wanted to or I could add the Oh sneak cloak say I had a fleece in a no sneak lok with me I could put the fleece on I had no sneak cloak and then I could add the and then I could add the poncho on at the end for wind proofing and one of the things you think of as far as what you can do with them is okay what I just mentioned you'd be you might be like yeah I'm gonna have to fleeces with me well no you probably aren't so you're going somewhere a camp and you're like I think it's gonna be a little worse weather than I was anticipating so I'm going to take with me an extra item so you just plan that ahead I'm going to take an extra item because I think I might need it all right so so I'm down in here feeling good I've got I've got some good insulation around me it's a nice wind protection that's what we always say about our gear I tell people you know you get some people that like well I don't know if that gears for me or whatever and I I flat out tell people you know our gear isn't for everybody and I say here's here's what it's really intended for is the person who has an imagination creativity and resourcefulness and you know people like that that have that kind of attitude and thinking they can make the best use out of our gear because they'll get creative with it they'll think of ways they can use it that they never thought of before and we we really try to keep our stuff open in other words we give you as much function as we can that's our thinking you know give you give you everything we can give you and leave you free to be creative and that's what I like you know that's so that's what I like to do myself so I I'm just I cater the gear to what I like really honestly I don't think so much about you guys well I mean I do but I mean seriously I make I make gear that I like and I just hope other people like it too really that's that's the honest truth I do take suggestions and people have come up with some pretty good ones for me and so and I appreciate that but in the end if I don't like it it doesn't happen so because I got to use the guy camp every week pretty much all year round and if I don't like the gear then I'm not going to be happy with it so I'm not going to do something to the gear that don't like anyway yeah that's my soapbox so here's something else that you can do with your fleece now you can also lay the patch on the ground and you can use the fleece its kind of a liner inside kind of a to make a you know a sort of a bed out of it and you know like that could work in milder conditions where you need just a little little extra or you want to go really light the fleece is PSL length the Poncho's pß XL length so you can see the poncho is longer than the fleece is which is which is fine doesn't matter because it works just fine alright so down down here on this foot end what I've done is I've taken my tent stake and shoved it through both loops and then pull the elastic over then shove it down into the ground so that'll hold that corner together before you get too excited this won't make this won't make the full fledge sleeping bag type deal this thing is not going to be your total go to replacement for a sleeping bag but in a pinch it does pretty well and if you if you're creative you can make this thing work pretty nicely for yourself oh how well this works for you is gonna depend somewhat on how big of a person you are now so for me so they get up around my shoulders I can't quite I can come pretty close but I can't exactly totally close myself in but I can make it work for me yeah you know if I if I just get out somewhere and I've got to got to make do or I just got to do it I'll make it work and I'll be comfortable for quite a lot of people this is going to be this is going to be a nice suitable size to
work for him you know here again we're not really trying to make the sleeping bag out of it and that's that's our goal is to build off for people shelter well there's a little bedroll fleece and poncho
you
About the Author
Wilderness Innovation
"How to" for outdoor camping, hiking activities and survival. Some unique equipment and ideas. "Simplifying Survival" is our motto. Follow us on Twitter - WISurvival
More articles from this author
- Cooking Rice in Vacuum Bottle overnight
- Make a Bough Bed with a Hammock - Convert our Poncho
- Make a Pull Up Tipi with our Poncho Survival Shelter
- New DW Series Poncho - Light - Hybrid Coatings - Strong - Many Functions
- Space Blanket Reflector Shelter 2 of 2
- Good Morning People
- Ben Hendricksen | Wilderness Innovation
- Survival Kit Components Review 2 of 3
- Twig Bundle Fire Starter for Easier Fires
- Edibles: Sego Lily Bulbs Delicious
- Two Poncho Shelter Set Ups
- Fast Deploy Paracord Bracelet
- The Cow Pie Stove Multi-fuel
- Add this to your survival kit
- Quick-Tip: Keeping Dry
- Foam Hat Intro 1 of 3 wet test
- Desert Camp - San Rafael Reef - Little Wild Horse Canyon - Slot Canyon - Petroglyphs - Goblin Valley
- Survival and preparedness my beliefs and history
- Make your own saw out in the Woods
- How to Set up our Poncho as a Hammock in Junipers and PST as Cover
- Make our Tarp the PSTL into a Hammock
- 1st Snow at the Debris Hut
- Winter hike Big Springs
- Build a Raised Bough Bed add Tarp Cover
- Winter Trailside Shelter Quick-Tip
- Quick Tip: Tabasco add to survival kit
- To Mt Nebo Viewpoint & more-Cozy seat from Poncho- Grotto Falls
- My Favorite Spring Rain or Snow Tarp Set Up
- Space Blanket Fire Reflector Shelter 1
- Fire with Flint and Steel
- The Dakota Hole Fire-Covert, Effective
- Easy Mittens - Keep Hands Warm in Fall Weather
- Set up a Diamond Pitch Tarp with our PST
- Build a Super Shelter with our PST
- All Ponchos Lake Camp - 5 ponchos used - demo versatility - Beautiful Lake
- Survival Review components 1 of 3
- Snowshow Tips Kicking in Step n Pause
- Wedge Combo Tarp Shelter - Making it Fully Enclosed
- Sven Saws: Low Effort, Light, and Compact
- Rattlesnake - Quick Tip
- Put Incredible Tension on a Rope with these Knots
- GSI Glacier Cup - part of the OffRoad Survival Kit by Wilderness Innovation
- Survival Kit Bags
- Cast Iron Cookin Midday Breakfast - Camp Cooking
- Fun Fire Science Interesting stuff
- Snow Insulated Bed - part two
- Lake Mountain Solo Desert Trek Part 2
- Make a Tent Line Tensioner w Swiss Army Knife
- Dyneema Knot - Poncho Hammock set up - Multipurpose Poncho
- Quick - Tip: Solar Snow Melting
- Makeshift Apple Crisp at Camp spiced with Tang
- Poncho Lean To with our PSS
- How to Make a 1 Person Floored Bivy with our PST
- Baking Cornbread Muffins with a Zebra Pot as an Oven
- Survival Kit Tip - The Whistle
- Knowledge is Power Audio Program
- Sleeping Pod - 4 Part Set Up - Best Sleep Ever
- A Little Spork Review
- Lodge Mini Skillet - Nice even for backpacking
- Beef and Broccoli over Campfire Nice and warm Under PD Shelter
- Hoodie Pocket Fleece Liner for our Poncho's
- Insulated Hammock Created from Poncho
- Wales Ridge Camp with PST Whelen Tent etc
- Introducing Personal Survival Tarp
- Yukon Chair Super Shelter at Grizzly Gulch
- Poncho Shelter System Components and Set Up
- New Gear Shown in Camp at Wales Canyon
- Camp - Hammocks - Bough beds - Slow Cooking Chicken - Gear Shelter and Platform
- Combine Ponchos to Make Larger Shelter - No Extra Connector Strips Needed
- Survival Blanket Info - Tips - How To - Sizes - Features - Moisture Handling
- Fleece Poncho Liner handles Moisture well
- Cookin' Fun - Egg On Rock
- Pine Ridge Camp
- Poncho Hood Tips and Use of Poncho for Everyday Chores
- Haul out your friggin trash
- NEVER Leave your Survival kit - use our Off-Road Kit-attach to anything
- Osni Cloak Introduction - Coat, Poncho Liner, Woobie, Sleeping bag, Under Quilt and more
- New Canopy Bug Net for the Poncho Shelter System
- Tarp Tips: Double A Frame-add another Tarp-Support Pole Tip
- Backpacking Water Heater
- EZ Spark-Lite Fire w Thistle down
- Zebra Pot Storage and Carry Bags
- PST Tarp Series - Intro what is included - features - set up pics
- Snowshoe hike up Spring Creek Canyon clip 2
- Quick Tie Bowline & Sheet Bend also Tarp Tie in
- Make a Purpose Built Fire - Quick Tip
- Surprise Gift to Me from Shauna
- Survival item - The Scavenger Bag
- Underquilt Sleeping Bag
- Make a Super Shelter on a Diamond Pitch with our PST
- Winter Camp at Huntington
- Wilderness Necklace - yup that's right
- Nano Stove with 2 Person Cook Set
- Urban Materials Cordage Making
- Make a Triangular Sun Shelter from a Square Tarp #28 of 50 set ups
- Cheap water purification using: SODIS
- Edible and more The Juniper
- How to Make 24 oz. Cup Stainless Cup for $2
- 4 Tips for Insulating from Cold Ground - Natural Materials
- Hunting for Obsidian - Desert Camp - Scavenger Bag - Hammock Poncho - Obsidian + Fire Steel Fire
- Starting camp fire with a fire piston
- Whoopie Sling for Poncho to Hammock Setup using our PSS Series Ponchos
- My Four Most Commonly Used Knots for Camp
- Demo Magnesium FireStarter Kit - from our Survival Kit
- Emberlit Stove Review
- Sub Zero Camp with our Blankets No Fire No Tent
- Quick-Tip: Spring Stream Safety
- Poncho - Honeycomb Ripstop - New - Strong - xWide -Intro
- Flint and Steel Fire using green Willow as tinder
- Clean Badly Burned Cup Easily with Fire Remains
- QUICK-TIP - Keep Your Butt Warm
- Make a Paracord Neck Knife Cord
- Silver Lake Fall Trek
- Part 3 of 3 Review of Survival Kit components
- Tarp: Stingray setup over Hammock (PSS)
- PD Shelter Collecting Solar Energy - Parachute Fabric for solar
- Christy uses the Magesium Fire Starter Kit
- MSR Pot Survival Kit
- Poncho makes Recliner Chair also Nice Camp, scones, fun
- Buckhorn Desert - Rainy Winter Camp - Our shelter gear made it nice
- Hikers forced to build shelter
- Don't throw out old fruit, Make fruit leather
- Bury Your Alcohol Stove to Cook in High Wind - Trangia or Other
- Making Chokecherry Bannock and Doughboys
- Quick-Tip: Trail Maintenance - do your part
- Make a Punk Wood Fire Starting Kit
- The Pines Camp Snowy Spring Camping w Tarp Hammock Fire
- 8 Square Tarp Set Ups -Knot and Tarp Tips
- Zebra Billy Pot Now Improved
- Rainy Day Zebra Pot Omelet
- Search for Robbers Hideout - A Cave in the Mountains
- Intro Mini Every Day Carry - review
- Speedy Stitcher Shoe Repair - In the Field
- Box Canyon Camp /Hike also Test Canopy Bug Net
- Osni's first snow - clip of a few of more than 8 functions
- Keep Hands Warm and Useful
- New - The FireBox Stove
- Cozy Winter Camp Cookin
- Garden: EZ Hoe for Fast Weeding
- Quick-Tip - Snowshoeing set a pick for easier traverses
- Review Dr Scholl's Gel Insoles for hiking boots
- Winter Campfire Cooking Steak Rice Country Gravy Sourdough Roll
- Rainy Winter Camp - Parachute Dome Canopy - Sleeping Pod
- Quick-Tip: Quick no mess meal
- Don't Stay Stuck -Take a Shovel
- Cottonwood Camp Shanty Shelter
- Eat snow to stay hydrated? If you are careful
- Real Fire Power-Doan Magnesium-USA made
- Tie the Trucker's Knot
- Lean To Tarp Shelter to Poncho in Seconds
- Carmelized Apples on the Campfire
- Kolob Canyons in Zions National Park
- Osni Hoodie Pocket - also use the Osni for Recon and Glassing - recap of uses
- Easy Dry Shavings for Fire after Wicked Rain
- Heated Poncho Shelter Nice for Nap or Sleep in Cold Weather
- Off-Road Survival Kit Packing and Contents
- Review Dr Scholls Work Gel Insoles and update on videos
- Spring Creek Canyon clip 1
- Simple Pleasures at camp - get off the clock - take it easy - relax
- Using the Speedy Stitcher - Repairs etc
- Scavenge to Survive
- Testing Solar Heating in Mini Parachute Canopy
- Grillin' Trout on the Firebox Stove
- 4 Ways to use a Poncho - Rainy Camp w Bough Bed under Poncho Covered Lean-To -
- Hammock with boughs in it for a Bed and Small Blanket cover for cool weather
- TrueTimber New Conceal Poncho - short clip
- For Hammock Long Hang use Dyneema Cord and Our Poncho/Hammock
- Checkin out the Emberlit Stoves
- Piston Fire and making Fine Tinder from Hard Bark
- Testing Moisture Handling in our Survival Blankets PSB series
- Edibles: Chokecherry great food
- Turn a Poncho into a Hammock - See our Cordage Options - Get set up tips
- The Debris Hut
- Collect sun dried tinder when ground is soggy
- Connect 2 or More Poncho's (PSS) to Make a Larger Shelter
- Alternative Fire Starting Method
- Real Tree Xtra Poncho Makes into Hammock - Tarp - Chair etc
- More Important than Water - Sleep Quality - How to get it - Audio program
- Make a Whelen Tent with a Square Tarp
- Q & A Poncho Tipi Tips - Audio Program
- Tent Stake Tip Using Shock Cord - Our PSTL
- Pole Frame for Tarp Lean To PSTL Tarp Shown Easy Set Up
- Sliding A Frame Tarp Set Up - Quick Deploy if Needed
- Make a Tunnel Tent with PST and willows
- This Really Ticked Me Off - Help Me Stop It
- Batoning with Swiss Army Hiker? Yup
- How to Make a Bridge Hammock out of Our Poncho
- Make the Basic Foam Hat
- How To Make a Yukon Chair out of a Poncho - BONUS - Yukon Chair Shelter too
- Make a Swinging Chair - Shelter it with small Tarp
- Quick-Tip: Keep those Laces Tied Guaranteed
- From our PSS make a Swinging Hammock Chair
- Try A Stove Snowshoe
- Quick-Tip: Trail Safety -Widowmakers
- Wedge Tarp Set Ups - A Lean To with sides - from a Square Tarp - Easy
- Nine Mile Ranch Camp with Shauna - Exploring 42 miles of Indian Art
- Tire Chains - Simple Installation
- Make Our Poncho into a Hammock
- Magnesium Fire Starting 3 Tips for Success - Doan
- Breakfast in the Spring Snow- Beautiful
- Homemade Root Beer with yeast RELOADED VIDEO
- Doan 1 Handed Fire Starting
- Firebox Ultralite Nano Stove - All about it - Audio show
- Parachute as a Blanket for a Hammock - An Accidental Good Idea
- Payson Lakes Fishin Trip - camping - canoe - hammock - survival blanket
- Support 2 Tarps with 1 High Tension Guy Line
- Survival Blanket Bivy Sitting and Cozy
- Trangia Alcohol Burner Remote/ Continuous Fuel Delivery Test
- Snow Caves Survival Blankets Sleeping Shelf
- Snow Camp in Late Summer at 12 Mile South
- Tarps - 3 Easy Tips for Better Diagonal Set Ups
- Lean To with Log Thermal Wall How to build
- Need a tough as nails Poncho ? Check out the HD Series - Built Tough - Cordura
- Passive Pit Cooking | Survival Cooking
- Using the Swiss Army Can Opener
- Make an "A" Frame Tent from a Poncho with stick supports
- Pyramid Canopy Shelter using our PSTL Tarp
- Using AMSTEELBLUE Cord with our Poncho Hammock
- Wilderness Quick - Tip: Cooking add Fruit Leather
- Better Tarp Pitch for Rain - 5 Tips for Tarp Set Ups
- Vacuum Bottle Wheat Cereal easy and good
- ATACS iX HD Poncho Intro tough as nails and looks great too
- Easy Kydex Sheath Adjustment
- Quick-Tip: Bungee Carry Strap
- Twig Bundle Fire with Doan Magnesium in our Fire Starter Kit
- Quick-Tip: Boot Lacing for dual tightness
- San Rafael Desert Lite Trek to Indian Art - camping
- Offroad Survival Kit
- At The Wedges setting up some New Camp Gear - Hunt Camo
- Use Our Poncho and Liner to make a Winter Coat
- 4 Tarp Setups utilizing our Stake Bags
- The Scavenger Bag
- Tough Poncho in True Timber Snowfall makes hammock and tarp too
- Sneak Peek - New Gear Coming
- Night setup, Winter Camp, Hammock Under Quilt & Blanket, Jet Boil
- Use our HD Poncho to Make a Tough Lean To w/Awning
- Tie the Jam Knot - Make a Cozy Bed
- Experimenting with Layered Hammocks and Covers Using our Poncho Shelter System
- WQT Winter Shelter Secret
- New HD Series Poncho Survival Shelter - It's Tough - Intro
- Simple Survival Seasoning
- Prusik Loops Handy Around Camp
- Foam gear preview other hats mittens vest and mukluks
- The Snow Insulated Bed - Nice and Warm
- Making A Backpacking Continuous Flow Water Heater
- Our Poncho and Tarp Colors
- Make a Tipi with Our Poncho the PSSL
- Poncho A Frame Shelter with Our PSSL
- Review of the saw blade on the Swiss Army Hiker - nice!!
- Q-Tip Fire Starting Torch
- Rock Cavity Winter Shelter w Parachute and Blanket
- Camping at The Wedge - Central Utah Desert - Camp Tips too
- Trangia Burner Drink Warmer Modification
- Poncho Solar Super Shelter - Our PSSL
- Poncho Survival Shelter System - The Evolution from a multipurpose poncho to a system
- Snow hike up Hobble Creek Canyon
- Crab Boil under PSTL Tarp Rainy Camp
- Lake Camp in the Quakies - Tip Soft Shackles - HD Poncho - Shelters
- Doan Magnesium - 3 methods of fire
- Make a Dowell Pin on a Pole in the Woods -Bushcraft - Campcraft - Shelter
- Preview Our Poncho Liner
- Edibles:Stinging Nettle Good Nutritious
- Snap together a Hammock, Fleece and Under Quilt using our Poncho
- Guyot Squishy Bowl as Pot Holder
- Quick - Tip: Natures Pot Scrubbers
- A Handful of Canopy Tarp Set Ups and Handy Tips
- Emergency Blanket Survival Shelter
- Duct Tape Fire Starter w/magnesium bar
- Tangle Free Cord Winding
- Snow Hike with the kids and granddaughter
- Chicken Creek w Shauna Exploring, Campfire Dinner
- Poncho Optional Hoodie Pocket and Liner
- Seated Bivy Shelter with our PSSL Poncho
- Fire Starting in Damp Conditions
- Survival without Food - AUDIO Program
- We Test our Tarp, Poncho/Hammock, and Blanket Fabric - It's Tough
- Magnesium Fire Starter Fraud
- Wilderness Innovation- What it is May Surprise You
- No Tent Bough Bed Survival Blanket Camp in Snow
- Fire Starting with Only 1 second of Flame - useful for windy conditions
- Quick -Tip: Jacket Bivy to keep warm
- Organize your Survival Kit - our Tabs make it simple
- Moisture Handling for Tent Tarp Sleeping Gear - AUDIO
- Good Eatin' Try this tip with Ramen
- Whistles for Faster Rescue
- Can mittens and hat be warm when soaked in ice water? watch and see
- Roycroft Pack Punk Wood Fire Kit Poncho Tips Camping
- NEW Under Quilt for Poncho / Hammock - PSB Style
- In an Emergency: S T O P
- Poncho Pistol Carry is Easy inside our Hoodie Pocket 5 11 Velcro Holster
- Camping by Dinosaur Quarry & visit + campsite + setup tips
- Survival Blanket an Introduction to Our PSB - AUDIO PROGRAM
- Make a Water Carrier with a Poncho - Also Gravity feed Water Filter
- Camp Cookin - DIY Red Beans n Rice - Dehydrated Taste Great
- Tarp Tips: Making Do Using Mods
- Quick-Tip Mormon Tea soothing and medicinal
- WI RealSurvival Kit Video 1 Overview
- Testing Our Gear Carry Bags - Protecting your Investment
- Fire Starting with Waxed Rope
- Tree Bark as Insulation
- Double Hammock Tarp Set Up with Our PSTL
- Build A Free Chicken Feeder
- Spring Canyon Winter Camp
- Hammock Converted to Poncho then made into Shelter - quick and easy
- Trek 3 Days without ANY Food (REPAIRED video)
- Canopy Bug Net - How to Tips - Use without a hammock - Shelter
- Camp Cooking - Boiled Omelet
- Quick - Tip: Survival Kit Meds, Allergy
- Make A Floored Bivy From A Tarp - Featuring our PSTL
- Uses for Cylinder Type Gear Bags w MOLLE
- Survival Dental Care
- Quick-Tip Leaves a survival item
- Corona 10 inch Folding Saw Review
- My Old 1980's Snowshoe - Info and Test Run in powder snow
- Excellent Water Handling Properties of the Survival Blanket
- Take A Break - Enjoy the Outdoors
- Rain Poncho Snow use in making Quickie Shelter
- No Cord Hammock Hang - Poncho makes into Hammock - Carabiner use
- Easy Wheat Sprouting nothing special needed
- Fire starting with Magnesium stick and inner bark strips
- Cattails: Add 'em to Your Meal
- Never have cold feet again
- Survival Blanket Under Quilt Sleeping Pod for Hammock
- Single Willow Tarp Setup with our PSTS
- 1st Spring Camp Trek using our Gear
- Bug Out Family Style
- Make a Tripod from Our Build-A-Grill Kit
- Save $$$ Refill Propane Cylinders its Easy
- The Twig Stove
- Off-Road Survival Kit with shoulder strap for hiking
- Willow Framed Tarp Shelter No Cordage Needed
- Enhance SODIS water purification: heating
- Canoe Camp at the Lake
- Quick - Tip: Use weeds for shelter and comfort
- Hammock from a Poncho How to Get a Great Nights Sleep - Tips
- Felling Trees Using Leverage
- Make Warm Mittens it's Easy
- Bens Fantastic Snow Melter for Constant Hot water in Snowy areas
- Choosing what gear to take and what to leave behind - Multipurpose - Tarp - Poncho - Hammock
- Baking Pie Over Flames Not Coals in a Dutch Oven
- 7 Ways to Use the Doan Magnesium Fire Starter
- Two Tarp Combo Set Up with Our PST
- Quick - Tip: Lip Balm n T shirt fire
- Use Matches-Tip to make better burning
- Testing Personal Size Dome Canopy
- Doan Magnesium Lights Tire Rubber
- Making the Twig Stove - excerpts from 21 minute video
- Quick Tip - Dry Tinder in Snowy Woods
- Keep Parachute Cord Untangled
- Lake Mountain Solo Desert Trek - Audio Program
- Make a Wilderness Couch
- SuperWarmMukluks intro
- Smokeless Cooking inside Shelter
- Old Twig Stove Dissected how its made
- EZ Peach Cobbler on the Twig Stove
- Fall Camp Clothing - What I Do
- Quick - Tip: Lichens fun way to eat 'em
- How to Make a Tripod from a Build-A-Grill Kit
- The New Twig Stove Maiden Voyage
- OffRoad Survival Kit - Hot Chocolate
- Enhanced Survival Kit
- 3 Function Personal Survival Shelter
- Make a Leaf Blanket using our Slider Bug Net
- Convertible Tomato Cages: How to Make
- Add 1 item to Ramen - tastes great
- Make a Seated Bivy for Cozy Rest or Recon
- Spring Bike Camp in Rain w Tarp Hammock Blanket
- Caching Water on the Desert
- OD Green vs Ranger Green New HD Poncho color
- Fire with Rope - Also Testing Conduit Legs for PD Shelter
- NEW Multifunction Gear Bag - Bug out with this
- Fire Starting Tip - Using a Trangia Spirit Burner
- Don't get lost - Mark your way
- Green Willow Fire Backstory - flint & steel AUDIO
- How I "Process" Firewood - Simple - Tips
- Eight Lakes Trek - several early fall days in the Mountains
- Custom Soft Shackle + Whoopie Sling + Poncho makes Hammock
- Hood option for our Poncho Fleece Liner
- Spoon Carving A Campfire Hobby
- To Survive - Just Flip that Switch
- An Interesting Find Near My Camp
- Heated Poncho Shelter
- Edibles: Thistle Abundant Food Source
- Testing Tree Straps with Our Poncho / Hammock Set Up - Sleeping arrangement
- Make Yukon Chair from Our PSS
- Cleaning Up Camp - Make a Broom
- Optimus Svea 123 Stove after 25 yrs - test
- Lodge Cast Iron - Cookin Steak Peppers Mushrooms w Cookin Irons over a campfire
- Staying Hydrated in Winter
- Eating Raw Stinging Nettle also Thistle a Trailside Snack
- FireBox Folding Stove More Cool Stuff to do
- Camp Breakfast - Grits Redeye Gravy Ham Biscuit in Whelen Tent
- Winter Water without Stove or Fire
- Three Handfuls Fire Starting - Simple - Spring in the Desert
- Winter Hyrdation Tip - Hot Water
- Campfire Cookin Sticks
- Quick - Tip: Don't lose your Gear use lanyards
- Baked Chicken on Campfire w Build A Grill Kit
- Punk Wood Winter Fire Starting using sparks
- Duck Fork Camp w Osni Bag etc
- Snowy Canoeing Camp - Scouts - Osni Cloak - Tips
- My Favorite Tarp Set Up for a Hammock - Set up tips
- Unusual Tarp Part Two - Raised Bed Mattress - Expansion Space in one step
- Quick Shelter in Small Dense Brush Unedited Setup
- Red Rocks Camping in Utah - Explore - Cook - Camp - My Life
- Unusual Offset Tarp Set Up offers extra protection - uses square tarps
- Poncho Shelter System - Part One
- LIve Shelter Set Up - Quick - Unedited set up - Poncho Shelter System
- Putting the Osni Cloak to Work at Camp
- Live Shelter set up on Hard Rocky Slope - Unedited setup
- Tarp Accessory Kit for Ponchos - NEW
- One Handed Shelter Set up Unedited - Not Staged
- Hammock Kit for Ponchos - Shuttle Sling - Winter Hammock Setup
- Roomy Poncho Shelter Lean To - perpendicular layout
- Blizzard Bivy - Local Materials + Poncho Shelter
- No Man's Mountain - Desert Trek - Beautiful Views
- Why Figure 8 Cord Wrap - How To Make a Jig at Home - In Field
- Horseback into Black Box Canyon - Desert Trek - Utah
- New Locations New Products - Exploring the Desert - Product Intros
- Winter Camp Experiments - Fire - Super Shelters - No Tent
- Cold Feet - 8 Tips for Using Our Survival Blankets
- Live Set Up Poncho Shelter at Salt Creek
- Get the most out of Poncho Shelters Tips - Slings - Blanket Pod - Bug Net
- My Truck Long Drawer Gear Organizer
- Snow in the Red Rocks of Utah - Camp - Insulated Hammock - Passive Cooking - Scenery
- The BEAST in a Hammock - Don't even think about getting cold
- Rocky ground and wind - set up The BEAST sleeping system for comfort
- THE BEAST - Comfort on the Ground - Integrates our Gear
- Overlanding Peacock Style - Exploring the Utah Desert
- Delicate Arch Trek at Mexican Mountain - Camping - Cooking
- Cedar Mtn Camp - Rainy - Hammock - BEAST - Cooking Brownies on Fire -
- Dyneema Hammock and Poncho and Tarp - Test Project - Cuben Fiber
- Simple Nesting Cookware - Fire Bundle - Night Camp
- Campfire BBQ Ribs - Tarp Canopies - Cedar Mtn Camp part 2
- Stingray Tarp Set Up for Hammock - Unusual set up - Poncho is Hammock
- Ultralite Poncho Shelter set up in wind - Silpoly w Dyneema Tarp Kit
- Sids Mtn Hike and camp - Beast Sleeping Pad on the Rocks - Desert Beauty
- Beat Your Hammock / Poncho With a Stick - would you? HD Fabric
- Poncho for a Seated Bivy - Mobile Shelter - Personal Size Tent - Add Liner to Insulate
- Tandem Beast Sleeping Pads and Tarp - Makes a Tent - Almost
- Hammock Strap Kit Intro - Ultralite Poncho to Hammock set up
- New Ultralite Tarp Kit for Ponchos - Turn a Poncho into a Tarp
- Night camp w rain and hail - shelter and cooking - Current berry pancakes
- Camping - Make Asymmetrical Tarp - Hammock - Dyneema Poncho - Chop Kindling - Fire - Dyneema fail
- Buckhorn Viewpoint Camp Spectacular Scenery Solo Camp San Rafael Swell
- Don't Baton a Hatchet - A Hatchet does not need a Baton to Work - Splitting wood kindling
- NEW Ultralite Rectangular Tarp - Wild Chokecherries - Test Hammock Clip
- Hammock to Shelter Conversion - Poncho to Hammock to Tarp - 3 minutes
- Camp in a Borrowed Jeep - Rainy night - Ultralite set up - My Thoughts
- Dyneema Poncho Project Testing to Failure - VLOG
- Unusual Way to Use a Tarp Over a Fire - The Beast Sleeping Pad Set Up
- Basic Hammock to Pup Tent Conversion - How To - Use Multipurpose Poncho
- Trouble on Solo Remote Desert Camp Stranded - Things OK until
- How to Use Paracord to Make a Hammock from Our Poncho - Sleep Pad set up
- New Hi-Tech Fabric for Poncho / Hammock - Very Strong yet light - Not Dyneema
- Setting up The Beast Sleeping System in the Wind - Sleeping Pad - Cloak Blanket - Poncho Tarp
- Bikepacking High Altitude - Simple Light Gear - Multipurpose
- How to choose a Poncho Size - Customized Poncho / Hammock / Tarp Combos
- Ultralite Poncho not just for backpacking - Multipurpose Poncho hammock tarp
- Setting up a Hammock after Midnight Using a Poncho, Beast, and Osni Blanket
- Breakfast Bagels at Buckhorn Draw - Love Camping on the desert
- Torso Beast - the ultimate small factor sleeping pad
- Fall Camp on the Skyline - Just for Practice - and a Nap in the Rain
- Making Mormon Tea or Indian Tea - A Brewed Sun Tea
- Search for Assembly Hall Peak - Solo Camping on the desert - Utah
- ATACS iX & MARPAT camo Ponchos added to our Ultralite line Multipurpose - Tarp - Hammock - Shelter
- Making Wild Chokecherry Syrup at Camp w Shauna - Cook Roast - Sleep Set up
- Camping Jeeping with my Sister on Utah Desert | Campfire Calzones
- Raspberry Turnovers | Campfire Cooking | Solo Camp | Cast Iron
- Camp Overlooking Spectacular Utah Canyons | Versatile Sleeping Gear | VLOG intro
- Poncho for Blizzard Protection | Add liner for added comfort
- In a Blizzard, Shelter in Vehicle | How to Get Comfortable | Preparedness
- Ponchos For Tall or Big People | Works as Hammocks or Tarps too
- We Don't Puff -- What is warmer? Quilt or Non Quilt