hello /out/. I'm moving from Tijuana (México) to Maine in week, best /out/ spots? and how do I deal with cold? I no going to be used to it
Anonymous
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>>2815156 >best /out/ spots? Tijuana
Anonymous
>>2815156 does frogposting really trigger the /out/ janny? kek
Anonymous
Anonymous
>>2815317 Frogposters are low quality posters.
Anonymous
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>>2817328 brugly the whole board is low quality
what do you use to keep all your outdoors gear organized while at home? chuck it all in a plastic bin? separate your ""bug out bag""/emergency bag from the rest? keep some gear in your car? ofc guns and ammo go in separate storage but what about all the rest.
Anonymous
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>>2814950 Costco rack and buckets with different gear applications.
Anonymous
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Hung pegboard in the garage, stacking bin shelves, and a 30 gal bin for the car-camping stuff
Anonymous
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>>2815196 Kek, what a faggot.
Anonymous
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>>2816950 OP summarizes this entire board
it's not camping it's people who spend thousands in equipment every year and never use any of it
Anonymous
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>>2814950 Gee bill, two toboggans?
Kukri or Parang? Which is the superior tool when deciding to go /out/?
Anonymous
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classic usgi entrenchment tool, nothing else a taiga-1 is perfect too
Anonymous
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>>2816425 For what purpose, and what environment? For general camp tasks in temperate forests a small axe or even a large tomahawk is going to work much better. If you're brushing out trails you're going to kill your wrist/elbow, just get a chainsaw it will be worth it.
Anonymous
Anonymous
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>>2816581 >Google "bowie axe" >Throwing knives Anonymous
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>>2816524 usefulness > looking cool
you can do so much more with an axe or following the traditional kit by the OG mountainmen thag got bushcrafr started
2 knives and an ace
one knife for utility
one knife game processing
one axe for wood processing
in terms if exotics:
a decent langseax can go a long way as well as the thick broad side allows for a much deeper bite into wood than a kukri or machete and even bowie knife can offer.
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Has anyone hiked this in its entirety? How long did it take and what was it like? What are some highlights and what segments are less enjoyable? This can also serve as a general wisconsin /out/ thread.
Anonymous
>>2817176 Just go to Raceway Woods like the rest of the "Chicago area" suburban new age hippies from West Dundee
Anonymous
>>2817178 Why? It looks small
Anonymous
>>2817176 Imagine if you will a mammoth walking through there?
Anonymous
Anonymous
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>>2817179 It's the largest and coolest forest preserve in the area anyway unless you drive out to Galena or something
Is there any good hiking (ie: 10mi+ trails) worth doing in Iowa, Kansas or Nebraska?
Anonymous
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>>2811748 Very close, but LA and AR are not the Midwest.
Anonymous
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>>2813403 Texas and Oklahoma are multi-region states. There's no way that El Paso, Houston, and everywhere in between are part of the midwest.
>>2811748 This is the first time that I have ever seen Louisiana being labeled part of the midwest. That is wildly inaccurate. So is the exclusion of Michigan, Indiana and Ohio. Cleveland/NEO is the only part that's northeastern and even that is considered a transitional zone with heavy midwestern influence.
Anonymous
Anonymous
>>2813174 That map has been on this board longer than you
Anonymous
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>>2815711 notice they ain't responda that
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I'm so obsessed with this site that I didn't touch grass for hours
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What is the best handhold (the hardest part to get right) to use for a bow drill? I know obviously something like ball bearings are the best possible choice, but I mean something natural that can be found in the bush. Rocks that are soft enough to create an indent in are rare, bone that's large enough is rare around here. I was thinking greenwood with some kind of plant sap for lubricant (what kind is best?)
Anonymous
avocado pits, dry them out, natural lubrication.
Anonymous
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>>2816320 dead wood burns through too fast even with lubrication
Live greenwood is better but not exactly ideal
Anonymous
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>>2816320 Yes you could do exactly this. Other anon is being a bit pretentious. Wood is dense enough it wouldn't burn your hand before burning up your dried moss/grass, leaves whatever
Anonymous
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back in the day when i gave a shit about "bushcraft" and learning how to use bowdrill, i used everything from stones, shells, bones, everything really. but the absolute best hand hold i´ve found for a bowdrill? halved and dried avocado pits, somehow the friction "activates" or whatever, the fats in the pit, giving natural lubrication, they wear out faster then a wood handhold sure, but you can get a fire in half the time, and you get two per pit. of course it isn't something you can "naturally" scavenge, but i would be interested in trying out if it would work with outher large seeds, but we dont have anything like it here in my northern climate
Anonymous
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>>2816399 this actually sounds like a good idea
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I refuse to share the trail with bikers. They actively ruin it with their giant fucking mountain bikes zipping around at 20-30mph like it's some roller coaster ride
Anonymous
>>2814977 Exactly. You won't do shit because you're bitchmade.
Anonymous
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bikes =/= motorbikes i hate mountain bikers as much as the next guy, but plowing it up with a cv90 on a hiking trail, pretty sure that is already illegal
Anonymous
>>2815013 Yes you are correct. I a good person who would never do anything wrong.
Anonymous
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>>2815033 No, you're just bitchmade. Don't overthink it.
Anonymous
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You sound like a bitch. Have fun walking while I cruise by blasting my Bluetooth speaker, peasant.
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Be me, someone who use to use a sit on top kayak; but is now out of shape and fat. Upgraded to a Liquid Logix Renix XP10 and gear during covid; but never went /out and used it. Decided to go on the 8-mile float with the local Boy Scout troop yesterday. Easy part of the Buffalo River in AR, super scenic. Arrive and gear up, I have almost the entire gear set for light white water kayaking. Boat, spray skirt, PFD, good paddle, Sweet Strutter helmet, throw bag, etc… Gear up goes great, have lots of fun joking with the other scout parents. We have 26 scouts in our group and there are around 150 people putting in to float the river. Plus all the outfitters that rent canoes who are working. Throw the boat up on my shoulder and walk to the river, feel like a king, great weather, look absolutely badass with my gear, Get the boat in the water, sit on the back, and slide my feet in. Kayak fits like a glove! Launch from the bank goes perfect, it is going to be a great day. Dip my paddle in and do the first stroke. Boat catches the current and right there, three feet from the bank, I absolutely dump it. Never learned to roll due to this being a hobby that was not used much and must bail. Come up from under the boat, grab it, stand up in the river. Absolute silence on the river, all 150 people, and all 26 scouts watching me with their mouths open in shock. LOL, what great way to start the day!
Anonymous
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Float was absolutely amazing by the way! River was up and it had a few class 2 rapids to liven things up, managed to not dump it in them!
Anonymous
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>buy shit >dont learn how to use it properly