... Without any technology and money but I dont know how long can I survive...
Do you think its possible.
... Without any technology and money but I dont know how long can I survive...
Do you think its possible.
My Bachelor's degree is in Outdoor Education. I cannot guarantee your thriving in a wilderness. Here is my advice- Your most important tool is a knife, since it can make other tools. Having a whetstone, a file and/or a strop will keep it sharp. There are many styles of knife, but it's important to have a durable edge, a springy blade and be solidly constructed. Your most vital resource is air, followed by clean drinking water. Hammocks are a fine bed- it's important to sleep off of the ground, both for warmth and to avoid insects in the night. Practice making fire without a lighter or matches. At any ground-level altitude on Earth, boiling water for 3 minutes kills all pathogens. Hot coals can be dumped into a water vessel to boil it; if your only vessel is a plastic bag, then thickly lining it on the interior with green grass will prevent it melting and add a pleasant flavor. Boiled clay-water can be used for washing, including your teeth. Fruit, honey, nuts, eggs, fish and meat will be your biggest bang-for-the-buck meals. Get a book on plant identification for your chosen region and beware eating poisonous ones. Mushrooms are a terrible risk, for not much energy. Practice cutting meat very thin and drying it in the sun over a fire. Practice making traps. Learn to build a bow. Become skilled with a bow. Learn various knots. Learn to set up, take down and pack up a tent. Finding a wilderness at all, which is both bountiful and where humans would allow you to live, is a challenge in modernity. Trying out surviving for 1 day is a reasonable start, particularly when bringing your own water. One can adapt to fasting, eliminating the pain of hunger and instead only becoming tired (though one can still starve to death).
Learn how to keep a fire from spreading. In short, if it can burn, move it several paces away from your fire. Remember that burning embers can fly.
Additional thoughts: a whetstone works best when wet, ehich allows ot to not become clogged with bits of metal. You can also boil water by first heating stones in a fire and then placing yhrm in the water- you should make sure that they are dry by keeping them so for a while- the shape, type and size of the stone will change the necessary amount of time. 2 days is generally a safe bet. They ca be placed using large sticks, and it will probably take practice.
If a stone is thrown into a fire when wet, it can explode with shrapnel.
I don't know how convincing it will sound, but there are quite a few wildlife youtubers who use technology just to share their content with the world. Apart from their online presence, they claim they don't use technology for other purposes such as shopping, keeping up with current affairs etc. . To cut long story short it seems possible.
https://www.youtube.com/embed/iAz7R8Zwuhghttps://www.youtube.com/embed/U7xUWaMDF4QDefinitely possible to live off grid
Opinion
1Opinion
You need a wife dealing with many things for you at least.
It would be hard to find a wife with same nature centric mentality like me.
Sure. Pitch a Tent. xxoo
Why don't you do it xx
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