I love how this channel can show you primitive methods of survival, shelter building, toolmaking, and other things without saying a single word.
[QUOTE=TomatoFlakes;52007889]I love how this channel can show you primitive methods of survival, shelter building, toolmaking, and other things without saying a single word.[/QUOTE]
He will. he just hasn't gotten around to inventing language, yet
i want see what the most advanced technology he will make by the end of this
[QUOTE=TomatoFlakes;52007889]I love how this channel can show you primitive methods of survival, shelter building, toolmaking, and other things without saying a single word.[/QUOTE]
protip: check the description
Who would've thought that the Internet would be the only motivation you'd need to go outside?
[QUOTE=TomatoFlakes;52007889]I love how this channel can show you primitive methods of survival, shelter building, toolmaking, and other things without saying a single word.[/QUOTE]
I recently discovered that he adds a lot of description to what he's doing in the closed captions.
looking at his videos, you really start to realize how incredible and capable our technology is now
all that time and effort to make a kiln and some pottery but we take more refined modern products for granted
imagine 2000 years from now and someone finds a video of us building a house
[QUOTE=Akuma_lektro;52008082]protip: check the description[/QUOTE]
I know about the in-depth explanations of what he does but they aren't required at all to understand what he's doing or how he's doing it.
(It can provide useful details if you wanted to use the methods however.)
These videos have such a cool cozy atmosphere to them, reminds me of games like Age of Empires and Caesar.
cant wait for the mating episode
Literally the best channel on Youtube.
He even has a graveyard for all the pottery that is fallen in the kiln :cry:
play both
[media]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jJLTYcbknLQp[/media]
[QUOTE=Kill001;52008232]looking at his videos, you really start to realize how incredible and capable our technology is now
all that time and effort to make a kiln and some pottery but we take more refined modern products for granted
imagine 2000 years from now and someone finds a video of us building a house[/QUOTE]
If this is what we have now:
[media]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xktwDfasPGQ[/media]
...then future construction practices should be pretty interesting. I wonder if it would feel the same to look back on things from the future with regards to how we're doing things now, similar to how we look back at houses being built before us.
Not only was this a cool watch, but branching to another subject: termites (not the wood-boring pest ones some would think at first) are also pretty cool.
It's awe-inspiring in a way how some mound-building species in the east can create these towering citadels made with just mud, clay, and whatever else they can use.
[t]http://d3ct8f39dj9jhs.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/a-giraffe-walks-behand-a-termite-mound-in-the-bushland-of-the-okavango-delta-in-botswana-1600x1066-1024x682.jpg[/t]
Oh, and these funny looking fellas' of the nasute soldier caste (which I've taken to calling "needlenoses" for their horn-like projections):
[t]https://c1.staticflickr.com/4/3907/15309917686_41cd8af395_b.jpg[/t]
[QUOTE=Dr. Kyuros;52010576]Not only was this a cool watch, but branching to another subject: termites (not the wood-boring pest ones some would think at first) are also pretty cool.
It's awe-inspiring in a way how some mound-building species in the east can create these towering citadels made with just mud, clay, and whatever else they can use.
[t]http://d3ct8f39dj9jhs.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/a-giraffe-walks-behand-a-termite-mound-in-the-bushland-of-the-okavango-delta-in-botswana-1600x1066-1024x682.jpg[/t]
Oh, and these funny looking fellas' of the nasute soldier caste (which I've taken to calling "needlenoses" for their horn-like projections):
[t]https://c1.staticflickr.com/4/3907/15309917686_41cd8af395_b.jpg[/t][/QUOTE]
We're talking about bugs now? postal get in here
[editline]25th March 2017[/editline]
to talk about bugs
This guy has seen where the world is heading, and he's prepared.
[QUOTE=TimeSchocK;52010264]He even has a graveyard for all the pottery that is fallen in the kiln :cry:[/QUOTE]
I believe he mentioned in the description that the broken pottery in that hole is used to make grog that will make future clay stronger.
Subscribed, this was awesome to watch. My mother and her husband are both abstract sculpture artists, they'll definitely get a kick out of this.
[QUOTE=Kill001;52008232]looking at his videos, you really start to realize how incredible and capable our technology is now
all that time and effort to make a kiln and some pottery but we take more refined modern products for granted
imagine 2000 years from now and someone finds a video of us building a house[/QUOTE]
I get the opposite from these videos: It's amazing how inventive humans were with only dirt, wood, and stones.
[editline]26th March 2017[/editline]
[QUOTE=TomatoFlakes;52007889]I love how this channel can show you primitive methods of survival, shelter building, toolmaking, and other things without saying a single word.[/QUOTE]
This channel is incredible but probably isn't that useful for actual survivalism. This is the stuff you'd be worried about over years of survival, not just days or weeks, which is where you wanna focus for survival.
I wonder how people discovered/came up with some of these techniques.
[QUOTE=IrishBandit;52013636]I wonder how people discovered/came up with some of these techniques.[/QUOTE]
Hey Craig, look at this cheeky thing I did!
[QUOTE=IrishBandit;52013636]I wonder how people discovered/came up with some of these techniques.[/QUOTE]
once you've got survival itself figured out, you've got lots of time to be bored and complain about things, and seek solutions to those things
[QUOTE=bitches;52013674]once you've got survival itself figured out[/QUOTE]
Well that's the hard bit.
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