Mate, I really liked your video so at peace with all things natural, it took me back to when we were kids up at the farm, on the school holidays we would take our gear and hike up the mountain for 4-5 Klms and camp for a week or so.
Here in Australia we didn't have big animals to contend with, mainly dingoes ( they were quite timid, they would have a go at you if there were 10 or so of them.) Snake were the main ones you'd have to contend with, most time if you kept an eye out for them, they were OK.
Most times we always carried a .22 cal rifle ( they called a pea rifle, I really don't know why, maybe because the slug size was the same as a pea). We camped beside a mountain stream, always fresh beautiful clean water.
We virtually lived of the land only ate what we caught ( shot nothing to eat, mainly protection ). The creeks provided us with blue mountain yabbies, the trees had Wonga pigeons, beautiful cooked in clay( an old Aboriginal trick that they taught my brother and I ).
If we got desperate for food we put snares up along a Kangaroo/Wallaby trail and had fresh meat for days. I could go on forever, thanks to the above video for bringing back old memories.
JELLOPICKLE
Where did you leave the meat overnight? Just hanging there in the tripod? I would be worried about an animal coming. Awesome video, I love your aesthetics and Denmark looks so beautiful. I'm jealous because where I'm from in on the Canadian west coast our wood is often very wet for much of the year due to heavy rain. The wood you harvest looks so nice to work with haha!.
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