500 Days Survival And Build In A Rain Forest - NO FOOD, NO WATER, NO SHELTER

Published 2023-11-13
Hi, my name is Nick. I come from VietNam.I spent 500 days surviving and building in the rainforest. Starting from things found in nature and using primitive skills, I built a safe shelter and created a food source that helped me live a stable life in the forest. follow and see my life for the past 3 months. Follow and see my life for the past 500 days
Dear Mr/Ms
Thank you very much for your value time to Watch,Like,Comment,Share and Subscribe our videos on Primitive Technology Idea Channel, and we will try all our best to find more idea as try to Create more videos to make your assist and more facilities.
If you have any idea or more convenience to support us please don't hesitate to contact with us all time 24TH/7 Days.

Follow us now!
Subcribe :    / @primitivetechnologyidea  
Gmail : [email protected]

All Comments (21)
  • @the1_grammy503
    I actually lol’d during this video. The screaming tea kettle in the background for sound effects was the best part after all the red bricks.😂😂😂
  • @oasntet
    (I'm aware this is a paid actor supported by a full production team interested only in the ad revenue and not accuracy or honesty, so where I say "you" I really mean all of them...) 1:15: Store-bought refined clay, with oil content not found in nature. You should read up on slaking. 4:10: Poof, grey clay? From where? 8:40: twist store-bought twine into rope. yeah, okay. 9:20: the pencil-and-ruler lines would be easier to buy if you didn't then make fairly miserable ones moments later with charcoal 10:41: cane? far too uniform and round; that's more of the twisted store-bought twine. 11:00: lol, more perfectly smooth clay with added oils for forming. 11:35: After all that effort trying to cut a smooth top, no luck; time to bust out the plastic mold to get those nice round edges. 21:30: The bricks : mortar ratio is way, way off for that kind of mortar. Did you burn down twenty acres to get that much ash? 27:10 lol, the tiles that came out after being fire on edge are not the tiles you put into the furnace. 28:23 lol, no, this is not how you hang tiles. this won't last one rainy season before the 'banana rope' rots through and dumps your palette of store-bought tiles on the ground 29:35 I love how you put grey, unrefined clay tiles into a furnace and pulled out bright red tiles made from an iron-rich clay with zero sign of smoke or fire glazing on them. Wood-fired pottery is very different than the sort of electric-kiln-fired pottery you get from the hardware store. 30:45 and again, but also a good time to mention you aren't getting your tiles hot enough in the open-topped furnace, which is why they're in a pile off-camera slowly dissolving when it rains 32:45 and again, zero sign that these bricks have ever been near a wood fire 33:01 Love that we can see efflorescence on these "newly fired" bricks. That white patch? Yeah, doesn't happen on new bricks, that's something that happens with cheaply manufactured bricks that have had a lot of time to ooze salts from the fillers used. Not something that happens much with natural clay bricks pulled from a kiln recently. 37:40 that's just a bad design. because the shaft and the hole cut through the 'handmade' pottery wheel are round, it just spins freely instead of being a flywheel that keep the shaft moving 38:55 your 2x4 is splitting 39:35 I mean, it's neat how you roughed up a bunch of bandsaw-cut wood to make it look like you did it all with a stone axe, but the planar bits are far, far too in-plane. 40:00 seriously? you can't even resist dumping a box of store-bought bamboo on the ground to make it look like you harvested it? just look at those perfectly-cut ends we're to believe were cut with a stone tool... I might have bought it if it broken at the joints, but you don't even have the taper right; these are short sections cut from far, far taller bamboo plants. oof, and that rope. 41:30 at least it's an idea that didn't come directly from the smaller channel this one borrows everything else from... 43:30 you've gotten a bit better at hiding the obvious signs of digging with a backhoe, but the walls are still far too smooth on the right-side wall, and, uh, you missed some tire tracks 45:19 what's the perfectly-cut dowel in the background? a shovel? 51:40 the fact that the tank didn't collapse outwards despite there being loose soil surrounding it and being made of a wobbly stack of excessively-mortared bricks makes it pretty clear that this was re-done in pool concrete over a metal frame, probably rebar 52:15 oh, the blocking for this is hilarious. is the fish in the water or is it standing on land, about five feet tall? why does the string go out directly sideways? why is the fish pulling it so consistently, is the river fifty feed wide and the fish is a sunday driver? why don't the fish move at all when being pulled from the river? 55:20 those disks of potato aren't going to grow. they don't have eyes. you've made compost. Also, as anybody who's done aquaculture will tell you, you've also killed the fish because you haven't oxygenated the water. 56:00 lol! that's not how potatoes grow, they grow from the skin. did you just poke holes in a raw potato and stick store-bought seedlings into them? 56:46 where'd the fish go? too much work to move them from the real tank for this shot? 60:00 "some time later" what, no fake beard to go with the wig? 1:02:29 what, the prop department couldn't find white yams? so you "planted" white yams and they grew purple ones? 1:03:49 you could have just said you caught another fish in the stream. now it looks like you cooked a catfish and somehow ended up with a completely different fish. 1:09:55 "I haven't eaten this well in months" dude, you shot this over a couple days. you probably ate better for breakfast. Thank god you just added a couple shots of fresh-from-the-farm quail chicks. Not sure I could have stomached the effort you'd need to go through to make it look like they also aged 500 days...
  • Good content.. except the wig 😊 The yams were amazing.. you planted the white and it grow to be purple. And when it was grilled, can produce oil when you squeze it 😊 The cat fish also awesome.. it turn out to be different kind of fish after the grilled. Your skill is excellent. Cant wait to see another video
  • @Shypainter
    500 days and not a drop of sweat, I would have been raining buckets. Awesome video!
  • @sloth_e
    That wig is hilarious!!😂😂😂
  • @Lexas4m
    Я так и не увидел "rain forest"😉👍🔥😁
  • @annettealvey5297
    There are quite a few things you did that made me wonder. Like the zip tie for the start of the basket, tire marks as you make clay, the clay pot is not the same as the one you took out of the fire, the eye hook you used on fire starter, then the wig and the catfish that turn into a carp while cooking, the sweet potatoes with the plant stuck into the Potatoe wedge, grown in the water I think not it would rot! most of the other stuff was ok, and some smart. try better do better. truth your close would have been warn hard and tor or tattered. the one shot your hair is fine and all is good, then you threw in the WIG. WHY???? the pots you put in the fire not the same as the one you made, very different. all in all it was ok just be true with what you do!!! called out bro
  • @francoislebois
    I'm concerned by the amount of people who think this is legit
  • @natehuff8257
    Man, I gotta know where you can get pottery clay in a rainforest. So clean and dense... huge difference in whats used for the fire pits vs pottery. Texture... everything.
  • @woodlawnfinest86
    He got some great survival skills but that dry ass lace front wig just sent me overboard!!!! 😂😂😂 it was all good until I seent it for myself 😮😂😅
  • @edwardnigma2216
    9 months and the plants outside the house didn't even grow an inch... Impressive... Your fish trap even more so... I espeicailly liked the part where the line didn't have to angle down to the water while you caught fish.
  • @BigGabez28gs
    He was definitely inspired by the Australian bloke Primitive Technology who did this 8+yes ago, you should at least acknowledge or give a shout out to the original but besides that still really cool to watch🔥🤙
  • @Jared_09
    All in all. It’s an interesting video.
  • @loveydad4344
    You are very innovative man! I salute your prowess,imagine you made the bricks,the stone you sharpen to become an axe which is so useful to you,wow! You are so innovative man👍👍❤️❤️❤️🇵🇭
  • @byancaduran7303
    Estoy impresionada con su trabajo desde cero hace todo mis respetos para este joven 👏👏👏
  • @user-kr4wh1qb2t
    Este jovem é muito inteligente.jovem ajuda as mães co. Bebês no colo. Parabens pela a tua esperteza Deus te abençoe pra sempre. Continue assim trabalhador.
  • @jodiejones2450
    The wig 😂😂😂... As he built all those tools, you would think he would make a spoon or fork.
  • @MrStraightlover
    I'm intrigued how the rain water can not leak through the roof, while the tile is completely flat, there is no channelings whatsoever in the tile that may be able to seal the rain water from leaking and falling down through the roof.