Building My BEST DUGOUT EVER - ALONE into Wild Forest - Bushcraft Moss PILLOW - Badger Came - 4K

Published 2022-07-02
Asbjorn Olsen-Berg Bushcraft: Building My BEST DUGOUT EVER - ALONE into Wild Forest - Bushcraft Moss PILLOW - Badger Came - 4K
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About This Video:
In this video you will see the construction of a dugout in a hillside using hand tools.
It's a very hard job, but also an interesting experience.
For construction, I use only dead fallen trees, which I collect in the surrounding forest.

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Sleeping in a sand pit was a bad idea - in the process of drying, the sand gradually crumbled, and with it the stones. It is better never to do this, it can be life threatening.
Also, the sand that I poured on the roof crumbles a little inside. I'm thinking of fixing this in the future.

Digging a hole of this size was not as easy as I thought. This took longer than I expected.
Finding and processing dead fallen trees also takes a significant amount of time.
But the assembly of the structure itself is quite simple and does not take much effort and time.

From food I took with me mainly canned food, during the day the air temperature is quite high, the rest of the products can deteriorate.
But even canned food warmed up on a fire is very tasty after a whole day of work in the fresh air.
Despite the warm weather, the water in the river is cool, very refreshing and invigorating.

I fought mosquitoes and midges with the help of fire smoke. Inside the dugout, I set fire to a tinder fungus - it is a natural repellent.

To be continued.
Thanks for watching!

Temperature: Day/Night: +25°C (77ºF) / +16°C (60,8ºF)

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Camera: Canon EOS R6
Lens 1: Canon RF 50mm F1.2 L USM
Lens 2: Canon RF 35mm/1.8 macro IS STM
Lens 3: Canon RF 16mm
Mic: RODE VideoMic NTG
Tripod: Sirui 5C

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Disclaimer: This video is not intended to be a guide and is filmed for entertainment purposes only. The author does not recommend repeating the actions shown in this video and is not responsible for the consequences. It can be life threatening.
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#bushcraft #dugout #offgrid #survival

All Comments (21)
  • @Opr8rKaz
    No talking, No sponsor areas, no random stuff, just pure outdoorsman
  • @doggtown72
    Bro, nobody would consider it to be cheating if you packed a full length shovel into the woods. The fact that you did all that work with an E-Tool is crazy. Made my back hurt just watching it. Amazing work.
  • @robk5745
    Best build I’ve ever seen, no wasted movements, no panic, just smooth and efficient building. Thanks for recording this!
  • @Uni_baller
    Someone’s going to stumble on that in 100 years and be very grateful you were there to build that! Excellent work
  • @marksauck8481
    I’ve walked through many forests throughout my life and know you’re not going to find perfect building material that’s all that uniform in size and dryness without first trekking far and wide collecting it. This isn’t that easy. I believe this guy, if working alone, spent a great deal of time, prior, looking for all those logs. I wish they had filmed that part of the process because doing this on your own is lot more difficult and time consuming then we think.
  • @uubankwang
    What is blowing my mind is that you can be equal parts gifted in woodland shelter construction as well as cinematography and video editing.
  • Finally! A man who keeps his trap shut and cracks on with what needs to be done. True quality content.
  • @Oscuros
    I've done a lot of digging as a young man for work. I was impressed that you could dig a hole that deep with just an entrenching tool alone in less than a day. My hands hurt when you went through the layer of river stones, it's not easy work, especially with just that. Well done.
  • @MySkobi
    after building around 5 full on sheters and 1 dugout, I can confirm that this is the most beautiful dirt I have ever seen. No roots, no giant rocks, no underground hidden wells of water, just plain beautiful dirt. Nowhere to be found in my forests haha Great build, so much respect for you and everybody who builds and films stuff like this. Keep up the great work and stay safe.
  • Watching this felt like 40 minutes of meditation. Nothing but serenity, nature and hard graft. Respect bro, thankyou! 👊🏻❤
  • @austinblack869
    People don’t realize how lucky they are to live in woods like these. They are perfect for building.
  • @conk8636
    Coming from a ex logger. Man cleanest end cuts I’ve ever seen. Better than a chainsaw, and not a speck of dirt on pants or knees. Dudes a G.
  • @d112cons
    Those rocks really tell a story. Just a few layers down, a bed of smooth river rock. Which means the stream - now so far below - once ran exactly where he's building. A record of ancient history, a few centimeters of earth at a time.
  • @nfcboys1984
    The mosquitos swarming and acting like they were going to carry this man away would be enough for me! Incredible work!
  • @scotttilson8876
    I sometimes wonder if these people are really building these things themselves or they getting help. If they’re really building them. That’s real talent.
  • @Kupolikop._.
    Man I can't even imagine the amount of effort he put into finding logs that are also so perfect and similar this is really the most amazing thing I've ever seen
  • @omjourney
    During my childhood in the woods of southern New Jersey in the late 70s/early 80s, we built many dugout “forts”. They weren’t this elaborate and nice but I remember digging and collecting logs for days with good friends. Thanks for bringing back fond memories.
  • @MrCytree
    I want to start by saying I enjoyed this video. And I am not saying that it is not possible to do what this guy has done. But if the timeline in the video is not being fudged with, then in the first three days of labour, using a short shovel, a pull saw, and an axe, he made three+ meals a day for himself, found and cut 120+ straight logs, transported them to site, dug a significant hole in the ground, cut and gathered piles of moss and transported IT to site, built the walls and roof of a rough log cabin, and then covered the roof with dirt. That is an absurd amount of work to accomplish with the tools he is shown using and would take an enormous amount of calories. I could accept all of this, but what I will not stand for is that I did not see him even ONE time flailing away like a madman at the mosquitoes buzzing around. No one has that sort of mental fortitude. But perhaps that is just a lifetime of living in Northern Ontario that has made me so biased against the mosquito. An insect that I consider to be my personal arch-enemy. One night long ago, while sitting at a campfire at our cabin I accumulated 74 mosquito corpses on the arm of my chair as a warning to this evil species. They did not heed this warning and continued their assault until I was forced into the camp, leaving the carnage of the battlefield strewn with their evil little corpses.
  • Thank you so much for 40 minutes of pure entertainment. You are skilled and a man of wilderness. Indeed! You are the " Lone Ranger". Keep it up ❤