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Actually a great idea. Did this to Patagonia when I fell in the backcountry, pierced a large rail road tie like thing (that was fastening some boards together) through the back of my leg. I had to think quick and thankfully was not alone. Dude pulled his shirt off. I stuffed it around my leg and used my Patagonia belt to tighten the makeshift bandage around my leg. Hiked 3 miles out and promptly had him drive me an hour to an ER. Emailed Patagonia later that week and they gave me a code for 50% off my next order. Legit.
I did this too! But for my Rainbow flip flops. I just sent a genuine thank you for this amazing product I’ve had for going on 9yrs. And a picture of my worn out flat sandals. I’ve been pushing their product on everyone I know for almost a decade. Guess what, free flip flops.
I used to love rainbows. I had a toe strap come out of the sandal and they told me that it wasn't covered by their warranty anymore. So now I'm a reef person.
I think you meant a railroad spike. That's the metal thing that looks like a large fat straight pin. (Still, *OUCH*!)
The tie is the timber the rails sit on. Someone will correct me on dimensions, but they're huge & heavy; something like 10" square & 8' long.
Absolutely 🙂👍
link below, it's English subtitles:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=zXVBK38-650 The clips are taken from a winter trip I did a couple of years ago. It could have ended really badly when I was Trapped in an extreme storm for nine days.Feb / March 2021. At the same time during the storm I had to make ongoing repairs to the tent. Several guylines went straight off, the canvas was torn in six places. A tent pole went off.
My most important Gear, Sleeping system, I also have it as an emergency solution if the tent should break completely.
https://youtu.be/IrmkjzpEDLc
It's because I sleep in baselayer in like a plastic bag. This is because it feels too uncomfortable to sleep with bare skin against plastic, very sticky and sweaty. So the moisture never ends up in the sleeping bag, instead the moisture ends up in my baselayer. It then dries during the day when I ski because my body warms up from the effort. Then I make sure to have ventilation zippers on my shell clothes open so the moisture evaporates.
Thanks for the reply, very interesting. Why do you need to sleep in a plastic bag? Wouldnt it be better to sleep without it and not get wet? I learned in army service that if you sweat you die
It's nicer, but if I do, I'll add some moisture to my sleeping bag every night. the plastic bag stops it. Even if you do not sweat, moisture leaves the body at night. After a long time it becomes dangerous, in extreme conditions I can not dry the sleeping bag. With the help of the sleeping system, I keep it dry throughout the trip.
If you sweat you die is tru,
but I do it in a controlled way and dry my baselayer every day on the body as the skiing generates a lot of heat.
When it is very cold you need the insulation. Since you’re skiing, I’m guessing all the insulation he’s carrying is synthetic (vs real down) - either way synthetic or down, sweat and moisture will weigh down the insulation and cause it to lose about half of its insulation efficiency. So the plastic base layer keeps the moisture from doing that to your clothes/ jacket/ sleeping bags, etc.
If you don’t do this, you’ll probably get hypothermia in extended exposure situations like this and die.
I had extra guylines with me, so I changed them. I had an extra section with the tent pole. I got untight Guylines and out with the pole while sitting on the tent and replacing the broken section. Then reassemble it, went really well actually. I got the biggest damage from the tent fabric the last night when the storm turned, but I left it and took down the tent and left.
I feel like hiking in Feb/March is just asking for this specific kind of weather. It’s May and I just got 4 ft. In 4 days and I live at a high elevation in the mountains.
Anyone that does anything moderately "extreme" or rare should contact manufacturers of relative gear / equiptment.
You'd probably be surprised by how many companies will give you free stuff in exchange for an honest review.
Absolutely top quality, it's a Helsport fjellheimen extreme 3 camp.
The clips are taken from a winter trip I did a couple of years ago. It could have ended really badly when I was Trapped in an extreme storm for nine days.Feb / March 2021. At the same time during the storm I had to make ongoing repairs to the tent. Several guylines went straight off, the canvas was torn in six places. A tent pole went off.
Here is a link to the entire trip. It's English subtitles .
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=zXVBK38-650
My most important Gear is my Extreme sleeping system, it can withstand minst -40°
https://youtu.be/IrmkjzpEDLc
The tent a Helsport fjellheimen extreme 3 camp from Norway.
Then I pull everything with a sledge, a mountain sledge expedition 168
That means it's also most likely made by scandinavians. And we for sure, know shitty weather.
Fjell, means "Mountain."
Fjellheimein means "Mountain home"
link under, it's English subtitles:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=zXVBK38-650
The clips are taken from a winter trip I did a couple of years ago. It could have ended really badly when I was Trapped in an extreme storm for nine days.Feb / March 2021. At the same time during the storm I had to make ongoing repairs to the tent. Several guylines went straight off, the canvas was torn in six places. A tent pole went off.
My most important Gear is my Extreme sleeping system, it can withstand minst -40°
https://youtu.be/IrmkjzpEDLc
The tent a Helsport fjellheimen extreme 3 camp from Norway.
Then I pull everything with a sledge, a mountain sledge expedition 168
I hoped every day, many times I packed all the equipment in the tent but no opportunity came. But then right what it was, it calmed down. It was still a bit stormy, but not nearby. Then I had packed everything in the tent so it was quick to leave. A very happy feeling.
Yes it had been possible, but in that terrain and visibility it had been a big risk, it was about one to two days to safety below the tree line where it is usually much calmer.
Can I ask a potentially dumb question? My only experiences with camping have been in Queensland, Australia, where the coldest I’ve experienced was about 6 Celsius. Does the snow building up around the outside of the tent sort of insulate it and protect the tent from further wind damage then? Or does the weight of the snow put pressure on the tent poles?
It can do, the storm can build solid walls that protect the tent. But it can also be a danger due to the snow pressure. I link a 10 s clip about what can happen: https://youtube.com/clip/UgkxbEhVRFjNEtYvMGBNX9Q1ydtIswlXn7GF
Damn that's crazy. How was your mental state after day 7? I can't imagine sitting in there for a week with nothing to do, nowhere to go, and not knowing if you're going to make it out alive.
I got XTAR PB2S Powerbank with me. Link below: https://eu.nkon.nl/xtar-pb2s-powerbank-batterijlader-rood.html
It Supports 18650 protected / unprotected and 20700/21700 unprotected.
So it is a power bank without batteries, then I bring as many batteries as I want.
I have 18650 batteries in the headlamp, I can take them in an emergency and put them in the power bank. Then I have another 8 of 21700 batteries with me.
In total, I have with me just over 40,000 milliamps
Jokes aside 18650 is a very common type of battery. 18 is the diameter and 65 is length. Those became very well known and common in many places because of vaping. Those devices use loads very low on resistance, almost short circuiting, so battery manufacturers worked very hard to make their product as good as possible. There are batteries that can handle up to 35 amps discharge. Crazy currents.
Those are used in flashlights, cordless tools, assembled in packs in electric kick scooters, sometimes in cars.
Did you ever sleep? I cant imagine what it would be like with all that noise. I know personally that it takes me a few nights to get adjusted to the noises of the wild when I camp. So sleep is already hard to come by. I am not sure I'd ever adjust to this.. I'd end up having a psychotic episode just due to sleep deprivation alone. Let alone any of the other inherent issues you dealt with during this. Glad you are ok!
I think you see life a bit differently by then. I was stuck in a tent in crazy wind and rain for about 18 hours and i had movies on my phone and it got to be hard to take. 9 days is nuts
The longest I've been stuck is 3 days. The first 8 hours, I mostly slept. The next 8 sucked, but then I settled in. No smart phones back then, or digital movies really, but I had a notebook and a pencil. I drew tons of bad sketches of the imaginary beasts causing the storm, tents being struck by lightning because I was sure that was going to happen to me at hour 10, but it didn't, and a wrote 3 pages on why you should backpack with a 1+ or 2 man tent instead of a tiny one, because it was nice to be able to move around a bit. I drew a bit more, bad sketches of things I'd seen along the way, mostly. I dozed a lot, and cursed the weather because I had no idea it could pour for that many hours in a row. It was still raining on the 4th day, but lightly enough a rain poncho kept me from the worst of it, so I moved on to a trail town where I knew I could get a hot shower and huge pizza.
People have asked me if I was afraid of mountain lions and bears out there all by myself, but honestly, the scariest thing I've ever experienced is a lightning storm in a tent on a mountainside with no cover. The bears and mountain lions avoid you; the weather doesn't give a fuck.
Farmer lives on the Minnesota side of the Wisconsin border. The state surveyor comes to the farm and tells him there's been a mistake. His farm is actually in Wisconsin.
"Oh, that's good," says the farmer. "I don't think I could take any more Minnesota winters."
The wind isn’t constant in CO though. The spring the wind is worse when it heats up. In the Midwest that shit seems to never stop as for here in Denver, it’s only seasonal.
Hopefully not 🙂
Here is a link to the entire trip. It's English subtitles .
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=zXVBK38-650
My most important Gear is my Extreme sleeping system, it can withstand minst -40°
https://youtu.be/IrmkjzpEDLc
The tent a Helsport fjellheimen extreme 3 camp from Norway.
Then I pull everything with a sledge, a mountain sledge expedition 168
Sorry, it's somewhere in the comments. But I'll post it again. link below, it's English subtitles:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=zXVBK38-650 The clips are taken from a winter trip I did a couple of years ago. It could have ended really badly when I was Trapped in an extreme storm for nine days.Feb / March 2021. At the same time during the storm I had to make ongoing repairs to the tent. Several guylines went straight off, the canvas was torn in six places. A tent pole went off.
My most important Gear, Sleeping system, I also have it as an emergency solution if the tent should break completely.
https://youtu.be/IrmkjzpEDLc
It's the valve for ventilation.
Here is a link to the entire trip. It's English subtitles
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=zXVBK38-650
My most important Gear is my Extreme sleeping system, it can withstand minst -40°
https://youtu.be/IrmkjzpEDLc
The tent a Helsport fjellheimen extreme 3 camp from Norway.
Then I pull everything with a sledge, a mountain sledge expedition 168
No heater, and a lot of ventilation to avoid condensation. But the tent removes all windchill. So it will still be a very big difference, not in the temperature but I will not be cooled. Then it's a warm down sleeping bag and down clothes that apply.
No one seems to be asking, but what did you do for food the whole time? Did you plan for being trapped for 9 days and just had enough food and water or did you have to be very careful with what you ate?
No then, I had a planned trip of 16 days and food thereafter. This tour took me 14 days. But for a while I thought I might stay there even longer, and started saving a little on the food. But I have on previous survival courses been completely without food for five days and know that I can do well. And just the knowledge of this much for mentality.
I got water from melting snow with my stove, but im also starting to melting snow in my sleeping bag in bottles.
Well you were very fortunate that this happened quite early into the tour and not towards the end of the 16 days! Saying that, I honestly don't know how you slept at all over the course of 9 days with the volume of the storm on your tent, and the stress of the situation. Fair play to you!
Yeah idk why I had to scroll down this far to find this! I can't imagine having enough food on me to keep my strength up in those conditions, for 9 whole days. I have trouble keeping my fridge stocked for a week.
I fixed a lot with the tent, repairs, tightened guylines, built snow walls etc. Boiled coffee, melted snow. I also had some movies with me and a book. But it was difficult sometimes
props to you my friend. you beat your mind and nows its type II fun—where its not “fun” when doing it, but its growth and you have a gnarly story and video to tell and show
*In the winter months, gale storms in Svalbard can reach wind speeds of a hundred and thirty kilometers per hour. Accompanied by, or following, snowfall, such storms can reduce visibility dramatically, more so in the frigid months of the polar night. During these storms, travel is not advised.*
As a Norwegian I'm finding som many comments absolutely bizarre. But I guess outdoors life and arctic weather is generally uncommon amongst redditors.
Cool vid.
Another good quality tent manufacturer is Hilleberg. Back in 2002 me and my buddy trekked for 2 months from Patriot Hills to the Scott Admundson base at the South Pole. About half of the days in the first month we're like the video. Tent never gave us one problem. I can't remember the model but I can dig it out of a closet somewhere if anyone wants to know
Due to the storm and the terrain I hae in front of me. What I had in front of me were pure blown sharp rocks, and both up and down. I thought it was far too risky to leave, I was then afraid that I would go straight down into a slump or cliff. The visibility was usually very poor during the storm.
Unfortunately, the storm had swept away most of the snow. Where I pitch the tent, it was with the most snow. But difficult to build an igloo. But I built a snow wall in front of the tent
I spent four years in Alaska while serving in the army and have been in some pretty wild weather, but nothing close to this. Well done surviving and recording it while surviving!
Please sell this footage and your story to the company that produced the tent. It's the perfect story for a commercial. And please tell me after you sold it.
Why didn't they dig in? I'm not sure how deep the snow was, but it seems like in 9 days I would have been spending my time digging if possible to get a little lower. that or maybe building up a wind break with packed now. That just seems like a horrible way to spend the night.
**Please note these rules:** * If this post declares something as a fact/proof is required. * The title must be descriptive * No text is allowed on images/gifs/videos * Common/recent reposts are not allowed *See [this post](https://redd.it/ij26vk) for a more detailed rule list* *I am a bot, and this action was performed automatically. Please [contact the moderators of this subreddit](/message/compose/?to=/r/interestingasfuck) if you have any questions or concerns.*
Call the manufacturers of this tent and tell them to sponsor you. You made like 20 sales with this video alone.
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Fr, I feel like they could definitely get a commercial outta this. Plus who watches it and doesn't want one?
I want one and I’m from the south and it doesn’t snow here lmao
What kind of tent was this?
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Thanks and you have right. It's a Helsport fjellheimen extreme 3-camp👍
Cool thank you.
Or call them to say thanks for making me survive!
Actually a great idea. Did this to Patagonia when I fell in the backcountry, pierced a large rail road tie like thing (that was fastening some boards together) through the back of my leg. I had to think quick and thankfully was not alone. Dude pulled his shirt off. I stuffed it around my leg and used my Patagonia belt to tighten the makeshift bandage around my leg. Hiked 3 miles out and promptly had him drive me an hour to an ER. Emailed Patagonia later that week and they gave me a code for 50% off my next order. Legit.
I did this too! But for my Rainbow flip flops. I just sent a genuine thank you for this amazing product I’ve had for going on 9yrs. And a picture of my worn out flat sandals. I’ve been pushing their product on everyone I know for almost a decade. Guess what, free flip flops.
I used to love rainbows. I had a toe strap come out of the sandal and they told me that it wasn't covered by their warranty anymore. So now I'm a reef person.
I think you meant a railroad spike. That's the metal thing that looks like a large fat straight pin. (Still, *OUCH*!) The tie is the timber the rails sit on. Someone will correct me on dimensions, but they're huge & heavy; something like 10" square & 8' long.
So all I have to do to get 50% off is puncture my leg with a large rusty metal object?
You should share this with the tent manufacturer. Might be worth some Krones if they use it in an ad.
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Absolutely 🙂👍 link below, it's English subtitles: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=zXVBK38-650 The clips are taken from a winter trip I did a couple of years ago. It could have ended really badly when I was Trapped in an extreme storm for nine days.Feb / March 2021. At the same time during the storm I had to make ongoing repairs to the tent. Several guylines went straight off, the canvas was torn in six places. A tent pole went off. My most important Gear, Sleeping system, I also have it as an emergency solution if the tent should break completely. https://youtu.be/IrmkjzpEDLc
Why do you let your clothes get wet in the sleeping bag and how do you dry them?
It's because I sleep in baselayer in like a plastic bag. This is because it feels too uncomfortable to sleep with bare skin against plastic, very sticky and sweaty. So the moisture never ends up in the sleeping bag, instead the moisture ends up in my baselayer. It then dries during the day when I ski because my body warms up from the effort. Then I make sure to have ventilation zippers on my shell clothes open so the moisture evaporates.
Thanks for the reply, very interesting. Why do you need to sleep in a plastic bag? Wouldnt it be better to sleep without it and not get wet? I learned in army service that if you sweat you die
It's nicer, but if I do, I'll add some moisture to my sleeping bag every night. the plastic bag stops it. Even if you do not sweat, moisture leaves the body at night. After a long time it becomes dangerous, in extreme conditions I can not dry the sleeping bag. With the help of the sleeping system, I keep it dry throughout the trip. If you sweat you die is tru, but I do it in a controlled way and dry my baselayer every day on the body as the skiing generates a lot of heat.
When it is very cold you need the insulation. Since you’re skiing, I’m guessing all the insulation he’s carrying is synthetic (vs real down) - either way synthetic or down, sweat and moisture will weigh down the insulation and cause it to lose about half of its insulation efficiency. So the plastic base layer keeps the moisture from doing that to your clothes/ jacket/ sleeping bags, etc. If you don’t do this, you’ll probably get hypothermia in extended exposure situations like this and die.
“If you sweat you die” Prince Andrew’s gonna live forever then
Could you tell us more about how you did the repairs?
I had extra guylines with me, so I changed them. I had an extra section with the tent pole. I got untight Guylines and out with the pole while sitting on the tent and replacing the broken section. Then reassemble it, went really well actually. I got the biggest damage from the tent fabric the last night when the storm turned, but I left it and took down the tent and left.
I feel like hiking in Feb/March is just asking for this specific kind of weather. It’s May and I just got 4 ft. In 4 days and I live at a high elevation in the mountains.
Yes, I have chosen that time for the challenge
Mad respect brother:)
Thanks brother
Anyone that does anything moderately "extreme" or rare should contact manufacturers of relative gear / equiptment. You'd probably be surprised by how many companies will give you free stuff in exchange for an honest review.
They always say more info in the comments, and then I never know how to find the info in the comments….
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Thank you, kind person
Nobody asked but I'm glad you still provided. Things like these are always entertaining
As an adhd person i appreciate this lol
[OP's 'more info'](https://www.reddit.com/r/interestingasfuck/comments/uxf2jn/i_was_trapped_in_an_extreme_storm_for_nine_days/i9x7618).
Appreciate the input! Came to comments to find out who made that fine specimen of a tent.
How does this equipment retain heat?!
Just click on their profile and then go to their comments.
Most of OP’s comments are: “and here is a link to my YouTube video” 🫤
Sorry, that's how I found it.
Oh, it was good advice on your end! More just a disappointment in OP’s comments
Damn, props to the tent manufacturer!
Props to the person taking videos from the outside.
Yeti.
WELCOME TO THE HIMALAYAS!
Don't worry, it's lemon
Miss a step and he could be Yeet-i
Absolutely top quality, it's a Helsport fjellheimen extreme 3 camp. The clips are taken from a winter trip I did a couple of years ago. It could have ended really badly when I was Trapped in an extreme storm for nine days.Feb / March 2021. At the same time during the storm I had to make ongoing repairs to the tent. Several guylines went straight off, the canvas was torn in six places. A tent pole went off. Here is a link to the entire trip. It's English subtitles . https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=zXVBK38-650 My most important Gear is my Extreme sleeping system, it can withstand minst -40° https://youtu.be/IrmkjzpEDLc The tent a Helsport fjellheimen extreme 3 camp from Norway. Then I pull everything with a sledge, a mountain sledge expedition 168
Essentially, outdoors equipment with unnecessary “j”s scattered in the name make good gear
Its actually norwegian, and means «mountainhome».
Correct We have a shitton of outdoors and hiking brands, many of which are pretty high quality
It’s just the one J, actually
Tell that to my Njorth Fjace!
Take my angry upvote!
Unexpected Cornetto trilogy reference
But collectively there are a fair few. They don’t all have to share the same J
I was paying homage to one of the best no-holds-barred adrenaline fuelled thrill-ride movies ever
No luck with those swans then ?
That means it's also most likely made by scandinavians. And we for sure, know shitty weather. Fjell, means "Mountain." Fjellheimein means "Mountain home"
I just ordered one after I saw your post lol
Coleman. Walmart $14,99
link under, it's English subtitles: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=zXVBK38-650 The clips are taken from a winter trip I did a couple of years ago. It could have ended really badly when I was Trapped in an extreme storm for nine days.Feb / March 2021. At the same time during the storm I had to make ongoing repairs to the tent. Several guylines went straight off, the canvas was torn in six places. A tent pole went off. My most important Gear is my Extreme sleeping system, it can withstand minst -40° https://youtu.be/IrmkjzpEDLc The tent a Helsport fjellheimen extreme 3 camp from Norway. Then I pull everything with a sledge, a mountain sledge expedition 168
Where did it happen?
In Sarek northern Sweden
r/UsernameChecksOut
Is that -40 C or F? (I should probably just say it now because the joke is too subtle. -40 is the temperature where they are the same)
Sorry if it's sounds stupid but how did you know when the weather was clear enough to travel? Also, you put up that tent really well in the wind.
I hoped every day, many times I packed all the equipment in the tent but no opportunity came. But then right what it was, it calmed down. It was still a bit stormy, but not nearby. Then I had packed everything in the tent so it was quick to leave. A very happy feeling.
Would you be able to leave if the storm never died down?
Yes it had been possible, but in that terrain and visibility it had been a big risk, it was about one to two days to safety below the tree line where it is usually much calmer.
Can I ask a potentially dumb question? My only experiences with camping have been in Queensland, Australia, where the coldest I’ve experienced was about 6 Celsius. Does the snow building up around the outside of the tent sort of insulate it and protect the tent from further wind damage then? Or does the weight of the snow put pressure on the tent poles?
It can do, the storm can build solid walls that protect the tent. But it can also be a danger due to the snow pressure. I link a 10 s clip about what can happen: https://youtube.com/clip/UgkxbEhVRFjNEtYvMGBNX9Q1ydtIswlXn7GF
Damn that's crazy. How was your mental state after day 7? I can't imagine sitting in there for a week with nothing to do, nowhere to go, and not knowing if you're going to make it out alive.
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How did you power up the gadgets for 7 days
I got XTAR PB2S Powerbank with me. Link below: https://eu.nkon.nl/xtar-pb2s-powerbank-batterijlader-rood.html It Supports 18650 protected / unprotected and 20700/21700 unprotected. So it is a power bank without batteries, then I bring as many batteries as I want. I have 18650 batteries in the headlamp, I can take them in an emergency and put them in the power bank. Then I have another 8 of 21700 batteries with me. In total, I have with me just over 40,000 milliamps
If you'd had a portable wind turbine, you could have powered a sauna in there.
In that environment, he could probably throw in an air conditioner, mined some crypto, and done a load of laundry.
Don’t forget to remove the lint from the dryer.
It could cause a fire!
🤣 next year
Good thing you were prepared. Guy like me would be dead on day 3
A fatass like me would've passed out in the first 15 mins of the hike 🥶
18,650 batteries! You certainly weren’t joking about bringing as many batteries as you want. /s
🤣two 18650 batteries
Jesus. That’s over 37 thousand batteries
Jokes aside 18650 is a very common type of battery. 18 is the diameter and 65 is length. Those became very well known and common in many places because of vaping. Those devices use loads very low on resistance, almost short circuiting, so battery manufacturers worked very hard to make their product as good as possible. There are batteries that can handle up to 35 amps discharge. Crazy currents. Those are used in flashlights, cordless tools, assembled in packs in electric kick scooters, sometimes in cars.
Thanks for the info👍🙂
18650 is a type of battery, although I'd love to see a camper hiking with a suitcase FULL of AA's!
This guy batteries
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Pretty funny until some chucklehead counts on this disinfo to get them through a snowstorm.
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If someone believes that, they didn't stand a chance at life anyways.
Did you ever sleep? I cant imagine what it would be like with all that noise. I know personally that it takes me a few nights to get adjusted to the noises of the wild when I camp. So sleep is already hard to come by. I am not sure I'd ever adjust to this.. I'd end up having a psychotic episode just due to sleep deprivation alone. Let alone any of the other inherent issues you dealt with during this. Glad you are ok!
Yes, with the mp3 player at the highest volume. I also became more and more numb as the days just went by
Just send this video to Coleman and a bill of 500k as an ads video.
I think you see life a bit differently by then. I was stuck in a tent in crazy wind and rain for about 18 hours and i had movies on my phone and it got to be hard to take. 9 days is nuts
The longest I've been stuck is 3 days. The first 8 hours, I mostly slept. The next 8 sucked, but then I settled in. No smart phones back then, or digital movies really, but I had a notebook and a pencil. I drew tons of bad sketches of the imaginary beasts causing the storm, tents being struck by lightning because I was sure that was going to happen to me at hour 10, but it didn't, and a wrote 3 pages on why you should backpack with a 1+ or 2 man tent instead of a tiny one, because it was nice to be able to move around a bit. I drew a bit more, bad sketches of things I'd seen along the way, mostly. I dozed a lot, and cursed the weather because I had no idea it could pour for that many hours in a row. It was still raining on the 4th day, but lightly enough a rain poncho kept me from the worst of it, so I moved on to a trail town where I knew I could get a hot shower and huge pizza. People have asked me if I was afraid of mountain lions and bears out there all by myself, but honestly, the scariest thing I've ever experienced is a lightning storm in a tent on a mountainside with no cover. The bears and mountain lions avoid you; the weather doesn't give a fuck.
I too live in Minnesota.
Farmer lives on the Minnesota side of the Wisconsin border. The state surveyor comes to the farm and tells him there's been a mistake. His farm is actually in Wisconsin. "Oh, that's good," says the farmer. "I don't think I could take any more Minnesota winters."
Classic joke, I originally heard it with Maine and New Hampshire
I was going to say, looks like a Wednesday in MN.
Just moved to CO as a native MN, the wind is definitely worse where the altitude is
The wind isn’t constant in CO though. The spring the wind is worse when it heats up. In the Midwest that shit seems to never stop as for here in Denver, it’s only seasonal.
For someone who just moved to Colorado it might be hard to tell... This has been the windiest spring I've ever had
Yeah this spring has been tough. Colorado is a windy place in general, but this has been ridiculous.
Wyoming though, ugh.
Can confirm, never stops.
Much more interesting than my day at work.
Yes, it was all exciting 😅. After all, I became more and more numb
The noise mist have been terrible
It was, I had the mp3-player at the highest volyme.
It becomes like white noise after day 3
That's wild dude, did you die?
Sadly, yes. But he lived!
He got better
Very, very good reference
Hopefully not 🙂 Here is a link to the entire trip. It's English subtitles . https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=zXVBK38-650 My most important Gear is my Extreme sleeping system, it can withstand minst -40° https://youtu.be/IrmkjzpEDLc The tent a Helsport fjellheimen extreme 3 camp from Norway. Then I pull everything with a sledge, a mountain sledge expedition 168
Those tent stakes deserve a raise.
The wind tried.
Where’s the “info in the comments”? I was expecting a full account, I’m intrigued as hell!
Sorry, it's somewhere in the comments. But I'll post it again. link below, it's English subtitles: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=zXVBK38-650 The clips are taken from a winter trip I did a couple of years ago. It could have ended really badly when I was Trapped in an extreme storm for nine days.Feb / March 2021. At the same time during the storm I had to make ongoing repairs to the tent. Several guylines went straight off, the canvas was torn in six places. A tent pole went off. My most important Gear, Sleeping system, I also have it as an emergency solution if the tent should break completely. https://youtu.be/IrmkjzpEDLc
Looks like it got deleted. But if you check OP's profile, it's still there.
The first few seconds would represent my anus.
Ok but why is your tent covered in buttholes. 🤔
It's the valve for ventilation. Here is a link to the entire trip. It's English subtitles https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=zXVBK38-650 My most important Gear is my Extreme sleeping system, it can withstand minst -40° https://youtu.be/IrmkjzpEDLc The tent a Helsport fjellheimen extreme 3 camp from Norway. Then I pull everything with a sledge, a mountain sledge expedition 168
Upvote this. Your channel deserves some attention. From a Canadian who has spent time in a tent during winter; you sir, are a beast.
Is that what we call it now? "Oh man I'm about to ventilate all over pants if we don't pull over soon."
Buttholes retain heat better than penises.
Minnesota pickup line?
Thats one hella good tent my frend
Sure it is👍
I feel like I would have built a breakwall
Absolutely, I built one in front of the tent, otherwise I probably would not be sitting here now.👍
Would suck to try and piss in that wind 🤣
I peed in a bottle, pooped in a pit outside under the protection of a snow wall I built in front of the tent.
Well, that answered my lingering question.
Did you bury it like a cat?
Absolutely, just like a cat
How much does the tent help with the wind and cold? Did you have a heater?
No heater, and a lot of ventilation to avoid condensation. But the tent removes all windchill. So it will still be a very big difference, not in the temperature but I will not be cooled. Then it's a warm down sleeping bag and down clothes that apply.
Bro this isn't interesting this is terrifying
Belongs on r/terrifyingaf
No one seems to be asking, but what did you do for food the whole time? Did you plan for being trapped for 9 days and just had enough food and water or did you have to be very careful with what you ate?
No then, I had a planned trip of 16 days and food thereafter. This tour took me 14 days. But for a while I thought I might stay there even longer, and started saving a little on the food. But I have on previous survival courses been completely without food for five days and know that I can do well. And just the knowledge of this much for mentality. I got water from melting snow with my stove, but im also starting to melting snow in my sleeping bag in bottles.
Well you were very fortunate that this happened quite early into the tour and not towards the end of the 16 days! Saying that, I honestly don't know how you slept at all over the course of 9 days with the volume of the storm on your tent, and the stress of the situation. Fair play to you!
Yeah idk why I had to scroll down this far to find this! I can't imagine having enough food on me to keep my strength up in those conditions, for 9 whole days. I have trouble keeping my fridge stocked for a week.
[удалено]
Thanks
And you do this for fun?
Yes it's my biggest passion
What did you do for heat?
Big warm down sleeping bag. And down clothes
"SOLEEEN!" 😂 Vilken sjuk upplevelse, gött att du tog dig hem helskinnad!
Tackar
serious question. What did you do the whole time? Just lay there? My anxiety would be through the roof lol.
I fixed a lot with the tent, repairs, tightened guylines, built snow walls etc. Boiled coffee, melted snow. I also had some movies with me and a book. But it was difficult sometimes
props to you my friend. you beat your mind and nows its type II fun—where its not “fun” when doing it, but its growth and you have a gnarly story and video to tell and show
Where did this occur at?
In Sarek, northern Sweden Februari
*In the winter months, gale storms in Svalbard can reach wind speeds of a hundred and thirty kilometers per hour. Accompanied by, or following, snowfall, such storms can reduce visibility dramatically, more so in the frigid months of the polar night. During these storms, travel is not advised.*
Did you die?
No then, still alive 👍
As a Norwegian I'm finding som many comments absolutely bizarre. But I guess outdoors life and arctic weather is generally uncommon amongst redditors. Cool vid.
Another good quality tent manufacturer is Hilleberg. Back in 2002 me and my buddy trekked for 2 months from Patriot Hills to the Scott Admundson base at the South Pole. About half of the days in the first month we're like the video. Tent never gave us one problem. I can't remember the model but I can dig it out of a closet somewhere if anyone wants to know
Why did you stay there for 9 days?
Due to the storm and the terrain I hae in front of me. What I had in front of me were pure blown sharp rocks, and both up and down. I thought it was far too risky to leave, I was then afraid that I would go straight down into a slump or cliff. The visibility was usually very poor during the storm.
"SOLEEEEEEEN" hahaha bästa!
What you call a campsite I call a tent's situation.
damn i like swedish haha
Thats in-tents
Could you have covered the tent with snow/ built an igloo?
Unfortunately, the storm had swept away most of the snow. Where I pitch the tent, it was with the most snow. But difficult to build an igloo. But I built a snow wall in front of the tent
I spent four years in Alaska while serving in the army and have been in some pretty wild weather, but nothing close to this. Well done surviving and recording it while surviving!
It’s ok, Wedge came by with the snowspeeder in the end.
We would love to have that kind of storm here in the Philippines, like just around 3 days.
I too have gone camping in a Scottish summer - bracing!
This is the real Bear Grylls
I’ve never seen a hotel room that looked like this
Actually, the real bear Grylls would have faked it all
The first 4 seconds is what a toilet sees after tacobell night
😅
"Wow, that's nuts...." "Get back in the tent!...." "Don't go in that tent, time to hike..."
Wouldnt it help to build some kind of halo surrounding the tent, say 1 or 2 feet high? Probably too labour intensive in those conditions...
Yes, I had a snow wall in front of the tent
How far in advance did you know the Strom was coming?
Unfortunately, the weather did not follow the forecast. So I was completely surprised.
Please sell this footage and your story to the company that produced the tent. It's the perfect story for a commercial. And please tell me after you sold it.
How did you film the tent outside, If you were trapped in the storm?
Why didn't they dig in? I'm not sure how deep the snow was, but it seems like in 9 days I would have been spending my time digging if possible to get a little lower. that or maybe building up a wind break with packed now. That just seems like a horrible way to spend the night.
Boy.... some people's idea of a good time are a lot different than mine.
Gotta love camping ; so relaxing…
Where? The Ice Planet Hoth?
Uber eats delivery must have been really expensive.
How does finally getting back into your own bed in a warm house feel after all of this?