norwegian wool jumper is also good, if you can find one. not very common at all anymore
You can get them online from Norway, very common there.norwegian wool jumper is also good, if you can find one. not very common at all anymore
Hey Darryl sounds like you got the newbie bushcrafters disease and are becoming. a kit monkey! Remember you don't need to spend a fortune and get all the" kit" at once. Keep it light or you'll be moaning about backache or deciding you need another bigger bag to carry it all. Give yourself challenges like going out with say ten items and try to get it down to five in the summer. Remember knowledge weighs nothing , costs nothing. The more knowledge and skills you got the less kit you need..... untill you get old and rickety and need hot water bottles and air beds !
Yes yes... but what about all that stufffff?
No but seriously, it’s only because what I currently have is more useful for posing at a 1986 Bulgarian après ski disco, than it is for anything useful. Current kit: Stove,kettle,tarp,boots,bag,bivvy bag....
there’s not that much more i’d need for a night out but I definitely need it.
You can get them online from Norway, very common there.
The most common brand is Dale of Norway. In Norway there are shops with local handcraft, most I have been in sell handmade woolen jumpers.
Plus socks, mittens, hats and other woolen items.
On my Vintage HH, the obly part that needed repair is the finishing band on the sleeves, the part that goes over the knuckles when the thumb is in the hole.
Easily repaired using a strip of soft leather. I used chamois.
Warm, dry, not thirsty or hungry, somewhere to shelter and something to sleep in and something interesting to learn to do. That more or less covers the essentials. To do that, I need the correct clothing kit.
List everything you take with you for a nice couple of days and overnight out in the woods and compare that with the half bag of gear I have. What would you add to my kit? That’s what I still need to get.
All that glitters is gold...
I got that for £25 too in green check. Got it back to where I was staying and my FiL said it was just his style and he had one once (MiL threw it out as making him look old and scruffy). So I've not worn it and might take it back.I got a fantastic fjallraven looking cheque over shirt from Sainsbury's last year. It's made of that heavy cotton, and if it had a fjallraven logo on it you would have think it cost a fortune! Thoroughly recommended.
I have spent a decent night out with just the kit I could fit in the thigh pocket of my combat trousers - in cold , wet Wales - and that included bedding and shelter!
I can also go out for a weekend or more wearing and using nothing - from billycan to footwear, knife to jacket, basha and hammock to rucksack - that I have not made myself - as long as I go "Commando"!.
Mostly I use a mix of charity shop, home made, "mate made", Army Surplus, Aldi and hugely expensive (but mainly second hand!) specialist kit - the latter usually boots and Frost River big packs
You do not have to spend a fortune on kit but find what you like - the OP is on the right track asking a very good question and getting some very good answers - and spend what is needed to fit your "look", your budget, your activity, your comfort needs, your knowledge and ability level, your safety needs and of course your "oooh! factor
Spot on!
A few years ago I went to the Bushcraft Show in Derbyshire and saw a wonderful sight (I wish I taken a picture) of a family walking hand in hand.
Dad looked like he had just won a supermarket sweep at Ray Mears’ Woodlore store - and was dressed head to toe in pristine Fjallraven clobber, fancy boots, rucksack with GB axe attached and what I assume was an expensive knife on his hip.
Daughter (aged about six) was skipping along happily wearing a pink fairy outfit and mum was wearing jeans and sweat shirt and had an expression which suggested that she was not having fun but that the trade off for letting her nearest and dearests wear their fancy dress outfits was that next weekend she would be having a Prosecco fueled pamper day at a spa with her mates!
I have no idea whether the forests were echoing with laughter but there was a fair bit of sniggering at our bushcrafting hero’s expense.
If you absolutely set on purchasing the ladder to bushcrafting Nirvana then crack on but there is still time to change the road you’re on.
I do own some named gear, all of it second hand. I worked my way up to things. Most of my stuff comes from charity shops or I've made myself. Would I go buy a new swandri? No I would not. I've been waiting 10 yrs for one to come my way second hand,... still waiting, meanwhile I made a wool smock type hoody shirt thing that serves the purpose . It doesn't have a fancy label but I wear it with pride.... and I saved myself enough money to go to other things I want to do. After all to me bushcraft is not about the fancy label , it's about being comfortable in the wild with the least amount of stuff. Fancy gear doesn't make you a bushcrafter .