New to Bushcraft, please help me build a survival list. I am mostly using Amazon but don't mind going shopping either online or in person. Currently located in London, moving to the Highlands of Scotland (into a flat) sometime next year around March maybe.
I am hoping to hire someone sometime soon to help me locate as many bothies as possible and live off the land/as minimal as possible (or as much as I am allowed to that is). However, depending on the weather and where I plan on travelling to (when camping), I may have to stay a big majority in a tent if not in some abandon ruins. I am not entirely familiar with Scottish weather/rural land as this will be my first time going off grid so feel free to advise. At the moment, all I have my first aid emergency equipment but that is literally it.
I do have some/minimal on the camping perspective. For outdoors, I am very skilled (walking, hiking, understanding weather, fishing, hunting, etc.). I grew up on a farm so I am quite experienced in the outdoors but for camping I have minimal.
get a knife. a morak companion is a good starter for about £30, Rather than be an overnight Rambo why not just do some short trips and build up from there. Knowledge comes slowly with experience, Dip your toe in the bath for starters, Join the local bushcraft group/hiking group/ camping group etc. In time you will be killing bears with your teeth and growing a beard. xNew to Bushcraft, please help me build a survival list. I am mostly using Amazon but don't mind going shopping either online or in person. Currently located in London, moving to the Highlands of Scotland (into a flat) sometime next year around March maybe.
I am hoping to hire someone sometime soon to help me locate as many bothies as possible and live off the land/as minimal as possible (or as much as I am allowed to that is). However, depending on the weather and where I plan on travelling to (when camping), I may have to stay a big majority in a tent if not in some abandon ruins. I am not entirely familiar with Scottish weather/rural land as this will be my first time going off grid so feel free to advise. At the moment, all I have my first aid emergency equipment but that is literally it.
I am thinking:
Hiking boots
rucksack
cooking equipment
New clothing wardrobe for all seasons and types of weather
blankets/bedding
fishing pole/equipment
rain coats
fire starters
walking sticks
a weatherproof tent (preferably with a heater/stove opening for a chimney)
Some type of face covering to deal with bloody midges (lol)
open to discussion for any further equipment. Please be specific with brand names and links if possible. Respectfully, money is no issue. I would prefer not to have to promise my (future) first born but I also don't want the cheapest items either. Think of items that would save me from being a yearly statistic (referring to the lost souls who perish in the harsh winters) (as long as I gain the proper knowledge/experience on how to survive).
The lad is going to kill himself (starvetion) if he is going on with what he has told us.Folks, lets just give this chap a list of gear recommendations. That is what he is asking for. He has posted quite a few threads before, and everyone has questioned and informed at great length.
The gentleman is not for turning.
Probably not though. It is hard to get so far off grid, even in Scotland, that you could starve to death before you could get help…excluding immobilising accidents. Also, this chap has had folk here telling him what cannot be done plenty already. His goals have been dialled back since his first posts. I just think it is time to quit banging on the warning drum. He is gonna go, regardless of online doom sayers….so how about we just try to answer his question about gear?The lad is going to kill himself (starvetion) if he is going on with what he has told us.
For lots of gear it is best to try on and look at before you buy.Hiking boots
rucksack
cooking equipment
New clothing wardrobe for all seasons and types of weather
blankets/bedding
fishing pole/equipment
rain coats
fire starters
walking sticks
a weatherproof tent (preferably with a heater/stove opening for a chimney)
Some type of face covering to deal with bloody midges (lol)
Remember, fishing, you will need a licence
Thanks astrohicken and permit me to add that there is actually a morakniv companion with a ferro rod in the handle. its sounds a bit gimmicky but its actually pretty decent and the knife is my one and only blade for all my campcraft and cooking. xAs mentioned by others, it's key you know what you're getting into, and education is very important, as is the mindset to survive. There is a lot of reading material, self-education videos on the net and in-person training from parties well-experienced in the challenge, so some money should certainly go on this. I also agree with suggestions to do build-up 'expeditions' to practise and build-in some experience by actually doing short (and increasingly longer) trips to get to know your kit, your abilities and what the experience is like in reality. This should probably include some time in Scotland so you see what others in the region do / don't do.
My two cents on your some of your kit list questions (where I have any personal experience to draw on):
Hiking boots - I've got Lowa Camino Evo Gtx boots and they're amazing - really comfortable but still rugged enough for the hills / distance. I'd get in-person expert advice on what shape of boot your foot would suit as much as what style / type / price you like, as I was very surprised at how different the options were between manufacturer's based on where they come from. Visit well-regarded footwear stores rather than whatever shop may be nearest - their expertise will save your feet and your wallet.
Rucksack - my pack is by Gregory and whilst mine is more of a larger day-hike pack, they have everything up to 100l packs with plenty of modern tech and a good eye on sustainability too. My day-pack has been extremely durable and still looks almost new despite it being 14 years old and having been dragged for multi-day hikes abroad through primary rainforest, and over-the-mountain day hikes across the UK. The fit is absolutely crucial with this purchase, as it will massively impact how far you can go - a poor fit pack can ruin plans for travelling distance over natural terrain, which could seriously dent your plans. Others may chime in here on this, but I believe that the guide is for your total pack weight to be no more than 20% of your body weight, so you will need to work out just how much stuff you need to take / how light each item must be, to mitigate against long-term injury. This may see you switch thinking to tarp / bivvy / hammock for your shelter, although I've only just got myself a bivvy/hammock so can't yet comment on what it's like vs tent living.
Cooking equipment - for gas, you'll want a reliable and powerful lightweight stove, by a known-brand e.g. MSR, Jetboil or Primus. Don't get the cheap option from Temu! What I would say is that whilst aluminium is light and cheap for the pans, there are questions over long-term health implications for alu, so I would personally try to use stainless steel (although it's a little heavier) or titanium (light but is usually expensive). You'll likely want only a couple of cooking vessels that can do multiple jobs (one pan to boil water for drinks / cook starchy items like rice or pasta / make a stew, and possibly something like a little sauté pan to cook larger items like meat or fish, frying, etc). Avoid single-purpose gadgets, they're almost always not worth the space / weight. Consider making your own cooking utensils from wood when you're there (spoon, tongs).
Fire starters - if you're looking at the likes of a ferro-rod / Swedish fire-steel, don't get a cheap one, the composition of the metals is usually poor, meaning cooler / fewer sparks and much more work to ignite tinder vs a decent quality option. "Light-my-fire" is known as one of the best, with strong white-hot sparks from little effort, and it's small and lightweight. It should last for thousands of strikes, and with dry tinder should help get a fire going. For myself, I have a small tin of my own waxed-cotton pads as a tinder 'assist' to help in wet weather, and there are plenty of videos on how to make these really easily and cheaply. A small amount can ignite from the ferro-rod spark, giving you a wider window to work with your tinder to get your fire going.
Agree with getting a knife, and a Morakniv Companion HD is a good starter rather than spending a fortune on a high-end knife that may not suit your needs. Spend time with this doing different tasks with wood / food to get familiar with it, and get a good quality travel kit for sharpening and maintenance. Spyderco make a slim, two-sided stone for sharpening, and with a strip of leather and some stropping compound you can look after this in the field to keep it in good shape.
Hope some of this is helpful.