Knots and Rope: Rope vs Line
1:19
9 жыл бұрын
Knots and Rope: Dressing Knots
2:39
9 жыл бұрын
Outdoor Gear Review: Sunglasses
10:34
Knots and Rope: Figure 8 on a Bight
2:49
Пікірлер
@mandlin4602
@mandlin4602 4 күн бұрын
I went to Morocco last week and on the last Saturday my stomach felt solid, suddenly Sunday there I woke up feeling awful and glued to the toilet, it was literally liquid. Most of the time I felt ok - just kinda fatigued and bloated. Then suddenly I kept getting extremely painful cramlp - like so painful it felt like I couldn’t breathe painful, and then run to the toilet with 5 mins warning and liquid again. It’s now 2am the night before I go back to work, and I thought I was doing ok. I have had some liquid and mild cramps. I went to go to bed at 00:00, got a cramp. Went the toilet, the cramps got severe again and I have spent 2 hours between cramps and water - not much of it but enough that I have to stay on the toilet - you can’t sleep in your own watery poop. I’m ok 80% of the time but when it hits me (around every 5 hours) it’s bad and I get little to no warning when it will hit me. I don’t know if I should phone in sick, if I can get to a toilet in time and don’t cramp for 2 hours I’m fine lol. But I can’t work if I do get like what I just got now, as I said it’s not constant it’s just every few hours and it can range from mild and done with within 10 mins to 30mins-hours of cramps and liquid. Ugh!
@Yamezzzz
@Yamezzzz 8 күн бұрын
"some mild anorexia" Wild. I strongly suggest you look up what anorexia is so you don't say something like that again in the future. It has absolutely nothing to do with appetite.
@cv507
@cv507 24 күн бұрын
´gämma räe... G-Fhörrce ? öh dir? ^ ^
@jshepard152
@jshepard152 Ай бұрын
Very helpful video. People also need to understand that Satellite messengers (Spot / Garmin Inreach, etc.) aren't Personal Locator Beacons (PLBs). Personal Locator Beacons (PLBs) can transmit at 5 watts power (versus 1.6 for sat messengers), allowing them to punch thru poor conditions better than sat messengers. PLBs have enough power to transmit directly to geostationary satellites, which orbit at 22,000 miles in space, something sat messengers can't do. The one advantage of subscription sat messengers over PLBs is the ability to send two way, non-emergency messages to family and friends. That capability might be worth paying for, in remote places where there's no hope of catching a cell signal. But for a real life and death emergency in unknown conditions, when time counts, anywhere on Earth, a PLB is what you want.
@wilcoxtactical3716
@wilcoxtactical3716 Ай бұрын
I was bit once by a poisonous frog/toad. It made my arm go numb and it made me very tired. Fortunately it wore off and I recovered fully.
@AmorDia-GOAT
@AmorDia-GOAT Ай бұрын
That’s a thing
@victoriab2849
@victoriab2849 2 ай бұрын
Thank you, very helpful
@qcbs2315
@qcbs2315 2 ай бұрын
What about charcoal supplement ?
@NikosAnimals
@NikosAnimals 2 ай бұрын
I managed to dislocate my shoulder in my sleep
@BryanKirch
@BryanKirch 2 ай бұрын
The hicky joke really took away from the credibility not worth it
@erents1
@erents1 2 ай бұрын
Great video but I hear him say “keep your arm above your heart, head to the ER”, what if it’s (more likely) your ankle? Foot on the dashboard, your handlebars?
@wealthtrekkers
@wealthtrekkers 2 ай бұрын
I got hape once without knowing what it was and like Mary I am usually the person at the front of the pack, but not that day. Well I woke up after laying down for two hours to the feeling of breathing through a straw about to have a heart attack, luckily we were off the mountain at that point becuase if we weren't I would've needed a heli rescue. I feel like information on hape and hace isn't known well enough by the general public.
@saigonmonopoly1105
@saigonmonopoly1105 2 ай бұрын
i would find the clay and neutralise it bandage and ceawl to dr leech
@matthewsheppard7050
@matthewsheppard7050 2 ай бұрын
Stress can also affect bowel consistency in some people.
@matthewsheppard7050
@matthewsheppard7050 2 ай бұрын
But I still haven’t found out when to amputate….
@user-os1sg9ku6r
@user-os1sg9ku6r 2 ай бұрын
After a rattlesnake bite, how long do you have to get to the hospital? Some say 30-minutes, others say 2-hours. Which is it? We all know the sooner the better, but in managing the situation a more exact time is helpful.
@AmorDia-GOAT
@AmorDia-GOAT Ай бұрын
Some people say the bulk of it wore off in like 12 hours
@josephsharp9939
@josephsharp9939 2 ай бұрын
The way she looks at him… 😂
@jamesshepard4743
@jamesshepard4743 3 ай бұрын
When I was a kid in the 80s, we would have snakebite kits with anti-venom and we would test on ourselves, for allergic reaction , ( cost way less back then ) so we would know if we could use it out in the middle of nowhere
@lokidonald6452
@lokidonald6452 3 ай бұрын
Thanks man I work outside alot
@fmfardous4321
@fmfardous4321 3 ай бұрын
Come emidetle and coaling.Bangladesh 🇧🇩
@fmfardous4321
@fmfardous4321 3 ай бұрын
Terrtmant premant 2,poent.
@fmfardous4321
@fmfardous4321 3 ай бұрын
Ana konda sneik.
@fmfardous4321
@fmfardous4321 3 ай бұрын
Im all Badsha👑 my trretmant tepc ywear me.
@1seticat
@1seticat 3 ай бұрын
For the record you can encounter them on a trail
@danielg.1707
@danielg.1707 3 ай бұрын
So in other words, if you get bit in the middle of nowhere, and can't get to a hospital, you're a gonner. Nothing in this day and age you can carry to give you fighting chance? Unbelievable..😬
@WagonWheels707
@WagonWheels707 2 ай бұрын
An sos beacon.
@johnshipley9755
@johnshipley9755 4 ай бұрын
KZbin
@pamparanea
@pamparanea 4 ай бұрын
You shouldn't drink in the wilderness *if you want to survive
@jpesmar
@jpesmar 4 ай бұрын
So, instead of paying attention like I should, I was just wondering why you didn't refer to your niece by her name, but just insisted on calling her "the niece". I am not a smart man. Anyway, all the best to your and the niece, hope she recovers well.
@ladyjusticewarriorqueenz2005
@ladyjusticewarriorqueenz2005 5 ай бұрын
Why dont first aid kits have a snake bite bandage that draws out poisons? Be practical.
@richardhincemon
@richardhincemon 4 ай бұрын
Venom is injected into the bloodstream from hollow fangs that are connected to the venom glands that are connected to the venom glands located behind the eyes. Bandages can't draw venom out of the bloodstream or lymphatic system.
@richardhincemon
@richardhincemon 4 ай бұрын
Venom is injected into the bloodstream from fangs or stingers from snakes,insects,arachnids and other marine animals to have a deadly effect. Poison has to be injested or come into contact with skin to have a deadly effect. Toxicology 101 venom is treated with antivenom or being put on a medical ventilation machine and poison is treated with activated charcoal or skin lotion for poisonous substances that are on the skin of amphibians or plants.
@Tedd-E-Bare
@Tedd-E-Bare 5 ай бұрын
Can these symptoms persist for several weeks after leaving high altitude and returning to lower altitude?
@user-dm7gq3bi4p
@user-dm7gq3bi4p 5 ай бұрын
what is the video called where you showed how to put the person in there, considering spinal injury?
@ლევან_ყორიაული
@ლევან_ყორიაული 5 ай бұрын
Yes, everyone talks about immediate hospitalization. And it is very good info because it accepts a case when help is really far away. Me personally, didn't saw nothing really informative, except this explanation and maybe compression bandage method from Australia. though there is none poisonous snakes in my country, I sometimes, still checking for info about snakebites and everyone says don't do anything radical, keep calm, search for medical help(yes, it's very easy to search for help and keep calm and not move, when your lifeline is in danger :D), if there is no help? than what? calmly DIE??? urban people sometimes are so naive and narrowsighted... If you are bitten by something clearly deadly, I think algorithm of actions are such: 1. kill the snake (a. avenge! "sweet" avenge, b. take as evidence what specifically bite you) 2. do temporary tourniquet, 3. cut bite area and remove as much organic fluid as you can. 4. desinfect area using lighter, 5. do compression bandage. |That 1to5 takes less then 3-5min, I think. 6. don't remove tourniquet (change it with proper one-that will not damage muscles as quickly), life is still so much dear than knee(and sometimes limbs are saved after prolonged use of this lifesaver), 7. go with nearest area where are humans with transportation capabilities, or at least to area, where cell phone will work. use short stick while walking slowly to relieve pressure on sore foot. ........ If help is really far, maybe more than 70-100km (we are 8billions and this would be very rare case, and if that is a case, seems you are far from ocean and most likely are stricken by viper that very often are not so deadly) I would omit going long journey and would removed tourniquet. instead I would mark place(if possible) in such ways to be seen from air, and would go shelter with some reserves of water. than wait for help, or organism's imune system to handle venom, or END. ___If you found my comment very dangerous and misinformative, than be kind and describe concretely what to do, when there is no hospitals and civilization are many hours or days away.
@walkseeworld2453
@walkseeworld2453 6 ай бұрын
hike 10 day on 4350 Metter Mt my weight 160 pound how much should i take this medicines? (1/2 - 125 mg twice a day?) thanks you.
@frankblangeard8865
@frankblangeard8865 6 ай бұрын
Sunglasses (and reading glasses) from Dollar Tree work well for me.
@arthurtorres3680
@arthurtorres3680 6 ай бұрын
Doc thank you very much. How about Cipro and Tinidazole together? Do they work for the same condition?
@ChristopherBosch-ff1dt
@ChristopherBosch-ff1dt 6 ай бұрын
Mass Sagin 😊
@lauracantrell2163
@lauracantrell2163 6 ай бұрын
DIATOMACEOUS EARTH
@WSB_RTRD
@WSB_RTRD 6 ай бұрын
This is dumber than dog s***If you are out in the wilderness and you get bit by a snake. How do you think the romance in the Egyptian survived? This guy's like he had a cell phone. Will be great, the f*** are you f****** stupid?
@user-anc123
@user-anc123 3 ай бұрын
🙄👌
@mominulkhan2653
@mominulkhan2653 7 ай бұрын
It works
@MeowfaceMusic
@MeowfaceMusic 7 ай бұрын
_Above_ the heart?? My uneducated thought would be to get the bite _BELOW_ the heart to slow the spread. Seems contradictory to both apply a light tourniquet AND allow gravity to get the blood to the heart sooner than later. What am I missing? (Just a drummer.😉)
@junbh2
@junbh2 7 ай бұрын
I think what makes them worth carrying is they're super cheap and take up almost no room. And they do have uses, just don't take them too seriously.
@sacramentofoodforest
@sacramentofoodforest 7 ай бұрын
Wait …. You are pooping eucalyptus? Or English ivy? I usually have native runs
@axxiom20001
@axxiom20001 8 ай бұрын
If one is not hear help, what is the best way to "treat" or disinfect a bite if you believe it to be a dry bite?
@stevenoc1709
@stevenoc1709 8 ай бұрын
I’m here for the Jim Carrey comments 😂
@Pipsqwak
@Pipsqwak 8 ай бұрын
My mother got HACE at high altitude in Colorado. We'd spent nearly a week at altitudes ranging from 10,000 to 13,000 feet and thought nothing of it because we'd lived in Leadville for many years decades ago, and my parents had always lived in high-altitude mining towns in the mountains. She didn't get nauseated, but she had a headache, got more and more confused and disoriented, had ataxia (she staggered and had a wide, unsteady gait while walking and had to be supported), was uncoordinated and unable to dress herself, and had frank hallucinations. She was also lethargic, falling asleep and difficult to arouse. When finally aroused, she would only respond to questions in monosyllables. My dad thought she was having a stroke, but as an RN, I thought the symptoms were more like HACE and knew that we had to descend quickly from the remote area we were in and get her to a hospital. Sure enough, when we got her down to 5,000 feet, she seemed to recover completely. I still had her checked out with an MRI at the nearest hospital ED to make sure she had not had any kind of brain infarct. She's 80 and had a hemorrhagic stroke due to an aneurysm years ago,, from which she had recovered well. But cerebrovascular disease can make one prone to problems at altitude. She's now forbidden to visit our old haunts in Colorado.
@Pipsqwak
@Pipsqwak 8 ай бұрын
My elderly mother got HACE after spending several days at high elevations (over 10,000 feet) in Colorado. She'd had a stroke years before, and at first her symptoms were worrisome for a stroke, but she also had headache, lethargy, disorientation, hallucinations, delusions, and ataxia which led me to believe she was experiencing HACE. At the time we were in a remote area without medical services, so, as an RN myself, I knew the only thing we could do was to get her down to a much lower elevation as soon as possible. At 5,000 feet, she recovered almost miraculously, but I had her checked out with an MRI at the nearest hospital ED just to be sure she hadn't experienced a brain bleed (her previous stroke had been hemorrhagic due to a small aneurysm). Tourists need to be aware that AMS, HAPE, and HACE can affect anyone at altitudes like you find in the mountains of Colorado; especially the elderly. It's not just an affliction of fit young mountaineers in the Himalayas or Andes. Even if you've lived at high altitude (we were returning to Colorado where us kids grew up in Leadville at over 10,000 feet, after an absence of several decades), you can still get it.
@user-vi3hc5id1j
@user-vi3hc5id1j 8 ай бұрын
OMACs WWF=.*
@dianayount2122
@dianayount2122 8 ай бұрын
cro fab doesn't work for coral snakes
@MK-bk9nv
@MK-bk9nv 8 ай бұрын
Thank you for the numbers. I’ve lived at sea level (Hawaii) for all my life. I’m very physically active (canoe paddling, kayaking, hiking, weight training, etc). . I’m visiting my son in Colorado and was unprepared for the altitude symptoms (decreased activity tolerance, loss of appetite, weight loss). A friend suggested canned peaches with baby aspirin, which helps to some extent. Did not want to do Diamox nor take any medications. Are there any ways to prevent the symptoms ahead of time so that when I visit Colorado, I can do more active things without the symptoms? I see some of the military climbers in my Hawaii using restrictive masks while climbing..
@bobcraigcpa
@bobcraigcpa 9 ай бұрын
A food vacuum food saver does a very good job getting these back to a small package, not as small as the original but close