Every time I go hunting I think about how those guys had pretty much just one shot and a good knife, while I have a multi shot long gun, and a powerful handgun, not to mention g.p.s. phone , first aid kit. and a small survival kit , and much more. The amount of respect that I have for our ancestors not living but thriving with so little. Thank you and God Bless!
@AdamtheRed-6 ай бұрын
The shower when you get home, and knowing that you have that in your future while hunting cold and/or wet, is also pretty nice.
@benn4546 ай бұрын
@@AdamtheRed- And if you come up empty, you can go to a grocery store instead of starve.
@Bootycheeks86 ай бұрын
Imagine our ancestors surviving that just for this generation of kid's to be gender confused and not be able to fight their way out of a wet paper bag?
@Bootycheeks86 ай бұрын
Usetube sucks so bad now. 90% of my replies don't even make it
@Bootycheeks86 ай бұрын
My original reply was "imagine our ancestors surviving all that just to have a generation that believes they're a cat or gender fluid?"
@mrwillstam6 ай бұрын
Being in the Army, the longest I ever went without a shower and "normal" food was a month. And that was in training. I just cant imagine how hardcore that lifestyle is, compared to the comforts we have today.
@DebleeThree6 ай бұрын
My ancestors migrated from Virginia to North Carolina, to Kentucky, then to Texas and Missouri. Our family traveled with other families and they can be found in censuses living near one another. They intermarried and built communities together. They knew not to travel alone.
@tbjtbj47866 ай бұрын
Mine did the same from sc down to ga and into fl when it was the frontier. The other side came to fl with the Spanish.
@mattybhoy65226 ай бұрын
That's really interesting. I'm a Boer. My family did the "Great Trek and landed in the Orange Free State. Our history is so similar in terms of challenges faced by our pioneering forefathers but thousands of miles apart on different continents.
@horsthumbug16126 ай бұрын
And they kill the Natives.
@randallross76832 ай бұрын
My ancestors started out in Pennsylvania moved down along the Appalachia mountain then west to Georgia some of them got sick and settled in Georgia the rest headed to Texas and Arkansas
@Beryllahawk6 ай бұрын
I can't recall now if I read this, or if it came up in a discussion with my grandfather (or even if we were discussing something I'd read)...but the observation itself has stuck with me for decades. "The people who have nowhere else to go, the people with nothing to lose, the wild-eyed misfits and the low-down crooks...those are the people who become pioneers, explorers, hunters. The people who need other people around, the people who can't stand to be unkind, they do better to stay home and safe." You're very right about a special mindset. The willingness to do whatever it takes - gross, brutal, tedious or back-breaking - in order to survive. I think that men who made a habit of brutalizing others didn't necessarily last long...if nothing else because they earned a reputation and they'd run afoul of each other sooner or later. That kind of non-cooperation weeds itself out over time, but it's still very dangerous even NOW. Your comment about folks sheltering in gigantic hollow trees made me think about the book "My Side of the Mountain." I think the kid's in upstate New York (and it's hardly the frontier) but he does make a kind of hollow in a tree, burns it (which creates a barrier against tree sap AND bugs), and lives in that for like two years. I remember thinking "no way" and then looking it up. As for surviving in that time... Well, the preparations would be the deciding factor. Am I tough enough, willing enough, to do the extremely hard work? I'd be incredibly miserable most all the time, but I could do it. I'd drop weight damn fast (and maybe be cured of diabetes in the process), I'd toughen up and get fit because the only other choice is to die. But without any of the tools and knowledge needed? Just BLAM, isekai'd into 1850s Tennessee? Nope, dead in about three days, maybe less if I get sick from bad water. I know enough to TRY to get water and I know vaguely how to test plants as food, but that's the limit of my "wild" knowledge and experience. And dirty water, or stagnant water, would give me a flux: dehydration would be MUCH quicker if I'm having that kind of problem. Humans only go three days without water before expiring and it's very unpleasant. I'm pretty happy with my modern times, my clean water and house with a good roof. Yeah there's a lot of bad stuff, not even counting the global worries that bring us all down. But I'm not starving, I'm not without shelter, I'm not wearing every stitch I own and praying I won't die of exposure. I'm not prospering by anyone's definition, but I'm surviving better than I would've done back then, and for that I will count my blessings.
@BigMicksLittlePlot6 ай бұрын
I'd love to see a video about how a farmer would aquire land, what they would grow, the tools theyd need the animals needed for food and work or just what your year would look like. I grow my own food as a hobby and its hard work even now. cant imagine the effort it would take to make it work. Thanks for another amazing video!
@BigMicksLittlePlot6 ай бұрын
Also I'd last about 2 days if i was super lucky😅😅😅
@terryt.16436 ай бұрын
Farming on the frontier would be narly. First choose the land, build a shelter, clear the land, then plant, keep the critters at bay, grow to harvest, store, all the while hunting to survive with the threat of hostile natives, then survive the winter and do it all again. Not many of us could do that and survive. My hat’s off to my farming ancestors, amazing folks.
@BigMicksLittlePlot6 ай бұрын
@@terryt.1643 I know can you imagine doing all that. Praying your crops would not fail from the absolute stack of problems that can befall them with a baby to feed and only 24 hours in a day. No wonder people used to be very religious!
@townsends6 ай бұрын
Thank you for your support and suggestions!
@dwaynewladyka5776 ай бұрын
Great suggestion. I'm originally from a very large farm in Alberta, Canada. Farming still fascinates me, and I'd like to know what farming was like in North America, in the 18th and 19th centuries. Cheers!
@dxk656 ай бұрын
Native American here. Even though my ancestors spent centuries surviving here I'm not sure if I could. Modern society just isn't built for that lifestyle anymore.
@ianstuart56606 ай бұрын
Yes, so true!
@heathboeddeker54016 ай бұрын
That's because of a person's frame of mind. If a person puts there mind to it they can pretty much go back to those times in alot of ways .
@strawhousepig6 ай бұрын
Half the same. If I went back along the native side I'd be fine. I wouldn't want to, though, lol. If I went down the other side, still wouldn't want to, and I sure wouldn't "pioneer". Even not knowing what I know now, it's just I wouldn't make a bold change like that.
@ChipmunkRapidsMadMan18693 ай бұрын
depending on how you look, you could be adopted. Then you would have access to their medical knowledge. Granted, the way some clans styled their hair could be considered torture by us.
@andrewgreen55744 күн бұрын
My native ancestors lived in a cosmopolitan theocratic republic but pulled an identity from the Chichimeca who did live like this. I dont know if I could survive either life, tbh. They then moved to northern settlements called Pueblos de Tlaxcala which might have been an easier period to survive due to communal reliance and social structures. During the 2 Mexican Revolutions, well maybe not so much.
@AliceRelaxCooking6 ай бұрын
*I love your videos, you make us all happy 🥰🥰🥰*
@orange-micro-fiber97406 ай бұрын
Could we? If I was magically transported? No. If I was raised that way? Maybe.
@EC-dz4bq6 ай бұрын
We into I
@avangardismm6 ай бұрын
exactly what i thought
@bartsanders15536 ай бұрын
@@EC-dz4bqWould you like him to speak for you?
@oscard.lisboa61056 ай бұрын
Exactly
@floripaspbr6 ай бұрын
Perfect response. I´m from Brazil, my grandfather is two generations away from an escaped slave and he lived in the countryside cultivating bananas. He had raised and butchered his own hogs and chickens, hunted (until it was turned illegal) and planted for pretty much 98% of his needs. My father barely knows how to hammer a nail or fry an egg, but he has his own business built from scratch. Completly different mindsets and situations. Still fun to think about it though!
@PoppabearsCave6 ай бұрын
This was about the most perfectly made video I have ever seen on KZbin. All of the ones your team produces are quality. Please pass my compliments on to them. You guys have gotten me through my surgery recovery. Thank you.
@Bridgeburnerrrrr6 ай бұрын
Ouuuuu sounds like some one has a little man crush 😍
@PoppabearsCave6 ай бұрын
@@Bridgeburnerrrrr what happens on the frontier stays on the frontier.
@Bridgeburnerrrrr6 ай бұрын
@@PoppabearsCave you're absolutely right 🤫
@ievaification6 ай бұрын
all the best health to you!!! these videos really do help in so many ways
@cecilyerker6 ай бұрын
@@Bridgeburnerrrrrif you don’t have a crush on Jon Townsends you are lying to yourself
@weaniebeaniebur57256 ай бұрын
My family that moved to Washington made a shack out of a hollowed out tree and the family stayed there while building the permanent home. We still have letters and written testimony from the family that came here in the early 1800.
@Just_Sara6 ай бұрын
What a video! The thought you put into your words in this one shows, I felt like every sentence I learned something new. Thank you for this!
@LetsTakeWalk6 ай бұрын
I think our buddy Townsend probably would survive (even without nutmeg).
@privacyvalued41346 ай бұрын
Nope. His body has developed a nutmeg dependency. He'd definitely be dead.
@terryt.16436 ай бұрын
Survive perhaps but enjoy it, nope, not without his nutmeg, but I bet he keeps a grater and some nutmeg always handy, so maybe until he ran out…
@josephbenson63016 ай бұрын
Sans nutmeg... Would he want to?
@louel92726 ай бұрын
Nutmeg is the melange of John, he needs it to survive
@RyanGribble6 ай бұрын
He'd find nutmeg.
@jamesellsworth96736 ай бұрын
This is one of your best presentations due to the variety of familiar 'suspects' you show and the information you include.
@SDHA11916 ай бұрын
I love when you do these videos. My ancestors lives on the frontier and there is no way that I would be able to endure what they did. It furthers my notion that I love studying history but I wouldn’t want to live in it with the creature comforts I take for granted today. Such an interesting topic.
@weaniebeaniebur57256 ай бұрын
My family was the Mccalister family. Moved to Washington state pre 1830 from the Midwest area. Arrived near the coast of Oregon and Washington by the Colombian river where they were invited by local tribes to live to live in what was described as oasis in the puget sound with game to hunt and crops to grow. They lived in proximity to the Nisqually tribe, whose leader (chief leschi) invited them to stay. Upon arrival the only suitable home was a hollowed tree stump where they made their first home. A lot of controversy still exists to this day around the relationship between Leschi and the Mccalisters relationship. To this day we still have the Nisqually river and right next to it is Mccalister creek, near I5 and the sound. To this day
@hugo987655 ай бұрын
To this day?
@homesteadgal41436 ай бұрын
One of my forefathers was Roger Dyer, a frontiersman, who traveled from his home in PA into the wilderness. He and several other families built Fort Seybert in Pendleton County, [West] Virginia. When some of these early settlers were away one afternoon, some Shawnee and Delaware Indians attacked the Fort and slaughtered them -- 1758. They were killed and their fort was burned. I have visited the location and there are no visible remains of the fort. (My 5th great grandmother and several others were away during the attack, otherwise I would not have existed.)
@BenjaminKlahn6 ай бұрын
1:55 Kitty!
@boid97616 ай бұрын
It's the aforementioned Wild Cat!
@Cr4z3d6 ай бұрын
I didn't even notice that until you pointed it out, good eye.
@AltimaNEO6 ай бұрын
Frontier Kitty
@sinisterthoughts28966 ай бұрын
look out john! there's a cougar behind you!
@heroslippy66666 ай бұрын
I wonder what the cat thinks about this old style human settlement
@LYLEWOLD6 ай бұрын
1:55 "It took a special kind of ...", especially one confident enough to bring Kitty along. ;-)
@tannerunderwood55446 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for saying Appalachian mountain correctly!! Thank you. Also I was mostly raised living of the land and do it mostly as an adult. Definitely helps to study and experience at the same time
@THE-X-Force6 ай бұрын
So grateful for this channel, and for you, Jon. Thank you for all of the wonderful and inspiring videos. ☮
@MynewTennesseeHome6 ай бұрын
I enjoy challenging myself. I'm older now but up to a few years ago I regularly went on what I called survival adventures, usually along a waterway and away from civilization. Sometimes by myself, sometimes with a kid and sometimes with a grandkid or two for up to a week with only a little rice, a pot and what would fit in a small pack. It was very educational and sometimes tough. I know how to survive but not sure at my age I could do it and the longer you're out the harder it is.
@bbroogs6 ай бұрын
Lucky kids and grandchildren!
@victormartin66082 ай бұрын
Excellent video !!! 😊
@николайиванов-к2ь6 ай бұрын
Спасибо вам за ваши видео. Благодаря им я понял почему на Диком Западе строили именно так, хотя раньше считал что это некачественные строения.
@chrisquinn3946 ай бұрын
Most people think of western United States when talking about wild west but at this time heading west to territories like Kentucky was the wild west back them.
@николайиванов-к2ь6 ай бұрын
@@chrisquinn394 Благодаря вам я понял что Дикий Запад это не место. Это время, люди, история. Это огромная эпоха. Очень интересно смотреть. Спасибо вам еще раз.
@Eljacob06 ай бұрын
@@chrisquinn394 this is likely a chatbot
@Robertssurvivalsystems6 ай бұрын
Those old skills are still used today. They really knew what they was doing. Awesome vid!
@Pieces_Of_Eight5 ай бұрын
Another exceptional class with Professor Jon at Townsend University. Fantastic historic insight, stunning cinematography, marvelous editing. Brilliant as always!
@averycarter36206 ай бұрын
To live the frontier life you have strong mind, body, and spirit. To be as part of nature a human can ever be
@unseenadventures81306 ай бұрын
i moved to wyoming from ny and few times hiking with my dogs i was cought in rain and hail. you could defenitaly die from hypothermia in the middle of summer if you get wet then have to spend the night withought fire. your only hope would be to keep moving and stay warm just dont stop is your best chance
@MLukacs6 ай бұрын
Your question is interesting, Jon! Could we survive? If we went back in a time machine, it would be difficult. The right guide would be key, just as it was to the people of the time. Any skills you could develop would be of assistance, but as you point out, someone who was raised in a town then may not have the skills either. Growing up in the period would provide somewhat of an advantage. Your mindset would be key to the length of your survival on the frontier. Understanding the Native Americans in the area or those who you encounter would be a constantly changing game. Your point in this episode about each tribe being different should not be underestimated. I would think that most Native Americans preferrred that you were not there, and your presence could be in violation of a treaty they made with someone else. Learning to live with the indigenous people would be another key to survival. The odds were certainly against you, because accidents caused through no fault of your own could suddenly turn deadly. Being alone with God in the big woods can be a most peaceful experience, and it could be a most diffuclt experience. As you pointed out in the past, surival on the frontier is a young man's venture. Age provides experience but tends to limit your mobility in the woods and ability to tolerate extreme conditions, which dampens your desire to put yourself in that environment. Could we survive? Yes. If you venture out prepared in good company, you could. Would the odds be in your favor? That's doubtful. Especially the first time out. The people who venture out today will have the best chance. Those who tend to avoid God's country today would find survival difficult. Thanks for the diverson.
@SillyMe9996 ай бұрын
My ancestors had to share shoes. They went to church in shifts because there were not enough to go around. That's poverty.
@AltimaNEO6 ай бұрын
My family went barefoot. Shoes were a luxury.
@stevedeyne6 ай бұрын
@@AltimaNEO What are shoes?
@timothyrussell11796 ай бұрын
My ancestors had to share shoes, pants l, chewin' tobacco, and wives. They'd have to take shifts with the wife to get married at the church, and then the rest of the family would attend each wedding in shifts cause they didn't have enough shoes to go round. For efficiency, each person would wear one shoe and hop around on one foot. Thems the breaks.
@BakaPope6 ай бұрын
@@timothyrussell1179Ya'll had feet to wear shoes with? Bruh my ancestors didn't even have feet, to this day my family crawls on the ground. It is what it is.
@zubbworks6 ай бұрын
The church dosn't have a floor bruh, just pull up with no shoes. Janice in the choir been tryn to tell yall.
@Unknown-user1246-w9h6 ай бұрын
Amazing video, great work. Thanks.
@TheBestHistoryReview3 ай бұрын
Thank you! ❤ I love that you added, metaphorically, about moving forward today. Very important to draw strength from the past.
@RodCornholio6 ай бұрын
The Appalachian Trail has been said to be deceptively dangerous at times, even with all our modern gear. What frontiersmen did was extraordinary. They faced life and death on a daily basis. High risk.
@middknightdream15776 ай бұрын
It was usually a dozen to 100 men at a time working the trails and moving along the trails, it wasn't just two people going on a weekend hike getting lost. They were smart to go in groups, they also had a rule not to go wandering off in the dark or even during the daytime without their gear. The foreman in charge of all them had to know where every man was going to be at any given time so they wouldn't lose someone.
@mattybhoy65226 ай бұрын
Such an interesting video this. Im a boer. My family did the " The Great Trek "to escape Brotish rule and settled in the interior of the country. We were called Voortrekkers which means fore runners ( pioneers ). Faced so many challenges. Wars with Xhosa, Zulu etc. Faced disease never encountered before, face harsh environmental conditions, starvation, wild animals etc and then settled on a plateau of land that was not privy to farm but we managed to do so anyway. The English couldn't care less until we dug deep and started finding gold. Thats when the Boer Wars kicked off. So many parallels to American pioneers. We must be grateful for their sacrifices today
@johnovanic95606 ай бұрын
This was a good video especially for these times. The most important thing you spoke of was the mental fortitude of those people back then. People think that in a certain scenario that they're going to grab their go bag and run out to the Wilderness and survive. While those who have the fortitude mental and spiritual strength Will Survive others will not. While having spent more than a few weeks in the Ouachita National Forest of Arkansas with just my Flintlock knife and Tomahawk with a few provisions I can tell you it is not an easy task.
@olddawgdreaming57156 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing with us Jon, truer words were never spoken. They lived because they wanted too. Stay safe and keep up the good work and videos. Fred.
@fletcherhamilton31776 ай бұрын
When I was twenty, hell yeah no sweat! Aged forty-two, yeah I’d probably have been a goner already. MAD respect to all frontiersmen and indigenous folks of every country staving off disease and death in the ways that they knew how for as long as they could . . .
@writethepath83546 ай бұрын
Scoundrels 💯 thanks for your work and videos
@Mary-rb1pz6 ай бұрын
This is such a wonderful channel! I have so much respect for your love of place and period, and the quality of your work. Kudos to the entire Townsends crew, some in front of (and most behind) the cameras.
@Halblingen6 ай бұрын
thanks for your work
@Igodostuff6 ай бұрын
I go "camping" for my youtube channel and always think about how easy it is to be outside these days. I often look at my surroundings and wonder what it would have been like to have been the first or second person to ever have seen the area I'm in.
@woodsmanforlife16776 ай бұрын
Speaking for my MRS & myself: yes! In our younger years, we did live in near similar conditions (sans hostiles). We still have our gear (including long rifle) from back then. Lived in tents, build cabins. I still hunt/fish/trap........
@gezber6 ай бұрын
I like to think that I could I know that I wouldn't enjoy it Hats off to these people, tough as nails
@toryistatertot53946 ай бұрын
They remind me of the long haul truck drivers. It takes a special kind of person or one who has little choice to sign up for long hours behind the wheel. You see beautiful scenery and meet interesting people but it is dangerous and hard mentally. You are often alone with your thoughts which is why for years truckers used c.b. radios to keep each other company. You work in all weather, any time of the day or night and depending on the load you haul you might even have physically demanding labor. Injuries are dangerous and the "natives" (passenger vehicles) are hostile.
@lyria84696 ай бұрын
Who we are is also who we are from and THANK YOU, it's so important to remember!
@DudleyDuke6 ай бұрын
I love the cooking videos but this one was even better! Love the history lessons, it inspires one to see more of this vast beautiful country in person
@warriorworkouts53976 ай бұрын
I know I wouldn’t have but not for any of the reasons listed here. I’m indigenous and just got to travel back through my people’s original pre-Removal homeland for the first time. It was a beautiful and spiritual experience and had I been born two centuries earlier I’d have died before getting sent West.
@Theggman836 ай бұрын
I live closer to the land than most these days. And I'm not even sure I could manage it...
@Campfire_Bandit6 ай бұрын
I felt the exact same way watching this
@DebleeThree6 ай бұрын
Yah-I'd rather not.
@P_RO_6 ай бұрын
I'm certain that very few could survive today like they did back then, even with modern equipment. It's not so much about us, but about the world as it is today. Animals shy away from humans and with few humans back then chancing upon a game animal to eat every day or two was almost certain- but not today. Edible plants were also more abundant then. On the human question they knew every plant that was edible, what was medicinal, where it grew, and how to identify it in every season. Then also knew how to preserve that supply with nearly nothing and how to make the best use of it. The last time this kind of knowledge was exhibited was during the Great Depression, and nearly none of those people are around now plus much of what they knew has been forgotten. Without our modern world around us less than one percent of humanity would survive in the wilderness today, and I know I'm not one of them.
@Theggman836 ай бұрын
@@P_RO_ lol I live on a homestead in upstate Vermont... I raise rabbits, chicken, turkey, and ducks. I've had pigs and goats in the past... I also have two wells and a wood burning kitchen stove.. I burn my own wood for heating...I have a garden that has more square feet than my house... I forage and hunt every year... And I have yet to run out of growing things around my house. I don't even own a tractor. The biggest piece of power equipment I have is a push mower.... Trust me, people still live this way...
@P_RO_6 ай бұрын
@@Theggman83 Yes but very few. You're the one percent I spoke of. I'm better than the average city slicker but not by much, and my age and health problems means I can't make it without society's support.
@hayeonkim78386 ай бұрын
Thanks for meaningful and valuable video as always ❤❤❤
@ShiftingDrifter6 ай бұрын
Strongly recommend reading "The Frontiersmen: A Narrative" by Allen Eckart
@caseyj.13326 ай бұрын
I live in the same area as my forefathers here in the Missouri Ozarks. Young Nathaniel traveled with his family from Eastern Tennessee over 200 years ago and settled on the Niangua River. 600 miles of wilderness, heat and ticks. He must have had a good reason.
@carrow22503 ай бұрын
These videos are even more fun to watch when its cold out
@foresthiker67076 ай бұрын
Nothing short of outstanding!! Very well done, and keep up this excellent work,
@JayCWhiteCloud6 ай бұрын
Love the channel...My last name may speak to whether the "we" in my life, " could survive the frontier, " I still won't carry, have, or ever want a cell phone...I think I would be fine and the family has done well up to this point....LOL!!! Always great to see one of your videos...
@jeremyperala8396 ай бұрын
This gives me inspiration to do a fall camping/ fur trapping camp here in Minnesota this fall. Thank you
@mikeallensonntag4 ай бұрын
I rarely give out a subscribe off one video but looking at your channel alot can be learned here and i look forward to it. Thanks.
@ercmadden5 ай бұрын
If we were transported back in time, communication would be a thing to consider. Our terminology for things is different now and you could find yourself in a situation if you used the wrong word when asking for help/bartering.
@rustyshackleford90176 ай бұрын
as someone who has lived in a 1800s log cabin and spent more time in the wilderness than many, nope. Exactly all points hit. We have weather reports, medicine, firearms, soled shoes, etc., we are not being hunted by large game, not crossing into hostile lands... If you go down in the backcountry you can hit the SoS button and be good. I do think it would be fun to teleport for a week
@STho2056 ай бұрын
Of course we could Jon, as long as the last big order from the Townsend catalog arrives a day before all modern civilization crumbles.
@chrismaverick98286 ай бұрын
The descriptions of the trials and dangers associated with that time, the natives, the weather, the environment.... It all reminds me of a day trip to Cleveland. :D
@will768886 ай бұрын
Great video, Jon! Thanks!
@Blrtech776 ай бұрын
Jon, Thanks for the absolutely amazing video!
@rodgerlisamoore57866 ай бұрын
In my hometown of London, KY is the Levi Jackson state park. In the park is the site of McNitt's defeat. The tradition is that one of the survivors is a young lady that hid in a large tree. Some versions say she gave birth in the tree.
@toddshook17656 ай бұрын
Amazing to think that people that backpack bring their items of survival and most of the time stay on established trails. These of the frontier and explorers made their own trails; following the contour of the land or small path that some made before. Like you said some stayed and some went forward.
@GizmoBeach6 ай бұрын
If those who lived long in the past could trade places with us now…they’d do so in a heartbeat, if they could enjoy what we’ve progressed to, as far as being comfortable and well-fed, not dying at 30 from disease, etc.
@Ptitmalle6 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video 👍
@hawktheelfowl6 ай бұрын
I’d die of exposure, food poisoning or disease almost instantly.
@johnbryan56086 ай бұрын
Lol
@henrygarcia12036 ай бұрын
I feel like I'd die of exposure.
@bellowphone6 ай бұрын
Don't be so hard on yourself. You might survive long enough to die of starvation.
@Cr4z3d6 ай бұрын
You have died of Dysentery
@thomasmusso11476 ай бұрын
Not that 'instant' those mentioned. Given a broader choice, rather more quickly by the hand of some Indignant Indigini.
@jim72176 ай бұрын
Love your videos Jon - great job!
@Ammo086 ай бұрын
If I could go back in time, I would love to have been with Lewis and Clark...what an adventure. My paternal ancestors left Virginia and came to East Tennessee just before the Revolution. What little information we have is that they were educated, ambitious, and tough.
@avionics216 ай бұрын
Excellent video!!!
@lucax23006 ай бұрын
I used to know someone who really liked this channel. She referred to the uploader as "Keebler elf man," because she was halfway convinced that he was a very tiny person who was in a very tiny log house, because all the kitchenware looked modeled and tiny.
@JB-kx1he6 ай бұрын
Such a great channel
@kitramshaw54476 ай бұрын
Love your videos, they mean alot to me. ❤
@fraserihle48476 ай бұрын
All “exciting” dangers, when really things like typhus/Rocky Mountain spotted fever etc. were huge killers and once you got them it was often a death sentence
@amesstoday6 ай бұрын
Loved this video.
@kimthompson16186 ай бұрын
I really enjoyed this episode. Thanks.
@kungfuchimp57886 ай бұрын
LOVE these episodes!!!
@dwaynewladyka5776 ай бұрын
We take our modern amenities for granted. In North America, even in the 1950s, there were people living in rural areas that didn't have power. Persevering is what helped these people survive. This was another great episode. Cheers!
@wildmouse58886 ай бұрын
My Dad can remember the day they got electricity. One lightbulb with one plug in each room.
@floridaprepper7516 ай бұрын
Great video sir, thank you.
@timothyrussell11796 ай бұрын
Hunting/fishing no season no limit no regulations at all. Not polluted or destroyed yet; chestnut trees and clean water. In that era though, I'd have stayed by the shore anyway though.
@cet62376 ай бұрын
My idea of "roughing" it is- black & white television with no remote control. I wouldn't have made it 24 hrs. back in those days!
@tonyenglish51535 ай бұрын
I had parents that were raised the way and so, yes I could and actually Id prefer earlier times over todays times as things were harder and more appreciated. Simpler and required family and friends to be committed to each other. It was what the country was built on.
@buckgulick39686 ай бұрын
After over 40 years of hardcore reenacting (many eras) and trying to capture what folks in the past lived with day to day, I gotta be honest that even I couldn't do very well. After rough weekend or week long events, we'd be trashed and couldn't wait to appreciate the modern comforts we take for granted these days. That to me is the true value and beauty of hardcore reenacting. Glad I got my sons into it. Puts life into perspective. Be thankful for what we have now, and the ones who made it all possible. Too old to do it anymore, but the lessons it taught live forever. (Love your channel)
@PulpParadise6 ай бұрын
Jon's right; they were just ordinary people with the willpower to survive. Yes, we could do it, if we think similarly. Gaining the necessary skills is part of that journey, of course, but that's also part of the adventure. What were normal daily life skills back then are completely different now, but there are people who do similar things today as well. If you have the interest and the willpower, you can do it. Thanks @Townsends for another look back at history!
@smprfly6 ай бұрын
This is a great channel.
@tannersires97346 ай бұрын
I feel like I would have a better chance than the people who have lived their entire lives growing up in the city. My dad taught me how to hunt/catch and clean hogs,deer,rabbit,raccoons and many other animals. I feel like hunting wouldn’t be a problem and I’ve roughed it camping for days on end and having a particular interest in having basic survival skills would set me on a path of at least surviving the experience. Growing up in Texas with a dad who taught me many aspects of basic survival skills.
@Tambryl6 ай бұрын
That's awesome !
@beckypennington796 ай бұрын
Interesting and entertaining video thanks
@marleneplatcek63646 ай бұрын
Absolutely, thanks for sharing
@Steve_G886 ай бұрын
great video!
@robzinawarriorprincess13186 ай бұрын
Yay! Townsends!
@BonesyTucson6 ай бұрын
Excellent video.
@Veteran-Nurse6 ай бұрын
Great briefing.
@asdf07476 ай бұрын
im going to confidently say "NO". Although i developed great cooking and butchering skills from being a cook for years, the amount of disease, lack of drinkable water and the need to hunt are just too much of variable risks. The reason why you die 2 min into Oregan Trail is because that's exactly what happened.
@chatryna6 ай бұрын
Awsome video. Thank you.
@notyourinfopleasefoff47185 ай бұрын
❤ thank you for asking the question we've all been wondering LOL
@Alfiy_Wolf6 ай бұрын
I’d like to think I would survive even with all my bushcraft skills from the military, I know I’m tripping over in horse poop and hitting my head, getting and infected and die
@kellysouter43816 ай бұрын
Don't ill wish yourself. If you have bush craft skills you're more likely to be ok than most of us.
@Alfiy_Wolf6 ай бұрын
@@kellysouter4381 no, I’d get dead by something stupid
@revelationperception53706 ай бұрын
@@Alfiy_WolfGet staph cutting my thumb while whittling a tooth pick, is how I expect I would go out.
@middknightdream15776 ай бұрын
@@revelationperception5370that's when you dab your thumb with honey take a bit of cloth and wrap your thumb with it, and let the honey do its thing as a natural antibiotic.
@mrmicro226 ай бұрын
If you own any amount of land, you should own a shovel, a pick, an axe and a saw. This is what was known as a pioneering kit and is still issued by the military. In modern times, I would throw in a sledge and a crowbar. With those tools, you could do much to help yourself. If you don't own them, you probably pay someone else to use them on your behalf. That's fine but you are missing the chance to build that mindset Jon was talking about. Apartment dwellers and car owners can adapt as much of the kit as possible.
@revelationperception53706 ай бұрын
I always felt I could do it when I was younger, I grew up in the mountains...then I think of not going anywhere without my asthma inhaler. That smacks me in the face with reality.
@lorriewatson74236 ай бұрын
Most people, now days, cannot survive without a cell phone for a day, cannot walk more than a couple miles, endure a day or two without mindless entertainment. There are a few out here who appreciate and utilize the old ways, who barely survive on subsistance levels; but, when times are tough, we get thru it, because we know those old ways.
@danielsmith40906 ай бұрын
Thanks Townsend
@chrisquinn3946 ай бұрын
That knife you're holding up at the beginning of the video is a good representation of what they had at the time. Back then, everyone could sharpen a knife, unlike today. The blades were a lot thinner and didn't take a jig to resharpen the edge. The hunting and survival knifes sold today are so thick and stout you cant break them but that means you can't sharpen them out in the field either. The steel is so hard on these new knifes most people dull them when trying to sharpen them.
@charlessalmond70766 ай бұрын
Anyone who's decent at sharpening can sharpen a powdered steel in the field. I've carried stuff like 1075/1095 blades and I've carried stuff like Cru-Wear, S35vn blades in the field. In my experience I found at the end of a hard outdoor work day, I'm either sharpening a knife or im honing a knife. Either soft steel or super steel i end up spending about the same amount of time on maintenance. Just my 2 cents.
@chrisquinn3946 ай бұрын
@charlessalmond7076 I understand. You are not part of the most people, as I mentioned if your daily routine includes sharpening knives. You get good at it if you do it all the time. I'm pretty good at using traditional stones to sharpen knives. These modern knives are much harder to sharpen, though. I'm assuming the knives you are using are pretty thin at the edge if you have to sharpen them daily as the point of the steel they use today is to hold a sharp edge much longer. The softer steel will lose its edge much faster but you don't have to have a three piece stone system to get it back to what it was. A few swipes on a stone and it's ready to go. Even a small file would work and only take a minute or two.
@charlessalmond70766 ай бұрын
@@chrisquinn394 not sharpening, honing. Leather strop/compound. Have to definitely agree, people dont know how to sharpen anymore. We all have our strong points and weaknesses I suppose.