Nice one David 🙌 that tarp turned out really well 👏👏👏 not only doing Trevor's gear justice 👍 you deserve a lot of credit for the gear you also make as its all top Quality products 👌 thanks for showing us 👍
@davidfriars Жыл бұрын
Thanks mate I alway appreciate your kind words on the products and the tarp I am really happy with it just big enough for a day in the woods. Thanks again David
@RoughTimba Жыл бұрын
Nice tarp Dave 💪
@davidfriars Жыл бұрын
Thanks Tim 👍
@schonbeardwildmark Жыл бұрын
Beautiful work David!
@davidfriars Жыл бұрын
Thank you 👍
@teeflo2757 Жыл бұрын
nice little tarp. 👍🏼✌🏼🖖🏼
@davidfriars Жыл бұрын
Thanks Mate 👍
@greenmouse9354 Жыл бұрын
Nice size tarp Dave and go’s well with your FR set up 👍👍
@davidfriars Жыл бұрын
Thanks mate I am really happy with the tarp just big enough for a day in the woods and being canvas just looks nice. All the best. David
@Seanoduk Жыл бұрын
Really nice work on the tarp Dave, just the right size for the FR pack & a day bimble. I’ve got the Jnr & your pouches definitely make it work better. Need to get one of the haversacks as a great combo. Cheers Dave.
@davidfriars Жыл бұрын
It great to hear that the pouches have made using the FR pack better for you I think they work great, the tarp is perfect for a day out in the woods for a bit of cover and having it in canvas just looks nice, the haversack is really nice and yes makes a great combination. All the best David
@Thedagda801 Жыл бұрын
Brilliant subtle set up! As an aside , what boots are you using?
@davidfriars Жыл бұрын
Thanks mate and the boot are made by Salomon which i had for yours.👍
@jkline999 Жыл бұрын
Trying not to offend british outdoorsmen, but it seems, all of you, pack up a ton of different kinds of outdoor whatever stuff --weekly--for 'testing' and clicks, put all of that 'kit' into little pouches, then place all those in a different pack-- weekly-- this week it is the 'Frost River Pack', then drive to some 'woodland' where traffic is still heard and you still have cell coverage; put on your bushcrafty clothing, set up your tarps, make coffee, drink that from some bushcrafty mug, then 'process' wood, then cook dinner, then quaff a couple brews, then sleep, then breakfast, then break camp and then go home. Bonus points if it rains. Idea: fly to Alaska. Get dropped 200 miles from the nearest human being. Or fly to Idaho/Montana, get dropped 25 miles from the nearest human being. No cell service. Kill your dinner. Gut it. Cook it. Eat it. Then move to a different location because a bear might come along and say, 'hi!'. Pitch your tarp to the howl of wolves, enjoy a wet night because wind blew rain all over you, because your tarp setup is ridiculous for real weather plus mosquitos enjoyed feasting on your exposed face. You finally learn 'processing' wood is for chumps. After breakfast you'll fondle the .44 mag, and vow you'll do better the next day. Lived in the UK. I know you guys are doing your best with what you have on that tiny little vaccinated island, but oh man, I'm ready to start a bushcraft parody nancyboi channel for those whose hearts are ready to give out from AZenica. Now all that being said, I give respect to a dude that can design shit, sew it and use it: *hat tip*, good sir. People don't appreciate that stuff until they try to make it themselves.
@timfinley44367 ай бұрын
I wonder where you find the time to watch KZbin and post three paragraph long comments between your wild adventures to remote locations.