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In Episode 464 of the Survival Punk Podcast, we’re heading deep into the woods — not just to disconnect, but to reconnect with the skills that actually keep you alive when the modern world fails. This one’s all about bushcraft — the primitive, hands-on survival skills that still work when the grid goes dark and your fancy gear breaks.
Bushcraft isn’t about LARPing in the woods. It’s not cosplay for bearded dudes. It’s the real deal — shelter, fire, water, and food — using what nature provides and your own two hands.
When you strip away the Amazon orders, the YouTube hacks, and the fancy gear, bushcraft is survival in its purest form.
You vs. the world. And you’re not going in blind.
In this episode, I talk about the essential skills that preppers — especially urban preppers — tend to forget:
Fire-making without lighters — ferro rods, bow drills, and tinder you can find or make.
Shelter building with just a blade — from quick lean-tos to more insulated setups.
Finding and purifying water — animal tracks, plant clues, digging seep holes, and boiling with hot rocks.
Foraging basics — how to start learning what’s edible, and what will ruin your day fast.
Tool making — from cordage to fishhooks, being able to improvise is huge.
You don’t need to be a wilderness wizard. You need to be capable — and practiced.
We live in a soft world. But nature doesn’t care about soft.
If the lights go out — and stay out — bushcraft is what bridges the gap between comfort and collapse.
Even if you’re a city-dweller, these skills matter. They make you harder to kill, harder to break, and way less dependent on systems that don’t care if you live or die.
Learning bushcraft from a book is a start. Watching videos is fine. But none of it means squat until you get outside and do.
Make a fire in the rain. Sleep under a shelter you built yourself. Try filtering water with charcoal and sand.
Fail. Learn. Repeat.
Bushcraft makes you better, because it humbles you and hardens you at the same time.
You don’t need a $500 bug out bag to survive the end of the world.
You need hands that know how to make, fix, and adapt.
You need bushcraft.
Listen to Episode 464 and start training for the world we might get stuck living in.
Morakniv Companion Fixed Blade Outdoor Knife with Stainless Steel Blade, 4.1-Inch, Military Green
Don’t forget to join in on the road to 1k! Help James Survivalpunk Beat Couch Potato Mike to 1k subscribers on Youtube
Join Our Exciting Facebook Group and get involved Survival Punk Punk’s
The post Bushcraft Survival: Primitive Skills for a Modern Collapse | Episode 464 appeared first on Survivalpunk.
In Episode 464 of the Survival Punk Podcast, we’re heading deep into the woods — not just to disconnect, but to reconnect with the skills that actually keep you alive when the modern world fails. This one’s all about bushcraft — the primitive, hands-on survival skills that still work when the grid goes dark and your fancy gear breaks.
Bushcraft isn’t about LARPing in the woods. It’s not cosplay for bearded dudes. It’s the real deal — shelter, fire, water, and food — using what nature provides and your own two hands.
When you strip away the Amazon orders, the YouTube hacks, and the fancy gear, bushcraft is survival in its purest form.
You vs. the world. And you’re not going in blind.
In this episode, I talk about the essential skills that preppers — especially urban preppers — tend to forget:
Fire-making without lighters — ferro rods, bow drills, and tinder you can find or make.
Shelter building with just a blade — from quick lean-tos to more insulated setups.
Finding and purifying water — animal tracks, plant clues, digging seep holes, and boiling with hot rocks.
Foraging basics — how to start learning what’s edible, and what will ruin your day fast.
Tool making — from cordage to fishhooks, being able to improvise is huge.
You don’t need to be a wilderness wizard. You need to be capable — and practiced.
We live in a soft world. But nature doesn’t care about soft.
If the lights go out — and stay out — bushcraft is what bridges the gap between comfort and collapse.
Even if you’re a city-dweller, these skills matter. They make you harder to kill, harder to break, and way less dependent on systems that don’t care if you live or die.
Learning bushcraft from a book is a start. Watching videos is fine. But none of it means squat until you get outside and do.
Make a fire in the rain. Sleep under a shelter you built yourself. Try filtering water with charcoal and sand.
Fail. Learn. Repeat.
Bushcraft makes you better, because it humbles you and hardens you at the same time.
You don’t need a $500 bug out bag to survive the end of the world.
You need hands that know how to make, fix, and adapt.
You need bushcraft.
Listen to Episode 464 and start training for the world we might get stuck living in.
Morakniv Companion Fixed Blade Outdoor Knife with Stainless Steel Blade, 4.1-Inch, Military Green
Don’t forget to join in on the road to 1k! Help James Survivalpunk Beat Couch Potato Mike to 1k subscribers on Youtube
Join Our Exciting Facebook Group and get involved Survival Punk Punk’s
The post Bushcraft Survival: Primitive Skills for a Modern Collapse | Episode 464 appeared first on Survivalpunk.