interesting thought. One might carry goretex and gossamer equipment in preparation for 1-3 day scenarios, but if you are settling in for the long haul, carhart, filson, woolrich are much more durable and reliable. MRE's and protein powder for the short haul, 50 lb bags of rice and beans for the long haul. silicone nylon tarps for a bivouac, cotton canvas wall tents for a month or two. Of course, part of this is just being old: before buck made the folding hunter, solingen factories were turning out stamped metal lockback knives that sold for less than 2 bucks, sharpened more easily than the newer knives, and were easier to carry.Still got my first one, purchased 40 years ago or so. (my God, I am old...)back then, randall and puma white hunter knives were state of the art, and they still seem to do the job-altho many of them seem to be owned by collectors, not users. My austrian army surplus pup tent outperforms some of the expedition nylon tents in windy conditions, and horses are better transportation than hummers: no fossil fuel required, and if you have to, you can eat 'em. tried and true indeed. Larry Dean Olsen takes it a step further, chipped flint and deadfalls-I tried some of the flint chipping, using thick pieces of glass from bottle bottoms and glass bricks: interesting, once I got the bleeding stopped...
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Dance like you have never been hurt, work like no one is watching,love like you don't need the money.