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Solo Overnight in Steady Winter Rain - Tarp Shelter, Fire & Camp Cooking
Winter rain in the forest brings a special kind of atmosphere. In this video, I head out alone for a peaceful overnight as steady rain falls throughout the day and night. To stay dry, I build a reliable tarp shelter and set up my hammock underneath. With wet conditions all around, I gather firewood and manage to start a warm campfire. Over the flames, I cook a delicious outdoor dinner and enjoy a quiet night surrounded by the sound of rain.
This trip includes:
Building a weather-resistant tarp shelter
Hammock camping in cold rain
Fire starting and maintenance in wet conditions
Cooking over open fire
Staying comfortable during a winter overnight
If you enjoy relaxing rain sounds, cozy campfire moments, and practical bushcraft skills, this adventure is for you.
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Stay safe and have fun,
your Outdoors-University Team!
Fire in the Rain - Solo Winter Overnight with a Covered Campfire
Fire in the rain isn’t supposed to work — but with the right setup, it does. This winter overnight begins with rain falling through the forest and snow covering the ground. Deep in the woods, I build a tarp shelter with a hammock and create a covered campfire designed to stay lit even in wet conditions. Once the fire is protected, I cook Black Angus steak bites over open flames, listen to the rain fade away, and settle in for a quiet solo night surrounded by the sounds of the winter forest. By morning, the clouds clear and the sun breaks through the trees, turning the cold, wet forest into the start of a perfect day.
This is a slow, immersive solo bushcraft camping experience, focused on shelter-building, fire-making in the rain, and enjoying simple food cooked over a real fire.
Sit back, relax, and enjoy the journey from rain to sunshine.
#SoloCamping #WinterBushcraft #FireInTheRain #CampfireCooking #OutdoorAdventure #WildernessSurvival
Stay safe and have fun,
your Outdoors-University Team!
I Slept Through the Most Dangerous Winter Weather (No Fire)
I headed deep into the woods for a winter overnight during some of the most dangerous conditions you can face — temperatures hovering around freezing rain, with snow expected overnight. Just above 0°C, constant rain soaking everything… and then a forecast drop below freezing after dark. This kind of weather can turn deadly fast.
With no campfire at all, I:
Set up a fully enclosed tarp shelter
Carved a small wooden tinder container
Cooked a hot, satisfying dinner on a stove
Slept 10 hours straight in a warm, cozy bed system
By morning, I was lucky — no snow. Snow would have meant frozen knots, iced ropes, and a nightmare pack-up.
This trip was all about preparation, shelter, and staying dry — not fighting the cold, but working with it.
If you enjoy realistic bushcraft, quiet survival, and raw winter conditions, this one’s for you.
Stay safe and have fun,
your Outdoors-University Team!
I Survived a Freezing Night With NO Tent & Gear That Fits in My Pocket
I headed deep into the winter woods for an overnight survival challenge using only gear that fits in a pocket. No tent. No sleeping bag. No modern comforts. Using a variation of Mors Kochanski’s legendary Super Shelter, I built a shelter so effective that while the temperature outside dropped to 0°C, it reached over 30°C inside. I constructed a long fire with a reflective wall, carved a bushcraft spit, and cooked incredible chicken souvlaki over an open fire — all before facing the cold night alone in the forest.
This video is about true bushcraft skills, firecraft, shelter building, and proving that knowledge beats gear.
Could you survive a winter night with no tent and no sleeping bag?
If you enjoy bushcraft, survival, wild camping, and minimalist gear, consider subscribing.
#bushcraft , #winterbushcraft , #survivalshelter , #supershelter, #morskochanski, #notentcamping, #wintersurvival , #firecraft, #longfire, #reflectivefirewall, #minimalistsurvival, #primitivecooking
Stay safe and have fun,
your Outdoors-University Team!
I Took My Friends on Their FIRST Winter Camp… They Didn’t Expect This
I went alone into the snowy winter woods to prepare a simple shelter and a tarp hot tent before welcoming two friends for their first-ever winter overnight in the forest. After building camp, I headed back into the darkness to pick them up from their car. Together we finished their bushcraft bed, lit the titanium stove, and cooked dinner inside a warm, glowing tent surrounded by snow.
What followed was an evening of deep conversations, laughter, and quiet moments you only find far from the world. The next morning, we packed up and walked out together… but their final thoughts on the experience truly surprised me.
A reminder of how powerful nature, warmth, and shared silence can be.
Stay safe and have fun,
your Outdoors-University Team!