Alone on a Deserted Tropical Island with NO FOOD or WATER | Survival Challenge | Catch and Cook

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I survived 36 hours on a deserted island with no food, water or shelter!

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#desert #island #survival
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During a 2 year working stint on an island I found that after you drink the liquid from the green coconut you should fill it with rainwater and bury it in the wet sand to keep the water cool! Worked brilliantly for me.
All of the fish guts and bones can be used either for bait or chum - a small fish left in the sun for a few days is brilliant chum to lure bigger fish!
If you desalinate seawater (plastic bottles & the sun) then the leftover brine can be dried in the sun and used as salt.
Also - plastic bottles and containers can be filled with sand to be used in walls of a dwelling.

JOATMOFA
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When you see how much resources it takes to support a person at this level, you can see why pre agriculture, people even within large territories, had to be on the move constantly.

malcolmanon
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I can't believe that this Survival Guru isn't harvesting the rain that is coming down on his kayak. If it were me, I would trade getting drenched for getting water from the rain. That Kayak is a priceless container for everything.

emancify
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2 hours of rain is a blessing .I would have collected as much rainwater as possible.

joshbevill
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Awesome video again mate. My five year old loves to sit and watch your vids with me, so you may well be inspiring the next generation of bushcrafters/survivalists!

benjijoyce
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From Iraq love you so much my friend, I have many British friends who come to visit Iraq every year, and I speak English fluently with a British accent. I Love British people ❤️

Yusufaljboury
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Those young coconuts that have sprouted are the absolute best to eat, easy to open and the meat just comes away in a ball sweet and delicious, take a native with you next time.🤔

robteskeyteskey
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Me: When I was 11 in 1983 :P My friends and I " seven of us " took a couple of blow-up rafts to an island off the coast of Florida. We Camped for a week on the island. All we brought with us was an eight-person tent, sleeping bags, fishing poles, and a small folding sterno stove with two fuel cans. Food and drink, we had two 5 gallons of water, some hot dogs and beans for the first night, eggs and grits for the first morning. We caught our food for the rest of the time, Fish and crabs were easy to catch but we did find a couple of squirrels and possums on the island. water was easy for us to get, with it raining every afternoon for 2 to 4 hours. The island was just shy over of 1/4 of a mile wide. My uncle stopped by on his fishing boat on the third day to check on us. scared the hell out of us at 6am :P

akoww
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What about all of the water you could have caught off the kayak when it rained. A lot of empty water bottles. Love your videos

simonlironi
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I'm into the first 10 minutes so far, and a critical question arises: I've heard no mention of possible medical emergencies, conducted on-the-fly, as needed. I'm talking, bacteria(s), blood-born Hepatitist from even the smallest open wound interacting with waters, sand, 'found' foods, building supplies, weather, animals, etc. I ask this because there was an outdoorsman I used to read about - John Huerte? - in his Chicago Tribune column recalling many of his outdoor adventures. He was highly experienced, and was able to navigate various problems encountered during his hunting/fishing expeditions. However, as he crossed a simple creek on one occasion, polluted creek water entered a small open wound on his leg. Hepatitis was contracted, and he wrote about all of this . . . he eventually died of liver failure and the poisons, therein, circulating everywhere via his blood.
I hate to sound 'collateral', but, he was fond of 'making-do' in various emergencies. He even told of actually eating crow . . . of his own making. Any comments? I think you have a responsibility to always inform your subscribers of the many unforeseen dangers - and solutions during even regional adventures relatively close to home. BUT, I tune into your channel often. Your creative ideas are damn good; as are your video shooting and editing skills. Your chefing skills are mouth-watering, as well.
Good job, well informed; except for the problem of influencing neophytes who venture into various zones without being prepared. 'Course, you'll find inexperienced people doing all kinds of crazy ****.

sthulander
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When you burp when you're drinking means you're fully hydrated. Learn that on Dual Survival.

chrisk
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And they say plastic is bad. People on deserted islands need it to survive!

slowpoke
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Your content is always worth waiting for Dustin. I am absolutely loving these survival challenges you are doing as of late. Keep that sweet content coming!

ianblaikie
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Me... but I have to have a hammock. Thanks for the wine down, Great to see that handsome face again. Loved it! I don't think you should go out to those other islands, they look like they are just rock.

hopelifewalker
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A recommendation, secure water first, you can go a few weeks without food. Without water 3 days if you're lucky.

CptKirk-ytqx
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It’s not a deserted island, it’s an uninhabited island :)

Thanks for the vids and Gday from Tasmania Australia

beachhermit
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Mate we need you to do a week or however long you can stay, but take like a handful of items to help. Sort a survival/ camping expedition. Great content thanks

natureisallpowerful
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That first fish you caught is a grouper. Very nice to eat

renenjie
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ขวดน้ำทิพย์ ขวดซันไลท์ หอยจุ๊บน้ำจืด 😂

nemotoon
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Commenting: 1, 2 AND 3
I'm loving these challenges!

LordSothMajere