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We encourage you to have a look around the catalog first to see what we’re all about before posting your first thread. Topics typically posted here include:
>Outdoor recreational activities (Hiking, trail running, bushwhacking, camping, spelunking, geocaching, orienteering, expeditions, urban exploration, backpacking, etc.)
>Gardening, farming and related activities
>Hunting and fishing, and other activities involving the stalking or taking of game (including bird-watching)
>Outdoor survival, bushcraft, foraging, self-sustenance in nature, train-hopping, hoboism, etc.
>Outdoor destinations and exploration (specific trails, parks, regions, etc.)
>Water-related activities (boats, diving, etc.)
>Outdoor philosophy (conservation, Leave No Trace, protectionism, etc.)
>Outdoor building and living (cabins, huts, treehouses, etc.)
>Outdoor social activities and organizations (meet-ups, Scouts, NOLS, etc.)
>Gear related to any of the above topics

Most topics related to the outdoors are fine. Write properly, behave politely, encourage a respectful community, and most importantly, GO OUTSIDE!!

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Use this thread to share your recent /out/ings photographs and/or tales.
7 replies and 12 files omitted. View the full thread
if this is swiss it looks pretty nice
Replies: >>107
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>>106
Only >>102 and the tumulus >>105 are in Switzerland.
Jealous of the sheer size /out/ Canada has.
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Replies: >>109
>>108
Looking classy anon.
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Wasn't too hot today

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There are jews amongst us. They get here through the grass. As soon as you touch grass, you are in psychic contact with them. They smell you out from the pasture. You are wholesome and they are not, it's a match made in heaved. Your blooooooooooood vill be zuked and you villl like it.

Seriously how do I avoid this little blood niggerjewkikes?
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Replies: >>90 + 1 earlier
I picked one of these little jews off me earlier this evening. 
I hate them so damn much. They swarm my dog, sometimes when we go hiking I'll pick 10 of these little kikes off of her in one sitting.
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>>72 (OP) 
Yup, treated pants socks and boots.
This is the WAE.
I always carry tweezers and a lighter on me too.
Those little KIKES can burn in HELL!!
>> permethrin
I heard that's why people have certain plants around their houses, because they produce similar compounds that scare away ticks and insects.

I do check regularly but one managed to get through that, likely by hiding in my trousers until I put them on. It had barely drunk any blood by the time I took it out.

>>75
I dump them in the toilet and pour some vinegar in.
How dangerous are we talking about, if it rubs up on my feet while wearing soaked socks will it go loopy and die or do they have to munch quite a lot of it?
Ticks hate Cedar wood, and I love it. So keep the essential oil on hand and apply to exposed body parts, (and collars, etc too if very thickly infested). Works wonders for me, typically use Texas Cedar though Atlas and others work aswell.
Replies: >>98
>>96
Can you send a pic of the flask you bought pls

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I have a satsuma tree that I planted outside around 2 years ago. It's no taller than a meter and doesnt really like the climate it's in. It can handle cold weather but sheds like crazy whenever it gets hit by rain. Just wondering whether I should give it it's own little greenhouse to protect it from rain and keep it ( a bit ) warm. Not fixed to the ground, just a sort of cone made out of PVC see through plastic and wood. What do you think?
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Replies: >>60 + 1 earlier
you ever hear of those packing tape houses people make in the woods? They last and are proven. Alternatively, go to a clearcut and grab a few of the young tree cones yourself. They're littered everywhere typically
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>>56 (OP) 
Also:
https://www.thespruce.com/satsuma-tree-profile-4801471
Replies: >>94
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Started 2 olive trees and a fig this year. I’m stoked.
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I’m looking for a cover mainly to keep the birds off my olive, fig an apples trees. I’m aiming to keep the cover with 95%+ sunlight pass through. This is a render of the final image
>>60
>Orange
>Orange, JAPAN

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Cloudy and rainy in my part of Canada. 
But
I am on route to beers

So it could be worse
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Exact same weather here, I still get to read before bed with a nice hot chocolate.

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Some pics I did in the Black Forest
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>>64
Thanks for the info.
I've made giant puffball spawn before with distilled water and molasses from a dried puffball, but it didn't get the yield of friuting bodies i'd expected.
I'll probably try again this year since I still have a jar of dry spores--I think my timing was just off since we had a dry spell for ~10 days right after i did it.
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>>53
>good humor
go back
Unbeknownst to most, the Black Forest was nothing more than an elaborate hoax.

In the heart of this charming myth was the IKEA corporation, notorious for its flat-pack furniture and Scandinavian simplicity. One fateful day, the CEO of IKEA, a quirky man named Lars, had a whimsical thought. "What if we could create a forest of our own?" he mused, swirling his cup of lingonberry juice. Inspired by nature, he announced that every IKEA store worldwide would plant trees to bring the Black Forest to life.

With heartwarming enthusiasm, customers eagerly participated in the initiative. Each time someone assembled a Billy bookcase or a KALLAX shelving unit, they received a certificate claiming that a tree had been planted in the “Black Forest.” Soon enough, IKEA launched a global campaign, branding it as their mission to create the most magnificent forest humanity had ever seen.

As sales surged and people flocked to their local IKEA stores, Lars and his team calculated the number of trees they had supposedly planted. After an impressive few years, they tallied the figures: each store had reported hundreds of trees planted with every purchase, and with over 400 IKEA locations around the world, the numbers began to look staggering.

But as the figures added up in exciting presentations and advertisements, something just didn’t sit right with Lars. As he sat in a meeting room, staring at a PowerPoint presentation filled with images of trees and forests, he couldn’t shake the nagging feeling that they were missing something. "Have we actually seen this forest?" he asked. His team exchanged puzzled looks, their excitement dimming.

Determined to unveil the truth, Lars suggested a research expedition to the Black Forest. He assembled a quirky team of IKEA designers, eco-warriors, and amateur adventurers, all eager to witness the sprawling hardwoods they had created. They set off on their journey, filled with visions of lush greenery and the promise of wood and sunshine.

As they traveled through Germany, however, they noticed a peculiar absence. Where were the trees? They attempted to follow the GPS directions that led them to “the entrance of the Black Forest,” but instead, they found themselves driving in circles through quaint villages and empty fields. Lars scratched his head; the map confidently pointed to a “forest,” but all they could find were a few scattered shrubs and some sad looking fence posts.

After hours of searching, their hopes began to dwindle. Lars pulled out his phone to recheck IKEA’s announcements, but the numbers rattled in his mind like a half-assembled bookshelf. After further investigation, the team realized that the number of trees claimed to be planted far exceeded the actual area of the Black Forest itself. They gulped at the realization: the calculations didn’t add up. How could so many trees exist when the forest was, in fact, a mere whisper of its supposed grandeur?
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>>51
Apparently the forest's ecological composition suffered wars and neglect, but of course the Goyrman gov blames it on ((( climate change )))
It was called black because of the predominance of fir which has been getting replaced by spruce and pines (black? Scots? doesn't look like in your pics). The formers are very easy to plant thanks to the industry developped by IKEAniggers which I assume is the reason of their spread in Germany ; and the latter are opportunistic, frugal and a bit more aggressive than firs.
Firs are very easy to plant after a clearcut, provided of course that such manpower and skill is readily available in the area. It relies heavily on the presence of active hunters however, as the pressure exerted on saplings by ungulates when kept unchecked can be devastating to reforestation attempts.

I didn't check closely but these look like pinus nigra or black pines, which can withstand harsh conditions like poor soil, exposition to strong winds and sometimes even a drought or two. This makes them good candidates to plant on hilltops, and sometimes they even spontaneously conquer it themself if the conditions are right. In the Black forest, they could be used to provide a consistent cover for firs to slowly develop under, as they can easily grow in the shade of other trees. This would take much longer by a few decades to a century than directly p
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>>54
It's right there you DOUBLE KIKE

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How many of y'all are keeping animals other than pets? My wife and I just had 50 chicks come in(we bred half bought half) And thats just the tip of the iceberg. Anyone else spending time on the oldest profession of humans, animal husbandry?
Replies: >>88
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Don't chickens only have one hole? Like they shit and piss and lay eggs all out of one hole?

Kinda gross.
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>>76 (OP) 

yes
crossing marans with comets to create a sex-link maran variety with higher egg output and better cold weather resilience.
looking real hard at merging with bielefelders at some point for larger body weight.

picrel is one of the maran/comet crossbred hens.

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Lads, it’s nearly the last part of the early spring. Humanity at large decries that we need a continuing /HGG/ thread for our survival and independence. 

This year (Zone 8b) I’ve planted 2 olive trees, a Greek Koroneiki, and Spanish Arbequina, as well as an LSU purple fig tree. 

I’m using the biodrilling method (yes it’s real) with daikon radishes and soraya sunflowers to grow and decompose in the hard clay soil. These will decompose and create pockets for the roots of the trees to grow in, as well as provide nutrients from the decomposed plants and vegetables, without needing to till the soil and grassy area. 

Along with my soaker hose, compost, perlite and cardboard setup to smother the grass and protect the soil around the new trees, I have a goal of an enclosed structure with mesh to keep birds out, and more complimentary plants and vegetables. 

What are you anons working on?
Replies: >>85
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My trees :)
I’m OP btw, don’t know why I have a different ID, maybe 5G to WiFi connection
>>82 (OP) 
I’ve got a young purple fig, young pawpaw and kaki tree in my backyard. So more or less stuff I cant buy in the store fresh. If there was an apocalypse theres no way my little trees would help me survive lol.
Ive also got a satsuma tree that hates its climate. Not really too sure what to do with it, dig it out and pit it inside or keep a cover on it during the winter? Because it doesnt mind the cold, it just hates water.
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moving my flock of 40 to a new forage location
current coop area being converted to garden beds
is still early here, snow possible to mid May.
fertilised raspberry bushes, planted seed potatos yesterday.
fencing and raised beds in progress.

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You'll see, you'll all see! This is the year its going to happen!
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>>12
Based fellow cairn-kicker. I kick every cairn I see unless it's in the deep backcountry and the only one within visual range of the last one. 
>>21
black forest looks a tiny cute little forest. I want to come see it again when you've dealt with your country's "problems," hopefully by then there'll be more evergreen trees. I think Germany has direct flights to Whitehorse if you want to come kick cairns up north.

<shout out to the based admin for creating /out/
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>>22
>Whitehorse 
Nigga, why leave Chile for that freezing fucking place up north in YK? Like ngl I always wanted to visit it, it looks peak comfy however I guess that the plane tickets are still too expensive. And compared to fucking Chile.... why even leave that outdoorsman's paradise? Chile is peak comfy.

>black forest looks a tiny cute little forest.
I will not deny that it is small, however it is plenty big to be entertaining. if you knwo where you are going you can avoid normieniggers.
And yes we need to fix our "problems". But realistically speaking said problems will never get fixed so..... see you never. Maybe we'll meet in Yukon at some point, shit ain't getting better over here.
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When you are in the back country, dozens of miles away from or concrete they can be very useful to help keep on the trail or find cool side trails. Not every one is an adept tracker and can tell when one type of trail merges/diverges.

Also used as can be signs (but made out of natural materials) compare to the logging/forestey plastic flags that are in all too common use. Which I generally approve of both things.

Now if folk are just leaving them all willy nilly cluttering up the place, that might warrant renaturalization, but on the other hand, some times these things turn into geoglyphs. Digression, so I tend to favor cairns 2/3 of the time.
>>23
>why leave Chile
Because a man's gotta wander and I like the cold. Up in the mountains it's nice, not too hot unlike our summers up north. I'm here to get some hiking in and a cheeky spot of sun, then I'm going back up to the cold where I belong. I'll probably holiday down south again in July. You look at the climate data up there and it doesn't seem too bad, but arctic sunlight is intense it'll feel on par with the summers in Germany and France; sometimes it'll feel cooler because you're not as close to the arctic circle (also your pubs are closer together). Forest fire smoke from elsewhere will cool things a bit by blocking out the sun so it's not so bad, but then it gets hard to breathe. Fortunately our territory's forest management people aren't retarded like in BC so we use fire-resistant species to help stop fires from spreading, therefore Whitehorse is quite safe - from fire at least. The airport might slide down the hill though, erosion is a bitch to deal with.

As for your problems, never say never fren. There is always hope, especially when you still have comfy forests big enough to be entertaining and to misplace certain things in geocaches. Don't let them cut down your trees.
gem

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