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Green hell drying rack
Green hell drying rack










green hell drying rack

You can do most anything on the fly if you have a bed. So I store a bidon at each location so I can always just boil some river water in a pinch, or just drink dirty water and eat the orange mushrooms. The only downside I have found to my system is the dry season. For example, I can survive any venom bite in 6-12 hours with water, a bed, an antivenom bandage, and an extra day of food. The goal is to always be able to fix any problem quickly. I choose base locations based on fish and game in the area, water source and defensiblity. My plan is to have about 6 of these bases accross the map and travel between them easily. I still keep bases for the major things like drying meat, hunting, fishing, forging. This way of playing makes me super mobile. If I manage to put together a better tool, great, but there is always a chance I will lose a fight with natives or not hear a leopard coming so my pack contents are considered disposable. Tools and weapons I make as I need them because sticks stones and rope are everywhere. The only things I store are assorted bandages, seeds, arrows, and any building or forging materials.

#Green hell drying rack full

I eat all nuts and fruit immediately when I find them and if I am full I keep a few in my pack. I stock pile coconut cups and gorge when it rains. You can do this at a spear fishing location too. If I need to travel, I do it the moment a full rack of meat is dry. I hunt with a spear, crouch on approach and head shot. When I am totally out, I hunt, cook one meal and fill the drying rack up. It gives me all the meat I need and takes very little effort. Things that seemed important in the beginning just aren't as you get better at the game.įor example, when in camp I hunt 1 or 2 large animals every 2nd or 3rd day and dry the meat. I've been reading all these answers, and I gotta be honest, it depends on how you play.












Green hell drying rack