Dave and Cody are somewhere on the frozen plains of Montana during the winter - not a place you really want to be unless you're inside a toasty home.
As Cody explains: "Winter in Montana. Picture a headstone with your name on it. That's the story." Later, Dave chimes in: "This place is colder than a tin toilet seat on the shady side of an iceberg." That's one reason I like this: you never know what wacky thing these guys will say, moment to moment.
Speaking of wacky, Cody walks through the frozen tundra of snow wearing shorts and wool socks - no shoes. At first, I thought, it can't be that cold or he wouldn't do that but about a third of the way into the episode it's explained why he is doing that. His partner is not happy with it, and I can't blame him.
Anyway, this episode features, among other things, bison hides, flint-rocks, sinkholes, char-cloth, sleeping in hale bales, wind chills, rocky descents, cooking eating mice, and a whole bunch of interesting ways to survive in bad elements.
As Cody explains: "Winter in Montana. Picture a headstone with your name on it. That's the story." Later, Dave chimes in: "This place is colder than a tin toilet seat on the shady side of an iceberg." That's one reason I like this: you never know what wacky thing these guys will say, moment to moment.
Speaking of wacky, Cody walks through the frozen tundra of snow wearing shorts and wool socks - no shoes. At first, I thought, it can't be that cold or he wouldn't do that but about a third of the way into the episode it's explained why he is doing that. His partner is not happy with it, and I can't blame him.
Anyway, this episode features, among other things, bison hides, flint-rocks, sinkholes, char-cloth, sleeping in hale bales, wind chills, rocky descents, cooking eating mice, and a whole bunch of interesting ways to survive in bad elements.