Alone: Shelter from the Storm | Winter A‑Frame | Season 9 Exclusive
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Using the Labrador climate to their advantage, one participant builds an insulated A‑Frame shelter to last the winter.
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Season 9 of The HISTORY® Channel’s hit survival series “Alone” delivers a fresh set of dangers and challenges for ten new participants. Equipped with just ten items of their choosing, the survivalists are dropped into a remote wilderness valley in Labrador, Canada. While documenting their experiences, each participant must survive in total isolation, with hopes of outlasting everyone else to claim the $500,000 prize. Not only must they endure hunger, loneliness, and the elements, but this season, they’ll become the hunted as they discover their location is situated deep in polar bear territory. No camera crews. No gimmicks. It is the ultimate test of human will.
The HISTORY Channel® is the leading destination for award-winning original series and specials that connect viewers with history in an informative, immersive, and entertaining manner across all platforms. The network’s all-original programming slate features a roster of hit series, premium documentaries, and scripted event programming.
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Shouldn’t you disqualify Juan Pablo? If you allow this then the future of Alone is just going to consist of obese people sleeping and no one is going to watch it. This season is terrible, by the way. The fishing rules and bear as their big game…it’s a nonsense location. The biggest complaint however that I’ve seen is all the singing this season. Everyone’s an entertainer.. It’s okay every once in a while but viewers want to see skills being used. Thank God for your that Canadian doctor, Tamojin (misspelled I’m sure). Anyway, fix this show or no one will return to watch it.
Those evergreen limbs he uses on the walls will do good for a week or so. Then the needles start to dry out and fall off, then you’re left with a bunch of sticks.
Pretty sure he is still out there. He finally finished the east wing shelter addition. Word has it, he’s about 60% done with the front yard landscaping. 😆 the guy is awesome
The Legend of Cirmarron Shelter from the Frame
Smart young man
Just want to thank the History Channel for a GREAT cast on Season 9. Reminded me of the first 5 seasons.…just AWESOME.
What is he eating?
Thats an entire house . He has a window and a working fireplace
what will you DO in your shelter that you can’t do in a little coffin-like sleeping shelter, that needs no fire nor sleeping bag? You can build such a shelter in ONE day, using some of the big roll of Gorilla tape, and half of the reflective 12x12 tarp. Can you not do those jobs under a 7 ft high pavilion, made with some poles and the 10x10 tarp that they give you.? You can have 1–4 Siberian fire lays projecting their one way heat under the tarp, while you and your work-pieces while staying out of the rain. The pavilion can be create in half a day, but due to wind dangers, Do NOT leave that tarp up on those poles unless you NEED that pavailion. When you’re done with the pavilion, lower the tarp to cover the ashes pit and the charred ends of your fire-lays, your dry debris, firewood, and WEIGH down that tarp with logs.
I can save you a week or more of wasted time and calories with the shelter build and 2–3 weeks’ of time and calories that you wont waste on hauling and processing wood. I can also save you a week of time and calories that you wont waste on boiling 2 qts of water every day, twice per day. Instead, you’ll boil 3 gallons of water once every 3 days and be able to safely store the boied water. Until you can make the five 1‑gallon each baked-clay pots and their closely-fit lids, you’ll stone-boil the water in a tarp-lined pit, lining the tarp with gravel or sand, in order to protect it from the hot rocks.
you are NOT homesteading. You do NOT need what the frontiersmen needed, cause you’ll be gone within 80 days. You wont be there for the winter. you wont be prepping lots of hides, etc, etc, etc. All your shelter needs to do is keep you warm and dry. The smaller it is the better it is, actually. You want about 1 ft of space all around you, while laying in your tarp-tent and you want that space stuffed full of small, dry debris. Later, once rain is no longer a threat, you can add the vertically-stacked short logs, leaning them upon your ridgepole. Pile a 6″ thick layer of dirt, about 18″ high, wetting the dirt so that it freezes and becomes immobile. Cover the rest of your shelter with a foot thick layer of small, dry debris and weigh it down with brush and 2–3″ OD logs. The initial shelter is plenty for 20F, without a fire or sleeping bag, given the 5 layers of alpaca wool clothing and debris between each layer. The outside layer of dirt, logs and debris takes you down to 0F or colder, but this “winterizing’ layer cannot be added while rain is a risk. The wet debris will weigh too much and it will collapse your shelter, perhaps even smothering you.
none of them have fixed the problem of the 2 qt pot and their need to boil a gallon of drinking water per day. Drinking raw water is a crazy risk to take! You can boil 3 gallons of water at once, once every 3 days and save an hour per day, for 75 days. That’s a lot of firewood that you dont have to haul and prep. and a lot of time that you dont need to be out there in the cold, rain, wind, etc. Duh.
Like to see these contestants in Florida, Mississippi, or in Louisiana areas …
impressive shelter.….but I would lean some logs against the tarp from the outside to keep the tarp in place.….so the wind can’t play with it.…
I am surprised that no one has seen BIGFOOT
Gluck young man
@kevinhart46 Instead of (or in addition to) repeating suggestions in the comments, why not put your advice into action and provide links to pictures or videos that demonstrate your recommendations?
Why didn’t Alone give “one participant” the honor of using his name? He seems pretty adept with his skills.
BTW He was the winner of that season.. to all log cabin builders out there, he won with a simple tent.
There are things I would do differently and there are things I learned from this guy.
Be open, you can always improve 😉