Discover Some of the Best YouTube Channels
⛺ Camping

Best Camping Channels

From stealth overnighters to two-year off-grid cabin builds and solo wilderness trips — a guide to the best camping channels, who each suits, and where each falls short.

By the BestTubeChannels editorial team · Updated February 2026 · 7 channels reviewed

“Camping” on YouTube covers an enormous range — from sleeping rough behind a city supermarket to felling trees for a hand-built log cabin in the deep woods. The seven channels below are the ones genuinely worth following, spanning stealth camping, bushcraft, off-grid building, solo backcountry trips and cinematic adventure filmmaking. We’ve grouped them by what each is actually about, with an honest note on the limitations of each.

One thing worth saying up front: a lot of this content is filmed by experienced people in places they know well, and the wilderness is far less forgiving than an edit makes it look. Treat these channels as inspiration and skills reference, not as permission to attempt something beyond your experience — check local rules on where you’re allowed to camp and light fires, tell someone your plans, and build up gradually. With that in mind, here’s how the landscape breaks down.

On this page

How the landscape breaks down

Camping YouTube sorts into a few clear lanes. The stealth and unconventional camp — Camping With Steve — is about sleeping in unexpected places and making the mundane entertaining. The off-grid building lane — My Self Reliance, and the historical projects on TA Outdoors — documents large, patient construction projects by hand. Bushcraft and solo trips is the broadest group — Joe Robinet, Survival Lilly, Corporals Corner — covering shelter, fire, gear and overnighters with a practical, learn-as-you-go feel. And then there’s cinematic adventure, where Beau Miles uses camping as raw material for genuinely artful short films.

A good way to use them together: follow the bushcraft channels for repeatable skills, the building channels when you want a long-form project to sink into, and the adventure and stealth channels for the sheer enjoyment of watching someone do something unusual well. Skills shown casually on camera — fire, shelter, cold-weather camping — are worth learning slowly and in safe conditions before relying on them.

Quick comparison

ChannelBest forFocusRegionFormat
Camping With SteveStealth & winter campingUnconventional campingCanadaSolo overnighters
My Self RelianceOff-grid cabin buildingBushcraft / homesteadingCanadaLong-form builds
TA OutdoorsHistorical & bushcraft buildsConstruction / wild campingUKProject series
Joe RobinetHonest solo bushcraftSolo camping / canoe tripsCanadaTrip vlogs
Survival LillySelf-taught survival skillsShelter / bushcraftAustriaSkills & gear
Beau MilesCinematic adventureAdventure filmmakingAustraliaShort films
Corporals CornerReliable solo overnightsBushcraft / shelterUSAWeekly overnighters

The 7 channels

01
Steve Wallis — Camping With Steve
2M+ SubsStealth CampingWinter CampingCanadaUrban Camping

Steve Wallis is a Canadian heating contractor from Alberta who has been camping year-round since 2010 under one self-imposed rule: ABC — Always Be Camping. His channel is built around stealth camping — setting up overnight in unusual, unexpected or technically off-limits locations like industrial estates, storm drains, under bridges and inside roadside signs — and winter camping in temperatures down to −32°C. He is cheerful, practical and completely unafraid of looking ridiculous, which is what makes the channel work. With over 2 million subscribers and 362 million total views, Camping With Steve has become one of the most recognisable camping personalities on YouTube, notable for making the mundane genuinely entertaining.

Common criticism

The stealth-camping premise is entertaining but sits in a legal grey area, and copying it without understanding local rules could land viewers in real trouble. The format is repetitive by design — once you’ve seen the setup a few times, the novelty can wear off — and it’s built around personality and entertainment more than teaching transferable skills.

Steve Wallis — Camping With SteveWatch on YouTubeVisit channel →
02
My Self Reliance — Shawn James
2M+ SubsLog CabinOff-Grid LivingCanadaHomesteading

Shawn James is a Canadian outdoorsman who spent two years building a hand-hewn off-grid log cabin alone in the Ontario wilderness using only traditional hand tools — no power tools, no outside help. The documentary series he made of that build became one of the most-watched bushcraft and wilderness living series on YouTube. With 2 million subscribers and nearly 500 million total views, the channel is a sustained, honest account of what it actually takes to leave modern infrastructure behind. The cabin-building content is gripping in a way that has nothing to do with drama and everything to do with craftsmanship, patience and the sheer scale of what he undertook alone.

Common criticism

The slow, meditative pace and long-form builds aren’t for everyone — viewers after quick tips or weekend-camping advice will find it demands patience. The lifestyle shown also rests on owning suitable land, significant skill and serious time, so it’s more aspirational documentary than a replicable how-to for most people.

My Self Reliance — Shawn JamesWatch on YouTubeVisit channel →
03
TA Outdoors
2M+ SubsBushcraftHistorical BuildsWild CampingUKMike Pullen

Mike Pullen is a British outdoorsman who built his 2.5 million subscriber channel around one central idea: how did people before us actually live? His projects have included a full-size Viking longhouse, a Saxon pit dwelling, a Native American wigwam and a cabin built entirely from pallet wood — all constructed by hand in the forest using traditional tools and techniques. Alongside the historical building projects, the channel covers solo wild camping, bushcraft skills, fishing and hunting, all filmed with strong production values and Mike's relaxed, knowledgeable approach. One of the most ambitious and consistently impressive bushcraft channels on YouTube.

Common criticism

The flagship historical builds are spectacular but represent enormous time and resource investment that few viewers could realistically attempt. Upload frequency on the big projects is naturally slow, and the channel’s range — from authentic bushcraft to large set-piece builds — means the practical, learn-this-tonight content is more scattered than on a dedicated skills channel.

TA OutdoorsWatch on YouTubeVisit channel →
04
Joe Robinet
1M+ SubsBushcraftSolo CampingCanoe TrippingCanada

Joe Robinet is a self-described "regular Canadian guy" who has been documenting solo bushcraft camping trips in the Ontario wilderness since 2007. His channel covers solo overnighters, extended canoe trips and multi-day backcountry expeditions — sometimes in a tent, sometimes under a tarp, sometimes in the open — always honest about what works and what does not. He appeared in Season 1 of the History Channel's survival show Alone, and later filmed a TV series with his dog, but the YouTube channel remains the most genuine version of him: unscripted, unpolished and genuinely enjoyable to follow into the bush. A recent serious injury has slowed his output, but he has been returning to the wilderness throughout 2024 and 2025.

Common criticism

The deliberately unpolished, regular-guy style is part of the appeal but means less structured instruction than a dedicated skills channel — you learn by watching rather than being taught step by step. Output has also been less consistent following a serious injury, so the upload schedule is more irregular than it once was.

Joe RobinetWatch on YouTubeVisit channel →
05
Survival Lilly
1M+ SubsBushcraftShelter BuildingAustriaNaked and Afraid

Lilly is a self-taught Austrian survivalist who has been building shelters, fires and skills in the forests near her home since 2011. Her channel covers wilderness shelter construction, bushcraft techniques, gear reviews, archery and solo camping trips across Europe and further afield. She appeared on Season 15 of Naked and Afraid, which introduced her to a significantly wider audience. What distinguishes Lilly from many survival YouTubers is her emphasis on being genuinely self-taught — she has no military or professional background, and she is upfront about mistakes and learning. That transparency has built a loyal and engaged community around her channel.

Common criticism

Being genuinely self-taught is a strength for relatability but means some techniques are her own trial-and-error solutions rather than established best practice, so it’s worth cross-checking critical skills. The channel also leans toward gear reviews and survival scenarios that can feel removed from everyday recreational camping.

Survival LillyWatch on YouTubeVisit channel →
06
Beau Miles
800K+ SubsAdventureFilmmakingAustraliaSelf-Experiments

Beau Miles is an Australian outdoor educator and filmmaker with a PhD in outdoor education from Monash University, who makes cinematic short films about what he calls "meaningful and pointless expeditions." He has run a mile every hour for 24 hours while doing odd jobs around his property, kayaked 4,000 kilometres around the southern tip of Africa, walked to work across an entire state, and built elaborate structures from other people's discarded junk. The production quality is genuinely high — this is filmmaking, not vlogging — and the writing, pacing and soundtrack are a cut above anything else in the camping and adventure space. One of the most creatively distinct channels on all of YouTube.

Common criticism

This is adventure filmmaking rather than instructional content — you’ll come away inspired, not necessarily with new camping skills. The cinematic, essayistic style and infrequent uploads (each film takes a long time to make) mean it scratches a very different itch from a practical bushcraft channel.

Beau MilesWatch on YouTubeVisit channel →
07
Corporals Corner
500K+ SubsSolo OvernightBushcraftShelter BuildingUSA

Corporals Corner is run by a US Army veteran who has been posting solo overnight camping and bushcraft content since 2012. The channel centres on solo camping trips — usually overnight — where he builds shelters, makes fire, cooks over open flame and documents the whole process with a quiet, methodical approach. His underground shelter builds are among the most-viewed in the genre, and his consistency over more than a decade has built a loyal audience that values practical knowledge over performance. With new solo overnight videos dropping weekly into 2025 and 2026, Corporals Corner remains one of the most reliably active and genuinely useful channels in the bushcraft space.

Common criticism

The quiet, methodical solo-overnight format is reliable but stylistically narrow — most videos follow a similar shape, which some find repetitive over time. It’s firmly focused on solo bushcraft and shelter work, so there’s little here on group camping, family trips or gear-based car camping.

Corporals CornerWatch on YouTubeVisit channel →

How to choose for your situation

Match the channel to what you actually want — a skill to learn, a project to follow, or just a great watch — and build real-world experience gradually and safely.

Want practical, repeatable skills

Joe Robinet and Corporals Corner for honest, unpolished solo camping and shelter work, with Survival Lilly for self-taught bushcraft and shelter-building.

A big project to sink into

My Self Reliance for the off-grid log-cabin builds and TA Outdoors for ambitious historical structures made by hand in the forest.

Something fun and unusual

Camping With Steve turns stealth and winter camping into genuinely entertaining viewing — the easiest channel here to just enjoy.

Camping as storytelling

Beau Miles for cinematic, beautifully written short films where the camping is really a vehicle for something more reflective.

Frequently asked questions

Which channel is best for a complete beginner?
Start with Joe Robinet and Corporals Corner — both are practical, honest about mistakes and focused on straightforward solo overnighters rather than extreme feats. Survival Lilly is also good precisely because she’s open about being self-taught. Learn the basics close to home and in mild conditions before attempting anything remote or cold-weather.
Is stealth camping like Camping With Steve legal?
It varies enormously by country and location, and a lot of what makes the videos entertaining sits in a legal grey area or is outright not allowed. Steve is experienced and films in his own context; treat the channel as entertainment rather than a how-to, and always check local rules on where you can legally camp before pitching anywhere.
What’s the difference between bushcraft and regular camping?
Regular camping usually means carrying gear to a site and using it; bushcraft leans on skills and natural materials — building shelter, making fire, carving tools — with less reliance on equipment. Most channels here blend the two, but Survival Lilly and TA Outdoors lean bushcraft, while Joe Robinet sits comfortably between.
Can I really build an off-grid cabin from these videos?
They’re a genuine inspiration and a good overview of the process, but channels like My Self Reliance compress years of skilled work into watchable series. Real builds involve land rights, permits, structural know-how and serious physical risk. Use them to understand what’s involved, then learn the specific skills properly before attempting anything load-bearing.
Which is the best channel to just watch and enjoy?
Beau Miles for cinematic, thoughtful films, and Camping With Steve for sheer fun. Both are rewarding even if you never plan to camp yourself — one for the craft of the filmmaking, the other for the cheerful absurdity of where he ends up sleeping.