Message from @Deleted User
Discord ID: 376748358129156108
By the way, hiking with a dog is actually a great way to stay warm on cold nights if you use blankets. Feed em well and they’re like furry blast furnaces.
@Deleted User Reminds me of when i was young and riding in the car with my father, a song came on and he told me the band was "three dog night" Then procceded to explain three dog night was an indian term used to describe a night that was really cold and they would bing 3 dogs in the teepee to help with them for warmth.
But anyways good luck, let me know how it turns out
Well, we’ll see how loyal my dogs are. We have a dog door, so we’ll find out whether they choose me or the nice warm house. I’m wearing sweat pants, a sweatshirt, and wool socks.
@Deleted User Stay warm, you maniac
Went well. Very warm. No puppies. Treacherous bastards.
@Deleted User hey I have a question for you too 😆
That blanket you used the other night outside, where did you get it? I live in a 118 year old refrigerator during the winter months.
XL
Thank you
get two
Ok, I will.
This here’s a piece of poplar. Gonna try and make a fire bow today.
Tried last night using a pine drill. No luck. Going for hardwood today
So...off to the rainy forest for:
1 hardwood drill
@Deleted User I would try moving the hole right next to the side of the board, to scrape the ember pile that long of a distance will likely be challenging, here's a quick diagram, keep us updated!
Thanks. You think a hardwood drill will be better?
Gonna use a sapling for the bow
Need a socket too
quick google search: Your first step is to find the best wood for your spindle and your fireboard. Generally, you should make these two parts of your set from the same type of wood (if for some reason this is not possible, make sure that the spindle is a harder wood than the fireboard). Good choices for your spindle and fireboard are:
Red Elm (Slippery Elm)
Cedar - one of the best choices
Basswood
Walnut
Blue Beech
Cottonwood
Yucca - one of the best choices
Cypress
Tamarack
For your thunderhead you'll want to use a pine or hemlock knot. The trick is to get a piece of wood from the fir family that has a lot of resin that will help lubricate the thunderhead.
For fireboard I mean
yep found this: "The base board should be cut from a soft wood. Poplar/cottonwoods and Saguaro ribs are two examples"
@Brandon Ironside- ND okay we switched to a cedar drill (spindle) on a poplar board and we have some good smoke going
@Deleted User Great, obviously for this methods tinder is going to be huge, what you using?
Well since everything around here is soaked right now I’m going with dryer lint
I wish I had a cedar fireboard
Videos, if you can
Pls
So far I just have a video of the smoke
@Deleted User How did round two go for the wool blanket?
Doing it tonight. 19 degrees predicted
Good deal!
New knife benchmade buschcrafter!
very sturdy full tang knife, off to touch up the edge!
Bad ass. Heavy enough to work wood?
Two blankets
Tent shell on top
@Deleted User yes! that's why I got this one, thick spine, full tang, should perfect for wood splitting and general buschcrafting duties!
looks like a good setup, let us know how it turns out!