Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Fire by Friction (Part 1)

Our first project was to make the fire drill found on pages 170-174 (http://chrismolloy.com/page.php?u=p136). So we set out into the Cascade Mountains with the entire family and made a day of it. We took our gold pans for some panning and also were looking for river rocks for flintknapping.


We wanted to find a suitable stick for the fire bow and it didn't take long.


We used a Coghlan's Folding Sierra Saw and broke the tip. It worked fast and furious but was a bit spindly.


Those are Greenlee Handyman gloves. Easy cutting, bow looks just like the book.


Sawing and limbing the branch took about 10 minutes. Our favorite EDC knife is the Ontario RAT Model 1 folders with 3.6" blade. They work great but only after taking off the secondary bevel.





Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Living Off the Land

Heres a link to a short video of Australian Army soldiers learning to survive in the bush. Its a short video, about 02:19, and I offer it to you for fun. You can find it on British Pathe' website of historic films...

http://www.britishpathe.com/video/living-off-the-land/query/Koala

Here's the video description from the website:

"Living off the land (1944).

Australia.

Men of Australian Imperial Force learn to survive in bush land. They cut down a tree and slice off a section, C/U of water dripping from the end, a man collects it in a tin, drinks it and passes it round. They chop at a root on the ground, various shots as they blow down one end and water comes out of the other, several of these can be used as a makeshift shower. M/S as man collects dew off leaves.

M/S as they cut and eat a celery like plant in the bush. M/S as officer strips bark from a tree and eats a fat white grub underneath. C/U as he holds a handful of grubs and the men tuck in, M/S as they eat them. Various shots as they follow a kangaroo, koala bear, snake and frog for food. Two of them see an elephant and rub their hands in glee, he walks off quickly."

Monday, October 15, 2012

Bushcraft: starring Richard Graves

Amazon sells Richard Graves original 1944 work Bushcraft: How to Live in the Jungle & Bush (c) 1944. The dust jacket states that this book was taken directly from his class training notes while in the U.S. Army Air Crew, Jungle Survival & Rescue Detachment. He also instructed while operating out of Hollandia, Dutch New Guinea.

Here is the introduction to the revised and updated ~ Australian Bushcraft (c) 1984.

Richard Graves, who died in 1971, first published The 10 Bushcraft Books in 1950. A cousin of poet and author Robert Graves, he was an enthusiastic bushwalker, skier and a pioneer of white-water canoeing. During the Second World War he realised that knowing the bush helped to save lives, particularly those of men stranded behind enemy lines in the island jungles of the Pacific zone. He founded and led the Australian Jungle Rescue Detachment, assigned to the Far East United States Air Force. This detachment of 60 specially selected A.I.F. soldiers successfully carried out more than 300 rescue missions during the period of the war. Most of these missions were in enemy-held territory. All were successful, and no lives were lost.

The key to the success of these rescue missions in wild and inhospitable country was survival. It was then, during the jungle training school period, that he started to compile the notes for the original 10 bushcraft volumes.

Graves later revised the notes and after the war conducted a school in bushcraft for almost twenty years.

In his introduction to the collection of these books Graves stated:

“The practice of bushcraft shows many unexpected results. The five senses are sharpened and consequently the joy of being alive is greater. The individual’s ability to adapt and improvise is developed to a remarkable degree. This in turn leads to increased self-confidence.”

“Self-confidence and the ability to adapt to a changing environment and to overcome the difficulties is followed by a rapid improvement in the individual’s daily work. This in turn leads to advancement and promotion. Bushcraft, by developing adaptability, provides a broadening influence, a necessary counter to offset the narrowing influence of modern specialisation.”

“For this work of bushcraft, all that is needed is a sharp cutting instrument: knife axe or machete. The last is the most useful. For the work, dead materials are most suitable. The practice of bushcraft conserves and does not destroy wildlife.”

The Project Begins...

I'm embarking on an ambitious project ~ similiar to Julie Powell's blog where she made all of Julia Child's recipes in Mastering The Art of French Cooking. She took a year I may take longer.

My project involves taking Richard Harry Graves book Bushcraft: A Serious Guide to Survival & Camping and attempt to make or build every craft within its 372 pages.

I'm going to show how the common man with no experience can take God's natural resources and construct ropes, fire bows, snares, traps, bush hoe's etc. I live in the Seattle area and have at my disposal the ocean, mountains, rain forests, deserts, lakes, and farmlands. So, I should be able to make everything and will blog my journey.

The text will be included and I'll use the illustrations from the 1984 revision. I'm hoping some Aussie's will provide more up to date biographical information on Graves with photo's and even book links; if there are any. Time will tell.