Category: Old Skills

  • Shelter Building

    Shelter building is very much a common sense endeavour. The major considerations are structural strength and insulation/wind proofing. After those, you might want to think about comfort. In Canada I made my ridgepole higher than my head, because I was going to be there for a while and wanted to be comfortable. However, if I…

    Read More: Shelter Building
  • Natural Cordage

    The main skill of making natural cordage is the foraging and processing of the strands. There are a bunch of materials, but some of the most widely used include: Nettle: late summer nettles are stripped of leaves. The woody pith of the stems are crushed, and the green outer fibre of the stems are carefully…

    Read More: Natural Cordage
  • Pine Glue Resin

    Pine glue is not really pine glue. It’s conifer glue and can also come from spruces or firs. I doubt you’d get much from a juniper, and I haven’t tried a monkey puzzle or umbrella pine, but most of the conifer trees in the arboreal forests are valid. What you are looking for is the…

    Read More: Pine Glue Resin
  • Natural Containers

    Containers are one of the four or five absolutely key items for survival; mostly because without a container for water, you are going to be in trouble. Even if you ignore water, containers are necessary for storage of many sorts, particularly the seed and grains that will keep you alive through the winter. The easiest…

    Read More: Natural Containers
  • Making Birch Tar Glue

    Birch tar glue is an amazing natural resource whose uses have enabled some really key ancienttechnologies such as birch bark canoes, arrows, axes, and waterproof containers. It is especially good forbinding lashings, as it liquid when heated, but cools rapidly to become solid. Nowadays, birch tar glue is not likely to be a necessary skill…

    Read More: Making Birch Tar Glue

Search

Popular Posts

  • Shelter Building
    Shelter Building

    Shelter building is very much a common sense endeavour. The major considerations are structural strength and insulation/wind proofing. After those, you might want to think about comfort. In Canada I made my ridgepole higher than my head, because I was going to be there for a while and wanted to be comfortable. However, if I…

  • Natural Cordage
    Natural Cordage

    The main skill of making natural cordage is the foraging and processing of the strands. There are a bunch of materials, but some of the most widely used include: Nettle: late summer nettles are stripped of leaves. The woody pith of the stems are crushed, and the green outer fibre of the stems are carefully…

  • Pine Glue Resin
    Pine Glue Resin

    Pine glue is not really pine glue. It’s conifer glue and can also come from spruces or firs. I doubt you’d get much from a juniper, and I haven’t tried a monkey puzzle or umbrella pine, but most of the conifer trees in the arboreal forests are valid. What you are looking for is the…

Categories

Archives

Tags

There’s no content to show here yet.