dave payne
32 Cal.
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i used red cedar bark....shred into small pieces,maybe 2 or 3 times he size of a matchstick and char in a small tin as you would char cloth
Mike Ameling said:Catching that initial spark is the hard part. After that it becomes pretty ... mechanical.
In the northern areas, the Indians were already using Tinder Conch for fire starting when Europeans arrived. This fungus grows primarily on Birch trees. Official name is Innonotus Obliquus. A nickname is Bear Cr*p fungus - because it looks like a bear pooped on a tree! The outside it hard/black and knobby/spiky. The inside is orangish, sometimes with little white specks. Right off of the tree, the inside will catch a spark from a traditional flint striker - without any preparation!!!! Yeah, no pre-charring or soaking in potassium nitrate, or nothing. Just fresh off of the tree. Amazing stuff! It also is hard to put out once you do catch a spark in it.
But starting a fire with tinder conch/fungus is a bit different than with charcloth. You still need that "bird's nest" of dry tinder. But the heat is smaller and more concentrated than with charcloth. It is more like taking a small live coal out of an existing fire, and then coaxing it into flame.
There is a fungus that grows on some pine trees that works pretty similarily. Don't know the name of it.
The other primary way to catch that spark was with charred punky/rotted wood. Take some punky half-rotted elm or cottonwood or other type of wood, and then get it burning in an existing fire. When you have chunks of live coals in that punky wood, knock some off and put them into a "tinderbox" and close it up to smother out those coals. To use them, you then strike your sparks into that charred punky wood. When a spark catches in a chunk, you then fish it out, put it in your "bird's nest", and start your fire like normal. And be sure to close the lid on your tinderbox - to smother out any other sparks that also might have caught. When your supply of charred punky wood is getting low, just char up some more in your fire and put the coals in your tinderbox. Rotted elm and rotted cottonwood work well. Other rotted wood also works - like maple, or even oak.
Occasionally, you can find a chunk of rotted tree that will catch a spark without any pre-charring. It's rare, but occasionally happens. Sometimes everything just works out right. And often a tree right next to it won't work.
Charred punky/rotted wood was one of the primary methods of starting a fire in most areas, and back in the Old Country.
But other things can work. Some people have good luck with thistle down/heads. Some get cattail down/fluff to work. But most still have to pre-char whatever veggitation they use. Most any fungus will catch sparks fairly well after charring - like horse hoof fungus or shelf mushroom. Just bake/char it like making charcloth.
Karl Koster did find one journal entry up around the Great Lakes that talked about the local Indians using the downy feathers on the legs of Eagles to catch that spark! Ummm ... I think I won't try that one.
The other major method was to use amadou. This was a specific layer of material in a shelf mushroom that was soaked in potassium nitrate. The layer is just below the hard outer shell, and before the main "gills" inside. It is often only 1/4 inch thick or less. That layer is almost like felt. You cut it out, and then lightly pound it to help fluff it up. Occasionally you can get it to take a spark as-is, but most then soak it in a potassium nitrate solution. When soaked and dried, it will then catch a spark fairly fast, and then burn fast/hot - a lot like a cross between a cannon fuse and a matchlock slowmatch.
In major cities, amadou was made and sold by street vendors. They got the potassium nitrate by using boiled urine. Even the old Vikings wrote about making it.
Those modern "fire steels" made from ferro-cerrium give off hot enough sparks that you can start many things burning as-is - like dry grass or leaves. That ferro-cerrium is the same stuff as is under the thumb wheel on a modern cigarette lighter. Just scraping it with a hard/sharp edge will give you tons of white hot sparks! Those sparks get hot enough that they can get magnesium shavings/scrapings burning. That's why they make those camping fire starting blocks of magnesium with that ferro-cerrium rod on the other edge.
Just a few humble rambling thoughts to share. Good luck on your fire starting experiments.
Mikey - that grumpy ol' German blacksmith out in the Hinterlands
Did you miss what Mike said above, or are you asking where they got the urine? :haha:Steyr said:Where/how would they find potassium nitrate back in the day?Mike Ameling said:They got the potassium nitrate by using boiled urine.
That's because this thread is about "char cloth". There are other threads about tinder tubes though.rj morrison said:read thru and found no mention of a tinder tubes use.
Manure, Urin, on barn walls where manure lands/expelled and piled up, wet rotting hay or grass cutting.Steyr said:Where/how would they find potassium nitrate back in the day?
There appears to be little/no evidence that methods of friction fire were used by whites (or natives) after the introduction of steel strikers.crockett said:Mountain men without their firearms tried rubbing two sticks together- no mention of a flint from a stream bed.
friction fire
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