Yes, I have one. Milkweed ovum burns really fast, so you will want to transfer the ember to a coal extender such as punk.
is the inner fluff of the pod useable?
Yes, I have one. Milkweed ovum burns really fast, so you will want to transfer the ember to a coal extender such as punk.
t one VOU. that I went to the fastest way to catch a spark was to tale am unloaded flint lock and put a small wad of TOW, in the pan with a small amount of powder and VIOLA! the guy who did it in the fastest time, did it this way. anyone else ever done it this way?Or put a feather in the vent.
ROGER THAT!!Wanna cheat just a little on "char cloth"? Keep a little 4F steel wool in your shoe. Yes, the finest steel wool made. Catches fire nicely from your flint & steel spark maker.
I agree to a point . My question was if you are down to your last shirt what would you use. Thinking about someone in the woods not in the settlements were rags would be available.They chared and used anything that would catch a spark. However char cloth is not a modren invention. Eighteenth century diffintion of ‘tinder’ is chared linen cloth for fire starting. And rag-tinder was a common way of saying it.
Please see post #39I agree to a point . My question was if you are down to your last shirt what would you use. Thinking about someone in the woods not in the settlements were rags would be available.
I have to re harden my striker , will a MAPP gas torch get it hot enough to work ? How fast would it need to be quenched , and oil or water or air ?
Waste nought want nought, no they used a lot of natural stuff in their fire kits. From punk to fire fungus and all the other fluffs discussed here. However few people ever lived where cloth was not available. Bolts of cloth and ready made cloth clothing made up a large measure of MM goods. By the ARW few Indians used skin for anything more then moccasinsI agree to a point . My question was if you are down to your last shirt what would you use. Thinking about someone in the woods not in the settlements were rags would be available.
MAPP can work, though you may have to do it in a small "forge" made of bricks. There are youtube videos of this. Quench it in whatever vegetable oil you may have, cannola being better.I have to re harden my striker , will a MAPP gas torch get it hot enough to work ? How fast would it need to be quenched , and oil or water or air ?
Punkwood is essentially dead, decayed wood. While I am not intimately familiar with what grows in GA, I suspect that most of it will need to be charred prior to use. In the northern states, the punk wood from hard maple will catch a spark without charring. Its my second favorite natural tinder to tinder fungus. Mostly because its smoke does not smell as nice.Down here in Georgia a lot of people use Punkwood although I don't know how to find it. I always use charcloth. And drop it in a bird's nest made from crushed pine needles! My Pine Needle Supply is refurbished every fall when my favorite intersections get heavy traffic! The tires break the Woody centers of the pine needle and you're left with a nice fluffy material
I’ve heard of loading a rifle withe a light charge with a lot of cotton (patching) shot point blank at the ground to create a ember then go from there.They chared and used anything that would catch a spark. However char cloth is not a modren invention. Eighteenth century diffintion of ‘tinder’ is chared linen cloth for fire starting. And rag-tinder was a common way of saying it.
Nice!Down here in Georgia a lot of people use Punkwood although I don't know how to find it. I always use charcloth. And drop it in a bird's nest made from crushed pine needles! My Pine Needle Supply is refurbished every fall when my favorite intersections get heavy traffic! The tires break the Woody centers of the pine needle and you're left with a nice fluffy material
MAPP can work, though you may have to do it in a small "forge" made of bricks. There are youtube videos of this. Quench it in whatever vegetable oil you may have, cannola being better.
do you pull the feathers off of the stick or leave them in SITU?I was referring to this kinda Feather stick,smaller curls easily catch sparks
me two!.Love to see a vid of a feather stick taking a spark from F & S
just make sure that the lint is not from synthetics! it will be a no go!Best we've ever found is dryer lint - gray stuff from the filter. Used it many times for Boy Scout training. Not HC, but it works. Sometimes smells like dog hair.
I ask is the inner fluff with seeds on it usable to catch a spark, or just the outer part of the pod ??
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