I like working with natural materials in making my kit, gourds and cane, for instance. I imagine the early settlers on the Kentucky frontier made use of them more than we are aware.
Cane is handy stuff. I have a ball bag with a cane spout, and it has held up very well. My sewing kit is kept in a cane tube with rawhide sewn around it against splitting. I recently made two cane tinder tubes for my fire kit which work very well.
In 1831 in Texas, Noah Smithwick wrote of having a meal with the frontier family of Thomas Bell, “Beside each platter lay a fork made of a joint of cane.” I liked the idea of that, and I know Kentucky was full of cane, so I made one. I had some growing in my yard for years, still have a few pieces of it left. It’s easy stuff to work with, sands, saws, drills and files easily.
It will go well with my new gourd bowl.
Had to try it out at home to make sure it will work on a trek. :grin:
I have always thought powder measures could be easily made of cane, so I tried making one, today, for my smooth rifle.
I was right, no problems, sawed to shape around a node with a coping saw, burned the hole for a lanyard, sanded it down. 85 grains 3F, by volume or weight, I’m ready.
Spence
Cane is handy stuff. I have a ball bag with a cane spout, and it has held up very well. My sewing kit is kept in a cane tube with rawhide sewn around it against splitting. I recently made two cane tinder tubes for my fire kit which work very well.
In 1831 in Texas, Noah Smithwick wrote of having a meal with the frontier family of Thomas Bell, “Beside each platter lay a fork made of a joint of cane.” I liked the idea of that, and I know Kentucky was full of cane, so I made one. I had some growing in my yard for years, still have a few pieces of it left. It’s easy stuff to work with, sands, saws, drills and files easily.
It will go well with my new gourd bowl.
Had to try it out at home to make sure it will work on a trek. :grin:
I have always thought powder measures could be easily made of cane, so I tried making one, today, for my smooth rifle.
I was right, no problems, sawed to shape around a node with a coping saw, burned the hole for a lanyard, sanded it down. 85 grains 3F, by volume or weight, I’m ready.
Spence