Ogri the trog said:
Not sure I'd agree there Matt,
By all means get some help in making your first one, then a bit of practice. Its only by knowing how to make one when the time comes that you can say that you have used the knowledge of firemaking. Buying a set is a bit like buying a box of matches to me.
ATB
Ogri the trog
I can see that having a well made (bought one) would help and not hinder a person new to firecraft.
It takes one of the why wont it work!!!! variables out of the equation.
If you know that the bow, hearth, and drill works, yet you can not make an ember, you know it is
your technique that is at fault, but if your drill is not right, you will never know what is wrong, you will keep adjusting your style, and in the end you will learn nothing quickly.
Buying a set, a proved working set, you keep going, knowing that if it is not working it is down to the way you are doing. When you are able to make an ember time and again Then you can move on to making your own set
if the set doesnt work you know it is something wrong with the set, and not the way you are doing it.
Im hoping, that at the summer moot, someone with the patients of a saint will show me how to do both, as of yet all Ive managed to do is wear holes in my hands and a variety of woods without even smoke.