Just because I'm rather proud of it and I just saw the photos that my friend took of the class, I thought I'd post to show you guys what I got up to at the weekend. My friend Nikki (maker of things and organizer of events) arranged what she described as a 'skills sharing jamboree' last Saturday. She asked me to come along and to bring something bushcrafty to show people.
The idea was that classes shouldn't last longer then ninety minutes, so spoon carving was right out. The event was held at The Public in Birmingham, so fire lighting or shelter building would have been similarly challenging. Also, I'm not a bushcraft instructor - just a person with some rudimentary skills and I didn't want to hold myself out as being any kind of expert. That wasn't what the day was about, anyway.
So I settled on the theme of how to make sharp things sharper and then how to use them on green wood without cutting yourself. I did a written summary of what I was going to present and we did the proper risk assessments and made sure that we had the right first aid facilities in place.
Here's me, explaining what a knife blade looks like:

Knife skills by Many & Varied, on Flickr
Demonstrating sharpening using abrasive paper and float glass:

Knife skills by Many & Varied, on Flickr
...or even cheaper methods:

Knife skills by Many & Varied, on Flickr
and then using wetstones:

Knife skills by Many & Varied, on Flickr
Once we'd done sharpening steel, we went on to how to sharpen green sticks:

Knife skills by Many & Varied, on Flickr
Everyone had a go:

Knife skills by Many & Varied, on Flickr
Including this young chap (under very careful parental supervision!):

Knife skills by Many & Varied, on Flickr
I answered some questions about spoon carving:

Knife skills by Many & Varied, on Flickr
...and got to do a little show and tell with some of my latest ones:

Knife skills by Many & Varied, on Flickr
Some of the people who took part, told me that they'd never had any formal instruction about how to use a knife and some even said that they'd never in their whole lives even tried sharpening a stick! Wow - can you imagine never having done that?
Then we cleared up the fabulous mess we'd made (don't you love that floor?)

Knife skills by Many & Varied, on Flickr
After we'd finished, I got to go and try some new skills myself. My absolute favourite was lock picking. Within the space of an hour, the guy teaching the class had got me opening five-pin Yale door locks with nothing more than a tension wrench made from a car windscreen wiper insert and a pick made from a pound store hacksaw blade.

lockpicking by Many & Varied, on Flickr

lockpicking by Many & Varied, on Flickr
When the day was over, all the people who'd given a class stayed behind to eat curry and watch an episode of MacGyver:

Cury whilst MacGyver gets on with saving the world by Many & Varied, on Flickr
So I suppose what I want to say with this post is that if anyone ever asks you 'what can you teach?' - you might not be a bushcraft instructor, but there are people out there who genuinely have no idea why and how a knife cuts something. They might not know how to look after one, make it sharp and use it safely. Despite not having a formal qualification, you can probably show them most of this yourself.
So if you ever get half the chance, definitely get out there and spread the skills, because not much beats the look on someone's face when they start making shavings off a stave of green wood with a properly sharp knife for the first time!
The idea was that classes shouldn't last longer then ninety minutes, so spoon carving was right out. The event was held at The Public in Birmingham, so fire lighting or shelter building would have been similarly challenging. Also, I'm not a bushcraft instructor - just a person with some rudimentary skills and I didn't want to hold myself out as being any kind of expert. That wasn't what the day was about, anyway.
So I settled on the theme of how to make sharp things sharper and then how to use them on green wood without cutting yourself. I did a written summary of what I was going to present and we did the proper risk assessments and made sure that we had the right first aid facilities in place.
Here's me, explaining what a knife blade looks like:

Knife skills by Many & Varied, on Flickr
Demonstrating sharpening using abrasive paper and float glass:

Knife skills by Many & Varied, on Flickr
...or even cheaper methods:

Knife skills by Many & Varied, on Flickr
and then using wetstones:

Knife skills by Many & Varied, on Flickr
Once we'd done sharpening steel, we went on to how to sharpen green sticks:

Knife skills by Many & Varied, on Flickr
Everyone had a go:

Knife skills by Many & Varied, on Flickr
Including this young chap (under very careful parental supervision!):

Knife skills by Many & Varied, on Flickr
I answered some questions about spoon carving:

Knife skills by Many & Varied, on Flickr
...and got to do a little show and tell with some of my latest ones:

Knife skills by Many & Varied, on Flickr
Some of the people who took part, told me that they'd never had any formal instruction about how to use a knife and some even said that they'd never in their whole lives even tried sharpening a stick! Wow - can you imagine never having done that?
Then we cleared up the fabulous mess we'd made (don't you love that floor?)

Knife skills by Many & Varied, on Flickr
After we'd finished, I got to go and try some new skills myself. My absolute favourite was lock picking. Within the space of an hour, the guy teaching the class had got me opening five-pin Yale door locks with nothing more than a tension wrench made from a car windscreen wiper insert and a pick made from a pound store hacksaw blade.

lockpicking by Many & Varied, on Flickr

lockpicking by Many & Varied, on Flickr
When the day was over, all the people who'd given a class stayed behind to eat curry and watch an episode of MacGyver:

Cury whilst MacGyver gets on with saving the world by Many & Varied, on Flickr
So I suppose what I want to say with this post is that if anyone ever asks you 'what can you teach?' - you might not be a bushcraft instructor, but there are people out there who genuinely have no idea why and how a knife cuts something. They might not know how to look after one, make it sharp and use it safely. Despite not having a formal qualification, you can probably show them most of this yourself.
So if you ever get half the chance, definitely get out there and spread the skills, because not much beats the look on someone's face when they start making shavings off a stave of green wood with a properly sharp knife for the first time!