Hi
I have been watching the latest series of Ray Mears Bushcraft and I have noticed something odd (along with his way with the English language - describing the crook knife as "virtually a unique tool to this part of the World" for example).
From my modest knowledge of using axes, I thought that you should not use a forest axe to hammer in wedges into wood. Gransfors Bruks' excellent "The Axe Book" says explicitly:
"Only the poll of a Splitting Maul is designed for pounding on a steel splitting wedge. Do not use any axe or hatchet, for example a Splitting Axe, for driving in a steel wedge, when splitting." (p.32)
Yet this is being shown repeatedly in the course of constructing his birch-bark canoe. Only gentle taps into cedar, granted, but I thought this would damage his axe. Is this simply illustrating backwoods improvisation? Is this kind of use recommended?
I'm confused....
Best wishes
Bruce
I have been watching the latest series of Ray Mears Bushcraft and I have noticed something odd (along with his way with the English language - describing the crook knife as "virtually a unique tool to this part of the World" for example).
From my modest knowledge of using axes, I thought that you should not use a forest axe to hammer in wedges into wood. Gransfors Bruks' excellent "The Axe Book" says explicitly:
"Only the poll of a Splitting Maul is designed for pounding on a steel splitting wedge. Do not use any axe or hatchet, for example a Splitting Axe, for driving in a steel wedge, when splitting." (p.32)
Yet this is being shown repeatedly in the course of constructing his birch-bark canoe. Only gentle taps into cedar, granted, but I thought this would damage his axe. Is this simply illustrating backwoods improvisation? Is this kind of use recommended?
I'm confused....
Best wishes
Bruce