Hi all. In my introductory post I mentioned that I would be spending the weekend outdoors practicing bow and drill (for the first time). Talk about a learning curve. Experience and hindsight are wonderful things. I learned several things.
I learned that to my mind, bow and drill technique is not a survival skill, it's a technology. This may sound obvious, but until I began the process of making a bow and drill set and trying to produce fire, I was not aware of the distinction. In the past, I've based my survival skills on knowledge - knowing how to do things, where to find things, how to be comfortable etc. That approach didn't work in this case.
I read a linked article (post #1 in this thread) last week which talked about the importance of having time on your side; how the people who use these skills every day also have the years in which to find the right materials, to make note of where to get good drilling wood, etc.
So the notion I had that knowing how to make a bow and drill was enough to get me by in a couple of days in the woods, was plain wrong. Instead, I spent my time trying out different woods, different diameters, different combinations, different lengths of bow, different tautness of bowstrings. It's all about the technology - the materials used, the components made, and the way they work together. The more I know about the technology - what works, what doesn't, and the more practiced I become at making it work, that's where the survival skill is.
I like that I learned this and hope others find it a useful insight.
So here's my practical results. I used two drills - one about 8mm diameter (sycamore), the other closer to 30mm (unknown, hard wood). The 30mm was much more successful but was too long (30cm long) to be held stable until I cut it down to 20cm. At that length it was much easier to control. My hearth board (sycamore) was too soft for the hardwood drill and has almost worn through, producing huge amounts of smoking black powder but no spark. If I'm to use this drill, I need a harder hearth. The bow was difficult to use until I cut it down in size to ~70cm long. The string (3mm nylon cord) worked better when loose - too tight and there wasn't enough slack for it to take the wide drill.
I also learned that identifying dead trees is harder than identifying living ones because the bark and other identifying features degrade, and identifying fallen branches is harder still unless they are lying underneath the only tree for a square mile. And I'd like to meet the person who said there's no smoke without fire, because he's obviously never tried a bow and drill
I fully intend to master this technology so any tips from experienced members are very welcome.
I learned that to my mind, bow and drill technique is not a survival skill, it's a technology. This may sound obvious, but until I began the process of making a bow and drill set and trying to produce fire, I was not aware of the distinction. In the past, I've based my survival skills on knowledge - knowing how to do things, where to find things, how to be comfortable etc. That approach didn't work in this case.
I read a linked article (post #1 in this thread) last week which talked about the importance of having time on your side; how the people who use these skills every day also have the years in which to find the right materials, to make note of where to get good drilling wood, etc.
So the notion I had that knowing how to make a bow and drill was enough to get me by in a couple of days in the woods, was plain wrong. Instead, I spent my time trying out different woods, different diameters, different combinations, different lengths of bow, different tautness of bowstrings. It's all about the technology - the materials used, the components made, and the way they work together. The more I know about the technology - what works, what doesn't, and the more practiced I become at making it work, that's where the survival skill is.
I like that I learned this and hope others find it a useful insight.
So here's my practical results. I used two drills - one about 8mm diameter (sycamore), the other closer to 30mm (unknown, hard wood). The 30mm was much more successful but was too long (30cm long) to be held stable until I cut it down to 20cm. At that length it was much easier to control. My hearth board (sycamore) was too soft for the hardwood drill and has almost worn through, producing huge amounts of smoking black powder but no spark. If I'm to use this drill, I need a harder hearth. The bow was difficult to use until I cut it down in size to ~70cm long. The string (3mm nylon cord) worked better when loose - too tight and there wasn't enough slack for it to take the wide drill.
I also learned that identifying dead trees is harder than identifying living ones because the bark and other identifying features degrade, and identifying fallen branches is harder still unless they are lying underneath the only tree for a square mile. And I'd like to meet the person who said there's no smoke without fire, because he's obviously never tried a bow and drill

I fully intend to master this technology so any tips from experienced members are very welcome.