I've stuck this here, if it's in the wrong place, so be it! (Please feel free to move/delete/etc)
I recently, finally managed to salvage a load of old photo's, videos and assorted other stuff from the hard drive of my old computer.
One of the video's was this clip of my older brother chopping kindling for a stove he'd made:
[video=youtube;Gzyh49cVo68]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gzyh49cVo68[/video]
I'd posted it up on youtube and then somehow deleted it in error and then couldn't get at it again on the old hard drive.
Anyway, I thought I'd put it back up just for the sake of it really.
It's not a "how to" and no alcohol was involved, nor was my brother aware of me filming him, so his "style" is natural and relaxed, not staged
It's not how I would do it and yet,........ I've probably collected more scars than him from edged tool use over the years, so who knows?
The axe is a more or less blunt (by my standards) Fiskars, mass produced, injection moulded handle, monstrosity. The wood is short lengths of, surprisingly straight grained (hence the very easy splitting), softwood packing case plank and the stoves were converted gas bottles ( pre "you can't do that, it's illegal" days of course, so, sadly; no he doesn't still make stoves from bottles and don't try it at home!
)
Play safe out there!
Steve
I recently, finally managed to salvage a load of old photo's, videos and assorted other stuff from the hard drive of my old computer.
One of the video's was this clip of my older brother chopping kindling for a stove he'd made:
[video=youtube;Gzyh49cVo68]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gzyh49cVo68[/video]
I'd posted it up on youtube and then somehow deleted it in error and then couldn't get at it again on the old hard drive.
Anyway, I thought I'd put it back up just for the sake of it really.
It's not a "how to" and no alcohol was involved, nor was my brother aware of me filming him, so his "style" is natural and relaxed, not staged
It's not how I would do it and yet,........ I've probably collected more scars than him from edged tool use over the years, so who knows?
The axe is a more or less blunt (by my standards) Fiskars, mass produced, injection moulded handle, monstrosity. The wood is short lengths of, surprisingly straight grained (hence the very easy splitting), softwood packing case plank and the stoves were converted gas bottles ( pre "you can't do that, it's illegal" days of course, so, sadly; no he doesn't still make stoves from bottles and don't try it at home!
Play safe out there!
Steve