pierre girard said:
The first fungus on the website you listed looks like the stuff we use for tinder (fomes fomentarius). We cut it in chunks and char it for use as a spark catcher - just as you do with char cloth. Is that the common method in GB? There is some other stuff which works as char - right off the tree (or maybe it is the same stuff in a state of decomposition). I don't know much about fungus - just know it when I see it.
PG
It seems that there are as many ways of preparing fomes as there are fish in the sea
I agree though that sliced and charred it works very well.
Wayland and I were talking about this and we reckon that folks have put together all sorts of little bits and pieces of what used to be done with this fungus and created some sort of hotchpotch.
Stale urine becomes ammonia; ammonia is used to de-grease wool before dyeing; fomes is sliced up and boiled for dyeing wool; the waste fomes when dried out will still take a spark.
Somehow this transmuted into boiling fomes in urine before using it for firemaking
I can see no other reason for boiling fomes in the first place than for a dyebath. It's inedible so it's not for cooking it, it's not a good medicine, and it's not a fertilizer or a cosmetic. But it does give me a good green dye on wool
I do seperate out the rather corky layer and boil it up, then while it's still wet I pound it with a stone until it's like a bit of felt. I use this under my bowdrill to catch the ember, it gives me something to handle the coal with. I have boiled it up with saltpetre and it *really* catches a spark once it's been allowed to dry out, then.
There's an old rhyme for this one
"As dark as auld Nick who burns forever.
Roast it black and they'll burn thegither"
Cheers,
Toddy