Can anyone suggest how I might make a wooden tube?
I am still on a quest to make a simple flute from our indigenous species (the flute design doesn't have to be native just the materials) and need to make a tube with a bore somewhere between 1/2 -1". I have tried elder our only native hollow pithed shrub (please let me know if there are others) but wasn't overly successful, so I wondered if I could hollow a slightly harder wood in some way.
Here is a link to the flute I am trying to make:
http://paleoplanet69529.yuku.com/topic/43822/Make--Native-American-Indian-Flute--Northern-Mexico
I have done a working version in bamboo... but good bamboo is hard to find.
My rule of indigenous species might seem prohibitive but stems it from the fact that I am a ranger by profession, I work with a couple of mental health projects and schools and use some of these skills (green woodwork, foraging, primitive skills) as a vehicle to get a wider appreciation for the countryside. It allows for greater accessibility and the feeling amongst those who want to learn that they can do it and they are not reliant on anything to be able to achieve it, it grows under their nose!
The making of your own musical instrument is another taste of alchemy from the hedgerow, as with friction fire lighting, the simple 'useless' stick (although you have to learn which are the right ones and that's the trick) turns in to something of value... then do all the sticks start to look different?
Those of us who appreciate this already know this already but for those who don't it can have a really positive effect on their happiness.
Sorry for the rant!! I'm not a missionary! Just on a mission!
Hope you can help.
Leo
I am still on a quest to make a simple flute from our indigenous species (the flute design doesn't have to be native just the materials) and need to make a tube with a bore somewhere between 1/2 -1". I have tried elder our only native hollow pithed shrub (please let me know if there are others) but wasn't overly successful, so I wondered if I could hollow a slightly harder wood in some way.
Here is a link to the flute I am trying to make:
http://paleoplanet69529.yuku.com/topic/43822/Make--Native-American-Indian-Flute--Northern-Mexico
I have done a working version in bamboo... but good bamboo is hard to find.
My rule of indigenous species might seem prohibitive but stems it from the fact that I am a ranger by profession, I work with a couple of mental health projects and schools and use some of these skills (green woodwork, foraging, primitive skills) as a vehicle to get a wider appreciation for the countryside. It allows for greater accessibility and the feeling amongst those who want to learn that they can do it and they are not reliant on anything to be able to achieve it, it grows under their nose!
The making of your own musical instrument is another taste of alchemy from the hedgerow, as with friction fire lighting, the simple 'useless' stick (although you have to learn which are the right ones and that's the trick) turns in to something of value... then do all the sticks start to look different?
Those of us who appreciate this already know this already but for those who don't it can have a really positive effect on their happiness.
Sorry for the rant!! I'm not a missionary! Just on a mission!
Hope you can help.
Leo
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