Making Yucca Cordage

Processing Yucca Fibers
by storm


Here is a quick and easy way to extract the long, white fibers from Whipple’s Yucca (Yucca whipplei) leaves.


Here are the tools I will use: smooth pounders and blunt scrapers. My favorite pounder (the black one at the top) is a 23 million year old piece of fossilized burnt wood that I found on the beach in WA. The pounder at the bottom is a slightly modified piece of Jeffrey Pine branch. The scrapers are slate and silver sheen obsidian (with the scraping edge ground on sandstone to blunt it).
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Lightly pounding the yucca leaf will result in the fibers loosening from the epidermis and flesh of the leaf. As shown, that leaf resembles some ancient yucca paintbrushes that have been found at archaeological sites in southern CA.
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Having pounded the front and the back of the entire leaf, I will now scrape with moderate pressure (make sure the scraping edge is blunt or you will destroy the fibers) and remove some of the skin and flesh of the leaf.
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Results of the first scraping. Now I will wash the saponins (soap) and fleshy debris from the fibers and scrape them a second time. Removing as much of the chaff from the fibers as possible makes future cordage easier to make and somewhat stronger.
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These yucca fibers have endured a third scraping with my fingernail and have been separated. They are ready to be made into fine cordage.
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Here is ten feet of 4mm-thick, leg-rolled yucca cordage made from fibers that were scraped twice. Rope can be made from rough-processed fibers—you don’t need to remove all of the chaff (especially for large-diameter rope). This ten feet took about 15 minutes to leg-roll.
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rich59

Maker
Aug 28, 2005
2,217
25
65
London
Thats great Storm.

My current finger folling technique would probably take an hour or two to get 10 feet. Any tips on leg rolling gratefully received. Do you do anything special to keep the two bundles from getting tangled as you roll them?

I don't have yucca in my garden. I do have phormium which is the New Zealand flax. Very strong fibres. Pounding didn't seem to separate the fibres in this plant. But pretty good cordage could be made from just splitting off bits from the dried flat leaf.
 

directdrive

Forager
Oct 22, 2005
127
2
75
USA
Great tutorial! I've been making yucca cordage for some time. However, I've never scraped it the way you've done. All my stuff is either green or brown depending on whether or not I soaked it. Can't wait to try your method. Here in Florida, we have yucca but I have no idea if it's the same variety as yours. Each year it sends up a central stalk and has a blossom on the tip that resembles a small bird from a distance. Thanks again.
Bruce
 

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