Llwyd, there are very, very few areas in the UK where birch grows bark thick enough to be used the way Canadians do.
The climate is not cold enough, long enough, to encourage such growth.
We do use birch bark, but often just the thin stuff woven in strips; it's certainly not sound enough to be used for canoes. The biggest birches here have vertical creases/splits as well as the horizontal lenticles.
Stripping the outer bark really is an issue and not as easy as it sounds with the thinner barks that grow here.
This is a simple explanation; not an excuse or another cause for dispute; it's simply that it is what it is.
Toddy
The climate is not cold enough, long enough, to encourage such growth.
We do use birch bark, but often just the thin stuff woven in strips; it's certainly not sound enough to be used for canoes. The biggest birches here have vertical creases/splits as well as the horizontal lenticles.
Stripping the outer bark really is an issue and not as easy as it sounds with the thinner barks that grow here.
This is a simple explanation; not an excuse or another cause for dispute; it's simply that it is what it is.
Toddy