the only true old school way to light fire is to wait for lighening strike![]()
I prefer to use lava
the only true old school way to light fire is to wait for lighening strike![]()
...I think it is getting a bit more confused with camping more than anything. People like the luxury items during camping and just care to get out and there is nothing wrong with that but for hardcore bushcrafters they'd rather gain full knowledge of how things work. Almost like a Chef and a Cook. Some like to cook and they call themselves chefs but they aren't really "Chefs"...
-A "Cook" is someone who gets paid poorly to cook what you want to eat and he has to be very good at that.
-A "Chef" is someone who gets paid very well to cook (or direct others to cook) what he wanys you to eat and he doesn't neccessarily have to be any good at it, just able to convince you he knows better than you.
Don't get me started on firesteels.
I can't for the life of me understand why they have become so synonymous with bushcraft at the expense of the actual methods our ancestors practiced (the materials for which are, more often than not, readily available).
Even worse, the firesteel has become such a fully integrated item of kit it is now 'standard issue' to have a knife sheath made with a loop for one.
Firesteel sparks are hotter and there are far more of them than a flint and steel with charcloth, never mind the bow and hand drill. For such a fundamental skill as firelighting I think firesteels should be banned from all bushcraft courses until AFTER bow and hand drill, or (even easier) the fire plough, have been taught.
Thomas J. Elpel's "Three Days at the River - with nothing but our bare hands" should be standard fodder for anyone claiming any interest at all in bushcraft. It is as humbling as it is eye-opening.
No, I don't expect folks to go hardcore with little or no practice or experience, but I don't realistically buy into the kit-driven ethic of bushcraft either, which places itself at the opposite pole.
Firesteels - handy to have, and about as bushcrafty as an iPhone![]()