I’ve never used dryer lint in a tinder bundle for a coal ignition fire. It certainly seems dry and fluffy enough, but if you continue to struggle maybe try a different tinder bundle material. Make sure your tinder bundle is large enough, and when you drop your coal into the bundle, you start off very gently blowing, this is very important if you blow to fast it will blow apart your little coal. As the coal grows in size you can slowly increase the amount of blowing force, eventually it will spread and create enough heat to ignite.
Getting the coal is the hard part so you’re close; keep it up and good luck.
If you light a fire for a man he is warm for a day, but if you light that man ON fire he is warm for the rest of his life.
Thanks for all the advice guys. I could make the set out of anything to make it work here at home, but in the desert I have very few types of wood to choose from. Palo Verde, dead Saguaro, Creosote Bush(mostly for the bow) and not much else.
I know my set works now...so I need to find some grasses, and try that twine, and finish this puppy off.
Getting a "coal" is not the problem it seems, as you have done it 3 times....
your tinder bundle may be packed to tight..go to have a lot of air access to it, shred the tinder apart, lint, grasses what ever you use allow air (oxygen) easy access
and don't blow to hard and blow the "coal" out.... everything in measure
Bear Clan
I was born with nothing,
with hard work and deligence I still have most of it
this week a lot less...must be a hole in my pocket
I DID IT!! I can't tell you how excited I was. I scoured around my house and found a couple hand fulls of dead weed, and grass, added the dryer lint, and made a nice "nest."
The first time I tried it today I hadn't added the lint...just used the grass and weed. Coal didn't take in the nest.
So I added the lint, made another coal, and when the dryer lint started smoldering I blew harder, and the grass finally caught, and I had flame!
Tossed it in the fire pit, threw on some wood shavings, and viola...a nice little camp fire.
Now, on to phase two. Doing this in the desert with the materials available to me.
Thanks for all the advice, and encouragement...we won!
G
NICE!
What did you end up using for the drill and fireboard?
Jim
I am so clever that sometimes I don't understand a single word of what I am saying.
Oscar Wilde
http://www.youtube.com/user/jimhuntermj21
atta boy way to persevere![]()
Last edited by wareagle69; 01-04-2009 at 06:46 PM.
always be prepared-prepare all ways
http://wareaglesurvival.blogspot.com
Good job Dolfan87 - way to stay with it.
Way to go!!!!!!!
Soular powered by the son.
Nell, MLT (ASCP)
Thanks all, I had a real sense of accomplishment. My kid came out and said "dad, did you cheat?!" lol
I told him, "what the heck would be the point of cheating?" He laughed at me and said "well I would of just used the matches here on the table."
There is a lot to teach me, and even more to teach him.![]()
Nice job, That first time getting it right is pretty cool.
Well, making fire with a bow drill is very hard indeed
Stroke longer, really until you see glowing or smoking coal. That's the hardest part. You're doing great, just practice that last part and you'll succeed.
For lots of wilderness survival, visit www.surviveinnature.com!
Ok, I had today off from work, so I trekked out to the desert yesterday, and accomplished my next goal. I built a bow drill from desert brush and trees, and successfully got my camp fire going.
It was a little bit of a challenge getting the right drill. At first I whittled on a piece of dried up Palo Verde branch, but it was never straight enough, so I found a bush (I am trying to identify it now, but no luck so far) that had these long straight branches. At first I thought there was no way they would hold up because they were extremely light (felt as though there was nothing to them) but when I began to drill with it, I got almost immediate smoke.
Once it was burned in, I notched the fire board, and had a coal on my first attempt.
On my way in, I had found an abandoned birds nest. I dropped the coal in, blew it to flame, and had the fire going in less then 10 minutes from beginning to end.
I was so excited, but alone, so I had to just pat myself on the back. lol
There are two more things I want to accomplish now. Make my own cordage for the bow, and once I have successfully done that, try to do it hand drill style.
Here is my desert made set, and fire. Fireboard is dead palo verde, as is the hand hold. Live Creosote bush for the bow. 550 Para on the string. The drill...I dunno what it is yet.
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Fire!
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Great job! Nice pics.
That looks like a very long spindle, the ones I’ve always made the spindle was 8” or so, but I guess you can’t argue with the results!
Good job!
If you light a fire for a man he is warm for a day, but if you light that man ON fire he is warm for the rest of his life.
It's not mine, I am just holding on to it for a friend. i swear
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