How to learn primitive skills
« Back to Previous Page▲ ▼ |
Looking for recommendations on learning primitive skills, like making a bow and animal traps. Youtube? DVDs? Website? Book? Workshop? |
▲ ▼ |
If you're on the West Coast, Trackers (http://trackersnw.com/blog/index.php) are the place to go. There are others, including bigger and better funded operations, but Trackers have an amazing wealth of knowledge, a love of what they do, and a focus on pedagogy and sharing their skills that is outstanding. They cover everything from wilderness survival to crafting, from marine to mycology. |
▲ ▼ |
Try Camping & Woodcraft http://www.traditioncreek.com/storefront/camping-amp-woodcraft-p-1833.html |
▲ ▼ |
Trackers seems to be a camp, which I may not be able to make. The book Camping and Woodcraft looks interesting, a reprint of lore from a century ago. Have you used this yourself, Joshuaw? |
▲ ▼ |
One place to start is FM 21-76 US ARMY SURVIVAL MANUAL, which you can find for free in various electronic formats. |
▲ ▼ |
In the Northwest, Wilderness Awareness School near Seattle is probably the best option, whether for a weekend, a year, or through self-study. http://wildernessawareness.org/ Mark Elbroch's tracking books are quite good. |
▲ ▼ |
Foxfire books. Full stop. |
▲ ▼ |
I like the SAS Handbooks. |
▲ ▼ |
ME, I've seen the Foxfire books. What did you learn from them? |
▲ ▼ |
Kevin, I have the book and have looked through it but not used the advice. Very practical advice some outdated but some still veryrelevant. How to make an effective bed-roll. How to make a lean-to. etc. Seems like not just lore but a practical handbook. Highly recommended even just for enjoyment reading. -josh |
▲ ▼ |
Ahh ha! A downloadable public domain version of Camping & Woodcraft: http://archive.org/details/campingwoodcraft00kephrich Note: The printed version seemed to also have a second volume printed with it. Not sure if that is in the PD version A link for other books by the same author in the public domain: http://archive.org/search.php?query=creator%3A%22Kephart%2C+Horace%2C+1862-1931%22 Which also makes me think: Have you covered the Internet Archive as a "cool tool"? |
▲ ▼ |
Camping & Woodcraft is a good choice and even helped me get my current job. <story> I was doing a job interview on Skype and got asked one of those non-job questions: "If you were on a desert island, what one book would you want to have with you?" Since I was in my home office doing the interview on a video chat I just turned around and grabbed "Camping & Woodcraft" off my bookshelf and held it up to the camera and said "I think this one would be handy to have." I got the job. </story> But another book I've had for many years is -- of all things -- a Reader's Digest book: "Back to Basics: How to Learn and Enjoy Traditional American Skills". It's really very good and nicely illustrated. |
▲ ▼ |
American Boys Handy Book. Definitive work on the subject. Make yourself a bow and arrows, build a raft, and float down the river to the gulf. Everything you need to know is right there. |
▲ ▼ |
I second the Foxfire series for general, basic skills. We always had a set on our bookshelves. Otherwise, there are different books depending on which basic skill you wanted to learn. LeeValley.com offers cheap version of different books, which is nice. |
▲ ▼ |
It's too bad North Carolina finally started going after Turtle Island; Eustace Conway is probably the foremost expert on primitive living but good luck having him write it down for you. If you had a spare two years he would teach it to you, but read "Last American Man" to figure out how difficult those two years might be. -C |
▲ ▼ |
I love Outdoor Survival Skills by Larry Dean Olsen ISBN: 0842500014. I used it all the time in scouts and it has lots of cool illustrations for trapping and snaring. |