Those are the adventures of Mr. Fimbulmyrk, in bushcraft and blacksmithing, mountainbiking and hiking, reenactment, writing, singing, dancing, stargazing and having a piece of cake and a coffee. Pray have a seat and look around you, but be warned - the forest´s twilight is ferocious at times.
Freitag, 29. November 2024
Another assault on democratic structures and human culture per se
Donnerstag, 7. November 2024
Quick and easy carving inspiration-carving a little dwarf with a Victorinox SAK
https://youtu.be/Bcv2hZcZrcw?si=FfyR4utixpuBizIF
I find, that the basic technique involved, can be applied to a lot more projects. So, this was sort of an epiphany.
Because it starts with putting an angle on the stick, it makes carving anything with a face so much easier and faster. In fact, those are just about 15-20 cuts you have to make.
Carve a notch for the nose.carve two more to define the nose and mouth.
Make a cut to define the hat. Define the nose further.
Work on the eye area.
Define the eyes with a chip carving technique.
Refine the eyes by scooping.
Define the moustache.
Carve a hat.
Refine the beard.
Have a cuppatree. 😉
Play safe, watch that video tutorial (because it is awesome), enjoy your cuppa, and take care. Giving your hands something to do helps a lot. Carving is especially good for you: https://www.sperorecovery.org/5-psychological-and-social-benefits-of-woodworking/
All the best, see you next time!
Mittwoch, 6. November 2024
A natural band aid from birch polypore
You can leave the mushroom intact, by the way. In the picture, you can see what I mean.
Actually you only need the porous part, and it is possible to cut the band-aid quite thin. The pictures were obviously taken for demonstration purposes. The injury was already healed and well at that point.
Now please keep in mind that this is an emergency remedy. If you have a first aid kit, please, at least use proper disinfectant before treating any wound at all. I am not to be made liable for any healing impairment or deterioration of the healing process to to the application of natural remedies. I share this as a merely cultural evaluation and for entertainment purposes exclusively.
That said, the use of birch polypore in indigenous cultural heritage as a natural remedy goes back to the paleolithic age. A later, and rather famous find from the late neolithic/ copper age, showed the multifunctional use of birch polypore. Otzi, the "iceman" carried, amongst other things, a piece of birch polypore as tinder, but probably also as medicinal. Studies have found traces of the mushroom in his digestive tract:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1879981718300883,
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0378874114003183
and presumeably he had taken this remedy for its anti-inflammatory and immune system modulating properties:
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5380686/
The mushroom has many uses and preparation methods. The dried powder was also used as a painkiller (see: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5380686/).
Relevant for the use as a band-aid are of course said anti-inflammatory properties. Responsible for these properties are mainly the Tri-Terpenes and Tri-Terpenoids. On the other hand, the wound-healing process might also be furthered by the poly-saccharids in its composition. Hydrogels with Saccharides and Glukose are a therapeutic remedy for necrosis even today. At least, those polysaccharides in the mushroom are said to offer a moisturizing environment for the wound to heal. For the same reasons, the fresh tissue from Fomitopsis Betulina can be used for skin care and hygiene. The dried mushroom must be rehydrated first. The dried powder might be best for the purpose.
So, while obviously cutting a band-aid from some old shroom in the woods can, in that situation, only be an emergency remedy, with a bit more attention to care, hygiene and attention, it could be far more than just that. The mushroom shows a lot of promising characteristics in a lot of fields of use.
Please harvest the mushroom sustainably. Take only what you need, and if at all possible, keep the mycelium intact. As a rule of thumb, take just 20% of the mushroom in order for it to regrow. Leave the Trama intact, too. Of course there is nothing wrong with harvesting a whole fruiting body where the mushroom is abundant, too. Just use common sense is all.
All the best, and take good care!
Samstag, 19. Oktober 2024
Helle Knives Skóg blade blank- and the modern relevance of archaeology
Anyway, I really do love Helle Knives. The blades always come in razor sharp, and most of them get the task done admireably. We had those Skóg/Fjellmann blades lying around for ages. It is made from H3LS, a three layer laminate steel with a carbon steel as a cutting layer and arming steel sides from 18/8 stainless steel, which offers rust resistance from hell, but cannot be hardened. It offers a bit of spring resistance, though, when forged. Blades like that are made by Helle since time immemorial and have been proven to be really resilient.
I mounted that little blade (80x2,7 mm) with a handle from reindeer antler and birchwood burl. At the first glance, it doesn't look any special, but it is
A while ago, I made some trial pieces for a replica of the Trollstein knife, a knife unearthed by Norwegian archaeologists at Lendbreen glacier, near #Trollsteinen. Look here for my thoughts: http://fimbulmyrk.blogspot.com/2024/04/thoughts-on-trollstein-knife.html
This is the original find. The pictures are copyright by @vegardvike and museum of culturalhistory, Norway. On the pictures you can see that the knife has a rather interesting handle shape, with sort of some diamond cross section and sort of a bevel towards the edge line of the handle. And testing my sample pieces, I found this to be a real game-changer for a lot of applications, from food prepping, to skinning, and it really excels at wood carving.
On the picture below, you can see what I mean. I wanted to incorporate this idea in a more modern handle design. Because, while the handle on the Trollstein knife is actually really efficient, it also makes the sheath design a bstd to get right. Also, I do like a little more contour and purchase in the handle. So I put those facets on a more modern design. It is obviously not a replica, but really works awesome. It is about the principle of signalling your brain and body which way you hold the blade. And what I want to say is, that I would not have known had I not tried to make a replica of the find.
Archaeology gives us insight into the knowledge of the past. The principles that people applied historically still are relevant.
In Germany, there is something going on that can only be called a culture war against all things of cultural heritage, science and craft. I do know it is even worse in the US. At the Uni, there is currently a move of the administration, and behind that, possibly altright political forces, to close down entire ethically relevant faculties like Archaeology, literature and philosophy, but also actively defunding medicine, mathematics and physics.
Think about the relevance for your actual life situations. For Archaeology, it might not seem obvious, but the relevance actually is pretty commonplace. Call it "the knowledge of the ancestors" if you want.
I am not actually asking "cui bono" yet, because I do not need to. Suffice to say that this handle design is really a rather enlightening experience.
And it was first designed in the iron age.
If you possibly can, try it out to get my meaning.
All the best, and take care!
Donnerstag, 17. Oktober 2024
A fun little carving practice- whittle a pig
(https://summit.sfu.ca/_flysystem/fedora/sfu_migrate/15910/etd9350_GHamilton.pdf)
with therapeutical benefits for individual mental health. The creative possibilities are infinite. This is a simple project that is well suited for beginners and kids with a bit of experience. Start with cutting a hazel branch that is long enough to give you a bit of a handle.
Carve a flat on either side.Carve the snout by using reverse grip power/chest cuts.
Carve a notch using a thumb pressure cut and reverse grip chest cut to shape the body.
Using a pinch grip cut, carve the eyes.
Shape the butt of the little piggy. Essentially it is just a notch you can carve with a chest clutch cut or by applying thumb pressure on the spine of the blade.
Before cutting all the way through, you can do some refining cuts on the body and shape and refine the legs.
Cut or saw off the notch, and in no time you get a stylized piggy. You can refine it with more details, of course, but as is, this project can be done in 20 minutes. It is a really satisfying lunch break project and is pretty well suited for grounding yourself when you feel stressed out, and you can keep little piggy in your pocket to aid comfort and resilience.
Take care, play it safe, and I hope you like it and have fun!
A boy scout knife and thought on a "culture"
This knife comes from a time before the rise of hyperconsumerism and Miltoenesque capitalistic Religion. The cultural context and its implications were rather wholesome. Kids were encouraged to climb trees, read books and reenact their content. They camped, learned to build shacks in the woods, built dams and in spite of breaking one or the other bone, they developed a rather healthy outlook on life and its natural boundaries. They were able to act out energy and relieve stress. And, contrary to popular beliefs, they rarely hurt themselves or others with a knife, in spite of the knives being razor sharp and pointy. I am not advocating educational violence, but the parents nowadays simply have no time or attention-availability to firmly lead the kids through situations with difficult orientational challenges. It is not only the parents 's fault, because our society doesn't generate a safe environment for raising kids. In fact, it is toxic as to creating a sustainable future.
That knife is 70 years old. If it would get banned, I would most certainly have to destroy it. One doesn't need to be a clairvoyant in order to suppose that it is only a matter of time. Mrs. Faeser, Federal Minister Of Homeland Security tried to establish thought crime as felony, proposes the reversal of the assumption of innocence and total surveillance via AI.
On a more positive note, the mere existence of such a knife is very good news. To me, as you might know by now, it is not a weapon. It is conveying meaning and sustainability in a world gone conkers. Every time I use such a knife, fond memories are coming up, of childhood adventures, of loong and beautiful hikes with my father through woods that were denser and wilder (or so it seemed), of carving hiking sticks from hazel, a ritual my father and I did at the beginning of every longer hike. Of shacks my pals and I built in the woods, dangerous treehouses 25m above the ground, sitting in the crown of a spruce tree, gently caressed by the wind and the perfume of resin. Of dams and forts we built, and campfires where we spent whole evenings without even talking, but understanding each other without words. Of toys we made, of bows from hazel and arrows without fletching, of sunlight through the leaves and hot cocoa after a snowstorm outing on skis.
Samstag, 28. September 2024
What a tiny knife can do-Helle Raud S review
Since I wanted a pocket knife that is capable of carving and didn't look threatening to the Karens or our Slytheen that rule us, I came across the Helle Raud S. Normally, I would not have thought twice about a knife that small. Actually, the Vics are awesome and those are actually rarely incapable of doing things, but the proposal for the novelty offensive weapon act would have banned a Swiss Army knife, because it would be too long. Actually, the new proposal, which still is not aborted, would ban all things not Teletubby from the public, including all kind of tools, knives, bottles or anything heavy or sharp.
I spare you the rant. It is pathetic, and we all know.
Anyway, I was asking myself, could one find a capable knife with a tiny blade that were still able to do some of the things I want or need to do in the woods? Forget tactical neckknives, those are toys for people who will open boxes at the most. And I thought, well, my Mora carving knives are actually pretty decent for a lot of things I do. But them being fixed blade knives, they still look too threatening to the Karen Teletubbies. So, a folding knife it had to be. Originally, I thought about the Helle Kletten, but dismissed it because it would not work with a ferro rod, because of its three layer laminate steel, so it had to be the cheaper Raud S. To be honest, I wasn't too fond of spending 120€ on a knife I normally would never have bought.
Well, the little knife arrived. There was a rather silly #nancysapplechallenge going on in the interwebs where you tried to demonstrate that you could not cut an apple with a short knife, which is a logical fallacy, because you cannot prove a negative claim. But, anyway, apple harvest was on the way and I had to make and conserve apple sauce from 5kg of crap apples anyway, so I put it through its paces. It obviously needed some adaptation, but it proved really not as inadequate as I expected.
It had its shortcomings, but it is possible to use it for food prepping in a pinch.
Where it excelled, however, was carving.
It performs several classes above its size when carving wood. The blade shape and Scandi grind and short blade all combine to add up to a really great detail knife.
I made wall hooks,
spoons from seasoned oak,
a walking stick from holly,
wallhooks from dry cherry,
And after all that hard use it still made shavings like that.
Using it to help with cordage, foraging, mushroom hunting, it really does a lot of things.
Its biggest advantage is obviously that it goes into the small pocket of your jeans and is so light and nimble that you do not really notice it until you need it. The blade is 55mm long and 2.7 mm thick. It is made from 12C27 steel, tempered to 59HRC. The grind is a medium Scandinavian grind with the tiniest of micro bevels. It locks reliably by a sturdy back lock. There is no radial or side play whatsoever. The liners are made from sturdy tempered steel (almost a millimetre thick). The handle from beautiful curly birch , which is stained red, is 85 mm long. To me, that means, the pinky gets to rest behind the handle. This led to a bit of pain in my joints of that finger after several hours of hard carving. The handle, being rather stubby and chunky, lends itself to powerful cuts, though. Inverse cuts, chest cut, scissor cut and all Slöjd positions need a bit of adaptation, but are perfectly doable.
So, if you are looking for a non-offensive and light carry knife for Slöjd in the woods, and can live with the limits of such a tiny blade, this knife, apart from it being in line with the removal of your civic rights, performs admireably well for little Slöjd projects. It might also be a really great first Slöjd knife for kids.
So, apart from the political shitshow going on, it is a great companion that you do not notice until you need it, but that is amazingly and surprisingly capable. I currently always carry it alongside my SAK, because for carving, it performs really great. If you can afford it, and can live with its limitations, it might be a great addition to your EDC.
Thanks for tuning in, take care and have fun!
Freitag, 27. September 2024
Acorn coffee with Chaga and hazelnut
I cracked the nuts and peeled the acorns. You need to thoroughly leach out the acorns. I was sort of in a hurry, so I chopped them and boiled them three times for 20 minutes, changing the water every time. You could keep the batches for staining cloth or tanning leather. When the bitterness is gone, you can take the nuts and acorns and roast them to a dark brown or even black colour.
Grind them like coffee and boil them with a walnut-sized piece of Chaga for about 20 minutes, until a golden-brown froth rises from the Chaga. If you want to make the drink more substantial, you can add some sweet chestnut and some cashews or unroasted hazelnuts.
Sweeten with honey.

Enjoy! 😉
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