Random Weave Basketry- Guest article by Jason from A Great Alternative
Join this photo guide to building your own simple random weave basket.
Phoenix Eggs - The joy of baking eggs over the fire
Often when adapting to life in the woods, our culinary skills are simplified to better suit the camp fire and the pots we have with us. We loose perhaps some options for cooking that we might find in a modern kitchen, but we also gain options too. Sometimes we choose to embrace the fire, and with it birth some Phoenix eggs!
Foraged Early Spring Greens Soup
One of my favourite ways to get connected with nature in the early spring, before even the sap is rising in the Birches, is to test my plant ID with the young new growth of woodland plants and make a soup from those plants I can identify 100%. In this way my ingredient list gets longer each year, and I’m noting which plants to come back to as the season progresses to see whether any plant which didn’t make the 100% mark can be correctly identified.
My Personal Bushcraft Knives
I thought I share a quick run down of my current collection of knives, their virtues and short comings, and my general opinion of them.
Knife Skills - The Humble Tarp Peg
One of the most regularly recreated of the camp-crafts is the tent peg; whether to replace a lost one or to better suit the soft ground of the forest the wood peg is a simple tool which relies of a deft use of the knife.
Personal Equipment: Belt Pouch and Pocket Carry
In regularly assembling my gear into various configurations I’ve found there are a few key items which fulfil some critical functions across a broad span of disciplines and so come with me on most excursions, and so I’ve tried to bring together items which are small, durable and reliable to perform when I need them whilst being as packable as possible.
How to Make: Pigeon and wild mushroom Stroganoff
This Autumn during a Howl team training weekend I made Max and Craigy a pigeon stroganoff for one of the evening meals, and in fine bushcraft form we added to the ingredients I had brought with me with some freshly foraged Penny Bun mushrooms Boletus edulis to kick the meal into the stratosphere.
How to Make: A hammock for under £15
So I got to thinking, could be make a functional hammock for under £15 without using a sewing machine or any real craft skills at all… to produce a super cheap, usable hammock for trailing it as a sleep system. That’s just what I did:
3 Natural Navigation tips for everyday travel
Learning to tune into the natural environment and see clues which can get you navigate is a wonderful, and vast, skillset. A skillset which will open your senses, and connect you with the land you’re travelling through. Don’t get me wrong, I advocate the use of a map and compass as you would expect, and we run a suite of navigation courses to develop those techniques.