Very interesting to see you forage and process these roots for use. 👍🏻
@jayceewedmak95249 ай бұрын
Busy busy! 👍 👍 😊
@denislosieroutdoors7 ай бұрын
Cool video thanks for sharing
@NomadicWoodsman7 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@mushercdn9 ай бұрын
Lucky the flies weren't out yet. I wonder how the Natives were able to boil the roots to remove the bark. That pot must have needed a good cleaning before the corn roast! Thanks for the video.
@NomadicWoodsman9 ай бұрын
This pot is for spruce roots only haha no corn ! :) There is a period when the fresh buds are just coming off that the roots are easier to peel. They may have boiled them somehow without metal pots, maybe clay pots ? Or another method ? I'm not sure !
@Ivan-hj1kd3 ай бұрын
@Noradic Woodsman What you do if some spots on roots are very sticky? Thanks!
@rgr7989 ай бұрын
Let's goooooo! I was just out today looking at the birch trees I've selected!
@TheHighway420n9 ай бұрын
Birch?This video is about Spruce, you know that right?
@charlesleblanc66389 ай бұрын
So @rgr798 .. are you maybe planning on starting a BB Canoe this spring ?
@rgr7989 ай бұрын
@TheHighway420n yes obviously. I was just saying that I happened to be doing canoe related stuff yesterday, the same day he released a spruce root video for a birch bark canoe. Maybe a little less 420 for you... hahaha
@NomadicWoodsman9 ай бұрын
The search for the perfect materials never stops ... it is part of the pleasure of crafting with what mother nature has to provide. The variety of quality in these materials is quite fascinating as a specific spruce can yield terrible roots, yet another in the same exact species, in a different location will yield super long and perfect roots. Same thing with the birch bark, some birches will give excellent canoe and basket bark, while other may only be good for burning in the woodstove. Cheers ! :)
@KeemoSabe_Dude_729 ай бұрын
Is there another option if spruce or birch bark isnt available or plentiful in my area for a canoe build? Are there alternatives that can be used? Thanks
@martinlariviere87039 ай бұрын
hé tu te fais de la bière d'épinette hahaha salut long time no see .
@charlesleblanc66389 ай бұрын
So Steve there's no snow where your at right now ? Did you put out a video of the finished 16 ft or not yet. And your going to make a big fur trade BB Canoe ?
@NomadicWoodsman9 ай бұрын
This video was filmed last May, I hadn't yet posted it. I have a ambitious project of eventually building a big 20 foot fur trade canoe ... I just need some more time and resources and it's hard to find some of the parts for it where I am right now. Eventually ! I am probaby going to build another smaller canoe before that big one. Yes there is still snow where I am right now but it is melting right now quickly.
@charlesleblanc66389 ай бұрын
@@NomadicWoodsman OK that's why I wasn't seeing snow .. I would say a 20 ft is an ambitious project ! What are the parts you have a hard time finding ?
@NomadicWoodsman9 ай бұрын
One long roll of bark for the hull, ideally a 21 foot roll, one piece. And also some 20 footer long spruce or eastern cedar boards for the gunwales, without too many knots.
@charlesleblanc66389 ай бұрын
@@NomadicWoodsman That's a long piece of Bark .. Maybe easier to go 15/3/3 or something like that. Just saying. I actually was able to splice my gunwales which worked good enough. Only had 12 ft cedar logs.
@orange3too9 ай бұрын
thanks for sharing. finger tip to finger tip is equal to your height.
@NomadicWoodsman9 ай бұрын
Yes, correct, that's why I try to get about wrist to wrist / hand to hand gives me about 5 feet. I'm 5'10''. With a 5 foot root, it is long enough to do a gunwale lashing which is about 2 inches wide (the lashings that the ribs go in between).