As Seen on TV

torch

 

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Trying is better than viewing

Have you ever caught yourself spouting as fact bushcraft knowledge with which you had no first-hand experience?  This happened to me two summers ago.

I was hiking in the high Sierras with a buddy.  We passed a grove of Lodgepole pine that had been damaged by bark beetles.  To defend themselves, the trees emit pine resin in the holes the beetles drill.  I was told that the newer resin has a reddish/brown tint and becomes dull yellow as it ages.

I start explaining to my buddy that the resin can be made into a torch.  And as I listen to the sound of my own voice, it dawns on me that I have never actually seen it done!  I had only seen it on TV!!!  Is seeing a bushcraft skill demonstrated on television sufficient to tell someone that the technique works?  It sure made me uncomfortable.

Where did I see it?  In Ray Mears’ excellent DVD, Extreme Survival.  There is an episode in the Rocky Mountains where Ray makes a torch.  He splits a stick longitudinally, cross-like, into four prongs.  He then wedges the prongs apart and fills the space between with pine resin and bark.

It was very cool!  But as much as I respect Mr. Mears, I felt foolish telling my buddy about it as if it were fact.  I had never done it, nor had I actually seen someone do it in person.  Is this being too picky?

There was only one thing to do!  I collected pine resin from some of the long dead trees.  I also grabbed several sticks (dead), choosing not to limb living trees.  I used my trusty Fallkniven F1 to make the two cuts needed.

Nothing is ever as easy as it seems on TV. 🙂   As I made the second cut, the split went farther than I wanted and chopped off one of the prongs.  This occurred even when I made a constrictor knot from some grass to try and stop the fracture from going too deep.

After three frustrating attempts I settled on a technique that worked.  I selected a much larger radius stick.  Instead of fighting, I allowed the prong be cut off.  Then I reattached the prong with cordage reverse-wrapped from some nearby grass.  I kept the prongs separated by inserting twigs to hold them apart.  The cordage allowed flex as I inserted the resin into the candle and held tighter the more that I inserted.  While not aesthetically pleasing, the result worked!  I experimented with lighting different parts of the torch (top, one side-split, multiple side-splits) to see how it affected burn time and the amount of light it produced.  It was handy to light that night’s campfire.

I wish I had taken photos of the process.  But I just have pictures of the torch the morning after it burned.

 

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Torch next to campfire the morning after use
A twig and some bark protrude from a side I did not light

 

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Close-up of torch

 

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Molten resin escaped from side I lit after the torch was already burning

 

I felt much better after trying it for myself.  And it was fun to replicate something I had only seen done on TV.  I learned much more from actually doing it than I had from watching the video.

Have you ever tried a technique you saw on TV?  Did it work like you expected?  Did you learn something unexpected?  I am curious to know what you have done.

 

If you enjoyed this article you make like others in the Skills Section.

 

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