Things are starting to green up here. Won't be long until garden planting and yard mowing time. Medicinal plants can't get you to hooping and hollering like catching grinnel.
You know i actually enjoy the mowing but now that weed eater is a whole nother story. And that grinnel is bout the only thing that really exites me like that
Hooray! So, happy to see you covered Usnea. I'm the one who commented before about this. I'm in Missouri and still looking as it will grow on dead and downed limbs. It also grows in clean air environments....you have the best of both worlds. I'll be out foraging soon in hopes to find it. Loved the book binder book you shared too. Thanks again and for all your educational and fun videos 😀.
You can use content from other authors just be sure to reference them where and when you use their information! You may write information in your own words and from your own knowledge without citing someone else's work. If you copy what someone else has said always give the information to their name and work.
Hey Justin! If you are planning to use the book for your own private use... I can't imagine anyone being taken to task about it. Compiling your own reference work for your locality & future use, reflecting your knowledge & experience, will be a valuable resource as the years roll on. You might want to consider using a Multi-Volume approach... rather than one massive tome that would stagger a mule trying to carry it!! A Table Of Content is crucial for finding the information you want quickly! Good Luck with your research! By the time you're done, you may just have to take a look at getting MORE book shelves! Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha! See you down the trail!
When you snapped off that dead goldenrod stem, it jogged my memory on something I saw on a video a long while back and was going to mention it to you but forgot all about it. I was watching a video on primitive fire building and the guy was using the dead stalk of a plant that I had made arrows out of as a boy, but never had a clue what the name was. It was Dog fennel, and the guy in the video said that a dry dead stalk of it was one of the very best drill parts of a bow drill set or probably just any friction fire method. I didn't try it, and in fact had forgot all about it till you snapped off that stalk of goldenrod and jarred my memory. I want to say it was the bowmaker Ryan Gill down in Florida, but I'm not sure. If you ever do a friction fire down at your camp, it would be worth a try if you find some of them stalks on your walks.
@@SpiritoftheOutdoors I'm saying that they used Dog Fennel shafts. You snapping that goldenrod reminded me of it. I saw the goldenrod video you did. I am curious which one works easier, if either one is any better or easier to make an ember than the other.
We've got mullin growing wild here sw of Tulsa.
Things are starting to green up here. Won't be long until garden planting and yard mowing time. Medicinal plants can't get you to hooping and hollering like catching grinnel.
I’m looking forward to gardening but that grass cutting is a different story. Need a new mower but them cotton picken things are outrageous
You know i actually enjoy the mowing but now that weed eater is a whole nother story. And that grinnel is bout the only thing that really exites me like that
Hooray! So, happy to see you covered Usnea. I'm the one who commented before about this. I'm in Missouri and still looking as it will grow on dead and downed limbs. It also grows in clean air environments....you have the best of both worlds. I'll be out foraging soon in hopes to find it. Loved the book binder book you shared too. Thanks again and for all your educational and fun videos 😀.
There will be a lot more plant videos to come
You can use content from other authors just be sure to reference them where and when you use their information! You may write information in your own words and from your own knowledge without citing someone else's work. If you copy what someone else has said always give the information to their name and work.
Hey Justin! If you are planning to use the book for your own private use... I can't imagine anyone being taken to task about it. Compiling your own reference work for your locality & future use, reflecting your knowledge & experience, will be a valuable resource as the years roll on. You might want to consider using a Multi-Volume approach... rather than one massive tome that would stagger a mule trying to carry it!! A Table Of Content is crucial for finding the information you want quickly! Good Luck with your research! By the time you're done, you may just have to take a look at getting MORE book shelves! Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha! See you down the trail!
You wanna buy a copy? 😂😂😂🤷🏻♂️im just kiddin i dont plan to do nothing but use it
When you snapped off that dead goldenrod stem, it jogged my memory on something I saw on a video a long while back and was going to mention it to you but forgot all about it. I was watching a video on primitive fire building and the guy was using the dead stalk of a plant that I had made arrows out of as a boy, but never had a clue what the name was. It was Dog fennel, and the guy in the video said that a dry dead stalk of it was one of the very best drill parts of a bow drill set or probably just any friction fire method. I didn't try it, and in fact had forgot all about it till you snapped off that stalk of goldenrod and jarred my memory. I want to say it was the bowmaker Ryan Gill down in Florida, but I'm not sure. If you ever do a friction fire down at your camp, it would be worth a try if you find some of them stalks on your walks.
He probably learned it from me. I been trying to tell people goldenrod shafts were the best hand drill fire makers there is
I know you been watching my videos long enough to have seen me do the goldenrod handdrill fire
Hand drill fire
ruclips.net/video/L8Mrb-Y0UFg/видео.html
@@SpiritoftheOutdoors I'm saying that they used Dog Fennel shafts. You snapping that goldenrod reminded me of it. I saw the goldenrod video you did. I am curious which one works easier, if either one is any better or easier to make an ember than the other.
Man I fight that dog fennel on my farm. Trying to keep it from taking over the pastures
I look forward to the plant and medicinal videos
There will be a good many to come
That’s wild. I just planted two peach trees today lol
My wife just printed out the same book last week and she had fits with her printer as well. Seems like a pretty good resource
I think the other book is more on using the plants so i will probably print it too
my garden is full of curly doc its a nightmare in the garden