Комментарии •

  • @Anime-Control
    @Anime-Control Год назад +1080

    A Lindybeige video about a relatively niche topic with a generally exploratory nature and a “we’ll figure it out” attitude? An instant classic

    • @loso8381
      @loso8381 Год назад +24

      Its not two hours long :(

    • @ScienceDiscoverer
      @ScienceDiscoverer Год назад +5

      @@loso8381 The magic of time warping.

    • @CottonTailJoe
      @CottonTailJoe Год назад +2

      Yes

    • @AmTrFilms
      @AmTrFilms Год назад +2

      Isn;t that every video of his?

    • @45calibermedic
      @45calibermedic Год назад +1

      And he knows a bit about it. Not everything, but he has some background knowledge from his study of history and archery. Just the sort of thing that stimulates wonderful discussion in the comments. We need way more of lindy explaining old words and ideas while exploring traditional and historical life.

  • @crisisOstrich
    @crisisOstrich Год назад +97

    Nothing stops an arrow like a good Frenchman

    • @_Mentat
      @_Mentat Год назад +2

      It seems to be the lot of Frenchmen to be skewered by English arrows.

    • @johnmcmanus7809
      @johnmcmanus7809 Год назад +3

      Mad Jack Churchill decided the Germans also worked well in this regard.

    • @ClashClash89
      @ClashClash89 11 месяцев назад +1

      I have met multiple German seniors pocking their heads into active archery ranges… so mad jack probably had some very cooperative targets. ;p friggin nominees for the Darwin Award…

    • @michaelturner2523
      @michaelturner2523 6 месяцев назад

      And you know what the only good Frenchman is...

  • @TreeFrogOnATree
    @TreeFrogOnATree Год назад +390

    Can't wait for episode 6 when you raise your own standing army!

  • @HeisenbergFam
    @HeisenbergFam Год назад +650

    Bro casually returned after a month just to make an authentic bowstring, respect

    • @edgarbanuelos6472
      @edgarbanuelos6472 Год назад +3

      Very British the more I think about it

    • @colinmackay92
      @colinmackay92 Год назад +49

      Far longer than that. His last legitimate video was many months ago. His most recent content was just the interviews. They were awesome. But this is the first classic lindybeige video in quite a while.

    • @Milamberinx
      @Milamberinx Год назад +18

      Probably filmed 5 years ago and not been edited too. Anyone an expert on ageing Beigemen?

    • @CausticTitan
      @CausticTitan Год назад +6

      Dude you are everywhere

    • @VoidVagabond
      @VoidVagabond Год назад +2

      ​@@CausticTitan I thought I was crazy for noticing this.

  • @Gordons1888
    @Gordons1888 Год назад +38

    'Two guys who know a little bit giving it a go'
    That's the mentality that built the empire

  • @Brave_Sir_Robin
    @Brave_Sir_Robin Год назад +323

    I think the thing I love most about this channel is how every episode is a complete roll of the dice. You never know what you’re going to get, and yet it’s always absolutely fascinating. Bravo

    • @NorroTaku
      @NorroTaku Год назад +1

      like a box of chocolate

  • @blurby
    @blurby Год назад +137

    enough flax to make a hundred bowstrings, or enough flax to try 100 methods of processing

    • @PerfectAlibi1
      @PerfectAlibi1 Год назад +20

      I go with the latter, or enough for 99 failures... XD

    • @abyssaljam441
      @abyssaljam441 Год назад +8

      @@PerfectAlibi1 99 failures but the bow rope ain't one

  • @CR0SBO
    @CR0SBO Год назад +100

    "Couple of guys, who know a bit, giving it at go" feels like a perfect series to enjoy. I for one will look forward to the spoon whittling episode, and the flint knapping one too of course!

    • @simonspacek3670
      @simonspacek3670 Год назад +7

      "How do you know that you cannot make a bowstring, if you never tried to make one?" A lot of things is quite easy (but still time consuming) if you give it a try. Can you mix concrete? Well, it is easy, just try it. On your third try you will be pretty good. Make sling from string? Well, first two or three were a bit rubbish, but the next one was good. Sew trousers? Version 4 was not bad and version 5 I had for few years until the fabric fall apart.

    • @man.inblack
      @man.inblack Год назад +7

      If you want anything flint, chase up Phil Harding and his hat on Time Team.
      He’ll smash out Stone Age tools in cut off shorts.

    • @Earthenfist
      @Earthenfist Год назад

      @@man.inblack I'm personally a fan of Will Lorde. He's got a RUclips channel and talks about a lot of Neolithic stuff.

  • @DStein22
    @DStein22 Год назад +152

    I never knew it would be entertaining to watch people make a bowstring for 40 minutes

    • @GaborSzabo747
      @GaborSzabo747 Год назад +3

      If it's a Lindybeige video, it is interesting!

    • @Logan_93
      @Logan_93 Год назад +1

      36min

  • @galankaufmann
    @galankaufmann Год назад +45

    Typically, bowstrings are waxed. This strenghtens the cord by sticking the fibers together, reduces fraying and waterproofs it somewhat in the bargain.

  • @collinvickers2345
    @collinvickers2345 Год назад +144

    I appreciate how genuine Lloyd is. It doesn't get any more classic than shooting a cardboard box with a homemade bow - didn't we all do that as kids? :)

    • @16m49x3
      @16m49x3 Год назад +6

      we yes. But our children will not be allowed to

    • @vincent-of-the-bog
      @vincent-of-the-bog Год назад +21

      @@16m49x3 you could just... allow them to?

    • @16m49x3
      @16m49x3 Год назад +7

      @@vincent-of-the-bog
      I bet the government will find a way to ban homemade bows...

    • @Valkbg
      @Valkbg Год назад +6

      I didnt. But I did make artillery pieces out of cork and matches

    • @IFarmBugs
      @IFarmBugs Год назад +4

      Cardboard boxes were rare but the apple trees had plenty of apples

  • @nickharvey7233
    @nickharvey7233 Год назад +32

    My Mum's family were in the linen trade in Ireland for generations (Ireland was one of the global centres of the industry). That wooden sword thing you refer to will be a scutching knife - we still have one hanging on the wall...

  • @tedferkin
    @tedferkin Год назад +74

    Mildred: Harold, you remember that strange bloke next door. He's got another bloke with him and they are hitting straw with a pretend sword then trying to make spaghetti with it
    A few hours later...
    Harold: Mildred, he seems to have used the spaghetti to make a bow now.

    • @adamcetinkent
      @adamcetinkent Год назад +7

      Harold should keep an eye out.

    • @grailknight6794
      @grailknight6794 Год назад

      ​@@adamcetinkent"eye" see what you did there 👀

  • @JasonKenway
    @JasonKenway Год назад +21

    Your Merlin impression was spot on, one of my all time favourite films and soundtracks.

    • @lindybeige
      @lindybeige Год назад +26

      I am a dream to some, and a nightmare to others.

  • @ivan55599
    @ivan55599 Год назад +3

    Yes! Finally a continuity of series of "Ancient versatile crafts, as demonstrated by an incompetent".

  • @Hrogthar
    @Hrogthar Год назад +58

    YES! Been missing a classic style Lindybeige long form video. Thank you.

    • @Wintermute909
      @Wintermute909 Год назад +3

      Same here!

    • @thothtahuti5509
      @thothtahuti5509 Год назад +2

      @@Wintermute909 and here! ❤️

    • @Spindlegrind
      @Spindlegrind Год назад +3

      Same… the Ukraine bollox was making me rethink subscription.

    • @thothtahuti5509
      @thothtahuti5509 Год назад +5

      @Spindlegrind fair enough, too. I like his classic style, but I couldn't get into them, i did watch the first one and then stopped watching. I'm sure it was well intentioned, I just prefer my politics and politicians dead and in the past (*dark humor). I'm glad to see him back in his "wheel house", which oddly is almost ANYTHING else, this is the first subject he ever covered that didn't leave me riveted in the moment and more knowledgeable by the end :)
      ❤️

    • @jphilb
      @jphilb 11 месяцев назад

      Glad I stayed to the end for the sing along.

  • @seeriktus
    @seeriktus 9 месяцев назад +2

    Don't be afraid to leave it uncut, doing long ones like this can be kind of therapeutic

  • @wolfkillerq9363
    @wolfkillerq9363 Год назад +47

    Ah just in time, I was wondering how to make a bow string from scratch!

  • @maxpowers9129
    @maxpowers9129 Год назад +63

    I loved this episode. Trying to do things our ancestors mastered helps show just how human and clever they really were.
    It's easy to act smug thinking we would know better, but the truth is very few people can replicate the level of technology from the past, and fewer still could replicate our current technology when starting from scratch.

    • @shaneintheuk2026
      @shaneintheuk2026 Год назад +7

      Replicating our current level of technology would be impossible without millions of people working together. Creating a chip fabrication plant from scratch requires a ton of other factories to create the parts.

    • @himan12345678
      @himan12345678 Год назад +4

      ​@@shaneintheuk2026 the thing no one seems to get is that recreating current tech after a hypothetical collapse wouldn't be from scratch. It would be from salvage/ruins. It could be from scratch, and the more time has passed since such a collapse the more and more likely it will be from scratch. But it would most likely be from salvage. Which a single person can do. I'm currently in the process of doing electronics fabrication from salvage actually. My biggest hurdle is stealthy "dumpster diving" into landfills. Which wouldn't be an issue really in a post collapse.
      But if you want to counter that it took many to make those original parts, then yes. But it also takes many (not humans) to make rocks and trees and other natural materials for humans to then process. No man is an island.

    • @shaneintheuk2026
      @shaneintheuk2026 Год назад +4

      @@himan12345678 interesting and viable in the short term but longer term I think it would be extremely difficult. Once the easy salvage is gone, trying to educate the next generation becomes a massive problem. How do you get people to degree level when the population is much smaller and everyone is trying to survive. David Brin’s The Postman discusses it nicely.

    • @Lanka0Kera
      @Lanka0Kera Год назад

      Few people know the basics of past technology because people don't care about museums that try to keep the knowledge alive.
      I know *how to* work flax into thread because both my parents took care of a museum for common household *stuff* as it'd had been around late middle ages tech wise. Never done it myself, but I know how to - and especially *why* some parts of the process are required. I know ye-shite-tonne of past-common stuff that have absolutely no use in modern age. Taught when I was a kid, now in mid 30 a lot of them are things I'd like to actually try to make by myself just to see if I can...

    • @joshuabacker2363
      @joshuabacker2363 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@shaneintheuk2026 Depends on how genetic intelligence was affected by a collapse and what sort of population one has to work with, and what level of knowledge or skills were retained.
      Salvage would make trial and error much less necessary though, because just having an example to work from is what makes it possible for non-geniuses to make things. It takes a rare and intrinsic talent to come up with, say, the idea of the printing press. But once it's been done, it's relatively easy to copy.

  • @andytopley314
    @andytopley314 Год назад +20

    I thought Kon-Tiki was trans -Pacific and made of logs. I believe Lloyd refers to a prior adventure of Thor Heyerdahl with the trans-Atlantic reed boat relating to Egyptians travelling to the New World.

    • @atspoonermom7652
      @atspoonermom7652 Год назад +9

      Yes, Kon-Tiki was green balsa logs starting from Chile and sailing west with the Pacific currents. They lashed it together with hemp rope, likely originally made in a similar fashion to the flax bowstring!
      However, where Kon-Tiki was 1947, the Thor's reed boat voyage crossing the Atlantic was 1970, so it was later, not prior.

    • @lindybeige
      @lindybeige Год назад +14

      Yes, the Ra-II was the boat I was referring to. I got the names mixed up. Sorry.

  • @ConnorLandonFreeman
    @ConnorLandonFreeman Год назад +6

    I'm not five minutes in yet, but this is already amazing. Lloyd denies us a video for a million years, then makes one about bloody bowstrings! The man is a hero!

  • @lesliefranklin1870
    @lesliefranklin1870 Год назад +25

    Keeping civil while you string us along. Great first attempt. By the 100th bowstring, I'm sure it'll look professional.

  • @13goodbye
    @13goodbye Год назад +6

    Constructive suggestion: spin thin strings of full length flax furst, then ply several together ( opposit spin) then there will be no joins and enough twist onnthe fibres to lake them stable. Can spin with a drop spindle or a long stick rolled along the thigh

  • @j.q.higgins2245
    @j.q.higgins2245 Год назад +27

    What a forking hell of work! Based on the foliage in the background and on the progress you made, it dawned on me that you must have recorded this video in early autumn...
    ... of 2018. 😂
    Well done!

  • @Tentin.Quarantino
    @Tentin.Quarantino Год назад +25

    Fun fact: all Englishman are imbued with unerring accuracy with a bow, provided that the target is a Frenchman.

    • @Spritofjazz
      @Spritofjazz Год назад +2

      Saw this before the French invasion, thought it was a joke. I should’ve known better

    • @bickyboo7789
      @bickyboo7789 Год назад +1

      Does anyone know where I may acquire an archery target in the shape of a Frenchman?

    • @Tentin.Quarantino
      @Tentin.Quarantino Год назад +2

      @@bickyboo7789 why, Agincourt, of course 😁
      Or France, but those ones tend to move about a bit.

  • @AngloSaxonWheatFarmer
    @AngloSaxonWheatFarmer Год назад +3

    This is the beautiful thing about newcastle, the history, the lovely buildings. and knowing somewhere among us Loyd is making bowstrings
    his back garden

  • @khodexus4963
    @khodexus4963 Год назад +11

    On the Conan anecdote, what you said is actually incorrect. Arnold got cast because he was the only body builder who DIDN'T have to lose weight to lift his arms because he had been training in a slightly different way that allowed him to retain more flexibility than was typical of body builders of the time.

    • @lindybeige
      @lindybeige Год назад +4

      I have heard this said specifically of Arnie and Conan.

  • @loungelizard3922
    @loungelizard3922 Год назад +2

    Nice to see two friends doing some hand crafts and having a yarn. I wouldn't want to be on the other side of that bow. I'm thinking about growing some of that flax myself.

  • @PaulTheSkeptic
    @PaulTheSkeptic Год назад +16

    I've read the books. But Arny is so iconic in that role it's so hard to seperate the character from the actor.

  • @JoeyVol
    @JoeyVol Год назад +23

    Love ya, Lindy 👋 You’re someone I’ve routinely searched for once every few months for almost a decade now.
    Here’s to the decades yet to come! 🍻

  • @TheMightyZwom
    @TheMightyZwom Год назад +1

    "I'm starting to get something a bit hair-like" Not only this, but it's also beige!

  • @konsyjes
    @konsyjes Год назад +5

    I wonder what people used to pre-stretch the string during the middle ages, if anything; to stress it until it settles. Your accuracy is very gratifying to watch ;)

  • @hawkeyesgirl2244
    @hawkeyesgirl2244 Год назад +16

    I think if you guys had info on flax to linen processing it might have been helpful at the beginning. When he described the tools he needed it made me think of this immediately. Rope or yarn the processing overlaps! Love for this channel! ❤

    • @rogersmith7396
      @rogersmith7396 Год назад +6

      Washer rollers for the first part then a spinning wheel.

  • @MelkisgoedvoorJan
    @MelkisgoedvoorJan Год назад

    The fact that I have been watching your entire back catalogue this month but didnt get this new video recommended says something about the algorithm

  • @tomw86
    @tomw86 9 месяцев назад +1

    You randomly showed up on my suggested videos - but yet we did student radio together more than 15 years ago.
    Hello old friend :D

  • @Bigfoot_With_Internet_Access
    @Bigfoot_With_Internet_Access Год назад +5

    We bigfoots have to make everything ourselves out here in the woods

  • @pandakicker1
    @pandakicker1 Год назад +3

    Ohhhh Lindybeige, I always love your goofiness. Please never stop being yourself. Blessings and hugs from Texas!

  • @mormonboy25
    @mormonboy25 Год назад

    Love the casual admission of lindybeige nearly hitting the deck second time abseiling due to overconfidence. Goes to show we are all susceptible to the donning-Krueger effect

  • @Munisk52
    @Munisk52 7 месяцев назад

    I absolutely adore your "lets just try it and figure it out" approach sir, thats after all how learning is done best!

  • @aewtech
    @aewtech Год назад +5

    I used context clues to determine abseiling is British for rappelling!

    • @lindybeige
      @lindybeige Год назад +1

      Oh yes! I edited that bit out, sorry. I meant to leave it in. Whoops.

  • @Logan_93
    @Logan_93 Год назад +2

    Gosh, if i were a make-a-wish kid, my wish would be to spend one day nerding out with Lindybeige.

  • @NewcastleFlyer
    @NewcastleFlyer Год назад +7

    Nice to see my former physics teacher again

    • @sdd4735
      @sdd4735 Год назад +4

      have a feeling he likes lasers

    • @lindybeige
      @lindybeige Год назад +3

      Your feelings are accurate.

  • @Wintermute909
    @Wintermute909 Год назад +4

    Im so glad we're back to normal vids.

    • @BlookbugIV
      @BlookbugIV Год назад +1

      What were the not normal videos? I’ve not been keeping up.

  • @crapphone7744
    @crapphone7744 11 месяцев назад

    You have the best viewers, ever. I love that a viewer just sent you the raw materials randomly. He knew you couldn't resist trying it.
    As hard as the work looked, it sure beats following the north end of a south bound ox pulling a plow. Better a journeyman than a peasant.

  • @Severalangrybees
    @Severalangrybees Год назад +10

    This kind of content is a favourite for me. Watching you try stuff out is great

  • @Luddite1
    @Luddite1 Год назад +1

    I love the fact that you did a survival course where the squaddies were deferring to you regarding orienteering and yet you trusted them to set up the ropes which you used to abseil !!!
    Your a brave man sir I salute you

  • @huskiefan8950
    @huskiefan8950 11 месяцев назад +2

    My wifes family is ojibwe, natives of Canada/Minnesota, and her dad told me something cool one time. He said that in the past their tribe would kill a turtle, and cut a spiral pattern around the skin of its outstretched neck(2 person job) in such a way that you ended up with a long skinny "rope". They would dry the skin, twist it tightly and tie it off, and they used that as bowstrings, successfully. It was like he was passing on some sage wisdom. That was a cool moment 😎

  • @leemasters3592
    @leemasters3592 Год назад +3

    @SallyPointer has some great videos on making cordage from plant fibres. Also some on repairing knitwear which might also interest you @Lindybeige considering your collection of lovely knit jumpers.

  • @krystallinecestmoneau1358
    @krystallinecestmoneau1358 8 месяцев назад

    it's so nice that Lindy is still making great videos since all this time , his videos have been a companion of mine for a while now , and I like it !

  • @collinvickers2345
    @collinvickers2345 Год назад +14

    It seems likely to me that our ancestors would have used a hackle kit and carding comb for this sort of thing, but it looks like a pair of dining forks will work in a pinch.

    • @abyssaljam441
      @abyssaljam441 Год назад +4

      they just had to wait for the fork to be invented first?

  • @adwarfsittingonagiantsshoulder
    @adwarfsittingonagiantsshoulder Год назад +13

    Intersting topic. It seemed like eons passed since the last upload from Lloyd, glad to see him back !
    I hav'nt done any bowstring for years, and those where made out of dynema or fastflight... really cool to see one made out of natural fibers. Even with modern materials, I needed loads of trial and error and a lot of time to make, so I'm very impressed by this video !
    As alwais this channel is full of suprises and a lot of fun to watch.

  • @piokul
    @piokul Год назад +5

    You can also make very strong string from nettle. In a more bushcraft and less agricultural setting. Nice greenish colour!

    • @Par-Crom
      @Par-Crom Год назад +2

      Apparently, the best period to gather them would be in May - June. You can cook nettles to make delicious soup too !

  • @zetachaox
    @zetachaox Год назад +4

    STRICTLY NO MUTTERING "I wasn't muttering! I was just mumbling!"

  • @mattfleming86
    @mattfleming86 Год назад +7

    It has been an absolutely hellish week..
    I needed this. Thanks Lindy!

  • @GavTatu
    @GavTatu Год назад

    there are some great vids of old gents making flax.... its amazing !
    conan... i read so many when i was 12/13 year old... i was enthralled !

  • @therealcarlxii
    @therealcarlxii Год назад +3

    I didn´t know that it was called "abseiling" in English. As a native German speaker it´s always funny for me to hear German words in the middle of an English conversation

  • @peterpaul7932
    @peterpaul7932 Год назад

    Lloyd is already a alltime classic. Thank you for your work and continues work!

  • @hodgeman
    @hodgeman Год назад +7

    I made a trash bow from a tree branch, strong elastic and some real arrows.... it went dangerously far, all the way across the park (was much more careful after the first launch). The branches break, but are easily replaceable.

  • @opsoverseas
    @opsoverseas Год назад +2

    Olden crafts, modern revival! Over the course of the hundred years war I expect you'd get a few good bowstrings out of that lot!
    Good stuff, well done both!

  • @mpersad
    @mpersad Год назад +1

    Well I'd certainly chalk that up as a success. Well done both for such an enjoyable video!

  • @consoya
    @consoya Год назад

    With sprinkles of trivia and anecdotes, love it.

  • @piotrektiger8633
    @piotrektiger8633 8 месяцев назад +1

    Truly some great impressions😆

  • @RealMoukeycat
    @RealMoukeycat Год назад +8

    If this is an example of "Bush craft" I keep wondering if the forks were naturally sourced. I tend to doubt it. It's the wrong time of year in England for the forks to be ripe.

    • @blunderingfool
      @blunderingfool Год назад

      We have these wonderful inventions called greenhouses, I had a haul of spoons in the dead of winter last year!

    • @RealMoukeycat
      @RealMoukeycat Год назад +1

      @blunderingfool so you're telling us it wasn't true bush craft. I was imagining Lindy went on a long walk in the countryside to sorce the forks. But all he did was pop into the garden.

  • @chrisleffler6490
    @chrisleffler6490 Год назад +1

    Fantastic work! I’ve missed these crafting videos with the beige man

  • @rogershakespeare3889
    @rogershakespeare3889 Год назад

    Best part of the video was you and Mark sharing stories while you worked. Thanks for the video Lindy!

  • @ethelredhardrede1838
    @ethelredhardrede1838 Год назад

    That was not only the best Nicole Williamson impression I have ever heard, its the only one.

  • @Bluemilk92
    @Bluemilk92 Год назад +2

    Hours of flax into bowstrings. I'm having horrible Runescape flashbacks.

  • @Runenmensch
    @Runenmensch Год назад

    There I was, thinking I couldn't like you more and now you share your love of Warhammer Fantasy Roleplay! Absolutely love it 😄
    Bummer that talk did get cut

  • @bunyslayer
    @bunyslayer Год назад +1

    Its always lovely when you have a guest, even if he should be muttering in a shed haha! (Also, it would be cool to hear some of your tabletop stories!)

  • @therealzilch
    @therealzilch Год назад

    Wonderfully simple and simply wonderful. As a string maker myself (for stringed instruments) I appreciate the worksmanship.
    cheers from rainy Vienna, Scott

  • @Festoniaful
    @Festoniaful Год назад +1

    Fun video Lindy! Can't wait to see a further attempt

  • @Waster_War_Boss
    @Waster_War_Boss Год назад +1

    Excellent video as always thank you

  • @DadofScience
    @DadofScience Год назад

    So that's pretty bloody remarkable for a crack at it for the first time. Bloody well done!

  • @aliceDarts
    @aliceDarts Год назад

    What am amazing video. I am so glad that this is my first time viewing this channel!

  • @LeBiggles
    @LeBiggles Год назад +7

    Me wondering why Lloyd uploaded a video at 1am but what does it matter, it's a proper Lloyd crafting video.

  • @teamidris
    @teamidris Год назад +2

    That moment when you find yourself explaining to the postman that it is flax and not the pelt of cousin It :o)

  • @mojom.9221
    @mojom.9221 Год назад +3

    Our Beige Saint has returned. Hello Again Lindybeige. Glad to see you again.

  • @egallagher41
    @egallagher41 Год назад

    Welcome back "Lindy" we missed you🤠

  • @siprus
    @siprus Год назад +1

    Authentic bowstrings were often coated with beeswax. Modern sorce often state that this is to protect the string from water, but it might also help to bind the strings together.

  • @gimmesomegod9999
    @gimmesomegod9999 Год назад

    Hey lindy I just watched your stoke Mandeville it was awesome I would really appreciate and enjoy more stuff like this also have been watching for years you are truly inspiring

  • @rickfordmorningstar130
    @rickfordmorningstar130 Год назад

    That you RP Warhammer absolutely makes my day.

  • @sirsydneysmith8847
    @sirsydneysmith8847 Год назад +5

    Love your videos Nikolas, some more WW2 tank videos? But what about your graphic novel, in search of Hannibal, even just an update would be nice.

    • @tommyteapot13
      @tommyteapot13 Год назад +1

      The script is finished, waiting on the art

  • @rubenskiii
    @rubenskiii Год назад

    Lovely little backyard, can't remmember seeing it before.

  • @Zarealdark
    @Zarealdark Год назад

    Just throwing this out there... I want that sweater. IT MUST BE MINE!!! Lol

  • @casinferneycf45
    @casinferneycf45 Год назад

    I love it! This is fantasic.

  • @joshuawalker301
    @joshuawalker301 Год назад +10

    Seeing him with friends it's always great. 😃

  • @pierauspitz
    @pierauspitz Год назад +2

    Hello!
    What an interesting experiment!
    It seems to me that your thread would benefit being spun much tighter. Probably using a drop spindle would help. Perfectly period technology, and one could easily imagine the archer's wife spinning thread for his bowstring in-between spinning for cloth.
    I must also say that the build up reminds me a lot of shoemaker's thread. That too could be done more easily by stacking threads, and holding them around a fixed point (hook or nail or tree branch), and rolling the threads, under mild tension, on your thigh with you flat hand to furl them together. Once again, it would help making a much tighter and stronger string than free-handed method. There is a very nice video made by a Lausanne shoe maker showing the process.
    Given the similarities in technology, I wonder if a bow string would also have been waxed or pitched, like shoemaker thread, for cohesion and weather resistance.
    I mean, a well spun and pitched 6 thread waxed end is rather thin, and virtually unbreakable by hand (it would cut you before braking)....

  • @Pentagon6519
    @Pentagon6519 Год назад +2

    When doing the rope making part put the loop over a nail in a board. Allows you to keep some tension on it and allows full use of both hands.

  • @arthurb6882
    @arthurb6882 Год назад

    Haven’t watched the video but assuming there is a joke about history in it somewhere, I would just like to say in advance that I laughed SO HARD at that joke that I was CRYING, and the reason that I laughed so hard is that I know A LOT about history and therefore understood it

  • @williamreed9590
    @williamreed9590 Год назад

    Thanks for your footage. I was recently tasked with making a primative bow and string at an American Mountain Man event. It worked marvelously.

  • @miinyoo
    @miinyoo Год назад

    I honestly could listen to you both banter for hours while doing something equally tedious and be right as a rain cloud.

  • @Oldo
    @Oldo Год назад +1

    2 friends having fun, love it

  • @jasontuck-smith3896
    @jasontuck-smith3896 Год назад

    Enjoyed this and for a first attempt I think you did well!

  • @DmncPalm
    @DmncPalm Год назад

    Thank you for the video, Sir Beige

  • @simonspacek3670
    @simonspacek3670 Год назад +3

    Just two guys, making a bowstring with things they have laying around. A lot of "I have no idea what am I doing but it looks like it is going in the right direction" energy and I love it.
    Oh, and thank you for that video, just last week I was thinking about what should I use when my bowstring snaps, so now I know.
    I would also add some beeswax on the string, just to protect it from water and also to keep those small things on it and maker of my bow advised to cover center with another string to protect the string from damage from arrows, but those are just cosmetic details.

    • @gavin5410
      @gavin5410 Год назад

      What do you mean by cover center with another string? Like to wrap a string around it?

    • @simonspacek3670
      @simonspacek3670 Год назад

      @@gavin5410 Exactly. The guy I bought my bow from advised to wrap it with any waxed string, he used one he otherwise uses for sewing leather. He said that then the string will survive at least twice as long.

  • @nadrinicuprija4406
    @nadrinicuprija4406 Год назад

    Just as i started to make my own bowstrings, this pops up. Love it :D

  • @gilliandrysdale5306
    @gilliandrysdale5306 Год назад

    so interesting never realised there was so much work went into making a bowstring ❤🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

  • @wobblysauce
    @wobblysauce Год назад +3

    Sent you enough for a bow string… and many attempts.

  • @dandelion4206
    @dandelion4206 Год назад +1

    Keep up the good work lindy ❤

  • @Pillowcase
    @Pillowcase Год назад +6

    For the first 15 minutes I was thinking a violin bow, and was slightly surprised Lindy also plays violin.