How to get started in Stick making by a Shillelagh maker

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  • Опубликовано: 14 окт 2024
  • Advice to people new to stick making , the first steps. A chat by Shillelagh maker Francis McCaffrey www.mccaffreycrafts.com

Комментарии • 40

  • @petercope3263
    @petercope3263 3 года назад +3

    love watching your videos Francis , and thanks for all your advise , i have been making Hazel sticks for around three years now since Hazel appears to be plentiful where i live in the UK . and i agree patients is or was rather the first big lesson for me there are far more things to learn than you first imagine with this hobby , but like you say take it slowly and enjoy it . thanks again for your time and valuable knowledge that you freely give . i have found in my short experience that some of my best work appeared to just evolve into far more interesting pieces of work just by studying the individual sticks own shape rather than trying to force it into something it isnt ha works for me anyway . much thanks again. from UK.

    • @FrancisMcCaffrey5
      @FrancisMcCaffrey5  3 года назад +2

      Hazel sticks are lovely too. Glad you follows my ramblings

  • @whitetail600
    @whitetail600 4 года назад +3

    Thanks for your insight Francis! Love your videos and the custom sticks you make! I started carving some sticks last year and was hooked. Now I have started my own business a few months ago here in Missouri, USA. I appreciate you sharing your beautiful work and talents! Take care!

  • @Outrider74
    @Outrider74 4 года назад

    What you said was absolutely true. Having done this for about three years, I wholeheartedly agree that patients definitely needs to be utilized

    • @FrancisMcCaffrey5
      @FrancisMcCaffrey5  4 года назад +1

      So true most give up too soon because they want instant results it took me 10 years to make this a sustainable business model.

  • @playeroflife
    @playeroflife Год назад +1

    Hi. We just found your channel. Fantastic content and your a true craftsman. I’m on the look out for a new hobby/passion and for yrs I have always admired Irish walking sticks and would love to start making them. I think having the beautiful wood in my shed and working on revealing the beautiful stick from within it. I’m in Dublin and I see you use hawthorn. Would you have any recommendations on where to source some wood? Ty and I subd

    • @FrancisMcCaffrey5
      @FrancisMcCaffrey5  Год назад

      You have to cut your own and wait 2 or 3 years to season

  • @leeterry7965
    @leeterry7965 3 года назад

    Thank you Francis for your time and knowledge learning loads from you and will keep watching your video's

  • @tolerhousecookies69
    @tolerhousecookies69 4 месяца назад

    Couple of days ago I got my chance to get my hands on some Holly and pretty much for the time being I'm just leaving it be letting it dry out so I can get started on some projects since I've been reading up on some stuff about Holly trees but yeah 👍👍

  • @waynehaylett6662
    @waynehaylett6662 Год назад

    Great video how many sticks per year is a good amount to cut to keep production following,? Been thinking bout setting up small part time hobby with bit of income maybe,hazel sticks is bit easyer for me

  • @wascalywabbit
    @wascalywabbit 3 года назад +1

    I have a project idea and would like advice.. We have all see a sapling where a vine has grown around it making a spiral and the tree grows around it...
    I would like to wrap one with 4 gauge brass wire and am trying the figure the best way to tightly wrap it for the sapling to grow around it,then wait/watch for the desired look and dig it out of the pot,and have a very special cane for myself

  • @DeanBritton
    @DeanBritton 4 года назад +1

    I made all these mistakes haha went out late spring years ago to cut 2 blackthorne (took 3 days out to find 1 tree so had to make me dad one from a Hawthorne) rushed to make it, slight curve in it (had no idea about straightening sticks) but figured it added character. Couple years later i went to gather some more in mid summer - one is split down its full 5ft! The other two may be salvageable when i can get time to look at them. Was lucky to have the original i made lately, needs a little maintenance but really helped me stay mobile after breaking me ribs 6 weeks ago (I'm still cautious on the stairs!)

    • @joegrande4848
      @joegrande4848 2 года назад

      I hear December is a good time to cut. First check wood to see an make sure there's no green. To make sure it's seasoned. Also find a stick an when going out in December use a stick to check by gently tap the tree to see if wood is good. If the wood a good ping sound when tapping on trunk an up the length of bush. If there's no ping sound when tapping on Bush then it's probably starting to either rot or the wood is not seasoned. Unseasoned wood will not have a ping sound so if it has no ping sound when tapping don't use it. Also peeling a small piece of bark off as well

  • @mattmorrison9379
    @mattmorrison9379 2 года назад

    Lots of maple in New Hampshire . When you say seasoned meaning drying it out? Edit you answered the question :). Very cool hobby sir i had no idea that the history of the shelialai goes back quite a bit.

  • @patrickskea6248
    @patrickskea6248 3 года назад +1

    I'm an American new but highly interested hobbiest in this field. Not looking to be a professional, and only using the "found" wood in my backyard. I have access to ash (many compromised by the emerald ash borer), some oak, and some maple. Having just "cleared out" my backyard of those wood trees, I wouldn't mind selling what I can produce (obviously without claiming them to be shillelaghs, and even offering disclaimers that they are no such thing and all locally sourced and personally tooled), but I have no idea what to do. Any advice you could offer would be appreciated.

    • @FrancisMcCaffrey5
      @FrancisMcCaffrey5  3 года назад

      Make sure you wait until the wood is seasoned before you start working on them. That’s the first piece of advice.

  • @jeffjones8285
    @jeffjones8285 2 года назад

    I have made wooden boken for years for my martial arts students and other practitioners, the two best species of wood for resilience and strength in America are hickory and locust (Osage orange)hickory being the best ,I have about 4 blackthorn (I think)I am now going to try my hand at walking sticks, enjoy your channel and contents. Master J.Jeff Jones 7th Dan Bushido karate.

  • @richardsumner4214
    @richardsumner4214 4 года назад

    A GOOD PLACE TO START !!! THANKS !

  • @eaglewolfff
    @eaglewolfff 3 года назад

    Thanks Francis for great advice. In my day to day work coppicing, I come across a lot of ash sticks which I could cut with a good base for handles - also thumbsticks. Would they be of any value?

  • @PIKEMASTER08
    @PIKEMASTER08 4 года назад

    Great advice in this video

  • @tonynapoli5549
    @tonynapoli5549 4 года назад

    Thanks for sharing Francis a Shillelagh yes it’s another piece of wood ! But in my opinion it’s not it’s Irish made in Ireland and has history behind it, thanks for your tips 👍 they are a talking piece and can be used as a tool 😊

    • @FrancisMcCaffrey5
      @FrancisMcCaffrey5  4 года назад

      I love my stick I use it for many things. Tend to carry it more and more often. I can understand more and more why people loved their sticks.

  • @joegrande4848
    @joegrande4848 2 года назад

    If blackthorn doesn't grow where you live, do research an take notes where you find how to grow blackthorn an try growing blackthorn. I looked up how to grow blackthorn so I'm going to try growing blackthorn try planting 1bush to start

  • @mikepaz8385
    @mikepaz8385 3 года назад

    Should the ends of the wood be sealed before or after the curing?

    • @mikepaz8385
      @mikepaz8385 3 года назад

      Nvm, I watched your video on seasoning the wood. Thank you for sharing

  • @Brainchild69
    @Brainchild69 Год назад

    How long should the stick be in relation to the height of the person wielding it?

    • @FrancisMcCaffrey5
      @FrancisMcCaffrey5  Год назад +1

      Easiest way is half your height with shoes on.

    • @robb4044
      @robb4044 Год назад

      @@FrancisMcCaffrey5 Great, thank you!

  • @Zionist-Occupied-Government
    @Zionist-Occupied-Government 2 года назад

    The biggest mistake I made is when I cut a massive bundle of mixed .. Blackthorn, Hawthorn, Hazel, Privet, Rhododendron .. and Holly. I put them in the middle of the loft where its nice and airy.. So around 5 years passed and I popped up to get a few down to set away making.. and the Holly just sort of crumbled in my hand ! .. Among the bundle there was a stick with a semi rotten block at the top, because they were mostly cut for one piece Knob handle Shillelagh style.. and this stick was infested with Woodworm beetle eggs and larvae .. The whole bundle was infested, but there was worse to be found . . because the wooden rafters in the attic were also badly infested too ! .. So a big lesson there for anyone who is planning on storing sticks in a house.. Make sure you keep them away from bare wood !!

    • @FrancisMcCaffrey5
      @FrancisMcCaffrey5  2 года назад

      That is your college education! Not all sticks make it.

  • @alexcheng1560
    @alexcheng1560 4 года назад

    Should post this on the Shillelagh Guild

  • @chriswashingtonbeats
    @chriswashingtonbeats 4 года назад +2

    Did my comment inspire this video?

    • @FrancisMcCaffrey5
      @FrancisMcCaffrey5  4 года назад +2

      Yes it did . Ask as much as you want helps me create these videos

    • @chriswashingtonbeats
      @chriswashingtonbeats 4 года назад +1

      @@FrancisMcCaffrey5 Oh nice thanks a lot. I've been getting interested in shillelaghs as my grandmother recently gave me her father's one and he was an Irish carpenter

    • @FrancisMcCaffrey5
      @FrancisMcCaffrey5  4 года назад +1

      Rhino Alestorm my father is also a carpenter I was born into the smell of wood. Trying to get my dad onto one of these videos he has a wealth of knowledge