Finding and Harvesting Fatwood - My Favorite FireStarter

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 5 сен 2024
  • Fatwood, lighter wood, sap wood, pitch wood, log lighter. You may have heard it called all kinds of things but, whatever you call it, it is about the best firestarter anywhere. Here's how I find and harvest this wonderful natural fire resource.
    I also want to recommend and offer my thanks to another channel, PA Bushcraft. Bill over there has some great videos and goes out of his way to help others who are just getting started. He really helped me during my first month on RUclips, so I would appreciate it if you checked him out. His channel is here:
    / pabushcraft
    Check out our sponsors and help support the channel:
    Sportsman's Guide: survivalonpurp...
    Klik Belt: survivalonpurp...
    Big Daddy Unlimited: survivalonpurp...
    *********************************************
    Please consider supporting this channel by using this link for all your Amazon shopping: Survivalonpurp...
    You can get a free audio book and free 30 day trial of Audible here: www.audibletria...
    Here are some Non-US Amazon links that support this channel:
    Amazon Canada: Survivalonpurp...
    Amazon UK: Survivalonpurp...
    Amazon Italia: Survivalonpurp...
    Amazon Germany: Survivalonpurp...
    Amazon France: Survivalonpurp...
    Amazon Spain: Survivalonpurp...
    Subscribe to this channel and get an update when new videos are posted:
    www.youtube.com...
    Twitter: / survivalscouter
    Facebook: / survivalonpurpose
    Instagram: / survivalonpurpose
    Website: SurvivalOnPurp...
    Thanks for watching Survival On Purpose.
    Remember:
    Survival is Not an Accident!
    Be Prepared
    ************************************************************************
    Survival On Purpose is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com

Комментарии • 258

  • @harrisquicksilver6595
    @harrisquicksilver6595 3 года назад +3

    Hey Brian, i also noticed that if a nail or screw has been driven into the tree, that also will cause a large build up of fatwood resin where the injury occurred to the tree.

  • @deusvult7559
    @deusvult7559 3 года назад +2

    In Mississippi we grew up calling it lighter knot. I'm lucky enough to have had lightning strike a loblolly pine in my back yard a few years back. Now there's an entire stump of fatwood at my disposal...should last for years.

  • @royphelps8084
    @royphelps8084 Год назад

    My aunt when I was a young child , lived off grid , gasoline-powered washing machine, kerosene refrigerator, lamps , Coleman lanterns , she liked for her family to whittle on cedar hearts , after they whittle figures, shed sweep up all the shavings and chunks , put some in little bags , put in dresser drawer, clothes closets, the rest was kept to start fires in a old king heater , but never start fires with pine or cedar in her cooking stove , didn't want either smell in her breads , she get live coals from the heater and start her kitchen stove . I remember granny doing close to the same things , everyone in that area was off grid back then .

  • @rkymtnhootowl7873
    @rkymtnhootowl7873 10 лет назад +1

    Thanks Brian, for showing how to find fatwood. I have used it before, but more by accident. Now I am an accident waiting to happen! LOL

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  10 лет назад +1

      I think I may be obsessed with it. Everywhere I go I'm kicking at stumps and sniffing wood. People stare and pull their children close.

  • @davidmorris5719
    @davidmorris5719 9 лет назад

    This video inspired me to go out in search of fatwood. Low and behold not 40 feet outside my backdoor was a nice 6 ft pine stump almost solid fatwood! Thanks man -- Your native Georgian friend, David. :):)

  • @prwoolrich
    @prwoolrich 9 лет назад +1

    Brian I admire your comments people who resort to bad language just lack a decent vocabulary in a way they should be pitied thank you for videos that matter and are constructive

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  9 лет назад

      PAUL WOOLRICH Thanks Paul. I defer to the famous words of Mister T...

  • @gregjones7874
    @gregjones7874 2 года назад +1

    Love it I do the same hear in so cal . Practic every day start 2 or 3 fires a day just to keep up the skill

  • @kpw528
    @kpw528 9 лет назад +8

    Great video as always, Bryan. You got lucky with that tree/stump. It looks like half punk wood and half fatwood. 2 great tinder types in one tree.

  • @csh6220
    @csh6220 2 года назад +1

    It's 2022 now and that piece of fatwood still has a lot of life in it! Love your videos.

    • @thatoneguy151
      @thatoneguy151 Год назад

      Its crazy how long he's used that piece of wood for

  • @parsons585
    @parsons585 7 лет назад

    Growing up in rural south Georgia during the 50's and early 60's I warmed my behind many times before an old fireplace or wood stove that had a bundle of fat lighter and firewood stacked close by! The smell of fat lighter to this day evokes memories of those by gone days! I was amazed when I started seeing small bundles of it for sale in some well known stores so I suppose the secret is out for people to start their fires in much fancier fire places than those I remember when the fire was to keep a room warm instead of just mainly to look at! Seeing you out there reminds me of being with my dad and granddad in the woods looking for fat lighter to take back to the house! Thanks!

  • @agrey8110
    @agrey8110 6 лет назад +2

    Thanks for the video. Found some premium FATWOOD here in California do to you man.
    This stuff is awsome over here, extremely volatile.

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  6 лет назад

      Nice

    • @agrey8110
      @agrey8110 6 лет назад

      @@SurvivalOnPurpose
      Video idea, you can do a review of fatwood from different parts of the country sent to you by your fans.
      I'm in from So. Cal.

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  6 лет назад +1

      That could be cool but I'd hate to ask people to pay postage AND send me such a precious substance ;-)

  • @csh6220
    @csh6220 6 лет назад

    It's 2018 now and you are still using the same fatwood you got in this video. I have watched all of your videos and love it every time you pull the fatwood out. The piece you use has another 20 years or so in it. Thanks Bryan. I know you are busy so don't feel like you need to respond to me. I know where your heart is.

  • @kongandbasses8732
    @kongandbasses8732 3 года назад

    Greetings from Germany, where we have pine trees and harvest fatwood, too.
    Fatwood translates to Kienspan in German language and was used to illuminate mines - and the houses of poor people who could not afford candles back in times.
    Miners held the Kienspan or fatwood stick with their teeth to see their working aerea in front of them while swinging the pick or the shovel.
    Pine tree translates to Kiefer in German language, some old people call it Kienbaum because of the Kienspan you are able to get from it.
    We use the same methods for finding and harvesting fatwood as everybody, I think. Windfall, broken branches and old stumps are the best sources here, as they are in the US of A.

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  3 года назад

      Thanks for the info

    • @kongandbasses8732
      @kongandbasses8732 3 года назад

      @@SurvivalOnPurpose
      You are allways welcome. Love your work. Stay blessed and keep on doing what you do.

  • @tarpbuddy5909
    @tarpbuddy5909 8 лет назад +1

    Been going through more of your earlier videos Bryan when I get some spare time here and there if there is such a thing as spare time. Excellent work on your videos and sharing your expertise and thoughts with others. There needs to be more people like you. I can tell you really enjoy doing this type of thing. Awesome channel. Keep up the excellent work. Dan

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  8 лет назад

      You are too kind Dan. By the way, have a very Merry Christmas

  • @hossenfeffer4115
    @hossenfeffer4115 3 года назад

    Thank you Brian from GA...
    You did a great job and I enjoyed learning more about the great outdoors through your efforts! May our great and mighty God continue to give you all that is needed to be a blessing to others.

  • @Cj12sings
    @Cj12sings 9 лет назад +9

    AWESOME!!! I will be sharing this with my Scout group!!

  • @livingsurvival
    @livingsurvival 10 лет назад +4

    Great video Brian, awesome demonstration!

  • @tiendaforense
    @tiendaforense 3 года назад

    Hi Bryan, great video as usual, not a bad idea keeping a chunk of that stuff in whatever bag you have, the best tinder ever.

  • @maritimespook
    @maritimespook 10 лет назад +6

    Fatwood is very plentiful here in Atlantic Canada,its a great resource,,,cheers my friend great video !

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  10 лет назад +1

      Man, I need to come up there. I'd really like to meet Mors Kochanski.

    • @maritimespook
      @maritimespook 10 лет назад +2

      anytime my friend lol i live in New Brunswick on the bay of fundy ,plus we have very thick boreal type forest here ,,,lots of adventure !!

  • @Missouriman68
    @Missouriman68 9 лет назад +1

    Thanks for sharing Brian. I let our Boy Scouts know that next month at the spring camporee we will be working on this skill. Thankfully our Scout ranch has a ton of pine trees.
    Eric

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  9 лет назад

      They should like that. Mine pretty much enjoy anything to do with fire.

  • @jonnyboat2
    @jonnyboat2 4 года назад

    We had a Pine blight a few years ago that is still killing off our pine trees here in Pennsylvania. My brother had hundreds of them die. Red Pine, Blue Spruce, Scotch, etc. He cut a lot of them down leaving stumps that are still there. I’m going to check them for fat wood. I have Red Pine in my backyard that died a couple years ago. I’ll check it first. Thanks Bryan.

  • @BloodEagle1583
    @BloodEagle1583 7 лет назад +5

    Lighter wood is easy to light during wet weather and burns hot. It's also very rot resistant and has been used for fence posts. It does vary in quality, with old stumps being about the best. Some seem to be almost pure resin.

  • @meelas010
    @meelas010 10 лет назад

    found fatwood for the first time the other day and guess what, it was just after a storm went through and put out my fire and of course made all the wood wet. My first proper wet weather fire - worked like a charm.

  • @BushcraftUkraineBV
    @BushcraftUkraineBV 10 лет назад +7

    Great demonstration, my friend... and you gotta love that music you got going at the beginning and end of your videos!))

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  10 лет назад

      Aw shucks. That's just little ole me strumming some chords I threw together. Glad you like it brother.

    • @meelas010
      @meelas010 10 лет назад

      any idea what the song is called? i like it

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  10 лет назад +2

      I haven't really named it. I just call it the Survival On Purpose theme. I'm glad you like it.

  • @LiveToSurvive
    @LiveToSurvive 5 лет назад

    Thought I had seen all your videos, but somehow I missed this one. One of the better fatwood videos I've seen. Most only show getting it from the knots. Growing up I never heard it called fatwwod. It was called pine heart. Finding stumps sticking up from the ground with rotten outer parts and solid inner "heart" was one of the things we did as a kid. We used them it for camping and lighting fires in the fireplace or wood stove. I'm in South Carolina, so we have pine trees everywhere.

  • @greatamericansurvival
    @greatamericansurvival 7 лет назад

    Very cool video, fatwood is one of our many blessings for scouts in Georgia.
    Thanks for taking the time.

  • @SignedSign
    @SignedSign 8 лет назад

    When you find a nice chunk of amber fatwood, then replace the plastic handle on you'r ferro rod to one made out of fatwood instead, then you always got ready to go tinder with you, and that little chunk of fatwood will light a lot of fires if you only take shavings out of it.
    The handle might be a bit sticky at first after you shape it into a handle, but just let it dry for a week and the surface will harden.
    The sap in the fatwood also makes it waterproof so it don't matter if it gets wet, just wipe it off and start scraping.
    In my area there is only pine trees so I use fatwood a lot, one of the best natural tinders there is.

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  8 лет назад

      +SignedSign I agree ruclips.net/video/umryvulwrVM/видео.html

    • @itsjustrenee1320
      @itsjustrenee1320 6 лет назад

      SignedSign you should harvest it & sell it to us plains dwellers. (Flat Landers)

  • @WhyamIstillwatchingyoutube
    @WhyamIstillwatchingyoutube 9 лет назад

    I cant believe it took me this long to find this video. Been watching for some time now and just came across this in your lists.
    This deserves another fresh review and a thumbs up & add to favorites. Thanks for the educational tips Brian.

  • @nancyjames6134
    @nancyjames6134 7 лет назад +5

    YAKMAN HERE !!
    Very informative video about finding the fatwood. !! I'm LOOKING FORWARD TO FINDING SOME Premium FATWOOD HERE IN MICHIGAN !!

  • @BarryDutton
    @BarryDutton 8 лет назад

    Saw your other fatwood related videos today, good stuff, inspired me to go into my 10 C's drawers and pull out my stick of fatwood and process it down to a couple of my other kits and whatnot, thanks Bryan.

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  8 лет назад +2

      +Barry Dutton sometimes I just scrape a piece and sniff it ;-)

  • @Macdivers1
    @Macdivers1 7 лет назад

    You have several vids on fatwood. I learned how to find and harvest it from you. Great channel! Thanks!

  • @nomadichunter2818
    @nomadichunter2818 3 года назад

    Thank you another use is as a bushcraft candle. I saw it on Felix Immlers RUclips channel. Very handy.

  • @donmoriarity5940
    @donmoriarity5940 2 года назад

    Enjoyed the video. Just what I was looking for. Thank you.

  • @ShlisaShell
    @ShlisaShell 7 лет назад

    Thank you for inviting me to your fire, I enjoyed it very much. Picked up a few good tips from ya also. Thumbs up!

  • @matthewgottung3182
    @matthewgottung3182 8 лет назад +3

    Thanks man, awesome video and very informative, I still look forward to checking for your new videos everyday, it's become part of my daily routine! Also I love that Glock hat, must have!!!

  • @glockensig
    @glockensig 8 лет назад

    I am going hunting Fatwood this Spring!!

  • @csh6220
    @csh6220 8 лет назад

    I get fatwood in downed pine trees from the branches, close to the trunk. I have boxes of fatwood 2 to 5 inches in diameter and up to a foot long LOADED with fatwood. Resin is so hard that chopping with hatchet takes a long time. I now use a saw. I am in Ky., and it's easy to find. The branches are rotted away, and the good stuff remains on the trunk of the tree.

  • @davidrogers182
    @davidrogers182 5 лет назад

    Great information! I love using fat wood!

  • @davidbirmingham6462
    @davidbirmingham6462 5 лет назад

    In FL we call it fatlighter . I love the stuff

  • @josephgkrestan3044
    @josephgkrestan3044 7 лет назад

    Greatest video I've found one getting fat wood for survival storage, emergency auto & other emergency kits. Thanks!

  • @TRV550
    @TRV550 9 лет назад

    Nice video Brian, Enjoyed watching. You can't beat fatwood and the price is even better. Enjoy & be safe !

  • @dcriley65
    @dcriley65 4 года назад

    I'm a city boy, but I enjoy your posts. Anyway let's cut to the chase. One of my aunt's was a Moonshisiser
    the sheriff tasted the piss jan 1959

  • @BrosephRussell
    @BrosephRussell 8 лет назад

    one of the best demonstration on finding fatwood thanks

  • @michaelbrunner6654
    @michaelbrunner6654 4 года назад

    Great information, we just don't have many pines around here.

  • @MiltonNGreeneIII
    @MiltonNGreeneIII 2 года назад

    Great video. Thanks for sharing.

  • @bashfulbrother
    @bashfulbrother 9 лет назад

    Brian, I found you by accident, but, man, I love your videos.

  • @habaz7838
    @habaz7838 10 лет назад

    I live in GA too, I was just about to start digging around on how to find fatwood. Thanks!

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  10 лет назад

      Greg Baker I think Georgia Fatwood is the best. Where do you live in Georgia? I'm in Douglasville, west of Atlanta. - Bryan

    • @habaz7838
      @habaz7838 10 лет назад

      Survival On Purpose I'm near Augusta

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  10 лет назад

      You should be able to find some fatwood there. I know there are lots of pine trees out your way.

    • @habaz7838
      @habaz7838 10 лет назад

      Oh there are, I have been watching alot of videos recently and been hearing fatwood repeated often enough. I just hadn't seen a video explaining where to get it. It was on my list of "things to look up". Now I've marked an item off the list and moved it to the list of "things to go do".

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  10 лет назад

      Pretty soon you can move it to "things to burn", which is one of my favorite lists ;-)

  • @nutmegger1957
    @nutmegger1957 10 лет назад

    Free is always good......and you are out in the woods. I'm with ya on that. On the other hand...........I like to order a big bag of Fatwood that someone ELSE has gone and gotten. "I' thought that most of the indiginous folks used to gather most of their Fatwood from the roots of a fallen tree. Interesting to see it harvested from the trunk of the tree. Useful "survival tip,"........... thanks!

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  10 лет назад

      I always heard about the root s too, but this just seems easier. Not that I'm afraid of a shovel. No sir, I can lay down right next to one and go to sleep.

  • @yoopersurvival
    @yoopersurvival 10 лет назад +1

    I have looked for years, I can not find it up here, thanks for the ideas, I'm not giving up. I have found some stumps color is right, no smell, and does not take a light easy. just not sure we have any up. it should be here lots of dead pines from the logging. take care my brother

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  10 лет назад

      It's weird. I kicked around on about a dozen promising stumps the other day and found some promising looking, un-rotten wood; but when I cut into it it was just wood, no resin. Then I found an area that looked like it had been burned and there was a whole stump full of fatwood. I went back in later with a saw and axe and packed the whole thing out. Maybe I'll make a video about it.

    • @adamwilson4834
      @adamwilson4834 6 лет назад

      Look at some of the old white pine stumps you'll find in your area from the old clearcuts. They haven't weathered for over 100 years for no reason.

  • @levicowan8178
    @levicowan8178 8 лет назад

    Great video. Fatwood is a truly amazing woods resource.

  • @sonyvegasfxvideos
    @sonyvegasfxvideos 4 года назад

    >200 subscriber giveaway
    >Currently 149k
    Good on ya mate 😊👍

  • @PeterNordBushcraft
    @PeterNordBushcraft 6 лет назад

    Awesome survival skill to know what fat wood is. Thanks I love finding fat wood and starting fires with it.

  • @keefercaid-loos5742
    @keefercaid-loos5742 3 года назад

    Great video! Very informative

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  3 года назад

      Glad it was helpful! This is when I got the piece I am still using in videos today.

  • @mikemaners4411
    @mikemaners4411 9 лет назад

    Great vid and attitude, Bravo from Montreal, Canada!

  • @KennethKramm
    @KennethKramm 10 лет назад +2

    Hi Brian, Useful information, nice demo. Georgia has a similar climate to east Texas, so much of what you say relates.... Plenty of dead pine trees here. ATB, Ken

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  10 лет назад +1

      Except, let me guess, the ones in Texas are bigger, right? Thanks Ken. Yeah, your videos make me feel right at home. Did you finally get some snow this year? A friend from church moved to the Dallas area and he said they got a lot.

    • @KennethKramm
      @KennethKramm 10 лет назад +1

      Survival On Purpose No snow where we live about 60 miles northwest of Houston.

    • @SeaBeagal
      @SeaBeagal 10 лет назад

      KennethKramm Are you towards Bryan/College Station?

    • @KennethKramm
      @KennethKramm 10 лет назад

      Texas Chevy Closer to Conroe, not too far from College Station

    • @SeaBeagal
      @SeaBeagal 10 лет назад

      KennethKramm Ok nice. I have some property on Hwy6 off 290. Not to far from where you are. I live in the Clear Lake area though.

  • @timmygilbert1371
    @timmygilbert1371 Год назад

    Great info . Learn something new everyday :)

  • @Indianartifact
    @Indianartifact 3 года назад

    Very informative, I appreciate the information and will definitely know what I’m looking for next time I’m out in the forest. Can’t wait to build a fire with some. Thank you!

  • @752brickie
    @752brickie 3 года назад

    Great video!

  • @jorgearroyo6881
    @jorgearroyo6881 7 лет назад

    Great video.

  • @Cands528
    @Cands528 10 лет назад

    Oh I miss the hat. Good video and information. I like how you explain things so the common man can understand.

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  10 лет назад

      Which hat? the Boy Scout with the paracord band or the one my son calls an "old man hat"? And thanks for the kind words. I guess I'm just a common man myself. Although I have been called peculiar too.

  • @Hungrybird474
    @Hungrybird474 Год назад +1

    Yeah man , fat wood . Good to have

  • @nutmegger1957
    @nutmegger1957 10 лет назад

    P.S.: Suggestion: Try holding your knife still, and moving the fire starter stick across the blade. the blade staying in place, helps the directional aspect of the pieces of flint.

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  10 лет назад

      I know...whether it's my knife or my ferro rod, that just doesn't work as well for me.

  • @HighCarbonSteelLove
    @HighCarbonSteelLove 10 лет назад

    Great video, Brian!

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  10 лет назад

      HighCarbonSteel Love Thanks Dave! I like me some fatwood ;-)

  • @jeger2610
    @jeger2610 9 лет назад

    Found in Maine too!

  • @trevorfillmore698
    @trevorfillmore698 10 лет назад +1

    the first time i heard called fat wood was on you tube here its called pitch wood good video.

  • @billyjoedenny
    @billyjoedenny 10 лет назад +1

    love the turpentine smell of the fat wood..
    ..bill

  • @ScrambledO
    @ScrambledO 9 лет назад

    Nice video and demonstration. Gonna be taking a trip to a but of a pine forrest in the next week or so... I hope to grab some nice fatwood!
    Thanks for the in formation.
    -ScrambledO

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  9 лет назад

      I'm glad you liked it. Good luck finding some fatwood.

    • @whitneybennett9045
      @whitneybennett9045 9 лет назад

      +Survival On Purpose I have some and it's fantasticalmost magical, wait, wait...yes it is magical

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  9 лет назад

      It is the stuff dreams are made of.

    • @whitneybennett9045
      @whitneybennett9045 9 лет назад

      It's somewhat like heaven on earth

  • @kcmusic1maker
    @kcmusic1maker 10 лет назад

    very insightful!!! thank so much

  • @joesanders6898
    @joesanders6898 8 лет назад

    Awesome video. Educational and informative.

  • @tulsarobgee5016
    @tulsarobgee5016 9 лет назад

    Thanx for sharing

  • @frostysoutdoors4135
    @frostysoutdoors4135 9 лет назад

    thanks for the video lots of pine trees up here thank you again review this process

  • @Gungeek
    @Gungeek 7 лет назад

    really liked the video :) I know what I'm looking for next time I go in the woods.

  • @eqlzr2
    @eqlzr2 9 лет назад

    Enjoyed your vid. Unfortunately, out here on the Left Coast, you can't even pull a leaf off a tree in a state park/forest without risk of getting cited by a state conservation officer, let alone actually chopping wood.

  • @PrairieJournals
    @PrairieJournals 7 лет назад

    I had no idea. Thank you.

  • @themiwoodsman7222
    @themiwoodsman7222 10 лет назад +1

    great vid Brian !

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  10 лет назад +1

      Thanks John. I may have said it before, but I like me some fatwood!

  • @backyardsurvivalist5039
    @backyardsurvivalist5039 7 лет назад

    Thanks.

    • @Kube_Dog
      @Kube_Dog 7 лет назад

      I'm sorry you're having trouble finding fat wood. Try viagra. Good luck surviving in your back yard. If it gets to be too much, go inside and make a sammich and watch a little TV.

  • @tcemedic100
    @tcemedic100 10 лет назад

    Awesome info, and I see your're a Glock Guy also...I will be getting the Glock42 for my spring summer CCW. keep up the awesome work.

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  10 лет назад

      Yeah, I work with a guy who is connected with Glock. The new .380 is pretty cool. Thanks.

  • @Standswithabeer
    @Standswithabeer 9 лет назад

    Most Excellent! Thank you!

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  9 лет назад

      StandsWithABeer And there is still a LOT of fatwood left on that stump. But I'm not telling where it is ;-)

  • @ApexHerbivore
    @ApexHerbivore 7 лет назад

    Good vid, cheers

  • @InFltSvc
    @InFltSvc 7 лет назад

    Thank you for sharing your knowledge!

  • @stanwebb2272
    @stanwebb2272 6 лет назад

    How about the Christmas Tree that most throw out after the holiday season.........????? And for tender the pine needles work well... if you have to just rub them between 2 rocks to make a near powder.......

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  6 лет назад

      You might like this video ruclips.net/video/jF-sKVIGUac/видео.html

  • @hogkillerjp
    @hogkillerjp 10 лет назад

    great video good info thanks

  • @T.A.B.Videos
    @T.A.B.Videos 10 лет назад +1

    Great info, thanks for sharing.

  • @banjomarkintexas
    @banjomarkintexas 6 лет назад

    been watchin you for a while now... finally subed n ... great info on alot of various items... love it !!

  • @whitneybennett9045
    @whitneybennett9045 9 лет назад

    awesome!

  • @SimpleAdventuresLLMSX
    @SimpleAdventuresLLMSX 8 лет назад

    I use to carry a couple of fatwood sticks and matches with me when I head out into the woods or weekend camps but now I just decided what the heck was I thinking... now a box of UCO titansport matches sits in my backpack instead of carrying couple of stuff.

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  8 лет назад +4

      +Louis Lee You're not getting me to abandon my fatwood. Never!

  • @outdoorsnlfishinghunting6174
    @outdoorsnlfishinghunting6174 8 лет назад

    awesome video! Really enjoy your content!

  • @trondmariushorpestad5348
    @trondmariushorpestad5348 8 лет назад

    I don`t smell anything :) :) :) :) Great video....!!!!

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  8 лет назад

      +Trond “Villmarksmannen” Marius I love the smell of fatwood.

  • @PitFireOutdoors
    @PitFireOutdoors 10 лет назад

    Nice!!

  • @kennethrubio2832
    @kennethrubio2832 8 лет назад

    Thanks. Very informative.

  • @BigCrazyOutdoorAdventures
    @BigCrazyOutdoorAdventures 7 лет назад

    Thank you for the explanation!

  • @jamesgosling3076
    @jamesgosling3076 7 лет назад

    nice

  • @MrBartoriginal
    @MrBartoriginal 9 лет назад

    Chuckle!!! Boy the woodpeckers are getting choosy now days ... don't want to do that much work....!!!

  • @itsjustrenee1320
    @itsjustrenee1320 6 лет назад

    We don't have pines in the Texas panhandle. I'm wondering what we can use in place of fatwood & pine needles for tinder. Since juniper is aromatic I was wondering if juniper stumps may have these qualities.

  • @wyattearp3897
    @wyattearp3897 8 лет назад

    The stuff that makes it burn and makes fat wood is a thing called Turpentine.

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  8 лет назад +1

      +wyatt earp Yep. Or at least it's what they make turpentine out of. I'm not sure. I just call it the good stuff.

  • @knifeknifego3323
    @knifeknifego3323 10 лет назад

    Cool video. I am in Gorgia also, im going to try these techniques to look for some fat wood. Do you have any videos reviewing your axe?

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  10 лет назад

      Always good to hear from a fellow Georgian. As for the axe, as a matter of fact...Wetterlings Hunters Axe Review Survival Tools

    • @knifeknifego3323
      @knifeknifego3323 10 лет назад

      Cool im going to check it out. Im in the buford area.

    • @SurvivalOnPurpose
      @SurvivalOnPurpose  10 лет назад

      Right up the road. I did a job a few weeks ago at the old Tannery Building in downtown Buford.

  • @MrMrsregor
    @MrMrsregor 9 лет назад

    thank you for the good video! that looks like the bark of black pine. is there a type of pine that is better than others?

  • @mesquiteguy121
    @mesquiteguy121 4 года назад

    I live in s.w. Texas kinda hard to find fat wood here.

  • @tikkidaddy
    @tikkidaddy 7 лет назад

    Brian. I moved from NC to TN, and in NC fatwood is easy. Here, I live in an apartment and there isn't one pine for at least two miles away. Trying to avoid store bought. Can you suggest a reliable source that isn't reselling the store stuff??

  • @bulldogvapor350
    @bulldogvapor350 9 лет назад

    What part of georgia are you from? I saw your video on hiking blood mountain. I've driven through there quite a few times. Great ride!