Making a tar kiln the old fashioned way

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  • Опубликовано: 27 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 29

  • @patrickvaughan432
    @patrickvaughan432 2 года назад +2

    Underrated channel. Glad I came across it. Keep it up!

  • @RAMUNI-Viking
    @RAMUNI-Viking 3 года назад +4

    Thats is an awesome and truly inspiring video. Thank for your time and effort to show and share this

    • @gustavthane2233
      @gustavthane2233  3 года назад +1

      Ramuni I really appreciate you saying so. Thank you. It was truly rewarding to do it as well.

  • @darkdoctoruploads7484
    @darkdoctoruploads7484 3 года назад +3

    I had a very stressful day and came across this absolutely breathtakingly shot and informative video that really made me feel alot calmer and better as a result so all I can say is thank you. This is very very well made and something I never knew I wanted to learn about but I'm so glad I did

    • @gustavthane2233
      @gustavthane2233  2 года назад +2

      Thank you, it means a lot to hear that it helped you to calm down on a stressful day. That was one of my main concerns when making the videos; to welcome people into the woods to experience the fullness of beginnings.

  • @nobodxy
    @nobodxy Год назад +1

    Ah i can smell this video. Love it

  • @danwoodward3786
    @danwoodward3786 11 месяцев назад +3

    The word that's inside the kiln has to sweat not burn that in turn releases the resin

  • @ponderous_tomes
    @ponderous_tomes Год назад +1

    love your channel, i hope you upload more soon !

  • @tomt9543
    @tomt9543 2 года назад +3

    Great stuff! First time seeing your channel, but very impressed! I’m very interested in the old ways of making what they used to refer to as “naval stores” in eastern North Carolina, once a hotbed of this industry making pine tar, turpentine etc.. Just last night I was watching several Mikko Snellman videos, a couple of which dealt with recreating this type of product. Thank you for taking us along on your journey of discovery! Subbed!

    • @gustavthane2233
      @gustavthane2233  2 года назад +3

      Thank you for your kind words, I am happy you liked the video. It was a challenge to start from the beginning this way and not use a metal bucket but is was so worth it. That feeling of having done something with your bare hands is really special. I hope to get the time to make a few more projects that can be shared here soon.

  • @act.13.41
    @act.13.41 2 года назад +1

    I can smell it from here in my mind.

  • @anonalpaca2513
    @anonalpaca2513 Год назад

    Thankyou! I ended up using this as an art reference.

    • @gustavthane2233
      @gustavthane2233  Год назад +2

      Sweet, I think of it as art as well, good to hear you used it that way. 👍

  • @seabournewolf2298
    @seabournewolf2298 Год назад

    Why use a pile of dead wood if it’s not even fat wood? Wouldn’t fresher wood produce more tar?

    • @gustavthane2233
      @gustavthane2233  Год назад +4

      It is not just dead wood, it is as fat as it gets. The inner core of old stubs, all non-fat wood has rotten away and only the fatest is left. Fresh fatwood has alot of water in it which cools down the fire and mix into the tar, it might be more liquid but not more tar.

    • @Aethelvlad
      @Aethelvlad Год назад +3

      Fat wood is made when a tree dies and sends all its sap to the dead trunk.

  • @foopadr9076
    @foopadr9076 2 года назад

    Ta på handskar! Mina fingrar fick massa sår och blev sjuk av bakterieinfektion. Har alltid handskar på mig nu.

  • @TheLordSod
    @TheLordSod 6 месяцев назад

    It's not supposed to burn. This is very wrong

    • @gustavthane2233
      @gustavthane2233  6 месяцев назад

      Yeah I know, I let too much oxygen into the bottom leading to fire and far to thick black tar. In my second attempt I handled this problem. That is what part 2 is all about. Check it out at ruclips.net/video/EXPi-NLDSYo/видео.htmlsi=Y-V6RAi1XveBeNWT

  • @camerondaiss304
    @camerondaiss304 2 года назад +2

    Nine minutes and 30 seconds in when you're stripping bark from a standing tree; You've removed so much bark-an amount in length taller than you are even-that this tree will not survive. When taking bark from living trees you should never take more than a palm sized amount maximum and depending on the tree and influences even that can be iffy. This is a huge, gross impact on the environment and is not sustainable living.

    • @gustavthane2233
      @gustavthane2233  2 года назад +3

      I can hear that you did not grow up on a farm. Sustainable living is not the same as refraining from harvest. I have spoken to the landowner and that particular tree is due to become firewood within a few years so the death of it is not a problem. It is always important to have permission when making an impact on the land. In Sweden we have an ancient law called allemansrätten (the right of all men) saying that a person is allowed to pick berries, mushrooms and firewood etc. in the woods even without permission from a landowner, we may even set up a tent and sleep there for one night without any sort of permission. Harvesting birch bark however, which is an activity that can be done on the lowest few meters of the trunk (without harming the trees at all) is not included in that law, such a harvest may only be done by whoever got permission from the owner. It is only the outer layer of the bark that is harvested, the inner bark normally keeps the tree alive.

    • @camerondaiss304
      @camerondaiss304 2 года назад +2

      @@gustavthane2233 I feel like there's a miscommunication here....there's nothing wrong with harvesting. I'm not saying don't harvest. I'm saying, you're the only person who knew this tree was slated for firewood in the coming years prior to my comment. So anyone watching would think it's acceptable to take that amount of bark from any tree and think there wouldn't be consequences for the trees. I'm trying to say you should have mentioned that so others don't replicate the amount you took.

    • @gustavthane2233
      @gustavthane2233  2 года назад +3

      @@camerondaiss304 Yes, you are correct. I failed to describe that this is not allowed in the average forest. I must have misunderstood you. This tree is not dead yet, but it may well die, and therefore I needed permission from the landowner, and I was not clear about that in this video. I scaled off a whole lot of bark in the early spring, that may be harmful to the tree. However, what I also tried to say was that this amount of outer bark harvest is not the main problem for the survival of the tree, the time of year is. If harvested a month later or two, just after the leaves fully comes out the outer bark would scale of with a snap and the tree would normally survive. It is illegal to harvest someone else trees but it is normally not deadly to the tree.

    • @annanelson6830
      @annanelson6830 Год назад +2

      Thanks for this discussion. I wondered if the tree would survive the removal of outer bark when there was clearly inner bark remaining.

  • @foopadr9076
    @foopadr9076 2 года назад +1

    Seems like alot of waste. Am sure there is a more efficiant way. Must be.

  • @foopadr9076
    @foopadr9076 2 года назад

    I like the idea.. but I can't make a road using this tutorial lol. I want at least 1 or 10 kilo for my roof man. Comon! You can do better.

    • @wulf_95
      @wulf_95 2 года назад +1

      Metal bucket with holes in the bottom. Or, better yet, look up Advoko Makes and his video on Bushcraft Oil. Switch out the 5 gal bucket for a big metal drum if you want even more oil from a single load.