Flint and Steel Kits
Anyone can make fire with matches or a cigarette lighter.
Flint and steel kits take the kind of skill
our forefathers had to have to survive.
It's impressive to watch, it's useful and it's a real
accomplishment to make fire using flint and steel kits.
How can I say it's useful making fire from flint and steel
kits, when matches and lighter are so easy?
Well you can run out of matches or they can get wet and become
useless. Instead of lighting, the head just breaks off or
smears down the side of the match box. And cigarette lighters
eventually run out of fuel, or they lose their flint.
This is where flint and steel firemaking kits come into their
own, because the flint is a large enough piece that it will
last for years many years.
The steel can be the back of your pocket knife or sheath knife,
or a special striker included in a commercial flint and steel
kit. It doesn't matter which.
All that matters is that you can make a strong spark, and
can drop the spark into some punk.
Punk is super-fine, tinder-dry combustable material, such as
charred cloth or the fluff from an electric laundry drying
machine (you collect some at home). The punk needs to be kept
in a completely airtight can or maybe a ziplock pouch.
You strike a spark into the punk and nurse that spark into a
tiny ember. Then, by blowing carefully on the ember, it becomes
a small flame. And the small flame is used to light your
tinder... very small dry twigs and leaves that will catch fire
immediately.
So now you know why people still buy flint and steel kits in
this twenty-first century. It's for the sense of
accomplishment, and as a back-up fire making system and the
link back to our pioneer forefathers (and their women) who made
fire every day using a tinder-box containing a flint and
steel.
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