View Full Version : Oriental Bushcraft ??
moontanboy
20-06-2012, 11:07 PM
Evening All,
Having grown up watching many kung fu / martial arts movies I have a fondness for most things japanese and chinese things too.
However this got me wondering if anyone on here knows of any bushcraft techniques that are specifically from the Orient ?
I guess the japanese had a monopoly on forging and tempering the hardest steel, katana's (swords) made from steel folded 900 times etc.. but there must be more techniques and skills that have originated in the East ??
4867
FishyFolk
20-06-2012, 11:18 PM
Evening All,
Having grown up watching many kung fu / martial arts movies I have a fondness for most things japanese and chinese things too.
However this got me wondering if anyone on here knows of any bushcraft techniques that are specifically from the Orient ?
I guess the japanese had a monopoly on forging and tempering the hardest steel, katana's (swords) made from steel folded 900 times etc.. but there must be more techniques and skills that have originated in the East ??
4867
I lived in south Asia and South-east Asia for 3 years. Can't think of anything that really is not quite universal. Many people there still live a life style that by itself is bushcraft. Like my mother in law in the North west of Thailand, who still makes her own charcoal for cooking. If we went out for a walk, you could be very sure that my wife would come home with her pockets, or bag full of edible wild stuff. And they both sent the farang (i.e the foreigner) in front of them on the path in case there where snakes...lol
Sollutions to problems are most often quite similar world wide, but perhaps with a local twist.
moontanboy
20-06-2012, 11:41 PM
Many people there still live a life style that by itself is bushcraft.
Hi FF, wise words as always.
AdrianRose
20-06-2012, 11:51 PM
I had a fondness for traps and snares some time ago (it's ok, I had some counselling and therapy and I'm ok now!) and as is my usual stance, I researched the heck out of them.
Apparently there are more animal traps indigenous to Asia than any other continent on the planet.
There's also that bloody clever friction fire lighting that RM did with the bamboo!!
Ade.
bronskimac
21-06-2012, 08:34 PM
Cooking with a wok on a small fire?
Hushwing
21-06-2012, 09:05 PM
And they both sent the farang (i.e the foreigner) in front of them on the path in case there where snakes...lol.
Brilliant! :happy-clapping: Did they tell you or did they let you just go ahead....
biker-bri
21-06-2012, 10:41 PM
[Q And they both sent the farang (i.e the foreigner) in front of them on the path in case there where snakes...lol
Sollutions to problems are most often quite similar world wide, but perhaps with a local twist.[/QUOTE]
You know the old saying ONCE BITTEN - DEAD
FishyFolk
22-06-2012, 09:00 AM
Brilliant! :happy-clapping: Did they tell you or did they let you just go ahead....
Oh they just let me go ahead...
Also interesting when i wen't fishing in the south part of Thailand, just north of Phuket/Khao Lak. The accomodation was a bamboo hut on a timber raft floating in the middle of the lake.
The guide told me not to worry about snakes at night because the king cobra, could not swim. At that precise moment, a king cobra was swimming behind him on the lake...
48744875
FishyFolk
22-06-2012, 09:09 AM
Oh, just remebered something special for the area. The production of silk straight from the worm and onto finished fabric. My mother in law does that. To do that they boil the silkworms, and when they are spent, alll the silk thread is out, the worms are ready to eat :-)
moontanboy
22-06-2012, 11:04 AM
Thanks for sharing your pics and ideas so far.
It's not quite Bushcraft but I did find out last night that "Char Siu Pao" (Riceflour steamed buns with sweet pork inside) are the chinese equivalent of Cornish Pasties for Tin Miners.
They take large buns in their pack lunches and were traditionally used by chinese builders.
4876
moontanboy
19-07-2012, 03:19 PM
Cooking with a wok on a small fire?
I picked up a cheap 8inch wok in Tesco for about £6 the other week!
Now I can have Betty Crocker shake to make pancakes for brekkie next time out in the wilds :p
FishyFolk
19-07-2012, 03:35 PM
Been thinking of getting one of those cheap woks with a collapsible handle for cooking on fire embers :-)
I am surprised we don't have one in the house allready as my familly is Thai :-)
But we use electricity for cooking...
moontanboy
19-07-2012, 04:02 PM
The one I got has a wooden handle which I might take off and attack with a drill to save a bit of weight.
It's like this one -
http://www.tesco.com/direct/27cm-carbon-steel-wok/213-8655.prd?skuId=213-8655&pageLevel=
but smaller.
They don't do international delivery though unfortunately
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.2.5 Copyright © 2024 vBulletin Solutions Inc. All rights reserved.