Month: August 2022 (Page 2 of 4)

The Bird Guy

Found the next course Id be interested in doing.

Bird language with Andrew Turbill

Australian birds have 10 vocal expressions/categories

Alarm, ground predator alarm, aerial predator alarm, annoyance , territorial, courtship, mimicry, aggression , begging, contact calling, pain , joy.

Week 1: Bird language – gateway drug for Nature Connection

Learning bird language is first and foremost about reprogramming your brain so that your sensory system engages with the world around you in ways that, once learned cannot easily be unlearned.

Once you start down this road it will change you permanently, you will be cursed to notice things that remain silent and invisible to most. You will begin to notice “what is really there”, removing sensory filters which previously interrupted your direct and full experience of natural environments

Being aware of bird language is not so much about knowing everything that birds are saying to each other, but rather about active listening to the world, so that you become alive to the lives of non-human others

Week 2: Gondwanan Origins & Relating Anatomy to Ecology

Songbird ancestors that survived the Chicxulub meteorite detonation were ground nesting / dwelling birds and possibly were able to use torpor as a strategy to survive. We still find these qualities in birds alive today

Songbird ancestors survived in Australia after Antarctica froze over, acting as a safe haven for the further evolution of songbird lineages which then spread to the rest of the world as late as 20mya

Birds that look similar across the world are not generally closely related but rather the product of concurrent evolution where birds occupy similar habitat niches, leading to similar specializations

A bird’s job description determines the tools of its trade so observation of bird anatomy tells us much about their lifestyle and ecology

Week 3: Fundamentals of Understanding Bird Language for Nature Connection

Introduction to bird language

Soundscapes – learning to re-associate bird song as sound rather than noise

Unique voices, including alarm, bickering, territorial song, begging, hurting, contact calls, mating calls and more

Why learning bird language is like watching a foreign film without subtitles

Re-patterning your brain to an older way of being in the world

Learning how to isolate solitary voices in the crowd using Binocular ears

Week 4: Bird Alarm – Introduction & tracking “invisible” predators across the landscape

Types of alarm

Ground versus aerial predators

Learning how to “go dark” so the source of alarm isn’t always you

Nature News and Concentric Rings of Disturbance

Experience the “baseline” state of an environment for the first time

The basis for tracking predators through the landscape or around your gardens is through becoming an active listener to alarm

Ground alarm versus aerial alarm – recognizing each and knowing where to look for predators

Trickery and coercion – thornbills and lyrebirds

How predators make a living from killing, despite sophisticated alarm systems

Week 5: Wild Trust

Wild animals have no reason to trust us, so how can we develop relationships of trust and respect?

Learning to recognize an invitation for wild trust and how to accept

On becoming humble

Noticing the hidden boundaries of bird territory and anxiety

Why being a practitioner of wild trust can extend your life

Week 6: Keeping a field diary and making Seasonal Calendars

Some birds seem to appear from out of nowhere, stay a while and just as suddenly disappear. Keeping a field diary can help to make sense of these seemingly random bird movements

Many songbirds reserve certain calls for particular times of the year. To track these changing voices we can create a seasonal calendar and learn how characteristic calls correspond with changes in annual climate and ecosystem cycles

Keeping field records takes us well beyond just listening to birds. To truly make sense of bird language we need to become all-round naturalist observers

Reading the Landscape

I’m gradually going from learning skills to training my mind and becoming more interested in naturalism, bird language, wilderness awareness and outdoor education.

I seem to have come a long way from starting out wanting to travel in order to do just one bushcraft course. Thinking after my second double lung transplant in 2014, I wouldn’t have lasted this long. However after initially becoming sick in 2001 and injuring my leg this year has taken me to different paths that I wouldn’t have even thought of ten years ago.

Tom Wessels

Toms teaching style uses a socratic or dialectic method known as maieutics. By giving an overview and then asking questions.

Part 1

Part 2

Part 3

Master Class

Kamana Training

https://www.survival.ark.net.au/kamana.php

Bird Language

Bird Language

Bushcraft has so many different levels and forms, which is one of the things that interests me the most.. One little thing takes you off to another level or pathway of learning. I sit here feeding the eastern Rosella parrots from my doorstep and notice the differing noises relating to what is happening around them and the influences to environment.

My caravan has inadvertently turned into my sit spot. A butcher bird fly’s into my door begging for breakfast as the parrots and sulpher crested cockatoos arrive to feed on bread.i watch the interactions and languages.

Base line vs alarm

the five vocalizations

1 )song

2 ) companion call

3 ) territorial aggression

4 ) begging

5 ) alarm

Bush Knots Master Class Part 6 knots

Knots (cordage to cordage)

Overhand knot, variation double overhand knot

used as a stopper knot

Fisherman’s variation double fisherman’s

used to join two pieces of cordage the same diameter.

Bowline

Sheet bend variation double sheet bend

used to join two ropes of differing sizes

Slip knot

Square knot

Whipping knot

this can used from placing eyelets on fishing rods to tying flies to finishing the ends on rope.

Arbour knot or canadian jam

Tarp corners

with no eyelets

Figure 8 standard or trace, inline or directional, on a bight

Traced

Directional

On bight

Alpine butterfly – mid-line knot.  This means it can be set part way along a rope to create a loop that can be loaded in any direction.  With this use, both strands of the original rope can still be loaded in any direction

Bush Knots Master Class Part 5 Hitches

You’ll notice I don’t use all one channel for explaining knots. I tend to reference the Pathfinder school mostly. Their really good at explanations and applications, but Ill use whomever explains a certain knot and the variations the best. TX Tool Club I watch the most. he says what works and what doesn’t and shows better ways. Hes influenced me mostly in improving bush knots.

Hitches (Cordage to Pole)

Half hitch

insecure by itself but forms the basis for many other knots.

Truckers Hitch (Improved)

This is used for a tarp ridge-line.An Evank hitch is used for the static end instead of the bowline/marlin spike.

Clove hitch variation with stop knot lock, with half hitch lock on side, spar hitch,picket line or ground line hitch constrictor with slip ends

Post or pile hitch

Evank hitch or Siberian hitch

Used for the static end of a ridge-line.

Timber hitch

Marlin Spike Hitch

Round turn and two half hitches variation anchor hitch

Friction hitches –

Taut Tarp hitch,

Used to tension guylines.

Prusic, variation larks head

Bush Knots Master Class Part 2 Lashings (Uses and Applications)

I wasn’t going to do a part 2, however Ive had lots of feedback, input and enquires. Besides I’m going nuts stuck in a caravan in this leg brace and need something to do to stay sane.

Knots can be explained an easy way or a hard way.. Some are there to learn other knots. You can get away with around a dozen basic knots for bushcraft. I wanted to take a step beyond that. I also wanted to show applications on farms or for emergency uses

You can pretty much FUDGE everything and just use a round turn and two half hitches and square knots if you really wanted to.. It all depends on how far you want to take your knowledge.

I tried writing this is one large section but its easier to break it down into sections. Ill have to start and do my own you-tube vids at this rate.

Lashings (Pole to Pole)

Square lashing – binds two poles together at a 90 degree angle. Such as in a ridge pole for a shelter or a ladder style pack frame, or to construct a stretcher, ladder, bed, box trap, chair meat hanger.started with a clove hitch.

Diagonal lashing – braces a rigid structure used in a Roycroft pack frame started with a timber hitch.

Shear lashing – joins two poles together to form legs ie instead of three legged tripod only two legs for a tree less tarp set up.(This can also be tied as a three pole lash.)

Round lashing – securing two poles together to form an end join as in to extend a pole for a longer saw handle.

(The difference between a shear lash and a round lash. Positioning and purpose of the timber)

Tripod Lashing – as name suggests for making a tripod

Fast Tripod Hack

One Bite At A Time

Ive been watching the following clip a lot lately. One bite at a time. Its the only way to get through long term rehab with injuries. Jarred my knee so back on the heavy meds and a week behind on stretching it out. At the moment I have a sick staffy and Im up at 4am with her. I must have turned on and off the computer three or four times before even beginning to start typing. I look at what Im working on and it over whelms me and I think ONE BITE AT A TIME and I just start working on one little piece.

sick staffy
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