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294,243 Views • Nov 19, 2023 • Click to toggle off description
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Uploaded At Nov 19, 2023 ^^


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95.15% of the users lieked the video!!
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RYD date created : 2024-02-16T23:11:09.916368Z
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YouTube Comments - 128 Comments

Top Comments of this video!! :3

@huckleberry5085

8 months ago

In my opinion, it’s better to hold your knife down on your kindling and pull your feral rod up instead of the knife so you have more control of where your sparks are landing.

76 |

@phillipchilders9012

8 months ago

TEACHING THESE SKILLS, ONE DAY SOON, COULD SAVE MANY LIVES. KEEP IT UP ! ! ! PLEASE.

5 |

@FordManiac76

8 months ago

Pull the flint backwards while holding the steel hard in place!

2 |

@Cu-sith7

8 months ago

I've started a fire with one of those didn't have matches or lighters but had that so I just scraped a bit off not making sparks then did a big spark wich caused the others to spark up and make a fire.

3 |

@RareVBlue

8 months ago

I spend a lot of time outdoors and in my opinion, the best way to start a fire this way is to hold the steel stationary and pull the fero rod back towards your body. That way your hand and the steel isn't banging into your tinder or wood and potentially scattering it or moving it. It also makes you more accurate on where the sparks land.

3 |

@x7slim8x

8 months ago

I personally use a carbide "sharpener" from Sharpenal. That thing will produce sparks from a damn ice cube lol.

1 |

@brienjefferson9488

10 months ago

Thanks, you’re a life changer and extremely helpful!

25 |

@crusader.survivor

8 months ago

You are definitely the only survivalist youtuber to teach this! Thank you for teaching the noobs the right way!

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@ladyofthemasque

8 months ago

Be mindful when using usnea--that beard-like lichen in the first scene of this video--to start a fire. Usnea is hydrophilic, it loves holding water, so it needs to be completely dry to use as a good tinder. One way to tell if it's good or not is if it's brittle when you bend it. Be extra mindful when picking it up in a winter environment, as frozen usnea will also break. Warm it up in your (dry) hands for about half a minute, then try to break it. (Do not breathe on it to warm it up!) If it bends far too easily once it's no longer frozen, it's probably too moist to ignite. (You'll want to test several times to be sure you know the sweet spot where it's dry enough to ignite.)

(Usnea has many uses, and there are a number of bushcrafters and survivalists who go over them, including some old videos from Far North Bushcraft And Survival.)

7 |

@Gator-357

9 months ago

Depends on the type of ferro rod you have. This method applies to the harder ones, hard pressure with a quick downstroke. The softer ones produce better sparks with a slow, firm strike. It also depends on the kind of striker you are using. Carbide stikers don't require as much pressure as say the back of a knife or a ceramic stiker. It's best to practice different methods until you find the best one for what you are using. The best way is the way that gets a fire started the fastest.

24 |

@MarkCondor4

8 months ago

got that same exact multi tool, the things really sturdy and well made. super handy

1 |

@TarmanTheChampion

8 months ago

Scape off some material into the tinder, then the smallest ignition will set it off

1 |

@MtnBadger

8 months ago

You're still missing the important part which is to slowly scrape some of the rod material into the tinder first, as it's those scraping You're lighting which in turn lights the tinder and you generally just need one spark strike, if you did it right. Plus, you want to hold the striker still and pull back sharply with the rod so you don't screw up your tinder bundle.
Every way you show here uses too much of the rod to light the fire. So many people are convinced that they know the right way and don't.

2 |

@miketyson8658

8 months ago

Let me tell you a little secret, those are pine needles sir.

1 |

@KhaozVoid

10 months ago

Yea most people don't realize those ferro rods are actually consumables. Yea, it takes some time but you're SUPPOSED to scrape big gouges...That's how it burns hot and long enough, people think one quick little spark is gonna do it, ugh no.

2 |

@martynichol2600

10 months ago

You know Bic lighters come with built in ferro rods, right? And they use them more efficiently. 😊

25 |

@lauro_o421

9 months ago

If only them darn elusive Bic lighters weren’t so damn expensive and unreliable 😂

18 |

@bobdixon4998

10 months ago

Infact a multi tool should have a hardened file on it as opposed to an unhardened one. The harder tool the better the strike.

3 |

@tyleradams3372

8 months ago

Good video, informative and to the point. Looking forward to the next one.

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@genevajoseco6928

8 months ago

Very good thats right people should know also somethings that most effective.very good

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