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Wilderness Survival - Tools

Hafting a Stone Blade the Old-Fashioned Way
Part 2
Text & Photos by Storm

(Part 1    Part 2)

View this article as a PDF

 
Not a great photo, but you can barely see the Elk Antler Wedge (on the right) that I used to score and eventually split the side of the handle where the blade will be inserted.
After splitting the handle once, I split it again in order to remove a wedge of wood, which makes room for the stone blade.
Using a piece of clay-and-sand pottery and fire, I melt some deer hide glue. Unfortunately, I chose to learn my lesson quite a few times that week regarding the erroneous use of flames to coal-burn containers. Here I am wasting yet another fine block of Western Red Cedar.
After applying hide glue to the blade and inserting the stone cutting tool into the handle, I wrapped a length of Australian Sea Grass Cordage around the handle. The cordage makes me feel as though the tool will last longer before falling apart eventually. And I like the feel of it. The red dot at the bottom of the handle is ground-up hematite (mineral paint). The hatchet was made in a similar fashion, but was wrapped in split deer intestine.
Voila...finis.

(Part 1    Part 2)

Text and Photos Copyright by Storm www.stoneageskills.com

 

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