Bitty said:Trust me, I work out how I CAN do things all day long. I've figured out how to survive vandwelling with my unique limitations, which involve unpredictable bouts of severe illness and life-threatening emergencies. My issue is not negative thinking. I'm being realistic: there's only so much ability in the pot and if all of one's ability is currently going towards survival and that's still not always enough, then there's really none leftover.
Bitty said:Getting help would be fantastic, I have chased down all the benefits I'm aware of and ask people outright as well. Many are willing to, but then get a bit of a shock from my unique limitations and end up bailing, and I don't blame them.
RevDrMartian said:What would you folks thing of knifesmithing for road-friendly income? I've an interest and the physical ability. I can make a tiny forge out of an old brake drum, and a stump anvil is only four inches square and weights ~25 lbs. Two hammers, a small bench with a vice and an assortment of files- all the tools can be packed into a reasonably small area. If I get a roof bin, I could store what I need up there when on the move.
As to fuel- I can make forge-quality charcoal with fallen branches, a campfire and an old paint tin, and any railroad will offer up any amount of steel spikes that can be forged into handy knives and even small hatchets.
It can also be a sharpening service for all sorts of edged gear- I can sharpen axes and chainsaws easy, and I can do extremely fine sharpening on kitchen blades.
Camp out on public land somewhere out of the way and just put hammer to steel all day. Do it near a lake or river and have a line in the water for my meals. Sounds rather like heaven to me.
BradKW said:That's pretty cool you can do all that! I think the idea has real potential, but I think the greatest value might not be so much the merchandise, but that lots of people would find it interesting. In Key West, we have lots of street artisans, everything from palm frond weavers, to jewelers, to painters to "poet for hire". And what you always see is people stopping to watch the craft, then perhaps making a purchase. If I saw someone making a knife from an old RR spike, using homemade charcoal, I might just buy a knife that I really don't need
RevDrMartian said:That is a thought. I am just not much good with people and have an aversion to being stared at, so I dunno, hah.
One thing that did occur to me a few minutes ago would be the idea of using local wood to make charcoal and hammering out a knife from a railway spike that had been quite literally part of a local area's lifeblood for ~100 years. It'd be pretty interesting to a local with the right mindset. It might also warm some hearts to the idea of vandwellers if one rolls up and starts turning local history into functional things.
Well, I still need to build the forge and practice making knives properly before I can make money out of it, hah. Also, trying to find local wood in the middle of the freaking prairies; not easy... Probably just get a certain type by the bag at Home Depot until I can forge something as beautiful and simple as the attached pic.
The sharpening might be handy. But you may need to pull into (gaspith) an RV park or a campground for a couple of days (weekly is cheaper). You will need to be where the customers are. People are lazy. They don't want to go out of their way to have something done for them. Sharpening knives may make you a few $$ if you are where the customers are. Keep in mind that some RV parks do not like commerce within their park (put a magnetic sign on your vehicle door or in a window) and you usually cannot operate a commerical enterprise (like sharpening knives) on public property with out paying a fee. I know this because I have vended food at a NM state park ($75 fee but the rangers waived it as they asked us to be there).RevDrMartian said:What would you folks thing of knifesmithing for road-friendly income?
It can also be a sharpening service for all sorts of edged gear- I can sharpen axes and chainsaws easy, and I can do extremely fine sharpening on kitchen blades.
highdesertranger said:you can buy portable kilns. here's one place that sells them, http://www.makeyourowngoldbars.com/gas-furnaces . go to the bottom of the page for the cheaper ones. here are more http://www.rosewindminingsupply.com/Kwik-Kiln-Mini-Gold-Kiln/GPK-Kwik-Kiln . highdesertranger
RevDrMartian said:Camp out on public land somewhere out of the way and just put hammer to steel all day. Do it near a lake or river and have a line in the water for my meals. Sounds rather like heaven to me.
cyndi said:I would be so completely pissed off if I was camping out in the woods, by a lake, or anywhere for that matter and had to listen to someone banging on a hunk of metal all day.
I'm living outside of urban areas to get away from intrusive noise pollution and to hear the sounds of nature.
RevDrMartian said:What would you folks thing of knifesmithing for road-friendly income?
Camp out on public land somewhere out of the way and just put hammer to steel all day. Do it near a lake or river and have a line in the water for my meals. Sounds rather like heaven to me.
cyndi said:I would be so completely pissed off if I was camping out in the woods, by a lake, or anywhere for that matter and had to listen to someone banging on a hunk of metal all day.
I'm living outside of urban areas to get away from intrusive noise pollution and to hear the sounds of nature.
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