By Dan Beard
HOW TO MAKE THE FALLEN-TREE SHELTER AND THE SCOUT-MASTER
Figs. 11-14.
One-Night Shelter. The fallen Tree
and the Scout-Master Shelters.
Now that you know how to make a bed in a half cave, we will take up the most
simple and primitive manufactured shelters.
Fallen-Tree Shelter
For a one-man one-night stand, select a thick-foliaged fir-tree and cut it
partly through the trunk so that it will fall as shown in Fig. 11; then trim off
the branches on the under-side so as to leave room to make your bed beneath the
branches; next trim the branches off the top or roof of the trunk and with them
thatch the roof. Do this by setting the branches with their butts up as shown in
the right-hand shelter of Fig. 13, and then thatch with smaller browse as
described in making the bed. This will make a cosey one-night shelter.
The Scout-Master
Or take three forked sticks (A, B, and C, Fig. 12), and interlock the forked
ends so that they will stand as shown in Fig. 12. Over this framework rest
branches with the butt ends up as shown in the right-hand shelter (Fig. 13), or
lay a number of poles as shown in the left-hand figure (Fig. 12) and thatch
this with browse as illustrated by the left-hand shelter in Fig. 13, or take elm, spruce, or birch bark and shingle
as in Fig. 14. These shelters may be built for one boy or they may be made large
enough for several men. They may be thatched with balsam, spruce, pine, or
hemlock boughs, or with cat-tails, rushes (see Figs. 66 and 69) or any kind of
long-stemmed weeds or palmetto leaves.
In the first place, I trust that the reader has enough common sense and
sufficient love of the woods to prevent him from killing or marring and
disfiguring living trees.
Selecting Bark
To get the birch bark, select a tree with a smooth trunk devoid of branches
and, placing skids for the trunk to fall upon (Fig. 38), fell the-tree (see
Figs. 113, 114, 115, 116, 117, and 118), and then cut a circle around the
trunk at the two ends of the log and a slit from one circle clean up to the
other circle (Fig. 38); next, with a sharp stick shaped like a blunt-edged
chisel, pry off the bark carefully until you take the piece off in one whole
section. If it is spruce bark or any other bark you seek, hunt through the woods
for a comparatively smooth trunk and proceed in the same manner as with the
birch. To take it off a standing tree, cut one circle down at the butt and
another as high as you can reach (Fig. 118) and slit it along a perpendicular
line connecting the two cuts as in Fig. 38.
This will doubtless in time kill the tree, but far from human habitations the
few trees killed in this manner may do the forest good by giving more room for
others to grow. Near town or where the forests are small use the bark from the
old dead trees.
Using Bark
To shingle with bark, cut the bark in convenient sections, commence at the
bottom, place one piece of bark set on edge flat against the wall of your
shelter, place a piece of bark next to it in the same manner, allowing the one
edge to overlap the first piece a few inches, and so on all the way around your
shack; then place a layer of bark above this in the same manner as the first
one, the end edges overlapping, the bottom edges also overlapping the first row
three or four inches or even more. Hold these pieces of bark in place by stakes
driven in the ground against them or poles laid over them, according to the
shape or form of your shelter. Continue thus to the comb of the roof, then over
the part where the bark of sides meets on the top lay another layer of bark covering the crown, ridge,
comb, or apex and protecting it from the rain. In the wigwam-shaped shelters, or
rather I should say those of teepee form, the point of the cone or pyramid is
left open to serve as chimney for smoke to escape.
Shelters,
Shacks, & Shanties