Author Topic: Foxfire Books  (Read 1052 times)

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Offline mechanic

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Foxfire Books
« on: May 08, 2010, 07:03:02 PM »
Any of you fellows read or collect the Foxfire series of books?  I have managed to pick up a few, and plan to buy the rest off that auction site I won't name here....

Very interesting and informative books on "how it used to be".  I especially enjoyed reading about how firearms were made on rudimentary tools and still came out beautiful and accurate....

Ben
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Offline thejanitor

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Re: Foxfire Books
« Reply #1 on: May 08, 2010, 09:42:39 PM »
I have a set of three. Some of it is a hoot when you read some of the old wives tails. But there is good info about making things. I used to want to make a banjo, they tell very well how to do it. I believe in there they talked about how they cut up and peeled apples and put them in a barrel and put a plate on top with sulfer (wood match tips ground) and burnt the sulfer and covered it and they were preserved as "fresh" and kept a long time. I don't remember which book that was in but it interested me thinking some of the dehydrated fruit you buy today has some kind of "stuff" to help it keep and I figured it was like that sulfer....
 The books are a good read, with much old school information. If you can find them I would get even one. My son and I had a good time laughing about some of the "medicine" like to heal a boil touch it with the tip hairs of a black cats tail.
Some of that seems funny, but some of the healing herbs and pultice type things are right on the money.
thejanitor

Offline dw06

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Re: Foxfire Books
« Reply #2 on: May 08, 2010, 11:13:27 PM »
 I have 4 of them in my collection, and have read most of the rest from the local library. Really enjoyed kicking back and reading them.
If you find yourself in a hole,the first thing to do is stop digging-Will Rogers

Offline williamlayton

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Re: Foxfire Books
« Reply #3 on: May 09, 2010, 12:01:32 AM »
Good books.
Fun read.
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Offline sk330lc

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Re: Foxfire Books
« Reply #4 on: May 10, 2010, 03:54:47 PM »
I have Six of them.   I will sit and read them from time to time.    Full of great Information.   Take the art of Butchering Hogs for example.  Very few old timers are left, that know how to butcher a hog and use every part for something.   
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Offline mechanic

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Re: Foxfire Books
« Reply #5 on: May 10, 2010, 04:21:34 PM »
I don't know why, but I was intrigued by wagon making.  That was something that required an amazing amount of skill.  Even with modern tools that would be a chore. 

I am amazed at what was done "from scratch" not so very long ago...
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Offline The Hermit

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Re: Foxfire Books
« Reply #6 on: May 10, 2010, 06:17:50 PM »
I have a set of the Foxfire books and I enjoy them. At 75, there is a lot of memories triggered when ever I read them. I was encouraged when some foster boys took an interest in the some of the things and was happy to teach what little I know. We made homemade butter in the kitchen, our own sausage, candles, etc. I laughed when they first used the outhouse at the cabin in the woods, " how do you flush this thing" made me laugh so hard my eyes got tears. I taught them to fish, hunt, camp and shoot.
Donna taught them hygene, table manners, respect and about God. Out of 17 boys, only 2 were incorrigable.
She's gone to heaven now, her lifes work finished. Mine will be too soon. Its natures way.
With the Foxfire books and a little teaching, a lot of the old ways live on, and I'm happy for that. Share what you know with others.

   The Hermit

Offline Glanceblamm

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Re: Foxfire Books
« Reply #7 on: May 11, 2010, 04:32:57 AM »
The Foxfire books are a great read as said. I do not own any but was able to check them out at the local Library.

Offline steg

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Re: Foxfire Books
« Reply #8 on: June 18, 2010, 03:08:58 AM »
I read everyone I had a chance to read, great books, weren't they written as a school project or something like that?.......................steg

Offline Foxfire Rod & Gun

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Re: Foxfire Books
« Reply #9 on: June 18, 2010, 03:38:33 AM »
I have volumes 1 -9 which I picked up back in the late 1980's - early 1990's. Since my mother & father's families were basically this type, farmers, plain 'ole country folks, etc., hence my company name which I started in the late 1980's. I'm not sure how many volumes have been added since volume #9 though. There is a mess of good information in these books that hopefully will not be lost or forgotten as time passes.

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Offline powderman

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Re: Foxfire Books
« Reply #10 on: June 18, 2010, 04:39:49 AM »
Quote
weren't they written as a school project or something like that?.......................steg

Yes they were. The dropout rate in that whole area was extremely high and a teacher designed the project to get the kids interested in preserving the knowledge and teachings of the hill folks. They went to the mountais and asked lots of questions and recorded the information. Great books. Had they not done this all that history and knowledge could have been lost forever.
Something else I'd like to see preserved is the old mountain music. Andy Griffith used to have the Darlings on the show quite often, that kind of music. In real life the Darlings were the DILLARDS. POWDERMAN.  ;D ;D
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Offline Swampman

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Re: Foxfire Books
« Reply #11 on: June 18, 2010, 06:04:50 AM »
Great books


BTW foxfire is rotten wood/fungus that glows in the dark.  I've seen it many times on fresh plowed ground.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foxfire_(bioluminescence)
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Offline Sourdough

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Re: Foxfire Books
« Reply #12 on: June 18, 2010, 07:51:56 AM »
I picked one up at the library and read it.  Brought back memories of my childhood in the hills of Tennessee.  

My Grandfather Hunter was a Blacksmith, and Farmer.  I remember seeing him put iron tires on wagon wheels.  He made iron shoes for Horses and Oxen, and then shod the animals.  He always was making metal fixtures for wagons, and farm implaments.  He had me driving a team of mules at the age of seven to a farm wagon hauling hay down the creek from the hay fields up in the holler.  A few years ago I took my son Skyler and showed him the ruts ground in the slab rocks of the creekbed by wagon tires.  Five generations of Hunters drove wagons over those ruts.  I walked up the creek and showed him where they raised hay on a hillside field.  He could not believe the work involved in raising, mowing, raking, loading on wagons and hauling to the barns.  Then the horse powered rope and trolley system used to load it up into the loft.  All this done with Mules, Horses or Oxen.

My Grandfather Williams was a harness maker and Horse and Mule trader, as well as a Farmer.  He was also into Moonshining and Bootlegging too.  

I remember both of them Killing and Butchering their own hogs, goats, and sheep.  Then salting down the meat and smoking it.  My Grandmothers would render the lard store it.  Everything got used, or sold.  The hides would be salted and sold in Red Boiling Springs, Carthridge, or Gainsboro.  They both built their own homes.  I don't mean they hired a contractor, I mean they laid the foundation themselves and did all the framing.  They put up the walls and roof.  Then finished the inside.  I remember in the early 50s, me sitting on a stool at a drill press, drilling pilot holes in Asbestos shingles so Dad and my Grandfathers could nail them on the side of the houses.  Without pilot holes the shingles would crack when nailed in place.

Both my Grandmothers milked cows by hand, then made their own Butter.  They canned fruits and vegatables from their gardens.  They also canned some of the meats as well.  They kept fresh milk in the spring house.

Much of the things I read in those books discribed my Grandparents daily lives.
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Offline SHOOTALL

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Re: Foxfire Books
« Reply #13 on: June 18, 2010, 08:54:56 AM »
I have 5 or 6 , the human intrest part is good . It shows the attitude of the people who live the old ways. It can be used as a guide for readers to build up the attitudes needed to get thru. hard times. Note I said hard times not bad . The reading has an effect.
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Offline flintlock

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Re: Foxfire Books
« Reply #14 on: June 18, 2010, 08:58:58 AM »
Yep, I have most of them...I also take Foxfire 5 when I give talks on Colonial America as one of my flintlocks was made by Bob Watts who was interviewed for that book...

Offline blind ear

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Re: Foxfire Books
« Reply #15 on: June 18, 2010, 10:27:48 PM »
According to some unrecallable authority the total accumilated knowledge of man doubles every few years now. It took several hundred years for it to double the first time.

Imagine what might be possible in another 500 or 1000 years in we don't wipe ourselves out.

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Offline Gun Runner

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Re: Foxfire Books
« Reply #16 on: June 18, 2010, 11:28:21 PM »
The first try they made at the b ooks was a flop. The smithsonian  (sp) institute gave them a grant and a couple of pointers and they were off and running. I have several of the books I read ov er and over. Some of the medical cures will either cure or kill you though I think,   ::)

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Offline SHOOTALL

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Re: Foxfire Books
« Reply #17 on: June 21, 2010, 04:00:46 AM »
It makes little sense for it to take 100's of years the first time . If you knew nothing the first thing you learn you double it then two more thing and double once more .
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Offline blind ear

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Re: Foxfire Books
« Reply #18 on: June 21, 2010, 04:24:47 AM »
I think it was hundreds of years to get to the industrial age then the doubleing of that knowledge occured relativly quickly, with other doubleings since then. Smothing of that nature.


C&P
"Buckminster Fuller’s “Knowledge Doubling Curve” can be summarized as follows;

The more we know, the faster we know more. Knowledge volume undergoes exponential growth, doubling and redoubling over time.

Up until the 1900 it was said that the accumulation of knowledge doubled every century.

At the end of World War 2 every 25 years.

Today – well anywhere from 1 to 1.5 years to – Nanotechnology they say every 2 years – Clinical knowledge every 18 months.

And IBM predicts that in the next couple of years, information will double every 11 hours!

Feeling overwhelmed yet?"

I was wrong
eddie
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“It is no coincidence that the century of total war coincided with the century of central banking.” – Ron Paul, End the Fed
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An economic crash like the one of the 1920s is the only thing that will get the US off of the road to Socialism that we are on and give our children a chance at a future with freedom and possibility of economic success.
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Offline SHOOTALL

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Re: Foxfire Books
« Reply #19 on: June 21, 2010, 05:03:40 AM »
 One has to wonder how fast worthwhile knolege doubles  :D
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Offline Lurker

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Re: Foxfire Books
« Reply #20 on: September 17, 2010, 09:45:51 PM »
I had the first three foxfire books, which caused me to want all of the others. I finally ordered the whole set from Amazon in 2006.

Those books would be worth a fortune in lingering SHTF situation.

I was alive at the end of the depression. I remember my folks doing a lot of the things that are in the Foxfire books.

Bill