Willows can often be found near water. Also, you could just find out what the young woman is using, and use that (provided that it’s sturdy enough).
Presumably they know about basket making more than me! I'll see what I can find out.
Looks like she's using pine needles! Don't seem sturdy but they are everywhere.
Actually, maple syrup is extremely doable for you. Can you identify maple trees? They are broadleaf trees with big slightly hand-shaped leaves that make you think of Canada. In principle, any maple tree will do for making syrup, but sugar maples have the highest sugar content and are therefore best, with the black maple apparently second-best... until you have some candidate trees, I won't bother explaining the detailed differences. Note that both of those trees are found on the eastern half of the North American continent, with almost all of their range being east of the Mississippi. If you do find such a tree, though, it's simply a matter of making a divot in the bark, collecting sap, and boiling it down. Modern technology helps in many ways, but you could make do. You would need to work on your pottery to get a suitable container.
A tip on the oven: Consider making some charcoal, by taking a pile of wood, covering it in earth except for a very small air-hole, and setting it on fire. Because of the restricted oxygen supply, most of the wood will not burn, but will break down into charcoal and tar under the heat. (The tar will flow to the bottom, you may be able to collect some, it has uses, but is not our primary interest right now.) Stay away from this as it will produce carbon monoxide. Over time, if you do this a lot, you may learn how to better control the process by making new air holes or covering up old ones to keep the fire burning exactly the right amount to convert as much wood as possible while burning as little as possible, but for now, you just want to be good enough. Charcoal will burn much hotter than wood in the same conditions, and can be used to vitrify clay, making it nonporous and therefore water-resistant. (Under the right conditions, a wood fire can reach the same temperatures, but charcoal makes it easier.) The best charcoal is black and mostly retains the structure of wood without feeling like wood at all. You should remove any unburnt wood from it, as well as brown charcoal that falls apart easily, which is a lower grade and can still be used for burning things when lower temperatures are desired.
Vitrifying your oven as you build it would make it much more resilient - you might be able to do this by constructing a shell and burning charcoal inside it until the inside layer forms a glassy surface (that's what "vitrified" means), then removing the unvitrified material from the outside, building the rest of the oven out of normal clay, and putting the vitrified shell over it. You should also use charcoal when firing pottery vessels. I will teach you how to build a good kiln... later. For now, I just hope you remember the "clamp" concept I mentioned before.
See if you can get people to help you make charcoal, by making some, then showing off how it burns. Then maybe gather some clay, show off the clay, start making bricks, see if people are interested in doing that too. Really get some community involvement in the whole pottery thing.
I know what a Canadian flag looks like! I'd still consider myself hopeless at identifying plants but even I can get that one.
Unless there are like other trees with the same general shape. Then I might actually be in trouble I guess.
I might have poisoned the well a bit by acting like an idiot earlier. I tried out your charcoal technique but that just got my audience into the "No
this is how you make a fire" instead of marveling at my modern wisdom. Which is fair since putting dirt on something I want to set on fire probably makes me look like an idiot without context. Their helpfulness made it hard to get anything functional done. I'll probably have to make some samples back home to show off.
Speaking of getting functional things done is there any way I can make some kind of shovel? It sounds like I'm going to have to move a lot of dirt and stuff with my hands if I don't have one. Its kind of annoying.
Two additional things:
1. If heated, the tar will harden into rosin. This can be used to more firmly secure stone tools (such as spearheads, axeheads, etc.) to their hafts (I.e. shafts). For example, you can brush some tar on the base of a spears’ spearhead and then “roast” it over a fire until the tar hardens into rosin.
2. If firewood gets wet, it can rot and then you have to throw it out. If charcoal gets wet, all you have to do is let it dry it out, and it’s still good to go.
3. Cooking with charcoal is significantly more efficient than cooking with firewood.
4. If you have metal, you might want to consider making a simple wok stove (which actually requires charcoal to function), and a round-bottom wok, but that’s probably for the future.
1 sounds like what I did to catch birds! Assuming it is the same general technique I think I can figure it out.
Others are good to know. I don't have metal (except the maybe copper rock) but I could run into rain any day now.
Have you seen any kind of tree nut on the ground, or in the trees?
I have not! Not unless pine cones count. I've seen some pine cones. I'm not actually sure if they are nuts or not. Like I said earlier I'm still really bad at plants. If they are then yes pine cones are everywhere.
It looks like they’re still in the Stone Age. I highly doubt there are any arboralists running around.
They do build a lot of stuff out of wood. I'm sure at least one of them really likes trees.
If you build it at/near their village, you've got a few things going for you:
1. You can "sell" it as a gift to the tribe.
2. Gives you an excuse to hangout with the tribe and enjoy their protection/hospitality while you work on it.
3. Could draw the interest of potential apprentices.
Alright! In/around the tribe it is!
It is getting late. I say goodbye to everyone. They still don't understand me but the general motion of getting up and getting ready to walk away is pretty clear. One of the hunters leads me to the dogs. He puts out his hand and lets them sniff him, motioning for me to do the same. I let basically all the dogs in the village sniff me a bit then head back up the creek leaving the village (and all my stuff barring the new bone) behind.
I make it back to my camp a bit quicker then I expected, stuff a few handfuls of berries into my mouth and start on the charcoal pit. I've made it pretty small/shallow but it should work as a proof-of-concept charcoal kiln. I get my campfire ready then head out to take a bath. The water gets cold late, I fantasize about having a hot shower. I start my campfire and make a torch from the earlier instructions, then drop it in the charcoal whole opening to start the fire. I then make basket 2.0 by firelight so I can have something to carry everything tomorrow. The charcoal pit was still burning when I was getting ready for bed so I just kinda let it burn as I went to sleep.
Next morning went out to check my traps. Bunny's brother was in a different one and I follow the last instructions to make breakfast (oh this kill is for you guys and so on and so forth). Guess I've been pretty lucky so far! Skin goes into the tree pot like the other one that was miraculously not stolen yet. I work on my hobby-wattle-and-daub as practice for my oven later while my breakfast cooked. I've got a nice little panel going and I put it on my lean-to just so I can say I have the best home around already.
I check on my charcoal to see that I've got a nice little handful of black charcoal. I put the chunk in my basket and double check to make sure I've got everything before heading back down the mountain. I pass a the tribe's camp and reclaim my precious rocks, which have thankfully not been stolen!
So here I come to the realization that my pretty little basket probably can't move sand because of all its holes. I also have no way of moving water aside from a single cup I made. And my hands. So I guess that I'm making it next to the creek near the tribe's camp. I use the measurement of "handful" to get my 50/50 mixture of nearby sand and a short-walk-away clay. It still just looks like mud to me but I get the base "easy" enough. Hardest part was moving the clay here. It is still hard to move anything that doesn't fit well in my basket in any meaningful way.
I guess I still need something to make the rest of the oven around. Pine branches worked well for my house earlier so I ended up just picking some of them. I try to get it together but I'm really not doing well with the "but make them so close that your mud doesn't go through" thing. There is definitely some visible gaps. I guess the straw will help with that so I press on. It takes me a bit longer than I liked but in the end my little igloo looks better than any house that exists in this time
.
Including my own
Moving the dried up grass was/is easier than moving the clay, but I had a stroke of brilliance and put the dried up grass at the bottom of my basket so I could use it to move clay better. I take a short lunch whenever I see a known berry bush. I manage to make some more cob (even with the grass...it still just looks like mud) and cover the first layer! Then I had to go back to camp since that basically took me all day. I build another panel for my dream house and sleep. No luck on traps the next morning, went out to bait some birds like before with all the worms I've been finding with all this digging (while hobby-making my home.). Managed to get some bird with pretty purple feathers and treated it like before (still not eating any part I'm not sure of. My stone "knife" didn't keep it from being much prettier) then went back down to make the second layer.
Anyway TLDR I managed to not starve and make an oven! I made the charcoal while I was waiting for it to dry, too. It did take a couple of days of work though. I don't have any fancy vitrifying shell on it yet but it looks good otherwise. It isn't too late to do that right?
Uh, anyway my battery is still dying slowly. Just as a heads up.