This excellent hands-on guide by one of the founders of the Boy Scouts
of America contains a wealth of practical instruction and advice on how
to build everything from a bark teepee and a tree-top house to a log
cabin and a sod house. No professional architects are needed here; and
knowing how to use an axe is more important than possessing carpentry
skills.
More than 300 of the author's own illustrations and a clear,
easy-to-follow text enable campers to create such lodgings as half-cave
shelters, beaver mat huts, birch bark shacks, over-water camps, a Navajo
hogan, and a pole house. Additional chapters provide information on how
to use an axe, split and notch logs, make a fireplace, and even build
appropriate gateways to log houses, game preserves, ranches, and other
open areas.
An invaluable book for scouts, campers, hikers, and hunters of all ages,
this guide and its fascinating collection of outdoor lore still has
intrinsic value, said Whole Earth Magazine, and will be of keen
interest to any modern homesteader.