Your first weekend of bushcraft
Most people overthink the start. Here's what to actually do your first weekend — from lighting a fire with a ferro rod to rigging a tarp that won't soak you at 2am.
By The JustBeginning Editors · Published May 24, 2026
Bushcraft has a reputation for being the serious end of the outdoors spectrum — the hobby where you need five years of training before you’re allowed to leave the house. That reputation is wrong, and it’s keeping people out of the woods.
The truth is simpler: bushcraft is a collection of practical skills, and practical skills are learned by doing them, not by reading about them. Your first weekend won’t look like a Ray Mears episode. It will look like a beginner learning, which is exactly right.
Here’s what that weekend actually looks like, and what you’ll walk away knowing.
Before you go: the three things to practice at home
The worst time to meet a new tool for the first time is in the dark, in the rain, when you actually need it. Spend 30 minutes at home before your first trip:
Light ten fires with your ferro rod. Gather a small pile of dry material — newspaper, dried leaves, a cotton ball. Strike the rod over it. Get the spark into the tinder. Do this until it feels mechanical, not mysterious. The motion is: hold the rod near the tinder, draw the scraper backward across the rod (not the rod across the scraper), and let the spark fall into your nest. This takes most people three to five tries before the first fire. Ten more and it feels natural.
Practice the tarp ridgeline. Find two trees, tie a length of paracord between them at head height, and drape your tarp over it. Then peg the corners out at an angle to create a lean-to shape. This takes about four minutes. The goal isn’t a perfect shelter — it’s understanding which direction the rain runs and which edge needs to be downwind. You’ll solve this problem differently in the field every time.
Carry the knife for an afternoon. Get used to the sheath on your belt. Practice opening and closing it without looking. Any knife feels unfamiliar the first few hours; familiar by the second day.
Day one: fire and shelter before dark
Arrive at your campsite with enough daylight to do two things: rig your shelter and make fire. In that order. Shelter first — because if the fire takes longer than expected, you want a dry place to sleep.
Rig the tarp first, before you’re hungry or tired. Find two trees roughly 10-12 feet apart and run your ridgeline taut between them. Drape the tarp over the line and peg the back edge close to the ground (this blocks wind from behind). Angle the front edge outward and downward — you want a steep enough pitch that rain runs off rather than pooling. Leave the front open for fire access.
Three things new riggers always get wrong: ridgeline too low (you’ll crouch all evening), front edge not steep enough (rain comes in), and guylines not staked (first puff of wind collapses everything). Add two or three guylines to the tarp’s midpoints and angle them out wide.
Gather tinder before you light anything. This is the step beginners skip, and it’s the reason their fires fail. You need three sizes: fine tinder (dried grass, birch bark, cattail fluff, or the dry underside of leaves — anything that catches a spark immediately), medium fuel (small sticks the diameter of a pencil), and logs (wrist-sized). Collect more than you think you need. Seriously — triple your initial estimate. Cold nights go through wood faster than anyone expects.
Light the fire. Build a small nest of fine tinder. Add pencil-sized sticks in a loose teepee above it, leaving room for the spark to breathe. Strike the ferro rod over the nest. When the tinder catches, blow gently to grow the ember. Add sticks in order of size as the fire builds. Don’t rush the transition from tinder to larger fuel — this is where beginners smother a fire that was working fine.
A small, hot fire is better than a big, lazy fire. You’re not trying to heat a barn; you’re trying to warm a space 18 inches in front of you.
What you’ll learn by doing it wrong
The first night is honest feedback, delivered without judgment. Here’s what you’ll probably do wrong and why it’s useful:
The tarp will leak at a seam. Adjust the ridgeline angle, re-peg the guylines, and figure out where the water is coming from. This is actual problem-solving. The answer is always in the physics: water finds the lowest point and follows gravity. Once you see it once, you see it forever.
The fire will go out twice. Usually from not enough tinder, or adding too-large wood too early. The second fire is always better than the first. The tenth is better still. Fire-lighting is a skill that improves through reps, not through more YouTube.
You’ll be colder than expected. A tarp open to the air loses heat fast. The fire solves this, but only if you’re close enough to it. Move toward the fire. The whole point of the open-front shelter design is to put your bed in the fire’s radiant-heat zone.
You’ll want more cordage than you brought. Bring at least 50 feet of paracord for a single-night trip. More won’t hurt.
Day two: skills that open up on a second day
The second day is when the skills start to click. You woke up dry (or you fixed what made you wet). The morning fire will light faster. You’ll spend less time problem-solving and more time observing.
Use your knife for something real. Whittle a tent peg from a straight-grained piece of greenwood — pull a branch, split it roughly to shape with your knife, and shave it to a point. This is the quintessential bushcraft exercise because it uses every basic cut: chest lever, knee brace, thumb brace. The wood teaches you where the grain runs and how pressure works. You’ll make ten bad tent pegs before you make a good one, and then you’ll know how wood behaves under a blade.
Practice reading your fireplace. What made it burn well yesterday? What made it struggle? What wood lasted longest? The species of wood matters — soft woods (pine, cedar) catch fast but burn quick; hard woods (oak, hickory, ash) take longer to ignite but hold coals. Pay attention to this rather than just adding fuel. You’re learning the material, not just using it.
Try finding natural tinder. Birch bark is the best natural fire-starter in most of North America — look for the papery outer bark of a dead birch tree (not a live one). Cattail fluff from a wetland is almost magic with a ferro rod. Dry pine needles work. The fun of day two is testing these against each other and seeing what the landscape gives you.
What a skilled bushcrafter actually looks like
After a weekend, you’re not an expert. But you’ve done the thing. That matters more than any book or YouTube series.
The bushcrafters who get good are the ones who go out consistently — even for one night, even locally, even in weather that’s slightly worse than comfortable. The skills don’t decay if you use them; they do decay if you read about them but never apply them.
Here are the next things worth learning, in order of usefulness:
Knots. Learn four: the bowline (creates a loop that won’t slip), the taut-line hitch (adjustable tension for ridgelines), the timber hitch (securing cordage around a log), and the clove hitch (attaches cordage to anything). These four handle 90% of what you’ll encounter in the woods.
Natural cordage. Inner bark from certain trees (basswood, elm, cedar) can be twisted into usable cordage. Knowing this gives you confidence that the tools you need are often already present.
Navigation basics. Map and compass before GPS. Understanding how to read a topographic map — what the contour lines mean, how to identify ridges vs. valleys, how to take a bearing — makes every trip safer and more interesting.
Ready to buy your first kit? See our bushcraft gear guide for the five items worth buying first — and the four things the internet will try to convince you that you need.