you take a qurter inch thick piece of metal you go to a grinder and cut it to size and shape then you take a belt sander and give it a nice edge on it the you drill two holes and you get a stick and saw a opening down one of the ends and you put the hatchet head in place you aline the holes you drilled in the wood and metal and get some nuts and bolts and titan it tight together so it does not fall out and your ready to go.
because he gets Gaven the hatchet by the pilot and the hatchet keeps him alive and teaches him how to live in the wild. Without his hatchet he never would of been able to make a fire, make tools, or make weapons
take wood and use the hatchet to shave
No, in the book "Hatchet" by Gary Paulsen, the protagonist Brian does not make a pouch specifically for arrows. Brian primarily uses his hatchet to survive in the wilderness after a plane crash.
a lean-to
nothing
Yes. He collected twigs and hit the back of his hatchet at a wall to create sparks.
Brian makes fire, makes tools, makes a raft, and guts animals with his hatchet.
Brian from hatchet made his fire in the following steps... 1-He strikes the hatchet on the wall of the cave 2-he lives in and it sparks; the cave's mineral makeup included flint.
The brain doesn't physically make a food shelf hatchet. It may be a result of miscommunication or a typo. If you meant to ask why someone would use a food shelf hatchet, it could be for preparing food in a rustic or outdoors setting.
Brian makes a shelter out of trees in the book "Hatchet" on pages 52-54.
Why did raspberries make a better meal for Brian than gut cherries Hatchet?
You make a few weapon with a 20 dollar bill a few cents a stick and a hatchet. One you can buy a cheap knife and attach it to a stick or you can also can buy a hatchet for under $20 dollars and by wood and place it together.