Making Cordage from Natural Materials

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by Adobestock/Rangeecha

When you’re caught in a bind — or at the end of your rope — making cordage is a skill that could come in handy.

Cordage — that is, thread, string or rope — is all but indispensable in a survival situation. It can be used for (among other things) bowstrings, fishing lines, trap triggers, snares, and lashings. Most people would likely despair if forced to make string or make rope. However, suitable natural materials are plentiful in most places (our Sources of Cordage Materials list will help), and the techniques required for making cordage are actually quite simple to master.

Materials and Their Attributes

Just about any strong, flexible fiber can be used to produce good cordage. The dried inner bark of most trees, for example, will supply you with workable raw material. It’s best to look for trees with dead bark, and strip off long sections of the fibrous cambium layer between the wood and the outer bark. If you’re in a true survival situation, you can even strip sections of the inner bark from living trees (it’ll be easiest to do in the spring, when the sap is running) and dry them. Be sure, though, to take only a few thin strips from any one trunk (Don’t cut all the way around it. Doing so can kill the tree). Should you have trouble separating the inner from the outer bark, just soak the strips in warm or boiling water until the fibers come apart easily.

  • Updated on Apr 4, 2023
  • Originally Published on Jan 1, 1983
Tagged with: making cordage, rope, Survival Skills, wilderness survival
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