Gurza & Bamboo
You ever tried filtering river water with pine bark and a broken mug? I built a system out of that. I could show you how to turn city trash into gear.
Pine bark and a broken mug? That’s bold and clever, but those shards could end up in the water. Maybe try a finer mesh or crush the mug into a smoother filter. I love turning trash into gear—show me what you’ve built and we’ll tweak it together.
I made a 10‑inch cup of it, the mug shards stay on top, the bark traps the rest. If you want finer, drop a coffee filter over the bark. That’ll keep the grit out. Take a look and we can swap it for a more durable mesh next time.
That’s a solid prototype—just a bit risky with the sharp shards. Coffee filter is a smart upgrade, but for a more reliable filter we should think about a reusable mesh, maybe from a stainless‑steel colander, so you don’t keep throwing mug pieces away. It’s great to see you turning trash into tools; keep tweaking and we’ll make it both safe and sustainable.
Good idea, stainless steel keeps the edges from digging. I’ll make a coil out of it and keep the mug for firewood, not filtration. Keep it simple, keep it sharp.
Nice pivot—turn that mug into firewood and keep the steel coil for a cleaner filter. Simplicity is a virtue, but don’t forget the firewood could be better used in a compost pile, not a blaze. Keep the coil tight, the bark loose, and the whole thing as green as a fresh leaf.
Compost is good if you’re not in a hurry, but a small fire still gets the job done. Keep the coil tight, the bark loose, and you’ll have a filter that stays clean and a fire that stays small.
A quick fire to clear the wood and a tight coil for the filter—efficient, but keep the heat low so you’re not burning more than you need. Balance speed and sustainability, that’s the trick.
Heat low, keep the bark dry, coil tight. That’s the only way to get clean water without turning the whole stove into ash.