The ocean was very calm, radiating a warm yellow sunlight that made the shores glisten.
Waves crashed ashore, leaving behind white foam.
Bi Fang's palms were very slender. Although they were covered in thick calluses, they were clean and beautiful. Right now, these hands were holding a wooden stick, vigorously rubbing it against another piece of wood, sending a large quantity of wood shavings flying due to the friction.
This was the second fire-making method Bi Fang resorted to after the failure of Fire-Making by Wood-Drilling, called the Fire Plough. This was the simplest method, completely reliant on the user's arm strength, involving a pointed stick being rubbed up and down in a groove on a wooden board.
At the bottom of the groove, very fine wood shavings would appear, accumulating more and more until, eventually, when the temperature reached a certain level, they would ignite.