It’s a long process but I think that’s where the joy comes from.
ETA - I was thinking about this today and I realized building a charcoal powered forge is minimalist welding. Forge welding is real welding. The first welding done by humans. The fact you can do it by making charcoal out of old chunks of almond tree smoldering in the dirt for a day is minimalism at its best. I can visualize the early blacksmiths cobbling together their forges out of rocks and making an old bellows out of animal skin.
The friend of mine who does this stuff really likes to do things in the cheapest way possible. He uses a hair dryer instead of a bellows because it was cheap from the second hand store. He likes the charcoal because he collects it from “free firewood” piles after tree trimming. Most of his steel and tools are made from demolition rebar and train rails. I think his bricks actually came from a chimney in a house demolition sale. This guy hates spending money.
He doesn’t use propane. 100% charcoal. And it burns hot when blown. Yellow hot.
I’ve teased this guy because he basically starts with low quality steel like rebars and makes them into low quality tools. He doesn’t seem to understand you cannot make a rebar into a samurai sword by heating it up and beating it flat.

Just saying, if you want to invest the time gathering up free stuff you can really do minimalist welding this way.