>>1402087>>1400477>>1399641>>1398601Fiskars made a hand drill that can be used with a max of 1/4" wide drill bits. They are pretty cheap, but fairly solid. If you are going to use it on wood, I suggest using a brad point drill bit for hard woods (bottom pic). Those cutting spurs on the side of the tip score a circle and make the hole edges really smooth and prevents tear outs, just go slow on the exit side. The center brad point spike keeps the bit from walking across the work piece when you first start the hole. That makes it excellent for round surfaces of things like small tree limbs. There are brad point bits fro softwood too, but those are not as good for hardwood obviously. Brad point bits make the cleanest, straightest, accurate holes in wood of all drill bit styles.
A good hand drill or even just augur bits with a twig handle in your bushcraft kit is priceless. You can make standard buttons, flutes, lanyard holes in handles or staves, peg holes for pegs to join pieces of wood together (who needs nails?), and a host of other things.