Free: Contests & Raffles.
I don't worry about the PC crowd to much when building these fires, I believe my life is far more valuable than their feelings
All you want to do is fall asleep. Its a euphoric high almost where it hurts to move and you are lulled into thinking life is good if you just relax and take a snooze. Its hard to press on and very hard to regain it back to reallity once it has set in.
I saw these posts and was kind of curious, After reading all the input from everyone else, why nobody has mentioned a basic fire starting tip I learned from my father (who grew up on a homestead in Canada before becoming an American Citizen to go fight in WWII )He told me "The dryest wood in the forest is still hanging on the trees"The branches on the inside of the tree, close to the trunk of almost every evergreen are dead dry and protected from the elements from the outer live branches.The thicker the woods, the more dead branches there are, on just about any kind of tree.I have never had a problem getting a fire started, as long as I had a dependable source of flame, even have successfully started a fire with a "Bow and Drill" as part of a course I took back in 1978 called "Wilderness Survival/Camper Safety" put on by Explorer Scouts, although as mentioned it is a pain in the butt..
Good thread Ice. As I was reading I kept waiting to see an item that not only will start a fire but feed you. Doc asked about it but no one commented on it. Corn chips. They burn hot and slow, and I have yet to have them fail me.Also, as I hunt I always look for damaged Pine trees as they will have bled pitch thru the summer and pooled a nice glob of pitch. I take that glob and put it in a ziplock that I carry in my pack.
Quote from: NWTFhunter on June 04, 2010, 11:59:13 AMGood thread Ice. As I was reading I kept waiting to see an item that not only will start a fire but feed you. Doc asked about it but no one commented on it. Corn chips. They burn hot and slow, and I have yet to have them fail me.Also, as I hunt I always look for damaged Pine trees as they will have bled pitch thru the summer and pooled a nice glob of pitch. I take that glob and put it in a ziplock that I carry in my pack.Good point about the cornchips. I have used them and they work well. The main problem I have is getting them to survive past the first stomach growl in my survival kit when hunting with my son... Better than a glob of pitch is "pitch-wood". Find a rotten conifer stump, rotten enough so you can actually kick it apart. In the very center, you will find unrotten wood where the pitch has settled and saturated and preserved the wood. This can be split almost paper thin, and it is so soaked with pitch that it lights very easily. Because it can be split so thin, it catches much easier than a glob of pure pitch. It is also easier to transport and store in your survival kit, since it is not a sticky as a glob of pitch. I keep a small handful of pitchwood slivers and shavings in an empty 35mm film canister in my survival kit. Good stuff.
If your on the wet side, its a little harder to find but still all over the place...