Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: highcountry_hunter on January 01, 2021, 08:00:08 PMI’m not sure about a big emergency fire, but in every backpack and all my rigs I keep a 1 gallon ziplock with a newspaper, 3 bic lighters and a film canister full of cotton balls soaked in petroleum jelly.People under 30 might not know what a film canister is. When was the last time you seen one?
I’m not sure about a big emergency fire, but in every backpack and all my rigs I keep a 1 gallon ziplock with a newspaper, 3 bic lighters and a film canister full of cotton balls soaked in petroleum jelly.
Quote from: Buzz2401 on January 02, 2021, 02:34:14 PMQuote from: idaho guy on January 01, 2021, 07:51:41 PM I have experimented with a lot of different fire starters over the years. Some good some not but never really kept track of what was best. I spend a lot of time in the mountains in the winter in snowy but also really wet conditions. If you had to pick one fire starter for wet conditions what would it be? I usually pack a few flares and some fire starter but looking for opinions on what’s the best. I’m not looking for something to start my campfire but most reliable to start a fire when stuck out there emergency type fire etc.Have you or anyone else here started a fire with a flare. I tried to one time and it didn't work, which I thought was crazy. Asked around and was told flares are designed to not catch things on fire for safety reasons, I guess they suck all the surrounding oxygen which doesn't allow other things to catch. Probably different kinds of flares though.Not my experience at all. I’ve lit lots off fires with flares and have caught several things on fire with them unintentionally at work. Only thing regarding what you’re saying I get off the top of my head is it’s adding so much heat it can cause things to burn the fuel too quickly in a small area. The flare is the heat component, it’s not sucking enough air in the outdoors to cause an issue in the oxygen component. All that’s left in my head is fuel. It can burn stuff so hot it is no longer going through pyrolysis enough to sustain fire. When I use a flare I get a spot going and move it to a new spot to get that going. This all makes sense in my head but is much easier to explain verbally. Sorry if it’s more confusing then helpful.
Quote from: idaho guy on January 01, 2021, 07:51:41 PM I have experimented with a lot of different fire starters over the years. Some good some not but never really kept track of what was best. I spend a lot of time in the mountains in the winter in snowy but also really wet conditions. If you had to pick one fire starter for wet conditions what would it be? I usually pack a few flares and some fire starter but looking for opinions on what’s the best. I’m not looking for something to start my campfire but most reliable to start a fire when stuck out there emergency type fire etc.Have you or anyone else here started a fire with a flare. I tried to one time and it didn't work, which I thought was crazy. Asked around and was told flares are designed to not catch things on fire for safety reasons, I guess they suck all the surrounding oxygen which doesn't allow other things to catch. Probably different kinds of flares though.
I have experimented with a lot of different fire starters over the years. Some good some not but never really kept track of what was best. I spend a lot of time in the mountains in the winter in snowy but also really wet conditions. If you had to pick one fire starter for wet conditions what would it be? I usually pack a few flares and some fire starter but looking for opinions on what’s the best. I’m not looking for something to start my campfire but most reliable to start a fire when stuck out there emergency type fire etc.
Good response so far a lot of the stuff mentioned I have used before. The wet fire stuff I had before and it is great. I hound hunt lions and sometimes by myself so I can end up middle of nowhere and just have to go where dogs go. It’s not like elk hunting where you decide when to turn back you have to go where the dogs go. Just looking for the ultimate emergency fail safe fire starter but I think a combination is best. I think I will just pack the coughlins fire starter,the wet fire, a lighter and a flare I should be covered 👍 for all the bic lighter fans bring 3 don’t ask how I learned this one. The weather where I hunt goes from snow to wet and rainy to freezing all in one day makes starting a fire a challenge.I have used my stove to warm our tent hunting so I have that but when you’re soaked you need a fire.
for all the bic lighter fans bring 3 don’t ask how I learned this one.
Quote from: idaho guy on January 02, 2021, 07:55:27 PMGood response so far a lot of the stuff mentioned I have used before. The wet fire stuff I had before and it is great. I hound hunt lions and sometimes by myself so I can end up middle of nowhere and just have to go where dogs go. It’s not like elk hunting where you decide when to turn back you have to go where the dogs go. Just looking for the ultimate emergency fail safe fire starter but I think a combination is best. I think I will just pack the coughlins fire starter,the wet fire, a lighter and a flare I should be covered 👍 for all the bic lighter fans bring 3 don’t ask how I learned this one. The weather where I hunt goes from snow to wet and rainy to freezing all in one day makes starting a fire a challenge.I have used my stove to warm our tent hunting so I have that but when you’re soaked you need a fire. My only hang up with the Wetfire is the cost,,, stuff works great, but I save it unless I can't get a fire started another way.
I am also going to play around with cotton balls a p jelly. I like to try stuff in terrible weather but not when I have to start a fire just kinda a test run. This is an old one but I haven’t really used. Thanks again for all the responses good stuff
https://blackbeardfire.com/products/black-beard-fire-starter?variant=31477581152392I used this stuff on my backpack hunts this year, it work well. Doesn’t burn real hot but it burns slow and did burn when wet. Seemed to work as advertised. Fairly inexpensive. I think you’re wise to have a few different emergency options. Disclaimer: I have not tried it in N Idaho wet yet, big difference from Central Idaho.