Sunday, December 5, 2021

Your Campfire and How to Use It ©

 

 

A campfire on a chilly winter day, photograph by the Author.

There has been a lot written on how to start a fire, in fact I have written a lot on building fires.  It’s one of the top ten wilderness survival skills that you absolutely must know before you wander in the wilderness. 

 

Over the last 45 years or so, I have made a lot of bad fires, and some pretty good ones.  The tips below are some things that I found out the hard way, some other things that I read about and have used with great success over the years, and hopefully they will be helpful to you. 

 

Getting started...

 

An excerpt from Military Review, April 1946, page 96.


Building your fire on a slab of rock or a gravel bar along a stream prevents your fire from escaping by burning underground, and it leaves little long-term evidence of your passage through the wilderness.  Always clear away all the burnable material for ten feet (3 meters) from where you plan to build your fire.  Never build your fire under low-hanging branches, against a tree trunk, or near a pile of brush or bushes.  You want to have a campfire, not a forest fire!

 

An excerpt from the Complete Book of Outdoor Lore, by Clyde Ormond, page 125.


Oh, and don’t forget, only build as much fire as you need.  If it is too big, it will just use up a lot of wood, and you can’t get close to it.  Better to sit close and save the wood!

 

An excerpt from Out of Doors, by Emerson Hough, page 258 and 259.


“Coals are for cooking -- flames are for boiling

 

An excerpt from Out of Doors, by Emerson Hough, page 262.


Before you build your fire, decide what you want to do with it, is it for boiling water and cooking a meal, is it to keep you warm, or does it need to do both. 

 

Remember if you are cooking “Coals are for cooking -- flames are for boiling1.  Oh, and if you are boiling water, fill and hang your pot over the fire before you light it.  This way you won’t accidently put out your fire when you hang your pot full of water over the flames.  Also hang the pot about a foot from the ground, that way there is plenty of space for the flames, if you put pot right on the wood of fire, you will smother the flames and maybe, even, put out your fire. 

 

An excerpt from Military Review, April 1946, page 96.


Build a fire...

 

An excerpt from Out of Doors, by Emerson Hough, page 259.


Now that you know what job your fire is supposed to do, start gathering your fire building materials.  Always gather enough tinder, kindling and fuel wood to build your fire before you strike a match. 

 

Graphic by the Author.


Remember, tinder is the smallest, finest, and fluffiest of stuff, no bigger than a pencil lead, it has the greatest surface area, and you need enough to fill a circle made with your hands.  Kindling is next in size, it is no thicker than your thumb, and you will need a generous armload of it.  Fuel wood is wrist-sized or larger, has the least surface area, and you will need a stack as high as your knee just to start the fire.  Also, make sure that your tinder, kindling and your first couple of armloads of fuel wood are bone dry, so that your fire will light easily. 

 

Graphic by the Author.


Once you have gathered everything that you need to light a fire, you should build your fire.  Do this before you build your tinder bundle and before you ever light your first match. 

 

The two most used campfires in areas where wood is plentiful, are the “Long-pole” fire, which is also called a “Parallel wood” or “Long” fire, and the “Crosswood” or “Hunter’s” fire.

 

Drawing by the Author.

A long-pole fire, can be used for both warming and cooking and it is built of firewood which is from ½ up to 1-½ times your height long, laid parallel to each other, and to the wind.  The fire is started in the middle of the pile and will burn up and down its length.

 

An excerpt from Out of Doors, by Emerson Hough, page 262 and 264.

 

An excerpt from Military Review, April 1946, page 96, adapted by the Author.


The crosswood fire is in between a long-pole fire and a “starfire2 and is used for cooking, for warmth and for “sectioning”, which making big logs into smaller ones by burning them in half.  This helpful when you do not have an axe or a saw.  Start by building a long-pole fire and then cross it with the logs that you are sectioning into two. 

 

An excerpt from Military Review, April 1946, page 96.


How to Make a Tinder Bundle or Bird’s Nest ...

 

A bird’s nest, fallen from a tree on the left and a “bird’s nest” tinder bundle on the right.  Photograph by the Author.


Once you have enough tinder and kindling, you can build a tinder bundle, which is also called “Bird’s Nest”.  A tinder bundle is a circle of kindling with tinder in the center.  And just like birds, who build a strong ring of twigs to hold soft grasses and padding to cushion their eggs, you should build a ring of kindling with tinder in the center to help your fire grow.  The bird’s nest tinder bundle in the picture above, was made with a ring of fine pine twigs, surrounding a ring of yellow birch bark, which is around a piece of toilet paper and a piece of fuzzed up jute string. 

 

Feeding Your Fire...

 

Photograph by the Author.


In the picture above, note how I am holding the tinder bundle upside down against a piece of bark, so that the flames from the lighter can rise through it.  The bark will shield my fingers from the heat of the flames, and it will prevent any ground water from extinguishing the new fire.  Next put your flaming tinder bundle into your already prepared fire.  Now all you must do is feed your fire and keep it going. 

 

An excerpt from Winter Camping, by Warwick S. Carpenter, page 91


Remember besides fuel, a fire’s greatest need is air, so don’t put too much wood onto it too quickly or you will smother it.  Start with small pieces of kindling, and then gradually add wrist-sized pieces of fuel as the flames grow.

 

But what if it is wet or windy?

 

An excerpt from Woodcraft, by E.H. Kreps, page 38.

 

An excerpt from The Book of Knowledge, Camping and Camp Lore, page 1037.


If you must set up your fire on snowfield, if the ground is wet or you are building your fire in a low spot, where the water table is close to the surface, build a platform to keep your tinder and fire off the ground.  The platform will keep your fire from melting down through the snow and extinguishing itself in a puddle of its own making.   And if the ground is wet and the water table is close to the surface, the platform will protect the fire, since as the fire grows it will warm up the moisture in the ground below it, drawing the resulting water vapor upwards and making it difficult to keep the fire going.

 

An excerpt from Arctic Survival Guide, by Alan Innes-Taylor, page 65.


Besides building a platform to keep your tinder and fire off the wet ground, you can use a fire pan or if you don’t have a fire pan, a piece of dry bark.  However, these two will not work in snow, unless they are set on a log platform. 

 

The Author’s firepan, after I extinguished the fire, photograph by the Author.


Additionally, since, you can never predict the weather or whether you will be able to find dry tinder when you need it, you should always carry a waterproof tinder-bag, full of things that make starting your fire easier.  My tinder-bag contains dry tinder, fire-starters, and fire-sustainers, things like a couple of tea-candles and a small tube of Vaseline® Jelly.  And I keep some trick birthday candles, the type that you can’t blow out, in my survival kit.

 

The Author’s tinder-bag, clockwise, (1) Ziploc® bag with birchbark, dryer lint old jute twine and cotton pads, (2) my waterproof tinder-bag, (3) a tea candle, (4) strike-anywhere and UCO Stormproof matches and a striker, (5) a mini-BIC® lighter, (6) a Landmann Fire Starter and (7) petroleum jelly as a fire sustainer, photograph by the Author.


Also, whenever you see dry tinder, gather it to replace things that you have used up from your tinder-bag.  And when the weather looks threatening, I will gather dry kindling and tinder and put it in a 2.5-gallon Ziploc® bag and store it in my pack.  It doesn’t weigh much, and it can pay huge dividends if the weather turns foul!

 

Extinguishing Your Fire...

 

An excerpt from the Complete Book of Outdoor Lore, by Clyde Ormond, page 138 and 139.


As Clyde Ormond said in the Complete Book of Outdoor Life, “It is just as important to know how to put out a fire as to know how to build one”.  Always make sure your fire is out and cold to the touch before you leave.  Stir the dead coals and ashes around with a stick and check for hotspots by holding your hand close to the wet ashes, keep adding water until you don’t feel any heat. 

 

A fire at night, photograph by the Author.


For more on fire building check out these articles, “The Top Ten Wilderness Survival Skills...Number Six©”, HERE, “Fire Burns Up! ©”, HERE, “The Book of Knowledge, Camping and Camp Lore, 1957©”, HERE and “Survival Tips From Jack London, Part One©”, HERE. 

 

Don’t forget to come back next week and read ““The Top Ten Wilderness Survival Skills...Number Seven©”, where we will talk water, hydration and survival.

 

I hope that you continue to enjoy The Woodsman’s Journal Online and look for me on YouTube at BandanaMan Productions for other related videos, HERE.  Don’t forget to follow me on both The Woodsman’s Journal Online, HERE, and subscribe to BandanaMan Productions on YouTube.  If you have questions, as always, feel free to leave a comment on either site.  I announce new articles on Facebook at Eric Reynolds, on Instagram at bandanamanaproductions, and on VK at Eric Reynolds, so watch for me.

 

That is all for now, and as always, until next time, Happy Trails!

 

 

Notes

 

1 An excerpt from Scouting Out of Doors, by Gilcraft, 1926, p 20-21

 

2


Excerpts from Military Review, April 1946, page 96 and 97.

 

When the gap between the burning logs is larger than the width of your hand, they will tend to stop burning, so you will have to keep moving them closer together.

 

Sources

 

Gilcraft, Scouting Out of Doors, 1926, p 20-21, [C. Arthur Pearson, Ltd, London, 1932], http://www.thedump.scoutscan.com/ScoutingOutdoors.pdf, accessed December 3, 2021

 

Hough, Emerson; Out of Doors, [D. Appleton and Company, New York, and London, 1915], pages 253 to 262, https://books.googleusercontent.com/books/content?req=AKW5QadmvhX8a3wUB-PjU-Mf8AM4ugTJLowe10sMUX8EQpXJqLDj-nDH6-M1y4HjNDMW2qBpdh4_A20snog1YjlV7pBWS9Of0qIgxv_d7M83kzk0u59EyjHjQ5VlJQYRi8ByD5sgC0sXLQufhcQEknu8tAdLnZtX-3ROE2WFL78Sciuj_DaUz8Ypd-Keipthwdq13wVs-wjF2U41a6TujFN-FdWMIKJp13ASz4NFkVfSdKC58ox5ms7q0xNm39ulRn5cFQt0cuax, Accessed October 23, 2021

 

Innes-Taylor, Alan; Arctic Survival Guide, [Scandinavian Airlines System, Stockholm, 1957], page 64-65

 

Klusmann, Wes H.; The Book of Knowledge, Children’s Encyclopedia, Volume 3, “Camping and Camp Lore”, [The Grolier Society Inc., New York, 1957], pages 1031 to 1038

 

Kreps, E.H.; Woodcraft, [A. R. Harding Publishing Company, Columbus, OH, 1978], page 38

 

Military Review, April 1946, Volume XXVI, Number 1, page 96, https://books.google.com/books?id=lhWh_fP6SKYC&pg=RA1-PA95&dq=Military+Review+%22How+to+Keep+Warm+in+Winter%22&hl=en&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiIlpCO6ar0AhWuVzABHccFB18Q6AF6BAgIEAI#v=onepage&q=Military%20Review%20%22How%20to%20Keep%20Warm%20in%20Winter%22&f=false, November 21, 2021

 

Ormond, Clyde; Complete Book of Outdoor Lore, Ninth Printing, [Outdoor Life, Harper & Row, New York, NY,1971], pages 123 to 138

 

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