Woods Walker
The Wood is cut, The Bacon is cooked, Now it’s tim
I really like twig stoves to cook food and boil water but they have another use. These stoves can make for nice low impact, clean burning scout/small campfires. Sets up faster than a fire ring and leaves less trace for times when discretion is the better part of valor. Lets go for a walk.
This bark looks good.
Some punky wood.
Yellow Birch, Oak and Tulip Poplar bark.
The type of hobo/twig stove I employ for this task are usually larger. The reason being these can produce longer burn times and have enough flames to illuminate the camp and provide some area heat which is why people make a camp fire. Also driving away bugs but that's not an issue here.
Left to right: Solo stove campfire, Firebox original and Core 5 setup in simplest configuration.
Core 5. Very UL. Around 8 oz. https://shop.mysurvivalpack.com/core-5-ultralight-titanium
Firebox original. 2 lbs. https://www.fireboxstove.com/5-g2-firebox/5-inch-folding-firebox
Lets start with the Solo stove campfire. https://www.solostove.com/solo-stove-campfire/
I am going to ignite this wood gas stove from the top however it's larger firebox allows for the addition of fuel without smothering the gasification. Also it works well if ignited from the bottom like a traditional hobo stove.
Birch bark and a Bic. Found the Yellow Birch maybe 10 feet from day camp.
Big flames with little or no smoke are all pros of a larger wood gas stove. Cooking the sacred bacon and getting warm at the same time.
As the wood gas stove burned down to ash used the last bit of heat to dry out fluffed up barks. Going to use the Core 5 next.
I intended to use traditional flint and steel with charred bark to ignite the stove however realized I didn't have a rock in my traditional fire kit. It was removed when testing a Titanium striker. One of the pros to traditional methods is natural materials are replaceable. There is a brook right behind daycamp. I employed my finest flint knapping skills on some brook quartz.
A hit!
Behold! My new flint rock aka quartz. Used my REI CO-OP dividend points!
Tossed some good sparks. The second pic is the moment of ignition.
With a pile of natural charred materials time is on my side. Let it smolder as got the stove ready.
Fire. The Core 5 can be fueled though the bottom.
It was getting dark and still had some miles to go so didn't use the Firebox stove this time. It's a good stove however. The pros of campfire usage for twig stoves are fast setup and low impact. Additionally wood burning stoves use very little fuel. I think they make for nice little scout/camp fires.
Here is an overly long video. Hold on... Aw 12 minutes isn't so bad. Thanks for looking.
This bark looks good.
Some punky wood.
Yellow Birch, Oak and Tulip Poplar bark.
The type of hobo/twig stove I employ for this task are usually larger. The reason being these can produce longer burn times and have enough flames to illuminate the camp and provide some area heat which is why people make a camp fire. Also driving away bugs but that's not an issue here.
Left to right: Solo stove campfire, Firebox original and Core 5 setup in simplest configuration.
Core 5. Very UL. Around 8 oz. https://shop.mysurvivalpack.com/core-5-ultralight-titanium
Firebox original. 2 lbs. https://www.fireboxstove.com/5-g2-firebox/5-inch-folding-firebox
Lets start with the Solo stove campfire. https://www.solostove.com/solo-stove-campfire/
I am going to ignite this wood gas stove from the top however it's larger firebox allows for the addition of fuel without smothering the gasification. Also it works well if ignited from the bottom like a traditional hobo stove.
Birch bark and a Bic. Found the Yellow Birch maybe 10 feet from day camp.
Big flames with little or no smoke are all pros of a larger wood gas stove. Cooking the sacred bacon and getting warm at the same time.
As the wood gas stove burned down to ash used the last bit of heat to dry out fluffed up barks. Going to use the Core 5 next.
I intended to use traditional flint and steel with charred bark to ignite the stove however realized I didn't have a rock in my traditional fire kit. It was removed when testing a Titanium striker. One of the pros to traditional methods is natural materials are replaceable. There is a brook right behind daycamp. I employed my finest flint knapping skills on some brook quartz.
A hit!
Behold! My new flint rock aka quartz. Used my REI CO-OP dividend points!
Tossed some good sparks. The second pic is the moment of ignition.
With a pile of natural charred materials time is on my side. Let it smolder as got the stove ready.
Fire. The Core 5 can be fueled though the bottom.
It was getting dark and still had some miles to go so didn't use the Firebox stove this time. It's a good stove however. The pros of campfire usage for twig stoves are fast setup and low impact. Additionally wood burning stoves use very little fuel. I think they make for nice little scout/camp fires.
Here is an overly long video. Hold on... Aw 12 minutes isn't so bad. Thanks for looking.