Starting a Fire: a Magical Experience
Likewise, I’ll never forget the glorious experience of starting a fire after a long day of hunting in the frozen Idaho wilderness. Or waking to a fresh coat of snow on the ground and sub-zero temperatures, fiddling around with fingers that felt twice their normal size and inflexible as stone, to finally, after some struggle, get the fire to take and basking in its wonderful heat. Feeling the warmth of the fire on my frozen fingers was magical.
However, sometimes starting a fire can be difficult.
Maybe you’ve experienced this. It can be hard to start a fire when it’s cold or damp, or you don’t have a fire starter on hand. Unfortunately, it is at times like these that one needs the warmth of a fire the most. I love how Christy Whitehead observed the effect of Murphy’s Law when she said,
How is it that one match can start a forest fire, but it takes a whole box of matches to start a campfire? ~ Christy Whitehead
We’re here to make sure you have success by showing you how to start a fire in any situation.
Now, it goes without saying that fire can save your life. It can prevent hypothermia and frostbite, it can keep predators at bay, and it can cook food and purify water.
Fire is magical, as long as you can put it out.
Man is the only creature that dares to light a fire and live with it. The reason? Because he alone has learned to put it out. ~ Henry Jackson Vandyke, Jr.
Please Exercise These Fire Safety Tips
- Always make sure you have an adequate way to extinguish your fire.
- Never pour gasoline on your fire, (unless you intend to set yourself on fire).
- Build your fire in a location where you can watch it at all times.
- Never build a fire larger than you need. This will prevent accidents and conserve fuel.
Exploding Rocks Heated rocks can be an efficient way to cook food, however, never use waterlogged rocks. The water can turn to steam when heated and cause the rocks to explode. Avoid rocks from streams or the bottoms of wet valleys.
Try to locate dry rocks from hillsides or areas far from water.
Okay, before we jump into how to start a fire in any situation, let’s cover some basics.
The Science of Fire
What is fire, and how does it work?
For starting a fire, you need three things: fuel, oxygen, and a catalyst. Fire is a chemical reaction. The flame is the visible part that everyone sees and calls fire. This reaction is caused by rapid oxidation of a fuel.
With this basic overview let’s get down to brass tax.
Starting a fire in any situation
First, prepare fuel.
When out in the woods or back country or even in your backyard, it is important to prepare fuel first. One of the most common fuels is wood. Did you know there are five grades of fuel needed to make a fire? Make sure you gather these as needed before starting your fire.
Five Grades of Wood Fuel
Tinder
Tinder is made from small wood shavings or any other soft, fluffy, dry organic material such as moss, cheat grass or cotton balls.
Kindling
Kindling is small twigs and branches that are about the size of a pencil. Make sure they are completely dry.
Squaw Wood
Squaw wood is named after the Native American women who used to gather it in large quantities. If you don’t mind a little bit of smoke, it is not as important to make sure it is completely dry.
Small Bulk wood
This is what you will be primarily burning and should range in size from your thumb to your wrist.
Bulk wood
This wood will be too large to break. Use it for large fires or to keep your fire going overnight.
Now you know more than you ever wanted to know about wood fuel and you’re fired up and ready to get fired up about firing up that fire! How’s that for redundancy.
Second, light the fire with a catalyst or fire starter
One small caveat: Please read our site disclaimer, if you have not already. It says that we will not be held responsible for any injury or damage you may cause by your use or misuse of this information. If you’re cool with that, read on.
Catalyst and fire starter methods
Matches
Cigarette Lighters
Flint and Stone
At first, this method may seem complicated, so it is essential to practice before the need arises. Use cotton balls or tissue as tinder for better results. Usually, you purchase flint with a small blade and or on a magnesium block. When using this tool, scratch the magnesium block so that it leaves tiny shavings on your tinder. When you have enough shavings, scrape the flint with the blade. This will spark and cause the magnesium to ignite. Quickly add larger pieces of wood to feed the flame. Keep in mind, fire is a chemical reaction and needs oxygen to burn, but be sure the source of oxygen isn’t too powerful, or it might put out the flame and ruin the fire. The Survival Spark Magnesium Survival Fire Starter with Compass and Whistle is excellent for regular use.
Now, for quite some time, I have wanted something that I could wear every day that would have a fire started built-into it. I finally found it in the Lucoo 5 in 1 Outdoor rope Paracord Survival gear escape Bracelet Flint/Whistle/Compass. I love it! Get it here.
Electricity
The thin threads in the steel will quickly absorb the charge from the battery and glow bright red. What? Yep! It’s cool, well, actually it’s hot, but you know what I mean. Using this heat, place your tinder on the glowing wool and you will derive a flame. This can take a little bit of practice but works very well once you have the hang of it.
Another way of starting a fire with electricity is to use a car battery, jumper cables, and a pencil. This can be especially helpful if you find yourself stranded in cold weather or in a situation where you need to start a fire to boil water, etc.
Why do batteries explode and how can you protect yourself from injury when your hood is up?
It helps to know a little bit about 12-volt lead-acid batteries. They have six two-volt chambers, called cells, that contain a grid of lead plates submerged in sulfuric acid. Electricity is generated when the acid reacts with the lead plates and water.
One byproduct of the process is gaseous hydrogen, an element so highly flammable that it is used to power rocket engines. Charging a battery also generates hydrogen. And because heat drives up hydrogen output, you can expect more trouble generally in hot weather.
The danger is that hydrogen will explode if a spark occurs nearby. One source of sparks can be the battery itself.
The most common cause of battery explosions upon start-up is dirty battery posts and cables, says Sam Memmolo, a master mechanic in Douglasville, Ga., and a nationally recognized automotive repair expert. The dirt prevents a good connection and allows electrical arcing. So it is a good idea to inspect and clean battery posts regularly.
Improper jump-starting is another leading cause of explosions. The mistake many motorists make is to connect the jumper cables to another car’s good battery and then to the dead battery, a practice that causes sparking. Always connect jumper cables to the dead battery first, then to the good battery.
Another important safety precaution is to attach the negative jumper cable for the dead battery to an unpainted metal portion of the car frame, rather than to the negative battery post. That allows any sparking to occur far from the battery itself.
SOURCE: latimes.com
Additional Fuels and Accelerants
Alcohol
Petroleum jelly and cotton balls
The best containers I have found for packing cotton balls in petroleum jelly are these used hair paste container, and since I use the product anyway, it’s a great way to repurpose something used.
WetFire
Okay, let’s say you find yourself really “up the creek,” and you don’t have any matches, or a lighter, or a flint and stone, or a battery and steel wool, or jumper cables and a pencil. You are in a world of hurt. In the middle of nowhere and it’s getting colder by the minute. Whatcha gonna do?
It’s time to bust out the primitive skills.
Friction methods for starting a fire.
The Fire Plow
The most difficult of the friction methods, the fire plow is not for the faint of heart. It can be quite laborious.
To make a fire plow, find a hard stick and shave the head down to a flat point, like a flat-head screwdriver. Then split a thick branch (about two feet long) of softer wood or shave off one side to make a flat board.
With a sharp stone carve a groove about 18 inches long for the plow to move along. Place the plow in the groove and start moving it back and forth.
Eventually, you will see smoke coming from the fireboard and plow, and the groove will darken. Wood fibers will collect at the bottom and with a lot of speed and pressure they will ignite into an ember.
The Drill Method
There are three types of drills you can construct for starting a fire: the bow drill, the hand drill, and the pump drill. They all work on the same friction principle to create a spark. Spin a stick (the drill), fast enough in a notch of a “hearth board” to create an ember.
However, of the three, the bow drill is the most effective.
One, last, amazing method — which I hope you will never have to use.
Starting a Fire with Ice
What? Are you kidding? I can hear it now. Fire from Ice? That’s right. You just need to make an ice lens.
To make an ice lens, you’ll need a block of ice about 4 inches thick and about 2 inches long and wide. Make sure it is free of cracks or imperfections that can distort the lens. Begin to care the block into a lens shape with sharp edges. Don’t carve too much away from the center. When you are close to the desired shape, put down your knife or rock or whatever you were carving with and use body heat to melt the rest. Test the lens by looking at an object through it and continue until you achieve a clear magnified image.
Use very fine tinder such as crushed bark and hold the lens between the sun and the tinder moving it back and forth until the light from the lens is focused on the tinder. You should start to see smoke very quickly. By blowing on it gently, you should be able to get an ember in about 30 seconds.
Well, there you have it, armed with this knowledge; I now bestow upon thee, the imaginary, Sheepdog Man Master of Starting a Fire in Any Situation Degree.