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Camp fire styling

Tue 12 Aug, 2014 10:34 am

There are numerous ways and styles in building a camp fire. What's your favourite method and why?

Just saw a Youtube clip on 'Swedish fire torch'. Pretty neat.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NeXf6xJJ2fw

Re: Camp fire styling

Tue 12 Aug, 2014 10:54 am

Ive seen that one GPSG, and one where a guy used a chainsaw to make cuts into the end. The only problem for me is no axe and no chainsaw, so usually its a ring of rocks if possible.

Re: Camp fire styling

Tue 12 Aug, 2014 11:16 am

Yes, not easy to make a nice one of that without a nice axe. Much more workable for cooking and others than one made with a few branches and sticks in a shallow pit.

Re: Camp fire styling

Tue 12 Aug, 2014 12:27 pm

I liked this torch so much I stashed a few blocks here and there for when I did a remote walk up past the locked gates

Re: Camp fire styling

Tue 12 Aug, 2014 12:55 pm

Not a bad idea Walkon.

I often take a small hatchet for such tasks. I'm generally not fussed about campfires my only rule is build them so they burn clean and efficiently! Nothing worse then a campfire that produces more smoke then flame.

Travis.

Re: Camp fire styling

Tue 12 Aug, 2014 1:43 pm

Swedish fires are great! They're best if you prepare them a year or two in advance and let them dry out.

Re: Camp fire styling

Tue 12 Aug, 2014 1:54 pm

Ok, there's even a Wiki entry on camp fires with listing of styles - Tipi, lean-to, log cabin, hybrid, Finnish rakovalkea, Schwedenfackel, keyhole, top lighter and star fire. Do you know them all?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Campfire

Re: Camp fire styling

Tue 12 Aug, 2014 1:56 pm

What about the "Dakota fire hole". Kind of nifty as a different way to do a campfire.

A bit restrictive though in the sense you don't really get much warmth from it, plus I don't usually take a shovel when hiking so purely a base camp activity....

Re: Camp fire styling

Tue 12 Aug, 2014 2:07 pm

Don't bring a trowel? Have never tried the Dakota fire hole but it's a logical design. Buries very well after use.

Re: Camp fire styling

Tue 12 Aug, 2014 2:14 pm

GPSGuided wrote:Don't bring a trowel? Have never tried the Dakota fire hole but it's a logical design. Buries very well after use.


I usually don't eat much when hiking so rarely need to "go". When I do I usually manage to plan a hut visit along the way.....

Re: Camp fire styling

Wed 13 Aug, 2014 12:22 am

If I got the time ill build a wall out of sticks and have a long fire in a bit of a hole, the wall reflects some heat to help stay warm, provides extra wood if needed and if all else fails smother the fire and sleep ontop of it.

Re: Camp fire styling

Thu 21 Aug, 2014 2:52 pm

Here's a link to Swedish torch that you can make without a chainsaw or heavy equipment. I tried it, and with minimal amounts of wood had a small fire going that lasted almost 4 hours http://youtu.be/kFKzvWDeiFc

Re: Camp fire styling

Thu 21 Aug, 2014 2:52 pm

Well, it's a Swedish torch of sorts ;-)

Re: Camp fire styling

Thu 21 Aug, 2014 6:12 pm

It's a mossy torch! Nice. :)

Re: Camp fire styling

Thu 21 Aug, 2014 8:30 pm

I cant' think who it was - an outback cattleman I think - who remarked that when it came to boiling the billy during a short break, the aborigines he knew could do it on a far smaller fire than the Europeans and I sometimes try to keep that in mind when making a cooking fire.
Travis22 wrote:I'm generally not fussed about campfires my only rule is build them so they burn clean and efficiently! Nothing worse then a campfire that produces more smoke then flame.
.
Personally, I think that when it comes to smoky fires, the smoke has 90% to do with the wood rather than the design.

Re: Camp fire styling

Sun 24 Aug, 2014 7:43 pm

I just get 4 logs and make a cross and as it burns u just keep pushing each log a bit further in. Simple and does not use much wood . Sometimes my wife helps me get wood.

Re: Camp fire styling

Sun 24 Aug, 2014 8:03 pm

mikethepike wrote:Personally, I think that when it comes to smoky fires, the smoke has 90% to do with the wood rather than the design.


In my experience smoky fires 99% of the time comes from people loading too much wood onto a small fire, or trying to burn logs far to big for the fire to burn efficiently.

Travis.

Re: Camp fire styling

Sun 24 Aug, 2014 9:27 pm

This thread made me think that I havnt had a campfire in well over a year. Miss them:) when I did have them occaisionally usually id keep it small and compact, and usually just use embers for cooking snags wrapped in foil. Probably similar to walkerchris..just a few branches, crisscrossed and push in when burnt enough
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