- Oct 21, 2011
- 28
BASOD said:I think LL Beans fatwood is actually imported from south America, probably from some rainforest clearcut.
the heart pine/lighter pine mentoined above is abundunt in the woods around my house, when all the exterior wood has rotted away the pith is left, lights easily but I don't think it really burns fast/hot enough for a goord fire starter. I've noted the dark black smoke from Bean's fatwood(I've gotten a box or two for x-mas gifts in the past) and from the lighter pine my GF picks up when on our woods walks.
They both seem full of resin that I can't help but think it's plating out on a cold liner during a fresh fire cold start.
I've made it from pine stump, best time to cut is spring when sap is running, let stump sit for a few weeks then cut and split/season for atleast a year better 2 even if small kindling.
It ends up being more work than the current kindling I pick up, 2 halves of poly 55gal drums one for 1/2in -anything I can break over my knee, and the other for fine twigs. takes 10-15mis to fill both in my woods and they keep the mess down on the front porch.
One small handfull of twigs, 5-6 1/2inch and larger limbs on a few pieces of news paper or brown bags from the package store and I get a clean hot burn started. No sooty black smoke like with fatwood or lighter pine.
Ubookz said:Nothing new from me but I break up branches and twigs and split short 2X6-4's scrap,the thinner the splits the better plus bark for kindling, corrugated cardboard.I don't do overnight burns and have time to start morning fires. Usually my temp. drops 10 deg. to 60, sometimes a little cooler.
I saw online this person in Nova Scotia scrapes the bubbles of pine pitch off trees and puts it on birch bark as a kindling fire starter.![]()
woodmeister said:take an egg carton fill it with chainsaw dust then pour melted wax over the dozen cells when cooled cut into 12 individual starters. They usually burn for 10-15 minutes, they work perfect for stoves as well as boilers, smell good too.
slackercruster said:Is there a way to make fatwood firestarters at home?
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