Jul-28-2015 12:18 PM
Aug-02-2015 10:34 PM
flguppie wrote:
My mom always seemed to end up on the side of the campfire with all the smoke. She would always say; "smoke follows beauty". I tried using that line once and everyone laughed. Go figure.
Aug-02-2015 09:55 PM
Teri (the RV.netter)
Eric (the significant other)
Aug-02-2015 03:30 PM
BossCamper wrote:
Our "campfire story"
We were camping one 4th of July and a young couple set up behind us. All they had was a dome tent and their car. The wife (I assume) was sitting in the tent looking out the scree door holding a miserable baby while her husband was trying to light a sire. I could tell they were newbies because he had a pile of 3" or 4" round logs .. no kindling, and he was dousing them with charcoal lighter fluid, lighting that, and standing back until the fluid burned out .. no fire, of course!
I decided I'd be a good Samaritan and went over with some kindling and my axe. Came to find out that they had never been camping before, and had just borrowed the tent from a friend. I gave him an extremely appreciated crash course in fire starting, split some of the logs, and helped him get a nice fore going.
Went back to tour trailer, talked it over with the boss, and since the mosquitoes were horrible, and the young wife had a fussy baby to deal with, and no place to sit, we loaned them our unused screened dining shelter that they could put over the picnic table (we have a screen enclosure that attaches to our awning roller, so we never use the screen house)
They were only staying the one night, and we left the site early to do some Geocaching, before they were up. I admit, I had some qualms about them possibly just packing up and leaving with the screen house, but when we got back in the PM, there it was on our table with a nice thank you note. I would bet they would have packed up after a couple of hours and left the night before if we hadn't helped out.
As for fire starter, I am always on the lookout for downed, dead birch trees where I can grab some birch bark, and I have a zip-lock bag full of it in my equipment. That's the best natural fire starter there is! Of course, we always camp in wooded areas so it's easy to gather some. If you have some kindling, even if it's wet, and a few square inches of birch bark, you can start a fire even in the rain. I used to do a lot of backpacking and we would gather some birch bark as we hiked to start our fire with each night.
Aug-01-2015 06:15 PM
Aug-01-2015 03:49 PM
SprinklerMan wrote:
I was having a hard time getting the fire started , the kids were playing with those long tube water squirters . I grabbed one and used it to blow air on the fire ,it worked great
Aug-01-2015 03:20 PM
Aug-01-2015 03:10 PM
Aug-01-2015 12:06 PM
Aug-01-2015 08:09 AM
Aug-01-2015 06:22 AM
Jul-31-2015 04:46 PM
Jul-29-2015 05:29 PM
DutchmenSport wrote:X2downtheroad wrote:GrandpaKip wrote:
Curious as to whether anybody else had this happen to them?
Sure, lots of times. We don't like it, but it's camping and camping means campfires.
Unfortunately, yes! It's just part of the camping experience. The neighbor campers are not INTENTIONALLY making smoke. They ARE wanting fire! Their wood is wet (or green) or both, and they don't have enough dry kindling to get a good fire started. Smoke, smoke, smoke.... yes... happens a lot. Nothing you can really do. If it ever happens to you (and it may someday) ... you'll be the one with neighbors glaring down your "smoke"!
Actually, the neighbors handled themselves pretty good. They avoided confronting you and escalating a troubled moment even more. By your action, just going over, demonstrated you were pi$$ed.
No (man) likes to have his primitive Neanderthal nature challenged! Something as basic as building a campfire is one of those basic natures!
Jul-29-2015 03:14 AM
dewey02 wrote:Halmfamily wrote:
I've used our air compressor twice to get wet wood burning. Its amazing how hot you can get wet wood burning with lots of compressed air.
This is true to a point. Most wet wood we have had to use is only wet on the outside layers. Once you burn through that you can have a good fire. I'll also lay the wet wood close to the fire to start drying it out. I've never been a "big" roaring fire person just want a good hot fire to cook over.
Until you remove the forced oxygen and the wet wood goes back it its slow burn smolder. Wet wood will burn. It just won't burn well or rigorously.
Jul-29-2015 12:24 AM