Amen!Can't beat sawdust soaked in fuel oil kept in a jar
Ideas was the intent here of courseThose somewhat 'glossy' magazine pages are so because they are coated with (used to be clay) something that diminishes their ability to burn intensely and generate the immediate heat of newsprint. Not readily ignited nor burned - great for ideas, not fuel!
I admire you for learning two languages. You actually write well in English. None of us gets it perfectly. I am trying to learn Chinese, and I am not very good at it. But think of language this way: Many on this forum are skilled craftspeople and are proud of their ability to build/assemble/use tools in their occupation or as a craft. They would be ashamed to do a sloppy job of using tools in performance of a task. And many would appreciate advice on how to do something better. Many come to this forum for that purpose. Language is a tool also, and use of language is a craft. I find it puzzling that some who are proud of their use of other tools seem nonchalant about the sloppy use of language. To me, precise use of language goes along with precise use of any tool. Communication should be done as clearly as possible. Maybe I am a bit OCD about it after writing more than 3 dozen technical articlesa and two technical books, but maybe this explanation will help you to understand where I am coming from.Nah you are over thinking it, it means what it is written ... No thanks. Short for, No but thanks or no thankyou
I understand asking clarification if you didn't understand something because of the way it is written. It is something else to correct the grammar when you understood what the person meant, that will get old pretty quick, so you can stop. If you do so regularly you will simply end up being ignored left and right. I always had difficulties with French grammar growing up (it is my fist language) and guess what, I still do. I am not going to turn that around at my age and spend the effort understanding the complexity of the French language I am a lost cause. I learned English later in life (self-thought) and I am still learning, I know my grammar and punctuation could be a lot better, but it is easier in English, there is odd rules that I never learn and I have hard time getting my head around but the last thing I want is getting corrected every time a write a comment I am not here to get grammars and punctuations lesson. My goal is understanding and being understood and help folks along the way like the majority of folks here. You can correct peoples all you want but trust me it not going to help you or anyone by doing so.
Pickaroons/hookaroons are invaluable at saving one's back picking up logs and dragging branches. I bought the Fiskars version several years ago. I also use a Pinch-a-Log for heavier rounds. (Yes, that is a real product!)Hi guys I split the wood in small strips and cut them with makita cordless saw and use charcoal starter fuild. All sometimes small squares starters from Amazon. A little diffenent topic I just purchased some Forester Hookaron Pickaroon Logging tool it sure make splitting work easier.
I am sure it works well. But with the cost of Vaseline, it this cheaper than using store-bought fire starters made of wax and sawdust? I start my fires with half of a piece.I lose power nearly every time it snows so after years of research, trial and error, I found that cotton balls covered in Vaseline works great.
Soften the Vaseline and dip the cotton balls in it.
It solidifies again soon after. It only takes one to get the fire going.
I keep a jar of them in my emergency (SHTF)closet along with wooden matches with the tips dipped in melted wax (waterproofed).
I hope this helps.
We were wondering, what are some of the ways that you guys are making your own fire starter’s. I tried small dried fir cones dipped in wax not good. Now using shredded paper stuffed into an ice tray with melted wax works good! Any other ideas? Thanks in advance for any ideas.![]()
We were wondering, what are some of the ways that you guys are making your own fire starter’s. I tried small dried fir cones dipped in wax not good. Now using shredded paper stuffed into an ice tray with melted wax works good! Any other ideas? Thanks in advance for any ideas.![]()
Dryer lint + wax in a paper/cardboard egg carton = 12-18 great fire starters. My wife and I are alone too, but she saves the lint every time she cleans the dryer filter. Then every month or so she makes me another batch of fire starters. I never run out.When we get frisky we take dryer lint and push it in egg cartons then drip melted wax on the top then cut those up, works GREAT
My go to is fat wood, buy it in huge quantity like HERE, they come in big pieces, take a hatchet and split them into pencil size pieces, take say 3 of those and light one and put them under some kindling then put firewood directly on top of that and you have a fire... as far as quantity and storage, one of those boxes fits in 3 of the christmas style popcorn tins and one box lasts me 3-4 years (they're cheaper in the off season)
The other dumb option is hand sanitizer, it's amazing what 3 squirts on some kindling will do, I found gallons of hand sanitizer at home depot clearance (it's crazy what they do once they're not required to supply it...) for $1 a gallon so I bought a bunch of that so I'm covered for years...
I'm 77. Heated with wood stoves, and fireplaces, burned a lot of brush, burned a lot of trash. In all my life, I've never had the need for a prepared fire starter. Wadded-up junk mail is free and abundant every day. I will admit I've used a little diesel fuel on brush piles and some hand sanitizer on green wood in the stove.We were wondering, what are some of the ways that you guys are making your own fire starter’s. I tried small dried fir cones dipped in wax not good. Now using shredded paper stuffed into an ice tray with melted wax works good! Any other ideas? Thanks in advance for any ideas.![]()