Great video. I’ve built 100 of these over the years. 2 necessities I’ve learned the hard way: 1) always pack dirt around your 45° guide posts and then cover the dirt with rock and stone - guider posts will not burn as easily 2) for a true maintenance free fire - tier your log size up the posts as follows: small > medium > large > medium > large > medium > large etc. the goal is to keep the ember base perfect.. gravity and time take care of the rest
The main problem I've had with the two-sided self-feeding fires is that they're not much good for heat. You only get a small point of coals radiating heat. It's blocked on two sides so it doesn't keep you very warm. A one-sided self-feeding fire can open a broader bed of coals to face your shelter. You just use two large rocks to keep the stack from collapsing. This also makes the fire useful for ither things like cooking. Another problem wit ALL self-feeding fires is that the ends of the logs don't burn completely. This keeps the other logs from feeding into the fire. They're not a set and forget fire. You still have to tend them. There are other fire lays that will burn all night, require almost no twnding, and project the heat into your shelter.
@@boltup5566 the one-sided self-feeding fire is like this except you have the open point facing you so the coals can radiate in your direction. Use rocks on the other side of the fire to keep the logs from rolling down on the fire. I make the feeder a bit steeper. I also place a small bit of kindling between the logs so they get a bit of a flame to start them. Sometimes you have to jiggle the logs loose but if you put the rocks on the opposite side of the fire, they feed pretty good. Also make sure there are some side slots that help a little bit of air get into the fire. Alternatively, you can have the logs feed onto a row of rock so that the coals fall down into a banked fire pit. My favorite fire to stay warm all night when I don't have a tent or sleeping bag is an Indian fire. That means a very small fire, about the size of your hand, that you can curl up next to and feed all night. I've survived some pretty cold nights (below zero F) with only an army blanket this way.
This fire does work. To protect the upright supports dirt is needed around the bottom to shield the ramp and helps contain the coals. I've watched a time lapse video which the builder piled dirt around the poles and between them to assist the logs and hold the embers from moving out of the burn zone. Great video Dan-O.
This was my first thought is how do you keep your uprights from burning up and dropping all your fuel. My first thought was stone, but dirt sounds way simpler and accessible. Thanks.
@@clintmcmahan3792 rock and stone over dirt is how I build mine.. also tier the logs up the feed from small to medium to large to medium to small and repeat.. zero maintenance 🤙🏼
It works.. stack your log size going up the posts small > medium > large > medium > large etc. also, use green wood guider posts at a 45° angle with dirt, rock and stone around the base. I’ve built these for years 👍🏼
Try putting another pile of logs at the back at 45° this will help reflecting the heat towards you. Or simply put two stakes at each end, and stack several lengths of timber between them to make a screen to reflect the heat. Then burn those as well! Enjoy watching!
Awesome video i have seen couple of videos saying this self feeding fire you would need tons of wood to last all night winter here in scotland it gets dark at 4pm till 8am
Here in Mid-Michigan, in the winter it is dark when you get up for work, and it is dark when it's time to start home again.... so what you get to take home from this is: burn nice dry hard wood, and don't muck about too much w that white pine crap...
Great video. Important tio: pit some mud in the outside of the bottom logs, so the fire doesn't burn through and around the bottom log. It'll burn longer and more focused on the inside bottom log 😊
Your 'frame' will catch fire without something around those poles. In one part of the vid, you can see fire clearly circling the poles on the right side. Siberian fire is more serious for an all night fire.
I agree. With a Siberian Fire you don't have to worry about the support poles burning or logs not rolling down and the big base log acts like a heat reflector to push the heat toward your sleeping area.
you forgot clay soil on the sides so the fire lasts longer. without it, your frame might catch on fire, and the fire will get more air, causing it to burn faster than it should. decent video still.
@@dennisjacques1817 Too many video creators on social media take liberties with their editing to make you think some "hack" or cool trick works but in practice doesn't, or at least not as advertised. I mean, it's not 5 Minute Crafts level of BS were talking here, but still. I know showing an uneventful, naturally slow process in time lapse isn't exactly fun to watch, but it shows demonstrably how the process works in practice, or shows that it doesn't.
Have you actually survived anywhere? I notice you don't show it burning all night. Unless one used green wood, the whole thing would go up in flames in short order along with the 45 degree angle posts.
This guys name on UA-cam is CoalCracker Bushcraft. He has about 1/2 million followers and 1000 videos in the last 10 years. He practically lives in the woods. I will stack him up to you any day of the week in knowledge and survival.
How do i know where i can practice these techniques without getting arrested? I don't think NY allows me to walk into any state park or public woodland and just start a fire.
no, you burry them in dirt or sand, and pile dirt over them so there's at least an inch of dirt around them and the logs roll over the dirt at the base. video doesn't show this but it's important. Or use a series of rocks.
Hmmm? Conceptually looks like it might work, in actuality it needs good experience to make it work.... my own idea that I would love someone to try it is that the long uncut timber on similar slides, with a flat metal collar close to the burning side as heat shield to prevent the whole timber from catching on fire and a deep enough hole in the ground on the burning end may be more reliable ..... too many round pieces on both slides with burning ends unevenly may make the whole thing collapse more often.... I have no experience in this neither on my idea therefore not expert .... thanks for sharing this video free to me.
Won't work because the two logs creating slopes will.catch fire at their bases unless you make them out of stone or metal. Better to just stack uncut logs 3=2=1 and move yourself as the fire burns along them for hours.
This does not look troublefree to me if one of your guide posts burns its a real hassle in the middle of the night to fix it. Personally i would never build one of these, I prefer fires that will burn all night with no help from me. Stack some 4 inch or so thick logs about 3 feet or so long 5 or so layers tall each layer perpendicular to the one below. put soil between the wood so hot coals can not drop below and start the lower levels burning this kind of fire lasts a very long time and requires no help at all so you can sleep or take care of whatever you need instead of messing with the fire.
Great video. I’ve built 100 of these over the years. 2 necessities I’ve learned the hard way:
1) always pack dirt around your 45° guide posts and then cover the dirt with rock and stone - guider posts will not burn as easily
2) for a true maintenance free fire - tier your log size up the posts as follows: small > medium > large > medium > large > medium > large etc. the goal is to keep the ember base perfect.. gravity and time take care of the rest
🙏
Thanks, Dan.
Courtesy of Half Vast Flying
The main problem I've had with the two-sided self-feeding fires is that they're not much good for heat. You only get a small point of coals radiating heat. It's blocked on two sides so it doesn't keep you very warm. A one-sided self-feeding fire can open a broader bed of coals to face your shelter. You just use two large rocks to keep the stack from collapsing. This also makes the fire useful for ither things like cooking.
Another problem wit ALL self-feeding fires is that the ends of the logs don't burn completely. This keeps the other logs from feeding into the fire. They're not a set and forget fire. You still have to tend them. There are other fire lays that will burn all night, require almost no twnding, and project the heat into your shelter.
What are those other fires you refer to? That are maintenance free and burn for a long time
@@boltup5566 the one-sided self-feeding fire is like this except you have the open point facing you so the coals can radiate in your direction. Use rocks on the other side of the fire to keep the logs from rolling down on the fire. I make the feeder a bit steeper. I also place a small bit of kindling between the logs so they get a bit of a flame to start them. Sometimes you have to jiggle the logs loose but if you put the rocks on the opposite side of the fire, they feed pretty good. Also make sure there are some side slots that help a little bit of air get into the fire.
Alternatively, you can have the logs feed onto a row of rock so that the coals fall down into a banked fire pit.
My favorite fire to stay warm all night when I don't have a tent or sleeping bag is an Indian fire. That means a very small fire, about the size of your hand, that you can curl up next to and feed all night. I've survived some pretty cold nights (below zero F) with only an army blanket this way.
This fire does work. To protect the upright supports dirt is needed around the bottom to shield the ramp and helps contain the coals. I've watched a time lapse video which the builder piled dirt around the poles and between them to assist the logs and hold the embers from moving out of the burn zone. Great video Dan-O.
This was my first thought is how do you keep your uprights from burning up and dropping all your fuel. My first thought was stone, but dirt sounds way simpler and accessible. Thanks.
Glad you said this..I really thought what is stopping the uprights from burning away and just letting smoldering logs roll all over your camp?
@@clintmcmahan3792 rock and stone over dirt is how I build mine.. also tier the logs up the feed from small to medium to large to medium to small and repeat.. zero maintenance 🤙🏼
I was just about to ask about those supports. Thanks.
I would like to see a time lapse of the logs rolling. Or just try it myself...
Me too
It works.. stack your log size going up the posts small > medium > large > medium > large etc. also, use green wood guider posts at a 45° angle with dirt, rock and stone around the base. I’ve built these for years 👍🏼
@@FFLL2112 how does he light the fire up? What is that red thing with a match effect?
@@oswaldc.3757 Yeah, you’re gonna need more than a few twigs to get a fire started with smooth rounds.
Literally a life saver. Run a metal pipe at an angle over it into your room and bam warm all night. Thanks Dan
So you can get the heat radiating from the metal pipe and not have to worry about smoke?
yes, you can make the metal absorb the heat and then radiate into the pipe@@kenyenmusic7548
@@kenyenmusic7548Yes!
I have used this method ,Dan, couple of times ,it works well. Just watch for wind changes
Try putting another pile of logs at the back at 45° this will help reflecting the heat towards you. Or simply put two stakes at each end, and stack several lengths of timber between them to make a screen to reflect the heat. Then burn those as well! Enjoy watching!
I started out watching 200 japanese wagyu steak cooking on a flat top grill,,,,
now Im just watching logs burn. ha.
can relate xD
Good, clear, instruction and demonstration in a short video. Thanks,
wouldn't the support timbers just burn and collapse?
Don't the supporting logs catch fire though?
Awesome video i have seen couple of videos saying this self feeding fire you would need tons of wood to last all night winter here in scotland it gets dark at 4pm till 8am
Here in Mid-Michigan, in the winter it is dark when you get up for work, and it is dark when it's time to start home again.... so what you get to take home from this is: burn nice dry hard wood, and don't muck about too much w that white pine crap...
Wont the stick holding the logs catch fire?
Great video. Important tio: pit some mud in the outside of the bottom logs, so the fire doesn't burn through and around the bottom log. It'll burn longer and more focused on the inside bottom log 😊
I will have to give it a try in a few weeks . I am waiting for the snow to start to start falling a bit more .
Thanks a lot. The detail tip of starting it way early sounds helpful for me. And the large size logs.
Your 'frame' will catch fire without something around those poles. In one part of the vid, you can see fire clearly circling the poles on the right side. Siberian fire is more serious for an all night fire.
I agree. With a Siberian Fire you don't have to worry about the support poles burning or logs not rolling down and the big base log acts like a heat reflector to push the heat toward your sleeping area.
It seems to produce a steady billow of smoke. I’m just glad I don’t see zero degree temps very often and don’t really need to use this.
Camping di musim dingin keren mungkin aku tidak akan sanggup good beautiful adventure😁👍☕
you forgot clay soil on the sides so the fire lasts longer. without it, your frame might catch on fire, and the fire will get more air, causing it to burn faster than it should. decent video still.
Would love to see a time lapse or honest picture 8-12 hours later.
Mistrustful much? Sheesh! Is he asking you for money, eh? lol! smh!
@@dennisjacques1817 Too many video creators on social media take liberties with their editing to make you think some "hack" or cool trick works but in practice doesn't, or at least not as advertised. I mean, it's not 5 Minute Crafts level of BS were talking here, but still.
I know showing an uneventful, naturally slow process in time lapse isn't exactly fun to watch, but it shows demonstrably how the process works in practice, or shows that it doesn't.
Great video
Thanks for sharing!
Have you actually survived anywhere? I notice you don't show it burning all night. Unless one used green wood, the whole thing would go up in flames in short order along with the 45 degree angle posts.
He looks to be a grown man. Seems like he's surviving pretty well 🤙
You can do similar fires with VERTICAL supports... this would be fine, especially in the cold
This guys name on UA-cam is CoalCracker Bushcraft. He has about 1/2 million followers and 1000 videos in the last 10 years. He practically lives in the woods. I will stack him up to you any day of the week in knowledge and survival.
A little bit of dirt around the posts keep it from getting out of hand. Don't be silly. This is tried and tested.
How do i know where i can practice these techniques without getting arrested? I don't think NY allows me to walk into any state park or public woodland and just start a fire.
I always had questions about how this would exactly work starting it early was the missing link I didn't think through, thanks!
Brilliant! Thanks- much appreciated…
I like this idea, quick and simple!
Any tips for keep the uprights from burning?
I've always wondered that. Surely they'd burn and snap well before the rolling fuel is expired.
i would have thought the supports would burn pretty quickly as they seem to be at the centre of the hot zone
Doesnt that frame catch fire?
This was great
Very clever! Thanks - much appreciated…
Спасибо за видео, это действительно очень интересный способ!
Aren’t the supporting sticks catch fire and break?
Could be wet and thick, also use living wood.
not if you use clay soil. but he didn't.
Do the support sticks risk burning/breaking off/collapsing?
they do. this is a terrible idea
no, you burry them in dirt or sand, and pile dirt over them so there's at least an inch of dirt around them and the logs roll over the dirt at the base.
video doesn't show this but it's important.
Or use a series of rocks.
@@laptopdragon Ahhhhh. That's smart - ok thanks!
What stops the roller sticks from being burned?
Tough to tell by the short video how well this method works. A timelapse would have been really cool, maybe next time(?)
So, the ramp wood does not burn and collapse?
This is genius! Can't wait to try it out, I hate the cold and always end up asleep next to the fire lol so this is perfect :D
what saw are you using?
And the sliding sticks are fireproofed or what?
Was this guy on "Alone"?
Yes
Hey ya ! I have a saw like that. It has a blade for brush. What kind of blade for logs ? 😊❤
I would think the uprights would catch fire and fall! How do you prevent that?
Why won't the whole thing catch?
why won't all the logs catch fire?
did you use wood branches as the rails?!?!? won't they burn?
never seen that b4, that's really smart
couldn't help but noticeing the guitar. jammin
Could you not put 4 forked sticks to support the top of the sticks the logs are resting on?
How do you pound sticks into frozen ground?
Never seen ground that was covered in snow but not frozen... ??? Man, tis little you know of the out doors!
AWESOME MUSIC 🎶 🎵 Was dancing and whooping and hollering to that bass strumming!!!
Nice can’t wait to try this myself after lockdown
Just go outside whatre u waiting for
Have you seen the Norwegian "Nying" ?
What keeps the uprights from catching fire?
Pile and compact dirt around the feeder legs.
Must the logs be round shape or can split wood in quarters work?
Do you think this method could be used to thaw frozen earth?
Very cool!!
What on earth did he use to light it!?
Sweet fire match
Very good information, thankyou
Wtf kind of match is he using??!
Sweet fire match by UCO
this is a cool project but there are simpler and more effective self-sustaining fire lays for wet/cold conditions.
Great video! Just subbed. Going to make one of these myself and film it for my own channel.
good video great tip, but not crazy about the music
Excellent video bud thanks
This never works for me... The fire just climbs and in an hour or so the entire collection is on fire and burns hot, but for a short time..
Trying this, this month. Now to just have some cold weather.
I like using a good sleeping bag you'll never wake up cold. It would be good in a emergency if you were stuck out in the woods unprepared.
Whole time in thinking "what stops the flames from traveling up the dry wood?" Oh, nothing at all
It does work 👍but sometimes shit happens, right 😁😂👍
I always wonder where these people are. Where I live, if there is snow on the ground you are not pounding wood stakes in the ground.
HAHA so true
Not even in the Fall, before Winter has come ravening in?
No time lapse on how it went.
Brilliant, thanks !
Thanks very informative
Wouldn't give off that much heat,I bet!I think one ramp would be more better!just my personal view though.btw good job👍❤️
Also a person will roughly get, half to a full hour of burn time for every inch the long is thick.
No shit? So an 8” log will last 8 hours? What about different types of lumber?
@@Japlonewolf57 8” log will burn a whole lot faster than 8 hours.
I Got a notification of this video and it was made three years ago
You should never have to worry about wood before you go to sleep, in a survival or hobby camping situation!
Always be more than stocked
The wood & the kindling is what you find in july not february.
Great idea thanks!
Just a Timelapse how it burns down is missing 😊
How does that not turn into a great bonfire???? I'm gonna try this
Totally AWESOME vid!
Kool Fire starter!
Hmmm? Conceptually looks like it might work, in actuality it needs good experience to make it work.... my own idea that I would love someone to try it is that the long uncut timber on similar slides, with a flat metal collar close to the burning side as heat shield to prevent the whole timber from catching on fire and a deep enough hole in the ground on the burning end may be more reliable ..... too many round pieces on both slides with burning ends unevenly may make the whole thing collapse more often.... I have no experience in this neither on my idea therefore not expert .... thanks for sharing this video free to me.
Great video
Thanks
What was that you used to start the fire with ?
Rite the v shape that hold the wood are made of wood. Why don't thay burn and collapse,??? ¿
I know another self-feeding fire.
Coal mine fires.
Not too good at warming shelters though, if you want to survive in them.
☮
Why is there country music playing when I should be hearing fire crackling? 🔥 also we didn't get to see the logs roll.
Wait this isn't Coalcracker Bushcraft...
The 45 degree sticks must be inflammable.
Those sticks holding up the logs are gonna burn
Pack dirt around them and use green poles it will work.
Very cool!
Big cons of this fire method is the SMOKE. Can't get enough air. But that is good if you have many mosquitos. :)
Cool !
Nice......
The ramps will burn and fall.
Won't work because the two logs creating slopes will.catch fire at their bases unless you make them out of stone or metal. Better to just stack uncut logs 3=2=1 and move yourself as the fire burns along them for hours.
If there’s heavy snow you’re FD.
Spoiler...the supports dont burn if you do it right, place them right and if need be shore them up with some dirt
This does not look troublefree to me if one of your guide posts burns its a real hassle in the middle of the night to fix it. Personally i would never build one of these, I prefer fires that will burn all night with no help from me. Stack some 4 inch or so thick logs about 3 feet or so long 5 or so layers tall each layer perpendicular to the one below. put soil between the wood so hot coals can not drop below and start the lower levels burning this kind of fire lasts a very long time and requires no help at all so you can sleep or take care of whatever you need instead of messing with the fire.
It would be funny to see burning logs of wood rolling into the jungle in the middle of the night!😁😁but I guess the chances are low, right 👍🙄😁😂