Life lesson #8: For all of the arm chair expert arsonists and backyard grill masters...make your own video and show us how its done rather than picking apart the effort shown here. Try a little honey instead of vinegar and perhaps you might make a friend or two. God bless our republic and all those willing to defend it.
Nice video, I appreciate that you were actually out in the elements while showing us how it's done. I wish it would rain like this in Las Vegas lol! Keep the videos coming 👍
10 uses for vasceline impregnated cotton balls 1. lubrication 2. waterproofing things 3. buffing up your leather boots 4. rust preventative 5. cleaning out your belly button. 6.preventing nappy rash 7. lip balm 8.making certain female toys easier to use 9.hair gel 10 fire lighting
Had it been raining much or been windy you'd have seen failure here. In bad weather you need a lot more tinder and smalls than you think you do- gather triple what you think is enough and that will be about right. Once it's lit, growing a fire means concentrating the heat where you want it to go while not impeding airflow (oxygen) and protecting it from rain till it's big enough to withstand that without added protection. In the woods always gather tinder as you travel along. If you don't need it save it for later or dump it on the forest floor for nature to recycle. Make a habit of this and you'll find yourself spotting the best tinder in your area by second nature and you'll never be wanting for fire starting materials ever again.
For little sticks when I lived in the woods and it was raining I would put them inside my jacket and let my body heat dry them as I walked around checking traps, It's uncomfortable and annoying but it's an easy way to dry sticks. Also when you're in wet conditions or just walking change your socks often.
@eciuj xob That’s true . The Republicans are the lesser of two evil but evil none the less . The both support the international Zionist bankster cartel and the Zionists Federal Reserve and fiat funny money system that makes every citizen and debt slave . Not to mention that both sides have started wars and killed and destroyed millions of lives ( US soldiers and people in the Middle East ) fighting Israel’s wars . Let’s not forgot the trillions in debt they have both contributed to that makes every citizen and generations to come debt slaves .
I have built fires in Downpours by Building a little shelter or roof on 4 three foot sticks making a kind of rack. Cover it with sticks then wet leaves ,mud ,whatever to keep the rain off My fire... Great Video with Great information that can save Lives!! Thanks
If you can add a fire blower stick to your fire pack, it helps to get air where needed without getting a face full of smoke. Great tip about using the larger sticks logs to keep the fire off the ground.
That is "flash" tinder and works great in dry conditions. For damp conditions you definitely need along the lines of fatwood or birch bark - anything that is oily or resinous that keeps a flame long enough to drive away the moisture in your kindling.
Thanks but i am aware of that. I was just letting others know about milk weed pods. And i am sure it will work in damp conditions as long as you have enough small dry pine sticks. Which you can find by digging in the under brush beneath a pine tree.
Excellent demonstration! I have learned so much about why I was having a tough time getting a fire started quickly from vids like yours. I always have cotton balls with Vaseline on me when I go camping now. Keep up the great content!
Thanks and good info. I found that chap stick is a good accelerant that is compact, cheap, and comes in a small containers that fit well in a fire kit. A long time ago I found myself out on a wet cold day without any common fire making tools. I ended up separating a shot gun shell to get the powder out and used a battery to heat up a wire to ignite the powder. In that split second of flare up it caught my tender bundle up and I was able to have a nice fire by providing a lot of attention and nursing to it along the way. It never hurts to practice basics from time to time to keep your skills in check.
When you feather a stick you need to try and keep the feather attached to it. Then once you have a two or three feathered pieces of dry wood get a large log to lean them against and light some birch bark or whatever tinder you have and then lean the feather sticks against it the log on top of the tinder. By only using 2 or 3 feather sticks there will be lot of oxygen and combined with the feather it will burn hot with no smoke almost straight away. Then you can add quite large pieces. NEVER use pencil thin sticks it will just starve it of oxygen as you saw here.
Thank you for taking the time to show how to create, keep, start, and maintain a fire in wet weather. No matter how many tools I have and know-how to light a fire, without having dry wood, I always feel vulnerable and desperate out there. Thank you so much for sharing your experience and knowledge.
The padding under your carpet is also very flammable. Most carpets melt when burned but they too eventually burn as well. Good to know if you break into a winter cabin after surviving a car wreck. All you need is a lighter or some good sparks
I carry a pack of the trick birthday candles... The ones that you can't blow out. Wet and windy conditions use your lighter to light a candle and use the candle to start the fire. That way you don't waste fluid in the lighter trying to keep it lit in windy conditions
One thing you can add to your fire kit would be pencil shavings. You can go to Dollar Tree or Walmart and pick up a pack of cheap number 2 pencils. And then just sharpen them and get as much shavings as you want.
I've Subscribed to your channel for sometime now Sir and i never get bored of your videos lots awesome information and tips, i myself come from South Wales in the United Kingdom obviously my country is nowhere near the size of the United States but the Bushcraft and Survival still applys. Anyway Sir a class channel keep up the awesome work and long live the Republic.
Great Information! I definitely recomend cotton balls. Beside that it's cheap most of us has it on hand or around the house. It sparks fast so you gotta get some of your kindling ready. I learned a lot, thanks!
Saturate cotton balls with Vaseline. The process of doing it is a little messy, but is so worth it! Just fill a Ziploc bag with a couple dozen and you are set!
Sootch, and I've said this many times, if you wrap a rubber band around a Bic lighter, it prevents the gas accidentaly escaping and the rubber band also gives you something to burn in a pinch, especialy in wet conditions.
Another way is to snap a match stick and place it between the body of the lighter and the bit you press on to release the gas , stick on with gorilla tape when storing it in you pack or in your fire 🔥 kit to stop gas escaping when stored.
This was great! I’ve been camping and made a fire or two but not like this! I wouldn’t have had a fire if it was raining 🌧 that’s for sure! 🌻🌻👍🇺🇸 Thank you
Nice video, the bic lighter can be attached to a small zip tie underneath the fuel button to prevent fuel leakage. Then it can be connected vertically to a chapstick roll with about a foot of paracord wrapped in duct, gorilla or gaffers tape to prevent losing it. A spare cotton ball soaked in petroleum jelly, can be placed in the cap. The empty bic can be useful even when empty, the plastic can be shaven, the wheel when rolled but not sparked can make a firestarter for the shaved plastic, when used that child safety device can then be removed with leatherman pliers can also be made into a improvised fishing hook and sharpened. If carefully removed, the two springs underneath the sparking wheel and the fuel cable button, can be bent into fishing hooks and a snare.
As a Boy Scout, we used to have a lot of skills, and things we could do in this situation, which takes a lot of work, like making kindling and fresh dry wood shavings. Now, I just have a lot of fire starter products in a fire kit :-)
I was a Boy Scout too. In fact, my family has a history in Scouting since their inception. I have my Great Great Grandfathers Scout books from 1912! The Boy Scouts taught valuable life lessons, like woodsmanship, leather working, Pioneering skills, leadership, cooking, and so on. It is a shame that it became what it is now. Young boys no longer have that available to them now, but they do have guys like you and I to carry thise skills forward!
Yep. Those wet weather fires were alway hard to get going. In Estes park in the Rocky Mtns I would bring my coleman peak 1 stove and a LARGE bottle of fuel. You still had to be careful with your fire lay but that extra fuel to start a roaring fire was a Godsend. Especially in winter.
You have to practice to build a fire. And you did a great job building your fire Don! I didn't do so well on my first real attempts even with a magnesium rod. It took practice to achieve that skill. Even in my survival training classes a bow drill was impossible to me. But I learned. I carry a fire kit in my Jeep bag. It's changed over and over again throughout the years. 3 item's will always be in my kit. A large magnesium rod, a telescoping bellows tube and a bag of magnesium shavings, of course I have fire tinder in my kit. But mag shavings really burn super hot. Here's one for you. A small pencil sharpener can make shavings out of sticks. I have one in my kit. In my first survival kit I ever built our teacher told us to add it to our kits, during wilderness survival training a longtime ago.... Anyway, thanks for the video Don! 🇺🇸 🔥🌧
The best tinder if silver birch bark. I guess it depends if you have them where you are? And woodland in Europe or the UK has silver birch around the place. But if they are rare when you see one grab as much as you can and store it.
Put a rubber band around the BIC between the body and the red switch you push down to release fuel. Don’t have to worry about an accidental fuel release. Good video
One of the best fire starters is just paper towels and vegetable oil. Just soak the paper towels in vegetable oil, light it, and it will burn for a long time. The paper towels can also be used as intended for cleaning and wiping, and the vegetable oil can be used for cooking.
Another little piece of ADVICE the more resiny the wood (pine cedar, or like sootch mentioned, birch) they'll light and hold fire a little more easily then regular hard wood. Even pine needles and dry leaves make a quick and relatively simple fire. Just will take a lot more leaves and pine needles then ya think
I admire people like you by adapting and using everything to your advantage in survival situations. Every move is crucial and can leave you injured/sick especially if your out in the woods away from civilization, I will subscribe to your channel and hope this helps since you helped me with some wisdom good sir salute 🇺🇸
You need to fan that Fire again and again if its raining. It helps a wet fire immensely to dry out and get the oxygen it needs. Use a sit mat or something to start the fire.
That's a hell of a lot of effort for wood shavings. Get yourself one of those chunky pencil sharpeners with the double holes. Then simply turn sticks in it like pencils. Added benefit is you also get a sharp pointed stick if you need one
I made some "firestarters" once, with pet betting (wood shavings) and paraffin wax. Put into a paper egg carton. Fill each egg slot with the pet betting and then pour melted paraffin over each. I used just enough paraffin to hold everything together. (put something under the egg crate because the paraffin will soak through.) Once set you can tear off a block and use as needed. Works a little like a candle..
Always carry some good tinder, BBQ lighting matches (compressed wood) are simple and work good. Burns for 5-10 minutes depending on the type. Over here we don't get showers, we can have weeks of cold miserable rain. Making a fire out in the open will often not work, need to first have shelter.
Yeah to cotton balls and vaseline, but an overlooked natural fire starter if in your area is dry of course, but Pine Cones. Pine Cones are amazing fire starters as good as fire starters/sticks you find in grocery stores and Walmart. Pine Cones ya'll:)
Easy way my dad thought me what type of fire to build, hot and dry make a teepee, (think of the great plains tribes,) or cold and wet, you want a "log cabin" to stay warm and dry. Or however you need to word it to remember
Great 👍 job sootch00, you are a amazing Man, I always trust you opinions, I wish my family lived next Door to your Family, If there is mail fraud, I really don't want to think ,what are country will become, so please stay vigilant and safe. Sincerely Rick from Mo and God bless you and your family 👪
Nice music: I thought you were going to start a cooking demo! P.S. If you favor Bics (and from what I can see, Exotac firesteels), then what's your take on those waterproof cases that Exotac makes FOR Bic lighters?
Morale.... The greatest tool in the devil's arsenal is discouragement. You'll need morale!
Life lesson #8: For all of the arm chair expert arsonists and backyard grill masters...make your own video and show us how its done rather than picking apart the effort shown here. Try a little honey instead of vinegar and perhaps you might make a friend or two. God bless our republic and all those willing to defend it.
Nice video, I appreciate that you were actually out in the elements while showing us how it's done.
I wish it would rain like this in Las Vegas lol! Keep the videos coming 👍
Well said, harder than you think to start a 🔥 in wet and humid conditions!! Try it yourself and you will see. God bless 🇺🇸☠️🇺🇸!!
That's funny. Gettem' fellows. GOD BLESS!
That was a lot of useful information...
Thanks bro..
Stay strong! 🇺🇸
10 uses for vasceline impregnated cotton balls
1. lubrication
2. waterproofing things
3. buffing up your leather boots
4. rust preventative
5. cleaning out your belly button.
6.preventing nappy rash
7. lip balm
8.making certain female toys easier to use
9.hair gel
10 fire lighting
Had it been raining much or been windy you'd have seen failure here. In bad weather you need a lot more tinder and smalls than you think you do- gather triple what you think is enough and that will be about right. Once it's lit, growing a fire means concentrating the heat where you want it to go while not impeding airflow (oxygen) and protecting it from rain till it's big enough to withstand that without added protection.
In the woods always gather tinder as you travel along. If you don't need it save it for later or dump it on the forest floor for nature to recycle. Make a habit of this and you'll find yourself spotting the best tinder in your area by second nature and you'll never be wanting for fire starting materials ever again.
For little sticks when I lived in the woods and it was raining I would put them inside my jacket and let my body heat dry them as I walked around checking traps, It's uncomfortable and annoying but it's an easy way to dry sticks.
Also when you're in wet conditions or just walking change your socks often.
God bless America long live the republic
God bless you too brother
@Ghost Only because of the traitors within ( Demoncrats in the United States and their billionaires financiers)
@Ghost there's always that 1% In whatever we do..no matter how big or small.
@@conservativesniperhunter7439 both sides are to blame..ain't nobody a bloody saint.
@eciuj xob That’s true . The Republicans are the lesser of two evil but evil none the less . The both support the international Zionist bankster cartel and the Zionists Federal Reserve and fiat funny money system that makes every citizen and debt slave . Not to mention that both sides have started wars and killed and destroyed millions of lives ( US soldiers and people in the Middle East ) fighting Israel’s wars . Let’s not forgot the trillions in debt they have both contributed to that makes every citizen and generations to come debt slaves .
I have built fires in Downpours by Building a little shelter or roof on 4 three foot sticks making a kind of rack. Cover it with sticks then wet leaves ,mud ,whatever to keep the rain off My fire... Great Video with Great information that can save Lives!! Thanks
If you can add a fire blower stick to your fire pack, it helps to get air where needed without getting a face full of smoke. Great tip about using the larger sticks logs to keep the fire off the ground.
Thanks Joe! I just got a telescopic fire pipe that I wish I had during the video. That would make life easier : )
@@SensiblePrepper In a lot of environments it's possible to find tubular vegetation that can be repurposed into blowpipes.
Milk weed pods are really good. The innerards are really combustable with a fire sparker. And find pine sticks.
That is "flash" tinder and works great in dry conditions. For damp conditions you definitely need along the lines of fatwood or birch bark - anything that is oily or resinous that keeps a flame long enough to drive away the moisture in your kindling.
Thanks but i am aware of that. I was just letting others know about milk weed pods. And i am sure it will work in damp conditions as long as you have enough small dry pine sticks. Which you can find by digging in the under brush beneath a pine tree.
Excellent demonstration!
I have learned so much about why I was having a tough time getting a fire started quickly from vids like yours. I always have cotton balls with Vaseline on me when I go camping now.
Keep up the great content!
Thanks and good info. I found that chap stick is a good accelerant that is compact, cheap, and comes in a small containers that fit well in a fire kit. A long time ago I found myself out on a wet cold day without any common fire making tools. I ended up separating a shot gun shell to get the powder out and used a battery to heat up a wire to ignite the powder. In that split second of flare up it caught my tender bundle up and I was able to have a nice fire by providing a lot of attention and nursing to it along the way. It never hurts to practice basics from time to time to keep your skills in check.
Thank you so so much for all of your hard work in presenting this information to us. God bless you
When you feather a stick you need to try and keep the feather attached to it. Then once you have a two or three feathered pieces of dry wood get a large log to lean them against and light some birch bark or whatever tinder you have and then lean the feather sticks against it the log on top of the tinder. By only using 2 or 3 feather sticks there will be lot of oxygen and combined with the feather it will burn hot with no smoke almost straight away. Then you can add quite large pieces. NEVER use pencil thin sticks it will just starve it of oxygen as you saw here.
Thank you! Do you have any videos or suggestions in addition?
@@markm2302 I did some feathering and fire making in thus video ua-cam.com/video/oCdm4t6tACo/v-deo.html
Thank you for taking the time to show how to create, keep, start, and maintain a fire in wet weather. No matter how many tools I have and know-how to light a fire, without having dry wood, I always feel vulnerable and desperate out there. Thank you so much for sharing your experience and knowledge.
The padding under your carpet is also very flammable. Most carpets melt when burned but they too eventually burn as well. Good to know if you break into a winter cabin after surviving a car wreck. All you need is a lighter or some good sparks
Thank you brother Sootch!
Always after all these fire starter video he has done, I always end up with something new I learned. Thank you!!
Thanks for the video. You're amazing.
A one inch length of cut dinner candle wrapped in wax paper like a piece of taffy lights instantly and burns for a long time in wet conditions.
Birthday candles, especially those trick ones, are also nifty.
I’m always finding candles at second hand stores. I probably have too many already, lol.
Candles are wax why would they need to be wrapped in more wax paper?
The Yellow Cursor the wax paper ignites immediately. The candle wax sustains the fire. :-)
Thank you SP.
Been binge watching these videos, really helps to constantly keep learning. Appreciate it
I carry a pack of the trick birthday candles... The ones that you can't blow out. Wet and windy conditions use your lighter to light a candle and use the candle to start the fire. That way you don't waste fluid in the lighter trying to keep it lit in windy conditions
One thing you can add to your fire kit would be pencil shavings. You can go to Dollar Tree or Walmart and pick up a pack of cheap number 2 pencils. And then just sharpen them and get as much shavings as you want.
Thank you for this video. Usually I am the one who starts an builds our fire. Again,great video!
Very good tips and instruction. I like the almost tv-like quality. Love you Sootch. Been watching you for years.
Love the soundtrack. So relaxing.
Since we’ve been having so much rain here lately should practice
Seriously, last time I went camping, it took forever to dry the wood, let alone get the fire started and going.
Very effective techniques. Thanks for sharing!
I've Subscribed to your channel for sometime now Sir and i never get bored of your videos lots awesome information and tips, i myself come from South Wales in the United Kingdom obviously my country is nowhere near the size of the United States but the Bushcraft and Survival still applys. Anyway Sir a class channel keep up the awesome work and long live the Republic.
Great Information! I definitely recomend cotton balls. Beside that it's cheap most of us has it on hand or around the house. It sparks fast so you gotta get some of your kindling ready. I learned a lot, thanks!
Saturate cotton balls with Vaseline. The process of doing it is a little messy, but is so worth it! Just fill a Ziploc bag with a couple dozen and you are set!
I want to thank you for showing us it isn't just a piece of cake but is tricky so people don-t give up the first time
Thanks for the tips, Don. may need a Scot Pack if the smoke gets too thick.
I never thought about using my knife put in a log to create tinder. Thank you
SensiblePrepper👍🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Thank you sir. 🌿🌱💚
Another great technique to making a fire in wet conditions is the top down fire.
Sootch, and I've said this many times, if you wrap a rubber band around a Bic lighter, it prevents the gas accidentaly escaping and the rubber band also gives you something to burn in a pinch, especialy in wet conditions.
Another way is to snap a match stick and place it between the body of the lighter and the bit you press on to release the gas , stick on with gorilla tape when storing it in you pack or in your fire 🔥 kit to stop gas escaping when stored.
Thanks.
Very good information could save your life
Made a few myself at the Pathfinders survival class. I enjoy learning new ways to get the job done. Great job!
This was great! I’ve been camping and made a fire or two but not like this! I wouldn’t have had a fire if it was raining 🌧 that’s for sure! 🌻🌻👍🇺🇸 Thank you
Thanks
Very nice. I found that wet fire and black beard fire starter works great in rain
Nice video, the bic lighter can be attached to a small zip tie underneath the fuel button to prevent fuel leakage. Then it can be connected vertically to a chapstick roll with about a foot of paracord wrapped in duct, gorilla or gaffers tape to prevent losing it. A spare cotton ball soaked in petroleum jelly, can be placed in the cap. The empty bic can be useful even when empty, the plastic can be shaven, the wheel when rolled but not sparked can make a firestarter for the shaved plastic, when used that child safety device can then be removed with leatherman pliers can also be made into a improvised fishing hook and sharpened. If carefully removed, the two springs underneath the sparking wheel and the fuel cable button, can be bent into fishing hooks and a snare.
As a Boy Scout, we used to have a lot of skills, and things we could do in this situation, which takes a lot of work, like making kindling and fresh dry wood shavings. Now, I just have a lot of fire starter products in a fire kit :-)
I was a Boy Scout too. In fact, my family has a history in Scouting since their inception. I have my Great Great Grandfathers Scout books from 1912! The Boy Scouts taught valuable life lessons, like woodsmanship, leather working, Pioneering skills, leadership, cooking, and so on. It is a shame that it became what it is now. Young boys no longer have that available to them now, but they do have guys like you and I to carry thise skills forward!
How do I join boy accounts
A great video with relivent and practical information, I love your work and I thank you for it.
A Very Nice djob sir , yank you and supprot from Normandie France !
One of your better more informative videos in a while sootch. Thanks for this.
good tutorial thank you.
for those that their significant other loves Scentsy...when they clean out he old wax...the wax on cottonballs is a great fire starter
Yep. Those wet weather fires were alway hard to get going. In Estes park in the Rocky Mtns I would bring my coleman peak 1 stove and a LARGE bottle of fuel. You still had to be careful with your fire lay but that extra fuel to start a roaring fire was a Godsend. Especially in winter.
You have to practice to build a fire. And you did a great job building your fire Don!
I didn't do so well on my first real attempts even with a magnesium rod. It took practice to achieve that skill.
Even in my survival training classes a bow drill was impossible to me. But I learned.
I carry a fire kit in my Jeep bag. It's changed over and over again throughout the years.
3 item's will always be in my kit. A large magnesium rod, a telescoping bellows tube and a bag of magnesium shavings, of course I have fire tinder in my kit. But mag shavings really burn super hot.
Here's one for you. A small pencil sharpener can make shavings out of sticks. I have one in my kit.
In my first survival kit I ever built our teacher told us to add it to our kits, during wilderness survival training a longtime ago....
Anyway, thanks for the video Don! 🇺🇸 🔥🌧
Wow thank you for the tips. I would have never thought about a pencil sharpner
The best tinder if silver birch bark. I guess it depends if you have them where you are? And woodland in Europe or the UK has silver birch around the place. But if they are rare when you see one grab as much as you can and store it.
Put a rubber band around the BIC between the body and the red switch you push down to release fuel. Don’t have to worry about an accidental fuel release. Good video
Tks a very helful video., I'm going to add the log feather to my tricks. All need to know how to do this and practice.
Good job!
Great fire kit!
One of the best fire starters is just paper towels and vegetable oil. Just soak the paper towels in vegetable oil, light it, and it will burn for a long time.
The paper towels can also be used as intended for cleaning and wiping, and the vegetable oil can be used for cooking.
Great video! thank you.!
Great advice, thank you
Charcoal starter does wonders
Great video Don! Have a blessed Sunday to you and your family
I always carry a road flare burns for 20 minutes and hot
Excellent video
Thanks for the video. Useful info, especially where I'm from. Greetings from rainy old england!
Nice video 👍😊👍
Cotton balls and Vaseline are my favorite. Carry 4-5 of those in a small ziplock bag.
Good video thank you.
Excellent video!!!
Another little piece of ADVICE the more resiny the wood (pine cedar, or like sootch mentioned, birch) they'll light and hold fire a little more easily then regular hard wood. Even pine needles and dry leaves make a quick and relatively simple fire. Just will take a lot more leaves and pine needles then ya think
I admire people like you by adapting and using everything to your advantage in survival situations. Every move is crucial and can leave you injured/sick especially if your out in the woods away from civilization, I will subscribe to your channel and hope this helps since you helped me with some wisdom good sir salute 🇺🇸
You need to fan that Fire again and again if its raining. It helps a wet fire immensely to dry out and get the oxygen it needs. Use a sit mat or something to start the fire.
Thank u, that helps
What brand is the watch?
this guy rocks, thanks for the video
That's a hell of a lot of effort for wood shavings. Get yourself one of those chunky pencil sharpeners with the double holes. Then simply turn sticks in it like pencils. Added benefit is you also get a sharp pointed stick if you need one
A flask of 150 proof moonshine is good to carry for various uses . Magnesium is good and hot . Finding burnable wood is the hardest part.
+1 for the Mora Garberg too!!
Did anyone else notice the deer rub on that small oak tree?
I usually keep some broken paint stir sticks in my pack it's dry cedar usually and lights really easy
Even if it’s dry, make a raised platform shown in the video, it helps draw more oxygen in and keeps the cold out
I just got that same watch. It looks good on you 👍
What was it?
@@ronicarbine8723 it was the new carbon core g-shock. They are about $120 on amazon if your interested.
@@remb9614 thanks for that.
I made some "firestarters" once, with pet betting (wood shavings) and paraffin wax. Put into a paper egg carton. Fill each egg slot with the pet betting and then pour melted paraffin over each. I used just enough paraffin to hold everything together. (put something under the egg crate because the paraffin will soak through.) Once set you can tear off a block and use as needed. Works a little like a candle..
All your videos are awesome - keep it goin!!!!
Thank you for the video.
Always carry some good tinder, BBQ lighting matches (compressed wood) are simple and work good. Burns for 5-10 minutes depending on the type. Over here we don't get showers, we can have weeks of cold miserable rain. Making a fire out in the open will often not work, need to first have shelter.
In really wet conditions I use a road flare to get a fire going. Very little effort required and they don’t add much weight to the backpack!
Yeah to cotton balls and vaseline, but an overlooked natural fire starter if in your area is dry of course, but Pine Cones. Pine Cones are amazing fire starters as good as fire starters/sticks you find in grocery stores and Walmart. Pine Cones ya'll:)
If you live in the West you don’t need to worry about rain........it ain’t gonna.......ever!
Easy way my dad thought me what type of fire to build, hot and dry make a teepee, (think of the great plains tribes,) or cold and wet, you want a "log cabin" to stay warm and dry. Or however you need to word it to remember
Sootch, or any viewers, can you recommend a good basic book on prepping ?
Great info Don. Keep up the great work.
What is your preferred survival knife?
Good review.
Birch bark is the best in dry and wet conditions.
That’s great info thanks for your video
Great 👍 job sootch00, you are a amazing Man, I always trust you opinions, I wish my family lived next Door to your Family, If there is mail fraud, I really don't want to think ,what are country will become, so please stay vigilant and safe. Sincerely Rick from Mo and God bless you and your family 👪
Good video
I second the birch bark, used some on my trip this weekend might as well be soaked in lighter fluid lol.
Good video . If you have a tarp make a shelter .
He's driving me crazy, poking around in the fire all the time, blowing, ... it's a miracle that it burns.
Nice music: I thought you were going to start a cooking demo!
P.S. If you favor Bics (and from what I can see, Exotac firesteels), then what's your take on those waterproof cases that Exotac makes FOR Bic lighters?