Noodles, pallets or cedar, the key is being very dry!!! Pine needles work great too but how much sap and smoke u want???
I'd like plenty of sap and no smoke...not even going up my freakin chimney!Noodles, pallets or cedar, the key is being very dry!!! Pine needles work great too but how much sap and smoke u want???
Thanks Zogger...you can always be counted on as voice of reason & a non-sarcastic one at that! LOLI use pretty thin split pine for bundles*, what doesn't make the cut for that because of odd lengths or knots, etc., goes into my kindling box. the thing is though, I really don't need it for myself, as I cut small branchwood as well. but, I use the leftovers.
* a handful wrapped in plain brown paper goes in the center of my oak bundles. So they are a full cubic foot, 3/4 oak nice splits, no bark, 1/4 real dry thin split pine, no bark.
Agreed, Cedar is SOOO easy to light. It's is no wonder the Ins Co charges extra if you have Cedar roof/siding! Old dry Douglas Fir works good too. I tore down an old chicken coop that was built totally of dougfir, found out after I threw it on the neighbors junk burn pile what great kindlin it would have madeHello,
When I built a 3 car garage on my second house, I had to take the cedar lap siding off the wall where it joined into the house. That was the BEST kindling that I ever used. I just took the long pieces and cut them up to about a foot long. It was a little work, but what a payoff !!! When I needed a little kindling, I would take a few pieces out of the box I stored it in and then took a hatchet and split it into small pieces ( it split like butter) !!!! You could just light it up with a match, no paper needed. If you ever get a chance to get some of that, jump on it !!!!!
Henry and Wanda
Yep, fatwood works good too (Pine BTW)Fatwood is supposed to be the best, whatever species that is.
Thanks Zogger...you can always be counted on as voice of reason & a non-sarcastic one at that! LOL
But...I just did some reading up on the potency of "pine-knots" as a great fire starter and survival tool...looks like I'll be scrouging the woods now for old rotted pine logs and kicking or cutting the knots out!
Excellent idea...thanks!fatwood, fat lighter or whatever term it goes by is pine wood that is completely saturated with pitch. It can be lit with a match and people pay a lot for it. I don't actually use it although I come across it sometimes. If you put a piece of lighter wood on a wood splitter, the pieces will shoot off the side when it splits as it's hard and brittle. You can sometimes make it by cutting a pine stump off about 2 feet above the ground and then come back months later and recut it flush. If the sap was flowing good when it was cut, it will be lighter wood. You can smell fat lighter as it smells like turpentine.