Most people wouldn't have a clue how to light a fire without matches and could not build a rainproof shelter from broken branches and leaves even if their life depended on it.
Full article: Survival skills on offer at children's weekend in woodlahttp://www.blogger.com/post-edit.g?blogID=3480056791257717983&postID=2876514890154855608nd wilderness - Yorkshire Post
Showing posts with label fire lighting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fire lighting. Show all posts
Tuesday, 27 July 2010
Tuesday, 9 February 2010
Wilderness Survival - Would You Survive?
A free 'How To' guide to wilderness survival. Would you survive the elements, know how to attract attention or find water?
Click Here for Free Wilderness Survival PDF
Click Here for Free Wilderness Survival PDF
Labels:
campfire,
cold weather,
fire craft,
fire lighting,
hunger,
shelter building,
signaling,
survival tips
Tuesday, 2 February 2010
Managing A Fire

The first question we ask ourselves is whether or not it is appropiate to light a fire. The campfire in particular is a matter of fierce debate. One view is that hike stoves should be carried into the wilderness and used instead, because they leave behind fewer traces of our presence. On the other side back-to-nature campers maintain that sitting by a campfire brings them closer to nature in a spiritual way that is impossible with hike stoves.
It all depends on where you are. It is certainly true that there are areas where use of a campfire is innappropiate: places where it may trigger a forest fire where fuel is not sufficiently plentiful, or where fires have never been lit before. In these regions a hike stove is the sensible option as it safeguards the environment we have set out to enjoy. But at the same time there are many other places where the falmes do not threaten the forest, where fuel is abundant and where, with proper management, a campfire need not leave any unwelcome after-effects.
I recommend aiming to travel throughthe landscape like a shadow, leaving as little trace of yourself and your activities as possible, and to use either a campfire or a stove as your location and circumstances dictate.
An excert from Essential Bushcraft by Ray Mears.
Wednesday, 20 January 2010
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