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- Building a Campfire
-
- There are many different campfire structures that can be built to start a fire while
- camping. The most common are the teepee, log cabin, dugout, and tunnel structures.
- Almost anyone can build these fires if he or she follows some key points.
- A fire needs three elements: air, fuel, and an ignition of some kind. For a campfire
- the air element is easily accessible; it's the air a person breaths or oxygen. Fuel is
- equivalent to wood. Sometimes lighter fluid is used to start big fires immediately, but
- usually when dealing with a campfire the fuel is wood. Ignition can come from a spark,
- match, or lighter. It is anything that initially starts the fire.
- Going deeper into wood, there are three categories to classify it under. Kindling is
- the stuff that is easiest to burn. It could be leaves, dryer lint, or very small twigs. The
- next size of wood is sticks and small logs. These will range in size from one half inch to
- two inches in diameter. Anything larger than this is classified as the fuel. The fuel is the
- big logs that will burn for hours. When a fire is started it needs to be built like this:
- kindling first, then sticks and small logs, and then the fuel, once the fire is going good.
- Using this technique with the following fire structures will ensure hot easy fires.
- The teepee style structure is probably the most used and easiest to build, but
- doesn't necessarily result in the hottest or longest burning campfire. To build this fire
- think about the name "teepee." The end result before burning this structure looks like an
- Indian's teepee (If the teepee shape is not familiar, then envision a conic shape). Start by
- placing the intermediate size wood or sticks in the ground in a circular shape about eight
- to twelve inches in diameter, leaning the tips of the sticks together in the center. The
- sticks should already start to resemble a teepee shape. Continue layering the walls of the
- teepee with more sticks, but not too thick, because air needs to be able to pass through the
- walls easily. Leave a hole on one side large enough to place kindling inside the stick walls.
- This hole is also left to light the kindling from the inside and may be filled in once the fire
- is lit.
- Once this is completed, the structure should be a recognizable teepee or cone
- shape. The kindling should be lit on the underside inside the teepee walls through the hole
- that was left. Due to this easy structure, when the smaller sized twigs start to fall in and
- burn up, larger sized sticks can be placed on the outside in the same manner as before,
- keeping the teepee shape.
- A log cabin campfire structure is just as easy to build as a teepee, but must be built
- more accurately in order for the fire to burn efficiently. In the same way the teepee name
- resembled it's shape, so does the log cabin. It's built by placing two sticks parallel to each
- other, and than another two on top parallel to each other also, but perpendicular to the
- previously laid sticks. When viewing the structure from the top it should look like a
- square. Continuing this procedure while sliding each layer to the middle slightly will
- produce a pyramid shape without a top. The end result will appear to be a miniature log
- cabin that grows narrower towards the top. In the center of this cabin is where the
- kindling is placed. When lighting this structure, a hole might have to be dug under one
- side if there isn't enough clearance to light the kindling from the bottom side. After it's lit,
- sticks can be laid across the top like a roof, and then eventually the fuel will be laid on top
- too.
- The next two structures are to be built when there isn't a fire ring in the campsite
- and a hole needs to be dug to contain the fire. The first of the two, the dugout, is started
- by digging a hole. The initial hole should be slightly oval in shape and reach into the
- ground about one foot. At one end of the hole two decent sized sticks should be shoved
- into the ground at forty-five degree angles six to twelve inches apart. Smaller sticks are
- then placed perpendicularly across the larger support sticks forming a lean-to structure.
- Lots of little sticks can be piled up as long as the support sticks can hold them up and they
- don't get packed together. Once this structure is built, the kindling is placed under the
- lean-to so that when it is lit the flames reach up into the pile of sticks that hang over top.
- Adding sticks to this fire is simple also, just pile them on the supporters in an orderly
- fashion.
- The last fire structure is the most time consuming to build, but the hottest one.
- The tunnel fire is composed of a hole dug in the ground, like the dugout, and a tunnel
- running into the bottom of that hole. First dig a hole for the fire to burn in. Then decipher
- which way the wind is blowing and dig into the wind from the bottom corner of the fire
- hole. This tunnel should be about five inches in diameter and submerge two and a half to
- three feet away from the edge of the dug out hole. When the tunnel fire structure is
- assembled, anyone of the previous fires may be built inside of it. Possibly the dug out is a
- good choice, because the hole is already dug for it. Despite which fire is built, the tunnel
- opening should not be covered. If this structure is built precisely, air will blow through
- the tunnel into the base of the fire creating an inferno of heat. The fire will burn up wood
- rapidly, but this will result in an extremely hot fire.
- Anyone of the four campfires are good structured fires. They will burn efficiently
- if the proper steps are taken in assembling them. Remembering the key elements for a fire
- and how to light and add wood will help also. The oxygen element is most important and
- must exist to have a fire. Adding the proper size wood at timed intervals will keep the fire
- blazing and prevent it from being snuffed out. Putting everything together, a great
- campfire can be built.
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