Responsible Firewood Gathering

My take on firewood gathering is: Don't do it! Deadfall provides important nutrients and shelter to a host of forest dwellers.
 
AWG_Pics said:
My take on firewood gathering is: Don't do it! Deadfall provides important nutrients and shelter to a host of forest dwellers.
Same here, but I also recognize people are going to build camp fires. Hopefully, the Ed. Video reduces their impact.

My Little Red Campfire does a good job for us.
 
Wandering Sagebrush said:
Same here, but I also recognize people are going to build camp fires. Hopefully, the Ed. Video reduces their impact.

My Little Red Campfire does a good job for us.
Our solution to the evening and night chilly weather is coats, wool caps, pendleton wool blankets and a nice single malt scotch. So far it beats the cold every time. We move into the camper if there is too much rain or wind.
 
AWG_Pics said:
Our solution to the evening and night chilly weather is coats, wool caps, pendleton wool blankets and a nice single malt scotch. So far it beats the cold every time. We move into the camper if there is too much rain or wind.
Julie and I are non campfire also. The stars, night creatures, clear air, and the bite of mother nature's embrace (cold ;)) take precedence. This post is for responsible behavior for those yet to cut the umbilical. :)
 
ski3pin said:
Julie and I are non campfire also. The stars, night creatures, clear air, and the bite of mother nature's embrace (cold ;)) take precedence. This post is for responsible behavior for those yet to cut the umbilical. :)
A timely and helpful video, for certain!

When young, and so much more unaware, I always built fires, usually from gathered wood. There was a certain lore, an understanding I guess, about only using deadfall. And if you could leave some stacked wood for the next camper. Life was so much more simple then.

We have grown to love the clean air, zero fire tending hassle and quiet of a starry night in the wide west.
 
Not to mention having no smelly clothes or the smoke
in the camper.
Dry camper here.

I don't even like chimney smoke here at home.
There is so much bad stuff in wood smoke.
Frank
 
Ok,
Here it goes. Get out the torches.
No fires in the west period. Every year we spend billions, billions. Too many people out there, not all are human based but a lot are.
None, zip, nada. Propane if you must, but enough with the wood fires
I know, this sucks but it has got to stop.
I spend most of my time north of yellowstone, was evacuated twice in 1988, still have nightmares of getting to my wife in Oregon this past year. It's always the same, every year more of our "special" places burn.
Kick back and watch the stars.
 
On the campfire wood subject.Now a lot of the wood for sale comes from Europe,
yes that Europe where the forests are cut the wood is dried and certified bug free.
Shipped here so we can sit around and watch the flames.
Pretty stupid IMO.

Check it out sometime where firewood is sold and look for the foreign wood.
Just one more thing the has been outsourced.
Frank
 
I am quickly moving away from fires as well. It is a hard habit to break after 50 years of camping: sitting around that fire at night seems to reach back to some genetic/ancestral memories. However, I agree with the post above that it is just not worth the risk in dispersed sites these days, and probably not in most established sites either and frankly I am starting to tire of the smoke . I am betting that a lot of the west NP will be shut down to camping by the end of summer secondary to fires as they were last year.

Ski, thanks for posting that Video, it will help the diehards. In Lassen a ranger told me they encouraged people to gather the deadfall to get rid of it, although I doubt it makes much of a dent in the risks for wildfire.
 
I’ve accepted that campfires are likely a thing of the past in the West. I will happily switch back to wearing wool jackets again. I had stopped wearing them because of smoke retention. My wife, however, won’t be so happy. To each his own.

Paul
 
I re-read my earlier post, i apologize for being blunt. Was not my intention to offend anyone.
Fires have just hit to close to home. Didn't mention the "small" one we had here in the fall that just about took out my MT place. Can't do much about lightning, but far too many are human caused.
And there are just so many more folks out and about these days. Can't blame them, we all started this lifestyle at some point in our lives, i just feel lucky that i was taught early how to behave outside. It's a process, i suppose.
Stay safe always.
w
 
Wango said:
I re-read my earlier post, i apologize for being blunt. Was not my intention to offend anyone.
Fires have just hit to close to home. Didn't mention the "small" one we had here in the fall that just about took out my MT place. Can't do much about lightning, but far too many are human caused.
And there are just so many more folks out and about these days. Can't blame them, we all started this lifestyle at some point in our lives, i just feel lucky that i was taught early how to behave outside. It's a process, i suppose.
Stay safe always.
w
I don't think there is a need to apologize. I've been forced from my home by fire three times now.

I've heard people complain: "What's camping without a campfire?" and/or "tell me how many wildfires are started by campfires" etc, ad nauseum. Most of them do not live on the edge of public lands. But the fact is that many fires are cause by runaway/abandoned campfires and just a single one is one too many.

I agree. No fires. None. Nada. Zilch. File it under "this is why we can't have nice things". I have found and extinguished too many campfires in both wilderness and dispersed sites and too many people are ignorant and/or careless. If the rule is NONE there is no opportunity for some defiant and self entitled sociopath to claim some kind of exemption from the rules. Not that they won't try anyway.

(then we need to make the common sense "suggestions" on a Red Flag Warning into law - don't get me started on "the National Forests are closed due to fire danger but there is no law against cutting brush and dragging as box grader through dry weeds on private property even when it is 95 degrees with 5% humidity and 35 mph winds" - I have neighbors who are imbeciles)
 
I also don't buy the "i didn't have any water to put it out". If thats the case why did you start it in the first place? One of the nice things about camping on the playa, no campfires.
 
in sept, i was in the northern wallowas, camping at a FS campground. the FS had just allowed fires 2 wks prior, but had to be in existing fire rings. i set up camp, and happened to look into firepit, and realized it was still warm/hot. previous camper had just left, and not watered it down. sheesh. the lostine river was only about 15 yards away
 
craig333 said:
I also don't buy the "i didn't have any water to put it out". If thats the case why did you start it in the first place? One of the nice things about camping on the playa, no campfires.
according to the campfire permit you are supposed to have a permit, 5 gallons of water and a shovel BEFORE you build a fire
 
goinoregon said:
in sept, i was in the northern wallowas, camping at a FS campground. the FS had just allowed fires 2 wks prior, but had to be in existing fire rings. i set up camp, and happened to look into firepit, and realized it was still warm/hot. previous camper had just left, and not watered it down. sheesh. the lostine river was only about 15 yards away
I have put out several smoldering campfires in wilderness areas that were 10 - 20 steps from water (supposed to be further from water too but that is another issue) They cave the fire ring rocks in on the flames and called it good, I guess. I mean - you have a pot you cooked in to carry water, right? (I carry a foldable water bucket that holds at least 5 gallons)

Maybe we need to have random fire drills in urban areas (we already have plenty of evacs in rural areas) 15 - 30 minutes. You may be out of your home for days to weeks. Don't like it? Welcome to our world. Stop behaving like an entitled idiot when you visit.
 
I weaned myself off campfires about 30 years ago. Just didn't feel the hassle of being a responsible camp-firer was worth the trouble. I enjoy them, but I'll never start one unless I/we critically need the heat.

We have a washer tub for fires with big groups. Used it once at Jalama Beach. Have been around another one on several trips and it has been nice to have camping in some fairly extreme cold but I doubt that I'd have hauled it on those trips.

Two trips ago was my first trip where someone else brought a propane fire pit. It was OK, but boy did it consume the propane! I think three nights nearly used up a bbq tank.
 
Just back from 3 weeks in southern Utah and eastern Nevada. No fires, no problems. Only ran into a couple of people that seemed to need a fire.
 
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