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Building a campfire is one thing, but keeping it blazing so you can enjoy its warm glow for hours is another.
Building a campfire is one thing, but keeping it blazing so you can enjoy its warm glow for hours is another.

How to Build a Campfire

Step one: know the conditions and whether fires are actually allowed where you're camping

Published:  Updated: 
Building a campfire is one thing, but keeping it blazing so you can enjoy its warm glow for hours is another.

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Lighting a campfire is one thing, but keeping it blazing so you can enjoy its warm glow for hours is another. Safely build one to be proud of using this guide.

Research and Prepare

Fire is, by its nature, volatile. Don鈥檛 take starting one lightly, since it could quickly get out of hand if left unattended. Be sure to check all regulations in your area鈥攃ampfires聽are prohibited in some places due to weather or archaeological reasons. If they are allowed, then which is usually displayed at ranger stations or along roads into public lands. When the arrow is pointing to yellow (high), orange (very high), or red (extreme), don鈥檛 burn.

If your campsite has an existing聽fire pit, use it. Building a new one is unnecessary, and chances are the pit is where it is for a reason. If your site doesn鈥檛 have one and it鈥檚 within the rules to dig a new one, make sure you鈥檙e聽at least 15 feet from shrubs, trees, and tent walls鈥攁nything that could catch. If possible, choose a spot that鈥檚 protected from strong wind, and make sure聽your pit is at least one foot deep to avoid gusts kicking up embers. Circle rocks around the finished hole to provide a safety buffer against people potentially stumbling into it. And finally, always have something that will聽extinguish the fire鈥攍ike a bucket of water or a shovel to scoop dirt鈥攁nd keep it nearby in case of emergency.

Gather Wood

Before gathering wood, be sure to check whether聽that鈥檚聽allowed, then聽only collect wood that鈥檚聽already dead. (It鈥檚 poor form to cut down a live tree, plus it won鈥檛 catch fire well since it isn鈥檛 dried out like the dead stuff.) You鈥檒l need to collect three types to provide a good base for a long-lasting blaze: tinder, kindling, and fuel wood.

Tinder is anything small and extremely flammable鈥攖hink twigs, pine needles, or even lint that you bring from your dryer at home鈥攖hat鈥檒l catch sparks. Kindling is smaller sticks聽about one inch thick聽that will help grow the flame. And聽fuel logs are the typical bundles of wood you see for sale at gas stations or grocery stores, usually with pieces at least four inches in diameter. These will keep your fire going long into the night.

Campfire Building Techniques

Make a small pile of tinder in the middle of your fire pit. Ignite it with a match or lighter, and gradually add more tinder as the fire grows larger, gently blowing on the base to聽give it extra oxygen. Once you have a sustained blaze, it鈥檚 time to add kindling and eventually fuel logs. How you arrange them depends on the type of fire you want and how long you鈥檒l have to tend to it.

Tepee

(Claire Bruce)

笔谤辞蝉:听Easy to make and lights quickly
颁辞苍蝉:听Requires a lot of fuel and attention

Carefully arrange your kindling upright in a circle around the pile of lit tinder, leaning the tops of the sticks against each other in the middle to form the namesake tepee. Once you have a stable kindling base, stack your larger fuel logs in the same formation.

Log Cabin

(Claire Bruce)

笔谤辞蝉:听Doesn鈥檛 require much tending and produces hot coals
颁辞苍蝉:听Uses more wood and takes longer to build

With your lit tinder and some kindling in the middle of the pit, place two pieces of fuel logs on opposite sides so聽they run parallel to each other. Then place another two logs so that each end rests on top of an end of the two original logs, forming a square.聽Continue building聽perpendicular layers聽until your log cabin is stacked three to four high, then light the tinder and kindling.

Pyramid (Upside-Down Fire)

(Claire Bruce)

Pros: Long-lasting without much tending
颁辞苍蝉:听Uses more wood and makes a taller fire, increasing wildfire risks

A less common configuration, the pyramid is perfect for times when you want a fire that鈥檒l聽last a long time without much babysitting. Start by laying your biggest fuel logs in a row, then add another layer of slightly smaller fuel logs on top, running perpendicular to the first layer. Continue adding rows of progressively smaller logs until you have three or so layers. If you want the fire to last longer, you can continue stacking layers of logs, just be sure it doesn鈥檛 get too high and possibly close to overhanging branches.聽On top, make a small tepee-style fire of tinder and kindling. Ignite that, and it鈥檒l continue down to light your pyramid.

Maintain, Then Extinguish Your Fire

Once you have a warm fire, maintain it by periodically adding fuel logs, being careful not to smother your configuration by restricting space for oxygen to access the flame. To reduce wildfire聽risk, keep your fire as small as possible while still getting the warmth you want from it.

When you鈥檙e ready to put the fire out and call it a night, allow the logs to burn completely to ash. If you don鈥檛 have time to wait this long, pour water on the fire (making sure to get all the embers, not just the glowing red ones). This will produce a hissing sound. Once that聽stops, you鈥檒l know everything鈥檚 successfully out. If you鈥檙e short on water, shoveling sand and dirt onto the hot embers can work as well.聽A good rule of thumb is that if it鈥檚 too hot to touch, it鈥檚 too hot to leave.

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