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Sandhill Crane
Joined
Mar 15, 2010
Messages
3,241
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Saugatuck, Michigan
Have not used kindling in three years! Margaret, my wife, got this from her sister who got it from who knows where....

Things you need:
1. old candles(garage sales, neighbors, friends, everyone has a drawer of holiday candles somewhere)
2. cardboard egg cartons
3. lint (yep...drier lint)

Melt candled in double boiler or however you wish.
Stuff lint in egg carton partitions.
Pour melted wax into egg cartons, let harden, break into individual parts.
Place two logs in wood stove. Set fire starters on top and light. Add more wood on top of fire starters.

We keep a small basket of them by the stove. Especially great in the Fall when lighting an occassional fire. And, they make great 'tokens of appreciation' for friends.

I had surgery last Winter and a good friend came over and brought wood from the shed up to the house with the quad and trailer. Margaret slipped a plastic grocery bag of fire starters into his car. He had kind of pooh poohed fire starters in general, thinking of store bought ones. He called two days later saying they were the next best thing to maple syrup!

Having trouble formating the image size to load photos.
 
cnice_37

cnice_37

ArboristSite Guru
Joined
Mar 29, 2010
Messages
929
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MA
Interesting....

so how full of each item in the partition?

to re-size files just use web host program, like photobucket, and there is some option there to re-size for web page - don't recall the exact wording.
 
Pulp Friction

Pulp Friction

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Sep 19, 2010
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121
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S. New Jersey
I use a case of fire starters from Walmart for $10. Just break off the smallest piece from each brick that you can get by with. I usually end up with a piece about 1 cubic inch. A case lasts all year that way instead of using one of the full-size bricks in the case, and I worry less about gumming up my stack with parafin or whatever they make them out of.
 
TreePointer

TreePointer

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Oct 21, 2008
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Western PA
We've been using a case of Jarden StarterLogg (yes, it's spelled with two g's). They're not actually log size, but look more like short bricks. Break off a cubic inch and that's all you need.

We've managed to get them in packages/cases of 4, 24, and 40 bricks (whichever one is on special/seasonal clearance).
 
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Winn R

Winn R

Rambling Wreck
Joined
Mar 13, 2010
Messages
386
Location
40 miles north of Atlanta
We have something called fat pine, or lighter.

It's the sap filled pine that's almost like amber. Lite a chunk with a match, it'll burn even wet. Pick it up in the woods.

Or one of the fancy Maine stores sells it for $25 a bundle!
 
Pulp Friction

Pulp Friction

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S. New Jersey
Starting a fire daily?......

Yes, pretty much daily. Actually I should have said "all season" instead of all year. The only time I use the starter-brick chunks is when I work overtime and get home from work too late for the embers to have lasted. When the embers do last, I throw on a couple of oak pallet strips a few inches long. Just add air aimed just right from a cracked open woodstove door and it is like solid rocket fuel. Otherwise, the chunk of starter brick gets used almost once daily. Just one match and walk away. I've done it all sorts of other ways and this is by far the easiest way for me so far.
 
gtsawyer
Joined
Mar 11, 2010
Messages
674
Location
Utah
We started using the lint/wax/cardboard egg carton fire starters maybe 3 years ago. I couldn't bring my man-self to even try them for awhile (I don't need no stinkin' fire starter crap) but after using them I realized they work really, really well. However, thinking of what's in the lint is kinda gross.

We collect bits and pieces of candles and wax over the course of the year and make the starters in the fall. We had a few left over from last year, seen in the photo.

I think next time I'll make them out of wood chips instead of lint to avoid the yuck-factor.

attachment.php
 
woodbooga

woodbooga

cords of mystic memory
Joined
May 7, 2008
Messages
11,943
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Between Gonic and Chocorua
Neat reading about these tricks folks use.

Around here, no one even wants to touch the white pine that's abundant - except for campfires.

I've about sold all the camp wood I'm gonna. So I'll be getting busy soon in whacking up a supply, taking the camp splits and whittling them down to small pieces that I'll pile in the barn.

The knotty pieces are great for firestarting because of the resin. But I sure do like splitting those straight-grained pieces. The way they go 'plink-plink-plink' as you split them down.

Our old cookstove won't hold an overnight fire, so we go through a LOT of kinlen!
 
TreePointer

TreePointer

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I'm an old Boy Scout at heart, so I prefer to start fires with just a wooden match and a little tinder. Heck, I often challenge my nieces and nephews to light the outdoor firepit with a magnifying glass or a friction fire. They get a kick out of it and learn things they wouldn't possibly learn in their formal schooling.

However, when I need a fire for quick heat, or friends are visiting and I don't want to waste time, it's hard to beat getting things going with something like a StarterLogg piece.
 
buildmyown

buildmyown

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Franklin, Ma
I pass by a cabinet shop one my way to work and about once a month he has 3 trash barrels full of hard wood scraps. I just dump them in my trunk and then fill 3 trash barrels in my basement those usally last all season and light right up using a propane plumbers torch. Then again the torch will usally light up nice dry wood anyways.
 

DSS

Cowshot
Joined
Nov 18, 2009
Messages
17,435
Location
Gone
Nice dry softwood noodles are the best thing i've tried.

But i'm gonna try the dryerlintintheeggcup thing, just because. Cool idea.
 

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