Fires vs. Stoves
The use of campfires, once a necessity for cooking and warmth, is steeped in
history and tradition. Some people would not think of camping without a campfire.
Campfire building is also an important skill for every camper. Yet, the natural
appearance of many areas has been degraded by the overuse of fires and an increasing
demand for firewood. The development of light weight efficient camp stoves has
encouraged a shift away from the traditional fire. Stoves have be come essential
equipment for minimum-impact camping. They are fast, flexible, and eliminate
firewood availability as a concern in campsite selection. Stoves operate in
almost any weather condition, and they Leave No Trace.
Should you build a fire?
- The most important consideration
to be made when deciding to use a fire is the potential damage to the backcountry.
- What is the fire danger
for the time of year and the location you have selected? n Are there administrative
restrictions from the agency that administers the area?
- Is there sufficient wood
so its removal will not be noticeable?
- Does the harshness of
alpine and desert growing conditions for trees and shrubs mean that the regeneration
of wood sources cannot keep pace with the demand for firewood?
- Do group members possess
the skill to build a campfire that will Leave No Trace?
Lessening Impacts When
Campfires Are Used
Camp in areas where wood is abundant if building a fire. Choose not to have
a fire in areas where there is little wood at higher elevations, in heavily
used areas, or in desert settings. A true Leave No Trace fire shows no evidence
of having been constructed.
Existing Fire Rings:
The best place to build a fire is within an existing fire ring in a well-placed
campsite. Keep the fire small and burning only for the time you are using it.
Allow wood to burn completely to ash. Put out fires with water, not dirt. Dirt
may not completely extinguish the fire. Avoid building fires next to rock out
crops where the black scars will remain for many years.
Mound Fire: Construction
of a mound fire can be accomplished by using simple tools: a garden trowel,
large stuff sack and a ground cloth or plastic garbage bag. To build this type
of fire: Collect some mineral soil, sand, or gravel from an already disturbed
source. The root hole of a toppled tree is one such source. Lay a ground cloth
on the fire site and then spread the soil into a circular, flat-topped mound
at least 3 to 5 inches thick. The thickness of the mound is critical to insulate
the ground below from the heat of the fire. The ground cloth or garbage bag
is important only in that it makes cleaning up the fire much easier. The circumference
of the mound should be larger than the size of the fire to allow for the spreading
of coals. The advantage of the mound fire is that it can be built on flat exposed
rock or on an organic surface such as litter, duff or grass.
Fire Pans: Use of
a fire pan is a good alternative for fire building. Metal oil drain pans and
some backyard barbecue grills make effective fire pans. The pan should have
at least three-inch-high sides. It should be elevated on rocks or lined with
mineral soil so the heat does not scorch the ground.
Firewood And Cleanup:
Standing trees, dead or alive, are home to birds and insects, so leave them
intact. Fallen trees also provide bird and animal shelter, increase water holding
capacity of the soil, and recycle nutrients back into the environment through
decomposition. Stripping branches from standing or fallen trees also detracts
from an area's natural appearance.
- Avoid using hatchets,
saws, or breaking branches off standing or downed trees. Dead and down wood
burns easily, is easy to collect and leaves less impact.
- Use small pieces of wood
no larger than the diameter of an adult wrist that can be broken with your
hands.
- Gather wood over a wide
area away from camp. Use dry drift wood on rivers and sea shores.
- Burn all wood to white
ash, grind small coals to ash between your gloved hands, thoroughly soak with
water, and scatter the remains over a large area away from camp. Ashes may
have to be packed out in river corridors.
- Replace soil where you
found it when cleaning up a mound or pan fire.
- Scatter unused wood to
keep the area as natural looking as possible.
- Pack out any campfire
litter. Plastic items and foil-lined wrappers should never be burned in a
camp fire.
Safety
- Provide adequate supervision
for young people when using stoves or fires.
- Follow all product and
safety labels for stoves.
- Use approved containers
for fuel.
- Never leave a fire unattended.
- Keep wood and other fuel
sources away from fire.
- Thoroughly extinguish
all fires.
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