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Homemade Firestarters
Making homemade firestarters is quite simple and easy.
Some may ask: What’s the point of making my own
firestarters at home when I can by matches at the store.
The answer is simple also. Making homemade firestarters
is cost-effective and doing so will increase your
knowledge of basic wilderness survival. Homemade
firestarters can be made from just about anything in your
home. Here are a few examples:
Vaseline Dipped Cotton Balls - Take a few cotton balls
(enough to fill up a sandwich bag) and coat them in
Vaseline. After you’ve thoroughly coated them in
Vaseline, place them into the sandwich bag and seal it up
for use later.
Wax Coated Newspaper - Cut or tear your newspaper in
strips, and coat them with melted wax. Be careful when
using the melted wax because it is very flammable. Be
prepared to put out the fire should one start.
Dryer Lint - Yes, that’s right, dryer lint. Dryer lint is
pieces of flammable material all balled up together. This
is the simplest homemade firestarter there is. You just
collected from your dryer and go on your way.
Homemade Wicks - Take a few cotton cords or rope and cut
into desired sections. Melt the wax and dip the cords
into it. Let dry and store the waxed cords away from
heat.
Paper Towel Rolls - Use paper towel rolls to start your
campfire. In order to do this you need to stuff it with
either paper towels or newspaper. Newspaper works better
for kindling the fire.
There are many things you could use to make homemade
firestarters. The key is knowing what you CAN use. Almost
all paper products can be used to start fires. Newspaper
as mentioned above is the best for starting fires. When
the recipe calls for paper, newspaper is the recommended
product. Wax is another product useful in making
firestarters at home. You could either melt your candles
to get wax or you could buy a block of wax, particularly
paraffin wax, to melt. Regardless of your method of
attaining the wax, it will serve as a valuable resource
for producing firestarters.
Mostly anything that you wax can be burned also. Anything
natural, that is. You could wax old cereal boxes, juice
boxes, or rice boxes. Pine cones from a tree covered or
dipped in melted wax are great firestarters too! The
possibilities are virtually endless. If you have wax and
paper, you’ll have a firestarter. So you see making
homemade firestarters is a simple task.
Copywrite @12008 Delmarva Survival Training
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