This WOODSTOVE TRICK blew my MiND!
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- čas přidán 9. 06. 2024
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Been burning wood for 40 years and tried this a week ago makes a big difference. The only way to build a fire. 79 years old and still learning stuff.
My Dad always said "when you stop learning, you stop living!"
heats flue and vent faster
But where did he put the firestarters?
I’m 58, have been burning for 30 yrs. I’m still learning obviously 👍
Great ideas are fun to learn.
@@shashakeeleh5468 watch the video, it's in there.
So I've recently lost my dad and now I have to learn everything, because my dad didn't teach how to start a fire. But he did teach me how to prep fire wood and split kindling. This saves my day. I'm only 16 years old and I have to be the man of the house. You are a blessing for me sent by our creator. Thank you so much for teaching me.
So sorry for your loss. Thank you for stepping up and being the man-the responsible one at such a young age. God bless you and prayers for you as you go through this difficult time.
@@phoebelong7513 thank you very much ❤️
So very sorry for your loss.God bless and keep you.
@@ballyantonia thanks ❤️
Sorry for your loss. Its beautiful that this video gave you what you needed in such a hard time ❤️❤️
These things literally saved my hands from frostbite on a solo backpacking trip in Alaska. I woke up to having the wind rip my tent off of me. It was lightly raining, but the wind was so strong on the mountain I could lean into it at 45° angle. Wearing full thermals and wool top and bottom, face mask, hat and all (in July!) I couldn’t get warm and the wind was just ripping all warmth out of me. My hands were beginning to go dead, when I remembered I had packed a few these fire starters on a whim though was (deep) in a fire banned national park. I found a small nook where I could get slight wind protection, set down a flat rock to keep from burning the tundra, and after struggling with the lighter with my numb, blue hands, I got it lit! It slowly returned the warmth to my limbs and got me through the morning’s extreme wind.
Smart
I struggled, building a fire the wrong way for many decades! But about 20 years ago, when I bought my first (and last) home, I learned the "top down" method of fire starting. I have never looked back! Spread the word, Wranglerstar!! ❤❤❤
I'm 61 years old and haven't needed a wife. Now I got to get one to save my drier lint.
And a dryer. Mayby she will allready have a dryer, thats a win win then.
Wanted, wife and dryer. Send pictures of dryer
I do my own laundry
I've got the wife part, but IMO on 90% of things if you want it done right you still have to do it yourself.
@@DaddyBeanDaddyBean I mean if you think your capable of doing it sure
Thank you. All really good stuff. Allow me to say just one thing: I will never again leave a wood stove door open. I was charging ours on a very cold winter day, had cracked the door open
a little bit, then got called to the phone. Fifteen minutes later I remembered the open door. I raised down stairs to find my stove heating at 900 F with the chimney red hot ten inches
above the stove top. I consider myself and family extremely fortunate to have made this discovery when I did. As a result, a baffle plate in the chamber was warped and never fitted properly thereafter. Door control valves are there to let air in. I concluded that opening the stove door means you are too much in a hurry; never a good idea with fire.
I saw another video like this and the guy left the door open only for a few minutes to get it going quicker and he was there to supervise. Little did I know, that's how I do it for the first few minutes (and it helps).
Happy Trails.!!.
I’ve been saving my dryer lint for several months now. My husband thinks it’s a little odd, but he knows why I do it. Cotton balls dipped in petroleum jelly works well too.
A bucket full of sawdust from chainsaw soaked in deisel or kerosene for starting worked well
petroleum jelly? Humm, I will add on my preps list.
And much quicker and easier.
Great tip!
With the petroleum jelly, you don't have to deal with any wax melting.
Another little trick I discovered in my 40 years of cooking on a wood-fired stove. Place a folded sheet of newspaper on top of your stack of kindling. This keeps the initial heat where you want it, in the skinny “morning sticks”. When the newspaper catches fire that creates a strong rush of air up the flue increasing the rate of burning just like blowing air into the stack of kindling.
Just a heads up to Chock full o’Nuts Company is now making all steel cans available again🤙
Thank you!
Proper measurement markings in the bands?
Local coffee brands (IE: Kroger and such) STILL sell coffee in large #10 cans... a few even have larger cans to use.
@@gw10758 you would hate the stores in the north.
Finally, a justification for my dryer lint collection. NOT SO CRAZY NOW AM I, MARY????????
Love it
LOL 😆
@@RrR-xv4ij and earwax too =P
🤣🤣🤣
May be the best you tube comment ever!!!
Tip for anyone watching. Put medium wood below the big logs at the bottom as a spacer from the bottom (more air can reach). Also have a slight gap between the big logs so the coals can drop below. Also be more conservative with your logs when it’s hot, one or two at a time or you’re just wasting wood.
Unless you have a Blaze King with an auto damper
Great tip for every logger: put a living proteins among the logs. We all remember the second world war? Pls. do not mind the endless jargon of like "that would not happen never again!" bla bla bla...there was no need for any extra heating on the camps then, so in the forest of Canada the protein will work better than any combination of the pure logs by itself!
@@elfillari, please explain, ‘living proteins’?
@@johnnunn8688 I think he's talking about animal protein. The fire is sticky and very hot, smells terrible and if escaping your stove, a horrible mess. Not something very fun. Like burning eggs or a roast.
No grate? Never seen a fire GO without one
LOVE IT. Been lighting my soft stone Vermont Woodstove for 20 years and been doing it wrong. Just learned something new today. A great tip for our Canadian frigid winter.
Thats the way my norwegian grandpa taught me to stat fires with the top down method I love blowing peoples minds with it hahaha
My Grandmother taught me this way in the 80's,used it every since,I even challenged well seasoned Boy scouts to a fire building contest,blew the minds 👍
Same here this is how I've always done it
Wish you were around my house in the mornings when I was a teenager, Eric! I used to have to wake up and start the fires on frigid northwest winter mornings. The house was about 40 degrees from the fire being out all night and I always had to stick around the fire for the first 30 minutes to an hour or so before it really got going good!
Old school coffee cans were used for everything like survival cooking, disposable cook pot, nail & screw storage etc. I would like to see them come back. Great tool.
I have been using the Folgers coffee red plastic coffee cans for storage of nails, screws, hardware, among other things. The so- called 3 lbs coffee can is now a 2 lbs, 1.9 oz can. They hold up pretty well, and have a snap on lid.
The 1lb can, Now 13 oz, is also useful. They don’t rust.
Also, Don Francisco coffee comes in a 13oz steel can, with a plastic lid. Also, Chock Full of Nuts, comes in larger can, with plastic lid (as someone earlier in the replies has stated).
Don Francisco coffee cans I use, but don’t care much for Chock Full of Nuts Coffee.
from Mike Schneider
8 months ago
Just a heads up to Chock full o’Nuts Company is now making all steel cans available again
Libbey County gravy and chip beef can be ordered in no.10 steel cans.
@@greybone777 good to know. Thanks.
The nice thing is that, this method works just as great on a fire pit. You just pile the big logs at the bottom and pyramid it half size upwards from there. The firestarter at the top surrounded by dry twigs, and flammable leaves if the weather is being moody.
Not to mention there's a lot less smoke.
This blew my mind too.
Same as you, i was SO Stoked* after 5 days in a row and no fails! (*No pun intended! Lol.)
It's been about a year now.
100% counter-intuitive.
Totally Amazing.
I am 72. Have been doing it the old way forever until I learned this a few months ago. Amazing isn,t it?
I'm old as well but grandpa tought me this with sawdust & old wax .
But where did he put the firestarters?
@@shashakeeleh5468 on top
@@crazypeoplearoundtheworld304 WoW! That's just cold-hearted, and cruel, young whipper-snapper. Just wait till you get there; then you'll realize that 72, isn't all that old, out-dated, OR useless. Especially, if one stays active, and lives a healthy lifestyle.
You ought to be thankful there are still some old geezers around to teach you how to survive the coming apocalypse... without your phone, to Google the answer.
@@crazypeoplearoundtheworld304 what a douche.
Great vid! One possible answer to the gray dryer lint question: In the artist’s world, when many colors are combined, we end up with sort of a mud color or gray. So a variety of clothing colors washed together should create gray lint. On the other hand, if you buy a new red towel or bright colored blanket and wash it, the resulting lint will match the color of the blanket or towel because it gives off a lot more lint (of its color) since it’s new. So there you go, lol.
True statement there. It is hard to wash more than a couple blankets at a time.
Red towels make red lint? I would have never known.
Uh, no. Paint and light are not lint related but, good effort.
Here for the fire go elsewhere for other science, like lintology.
Happy winter to all. 🙏
OK great, why is poo always brown then?
@@twizletv4376 you must be healthy. For some of us, there can be color variations.
For fire starters, go to your local thrift store and get an old metal perk coffee maker and buy old used candles. Melt the candles in the coffee pot and pour from it. If you can, go to a cabinet or carpenter's shop and get a trash bag full of wood shavings. Pack those into the paper egg cartons then pour some melted wax onto the shavings. I've found that one half of an egg carton cell is more than enough to get a fire going.
In my area we catch our own eggs and store them in styrofoam and some times plaster molds, with this swapped ingredient change anything?
I’m 65 and have never used a wood stove or fireplace in my life. I just bought a house with a wood stove and the temperature is dropping. I always save my dryer lint in a bag next to my dryer so I’m all set to try this. Thank you!!! I’m so glad that I ran across your video!
I really Love the automatic refilling humidifier on the top of the stove there! Definitely a mod only a professional home owner would think of!!!!!!
Mine in a 2 gallon copper kettle
How is it *automatically* refiilling?
@@PatIreland ahhh you must be one of them east coasters!!!
(no hate all love!) (chimney is not sealed yet lol)
@@joeh4295 yep, me too, mine is a big camping stock pot... easy peasy, no extra cost.
I used to do this when I was a teenager. Cody you should get one of those self powered fans that you sit on the fireplace they run off the hot air.
They run of the heat difference between the top aluminium finned piece and the aluminium bottom plate
I have two and they're a novelty
@@tnt666tnt so they don't move much air?
@@699hazard the one I had was a joke as far as air movement. Not enough angle to the blades and if you bend them more it doesn't have the power to spin them lol
Ben LePage do you use one that you like?
When I saw the caption, I had to watch to see what you were doing. I've been making a one-match fire for about 30 years. This is similar to what I do: different size wood all goes in before it's lit. Put the work in at first, then walk away or sit and watch it come to life.
My layers are the same except I add another one with larger pieces on top. I keep all my dryer lint for starting fires, too. Why is it grey? Don't know. For hiking, I take along waxed paper instead of lint because waxed paper lights faster than any material I've used. I can ignite it easily with a ferro rod.
Awesome information thank you
Wax paper is fine if your stove does not have a catalyst (which can be poisoned by accelerants, colored ink, etc)
If u don’t have saw dust, dryer lint or a egg carton. The cardboard tube in the middle in toilet paper roll mixed stuffed with paper towels works great
Kindling on top and 'big stuff' on the bottom? Man - I will try it, but I might have to build the fire while standing on my head just so that it looks right. hahah
It is contrary to the normal flow of things. Fortunately, humans have a great ability to adapt. 😁
I learned about the "upside down" fire a few years ago getting into all the bushcraft stuff and most fires I make for fun is this style they work very well :)
this is how i start all my fires now ( heat my house with wood ) and if i dont have any small kindling i just make sure i put a large piece of wood on the bottom of my fire starter and it builds a nice big bed of coals so anything you throw in lights right up and theres heat below it. works great
Hey Jeff.
Upside-down fire. My favorite fire lay.
Your great
I was just going to write that and saw you had already done so. I love to watch the Bush craft vids!
Life changing! Thanks for your video and God bless you and your family.
In scouting this type of fire starter [& others] is taught to the kids/boys and I hope some of them still have a few in their patrol boxes. Birch bark has enough flammable oil in it to act that way on its own..even if wet. Only thing is to avoid ringing the tree when harvesting the bark ... cut smallish vertical strips so the tree can recover. The small fire working from bottom up was used for cases outdoors where wind or air moisture could extinguish the small flames; also when wood on top needed a little drying out. With a wind and moisture proof environment like your stove the top down method makes a lot of sense. The Swedes also use a car tire to hold their log sections together while splitting. Nothing jumps away needing pickup pickup pickup. They sit the tire on top of tree sections to begin with to avoid all the wasted energy kneeling, bending up and down etc.
I have been doing fires this way for years, with small on top, big on the bottom, and a simple wadded up newspaper as fire-starter. A wood stove owner should know how to start a fire from any direction, top down, upside down, sideways, whatever. A little note here about kindling is that if you harvest your own trees, when you are cutting the tree up into stove-length pieces, continue cutting the skinnier branches as well (a kid with some bush cutters can do this) and stack them to dry for kindling. No need to split up a good chunk of firewood on a cold morning to get a fire started, and it helps eliminate the huge pile of branches left behind. The smaller twigs can even be composted or used as fill for low spots on your property. Waste not, want not.
What exactly is a “professional home owner”???
For kindling ,i go around my my 5 acres n pick up down branches 2in down to 1/4in 4,6,8 ft. long and chop saw them to length..Makes yard cleaner looking, cheap also..
A professional home owner is what he is. A guy that explores different ways to do things around the place, and shares what works for him on CZcams. It’s literally his job. And he’s been VERY successful.
For me the branches are essential, if I wanna crank up the temperature I just put a few handfuls in
I consider myself a HOME MOANER!
@@iceeman32y A house is a full time job, certainly.🤣
There is alot of old traditional Scandinavian stuff that works really well. Glad you found out abut this. Cheers from Norway 🇳🇴
Excellent! 50 years of building fires and never did one upside down, now it's my preferred way. Thanks for a new technique Cody!
No, you were burning upside down for (0 years now you are burning the right way up! 😂
@@andrewblankley8115Right!? Hahahahah😂
This is almost spot on how I do it with my stove. I do a mix in our camp fire. For my camp fires I do the large and medium then build the Teepee ontop of that base. We also always have a grocery bag or two full of dryer lint. We take it with us when we go hiking or camping since even the two stick friction fire starter is easier with dryer lint. Great video. Keep the awesome and educational content coming.
I usually start fires like this even outside because it gets the fire off the cold wet ground
This video changed my life! 😁 I have not started my daily fire any other way since I watched it. Now, I didn’t use the dryer lint/egg carton addition. However, the stacking method is flawless!!! I work for a flower shop and I use the mounds of newspaper our flowers are packed in each week as my ignition aid. Thank you for sharing!!
You and me both Paula, this is the only way to start a fire,
I reuse my egg cartons instead I use empty toilet paper rolls packed with dryer lint and wax. Thanks for the video, I intend to surprise my husband with this new method. Will no longer need to save paper mailers from grocery stores or buy fatwood. Looks like there's no smoke this way also. Awesome, thanks!
Nice demonstration. I'm still a bottom-upper and probably going to stay that way as my methods produce the exact same result for the exact same effort 100% of the time, so why change. The key to any fire is setting light to the small stuff, that being surrounded with medium stuff, and then that lights the big stuff and you can construct a fire in one go to do this, reliably and without it needing attention, whether it's top-down or bottom up.
One suggestion, a froe with a mallet is a slightly quicker, much safer and definitely more precise way of producing kindling/sticks and I just keep a chunky hunting knife by the fire to make the shavings that get everything started.
Great Help, Love your trick. I plan on using this method really soon. God bless you and your loved ones.
I love watching channels like this one, and Off Grid Homesteading with "The Boss". It's like Mr. Rogers Neighborhood for adults.
I’m from north of Sweden and learnt this method as a child. You never fail, my granny used to take a pice of a candle in a pice of paper as a fire starter. Your idea was brilliant 🤩
Yep we in The Netherlands call this the Swedish method :)
learnt ? that's how we say it in Ky - who knew ?!?
@@computerjantje I thought weed was legal over there - yall should have plenty of sticks and stems ...
I was scrolling through videos the other night and saw this one. I was so intrigued I started a fire in my woodstove to try this out. It works for sure. I doubt I will be starting fires bottom up again. Thanks for sharing this technique.
That’s how I do it since I bought my stove 2yrs ago. Works perfect every time.
I can't stop looking at the water on the floor now. You shouldn't have told us about it!
That's crazy, I didn't notice the whole video. Read your comment, went back to look, and couldn't believe I missed it. Crazy.
when did he tell us? i saw the water but never heard him talk about it...
@@SkiB84 last video. no roof flashing . been too rainy.
@@terrymacleod6882 Thanks Terry, I actually just finished watching that one. now i know what people meant :)
@@terrymacleod6882 thanks - I remember now I was thinking that there was water entering from around the foundation.
I use “birch bark” for kindling, it gets a fire 🔥 going quickly!
Oils in it really get it going
Makes a ton of creosote and will gum up your chimney.
@@polarbear4612 That is why you throw some pine and/or spruce in there once a while. They help to keep the chimney cleaner.
This method changed my life! Works like a charm!
I have to try this for sure , looks like an awesome way to light the old wood stove
An easier way to split those logs is use a hatchet and a 3lb mini sledge hammer. I just position the hatchet where I want the split and tap it in with the hammer. Once it is started it doesn't take much pounding. That way you have precision sizes you want, it's safer than holding the log while get that first hit if it wasn't cut straight and you don't run the risk of it slipping off and hitting a boot or shin. Just a quick tip I learned for my wood stove.
I learned that hitting an axe with a sledgehammer will open the eye
Haha, just look away, wear glasses, and yell highhhh-ya to deaden the "PING"
@@ajizum82 indeed! I just realized that my sentence has two meanings 😉
@@Sadowsky46 very nice.
Lol
Dont EVER do this. That axe will send off metal fragments. A guy I know lost an eye...shard went clean through. If it hits you somewhere else it is similar to being shot. Do NOT do this.
New drinking game: take a shot every time he says professional homeowner
Is Cody being ironic when referring to himself as a professional homeowner? If he’s not, what on earth is a professional homeowner 😊
@@vincefenton it’s a joke I believe
Some Kid - cheers for that 😊. I’m from the U.K. so what do I know 😉
I can't afford that much liquor.
Homesteader is the term. Hahahaha
The best fire starter is : Wood chips from the chainsaw.. dried and add candle wax= buy alot big candles for cheep at used flea market shops.. 2nd hand.. crush dried mint/ or spearmint= makes whole house smell wonderful and helps with colds .
Never heard it called a "top-down" fire starting method. We've always done the same technique but down here we call it a "cabin hatch" fire build.
I do the "upside down" fire like that in my soapstone stove. It's really handy and I find it way more fool-proof on starting fires for when I was learning to use a stove. I used to fill my living room with smoke and my wife was NOT happy, but with this method, and a little extra work in the kindling department, my fires are a one match affair.
I do an upside down-upside down version. I place a scrunched piece of newspaper and kindling between the large logs on the bottom, then fillet-stack kindling across them and then fillet-stack the slightly larger "second wood" on top. My theory being that heat and flames rise, so the energy from the kindling might as well go upwards and directly into the seconds wood, which then burns through and drops down into the pre-heated large logs at the bottom.
@@prdoohan That is a way to do it if you don't have fully dried wood.
Me: carefully waiting for the subtle trick to start a fire. Author: pulls out MAPI torch and blasts away. :-)
That's my secret, too. Don't fool around wasting time.
Lol I thought the same thing!
Haha yeah a road flare works too. It’s a big 15 minute match.
Yeah i just use a torch on some kindling.
Ground flowers...the firework that spins around. Just angle it so it wont spin. Or those little flashy ones...the ones that look like a welders flash.
Always enjoy and appreciate your informative videos.
Thanks for sharing, it was a game-changer. I used this method as a basis but changed it up a bit, so it just takes a squirt of lighter fluid instead of firestarters.
I no longer put off going down and starting a fire because I will have to babysit it for a half hour. I can go down and start a fire in the time it takes my coffee to brew and go back down and tend it for the first time when I'm done with my coffee...which is right about now.
Once I had twin daughters, my dryer lint turned a distinct pink.
That's a lot of kindling for one fire. I use dryer lint stuffed in TP rolls or a it of news paper and way less kindling. But we also use the upsidedown method
Wow, I've been doing my wood stove fires like that for a few years. I just tried it one day to save time and it worked so good. Thanks for letting everyone know.
Great fire starter tip. This top down fire building method also works for burning piles of green brush - put a bit of dry brush on top & the fire will burn down into the greener brush in your pile.
Cody, can you also go back to the wall tent fire and let us know how that little box did on warming up the tent in an hour? I’ve got a bigger box for a smaller 10x16 tent and sometimes we gotta open the flaps and go outside because it will heat us out even when it is only 10 degrees outside.
Thanks for sharing this - like you I can’t believe I’ve never thought of this! Just did this today in my shop - what a difference. I loaded it up and didn’t touch it for about two hours - perfect low maintenance heat!
Excellent, my first fire in Cyprus lit last month using this method. Works great!
My wife from Manitoba has been doing this method for years minus the lint starter but uses sawdust/shavings with wax. Says First Nation people do this up north to keep them longer but with more heat as the big blocks on bottom provide a ton of more air for your big guys you throw on. Awesome someone has time lapsed it. Never got to see it, go like this. Awesome.
I’ve been starting fires for 70 years, Dry wood and a propane torch is all you need. If spend 5 minutes I wasted time!
It definitely takes a lot less thought and effort to use a torch. By the time he gets done splitting all that wood, he probably has to go outside to cool off.
Dang we've been starting fires 1.7 million years before the propane torch, wonder how they did it
I love it! I'm crowding 70 myself and I'm always amazed by the efforts young-uns go to starting a fire. Personally I use sawdust mixed with a little waste oil and she gets hot quick.
@@jameskrug9938 as we age we get work smart!
Exactly, for the last 45 years that’s all you need.
To the trash bag of dryer lint that I've been collecting for years:
You have found your purpose for such a time as this!
Well said! 👍
And homemade fix a flat
This is a tried and true bbq technique.
Like you - I too applied it very recently to a wood stove .
I will say this , the top down / Minion method , just works . It works and it is simple . Very good video man - 🤘🤘.
We had a horrible winter here this year and I forced myself to burn as much as possible / it was mostly warmer than I would like to have as far as temps throughout the season .
As I am watching your video , I too am starting a fire with a beer and just enjoying the Sunday .
Cheers 🍻
4:45 when you're splitting like that it works great to use a 5 pound sledge to smack the head of your ax instead just slamming the whole thing against the ground.
1. how to make a firestarter: egg crate, dryer lint, candle wax..... 2. Use Mapp gas to start firestarter
Cause the Mapp gas will only start the starter but wont start the kindling lol.
@@obsidian314you'll use WAY less gas with his method.
That’s a good method. I haven’t had to “start” my fire for a week. I have welders gloves and to metal buckets. I let the fire slow down in the late afternoon. I scoop out a good amount of coal base and put it in one bucket and it goes outside. I scoop the rest of the coals and ash into the second bucket and it goes outside. I clean the tray and sweep up. Bottom pieces go in then the coal base goes on top. Kindling goes on top of that and it lights up. Works great, no smoke from the coals and less kindling to split
couldn't be without my welding gloves next to the fire and mine doesn't go out often either and if it does I just drop one fire lighter in the middle and cover it with a layer of charcoal and in no time I have red coals, dont even have to split kindling anymore!!
I use damp slack. Just a small shovel of it in the evening and it merrily simmers all night. Also if I don’t clear the ash out, I’ve discovered that the wood burner keeps hot for 2 days and warm for a further 3. After 5 days I was able to clean the burner out but only into a metal bucket as the ashes were still warm. I left the bucket in the kitchen and used it for heat rather than turn the radiator on. Love frugality lol
좋은 방법이네요. 👍 캠핑에 가서 꼭 시도해 보겠습니다. 감사합니다. 한국에서~!
Great video! I've seen two people cut themselves swinging at wood with a knief or axe. For the most part you pulled your hand away fast. If you are in a stressful situation you may miss. As you said "use a choping block" and always baton your kindling. I watched a person cut thru their tendon below the tumb which reqired surgry and they were miles away from a doctor. Place your blade on the wood and then use another piece of wood to hammer the blade thru the wood.
What do you mean by baton your kindling? L
@@AK88. he means you place the blade on the wood, then smack the blade into the wood with a piece of wood. Like using a wedge and hammer, but improvised. It works well, good advice. For very small pieces you can baton with a sturdy knife too.
@@HenrikBSWE it's easy to do especially when the wood you're trying to split won't stand up. Best to never have your fingers under the blade
A bungee cord around a vertical bundle of wood will hold it upright while you split it.
As a "professional homeowner" I appreciate the wet floor.
No need to worry about regulations the already wet.
That is a Cardinal rule of being a “Professional Homeowner” if your floors aren’t wet you just a Novice.
Lol best comment!
Ember suppression systems come in many forms...this being the most tried and true.
Noticed the Water on the floor..and the darkened lower panels parts In the wall..usually not good thing 🤔Imo.
There is another advantage: this method will grow hot at the top right away burning off the particles coming from below. This means venting a lot less particles to the air (something your neighbors might appreciate)
Years ago after we bought our first fireplace heated grate system. The people we bought it from advised us to preheat the chimney. By making a funnel with a page of a newspaper. Leaving approx. 8" +/- opening and folding over the opposite narrow end.
Of course the wood had already been placed on your grate prior to this point.
Then simply light the edges of the wider opening end and hold it up the chimney until the paper burns down until you can safely place it under the grate to start your kindling.
Essentially poking a hole through the cold air sitting in your chimney, and this will start your draft up the chimney.
Don't wait too long as we don't want to burn our fingers.
I can't wait to try this top down system as it looks pretty reliable.
Nice definitely going to try it
And God bless you
I’ve been doing the upside down fire for a few nights now, and it hasn’t failed me yet.
You can lay two or three solid pieces of wood on top of the kindling. Thats how i do it and you can make it last over two hours that way. Just a tip.
Why are you guys doing that! Have you wife build the fire...
It's odd to me the things that some people don't know, but I've always known that how smart people are depends on their experience, and background.
Your need a iron stand to put your logs on. I love my log grate, It helps the logs burns. Another thing a must to have is? A Bellow! helps giving it air to start. 1 More Tip. Never set fire wood next to a wooden wall or your wooden HOUSE! REASON? The logs still holds on Insects. Like Termites and Carpenter Ants. Set the fire wood next to any wood. They will go to it as well. Next thing you know 👀 NO MORE WALLS
Not trying to start anything here but at least us “east coasters” could split a piece of fir! 😁😁😁
And we Hoosiers know a knotted-up piece of firewood when we see it (-;
@@T.Dubya311 haha yeah but I’m not giving him any slack!
Actually, us east coast Pennsylvanians use anthracite...but that's toooo hot for a west coast man!! 😊😊
@@derwoodff64 I'm just being facetious. I enjoy watching his videos.
@@paulpysher11 I’m an ex pennsyltuckian, moved south years ago. But yes we burned coal also when I was living at mom and dads. Funny thing when I moved out they switched to NG. Dad said it was easier!! Haha
With that amount of kindling and firestarter, I could light my stove every day for a week.
Yip !! Bravo !!! Well Done !!! Thankx for the share !!! a world of difference !!! Who Da thunk ?!?!?!
I have done this in the past a few times (can’t do it right now due to injuries) and it works well…thanks for the reminder! Maybe I need to remind my hubby about this method, since he is having to get it started right now!
“Have your wife save it” 🤣🤣🤣
I usually make my fire starters out of cotton or dryer lint with some petroleum jelly mixed into it.
I learned this when I was about 7, I did not have to inquire to an overseas source, LOL!!!!
I’ve been adding a few corn chips to my kindling. They burn slow and even and the start is foolproof.
Learned this on my own about eight years ago. From a cold start, I can achieve 575 degrees Fahrenheit in my wood stove between 15-20 minutes. Basically got it down to a science. My first two years with a wood stove was a different story, with much frustration and trial and error. Love your videos, and the sacrifices you and your family have made throughout the years. God bless you.
A decent fire, started slowly, gets up to that temperature inside of 4 minutes. What you DO NOT want to do is to get a raging fire started in a metal stove. Like the boiler on a steam locomotive, you need to let the welds and thicknesses of metal, which do vary BTW, accommodate the ranges of temperature...over time.
@@mesenteria Thanks for the advice!
@@mesenteria do you mean cast iron stove? Cast iron will crack if it cools too fast.
You don't want your fire to get to hot to quick. You will Crack your bricks and can warp your fire box.
Cotton ball and vasaline wrapped in tinfoil is my go to firestarter.
Good idea, too!
True :) or a drop of Veg oil
But where did he put the firestarters?
I used to make this type of fire starter when Inwas a kid in Boy Scouts. If you don’t happen to have old candles laying around then you will have to buy some. You will quickly find that it is cheaper to by the premade fire starters.
In our country they call this the Swiss method. It is indeed the best way with the least smoke.
I love the term "professional homeowner!" Please keep it in your vocabulary!
Greetings from Sweden! Yep, this is how we have done it for for ages. It takes care of it self and meanwhile you can take care of wild animals, brown or black bear, elk and crazy women.
But where did he put the firestarters?
@@shashakeeleh5468 watch at 6:35 and you will see where he places the fire 🔥 starters. Hope this helps.
🌲🌝☘️
@@elizdonovan5650 I replayed and saw it. Thanks!
It took me many years to learn this by trial and error, though of course it is always the best way to light a log stove. What used to happen is that all the kindling laid at the base used to burn up without catching the larger logs above. At that stage it was a question of putting in more kindling and paper, difficult to do when the logs are smouldering and hot.
So you quickly learn it's easier to light a small fire on top instead, and bingo!, the burning ashes fall among the larger pieces of below and it all goes wonderfully.
I now use it all the time particularly with the wood range which has a closed box. I just pile in the large wood from the top and light the kindling fire on top, and then close the lid. 15 minutes later and it's blazing away. I find I don't need to leave any doors open or to increase the draft to make it work.
I wish I'd learned this twenty years ago when we first became dependent on wood heating but I guess it took me ten years to discover this; we all just copy the old way of laying a fire that we always learnt from parents, friends and neighbours.
My pops used to rebuild air cooled VW and Porsche engines and he would save the old oil and use it to get his woodstove going in the winter time
Never let fire go out. Then never need to start again :)
I had a Jotel wood stove in my last home for 15 years and tried many different ways to get my fire started. After a year or so I started using the same method you showed in this video and it is absolutely the best method I’ve tried. I used the same method with my son starting bonfires with his Boy Scout group.
I made firestarters a long time ago. I filled egg cartons with sawdust from the shop and then melted wax into the cups. Works well.
If you're already using small kindling you don't need the starters, if you use more wax the starters will burn long and burn the medium log with a couple of papers on the base. Also small sticks under the big logs to add more airflow.
Hey, i've started a fire like this for years, greetings from Estonia.
I moved to estonia but used the same technique at home in the UK
I guess as Americans we somehow lost our immigrant learnings.
In boy scouts we made Fire starters with egg cartons saw dust/ wood chips and wax
I use dryer lint on camping trips . I put the lint in a Ziploc bag so I can light up my charcoal, which I also use the then hot coals by transferring them to a fire pit. I bring a garden mini shovel for making a fire pit and cooking grate to straddled the pit sometimes and use the fire pit for cooking . After dinner I already have a readily available camp fire. The lint is especially exceptional for back packing and trail blazing trail headers, since the lint is light in weight and natural kindling isn't always dry enough to insure ignition.
You know when they say genius and crazy is hard to tell appart? Been called crazy for doing something similar. In fact it has prevented me from going 1 step further and end up like this.