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Whether you're stranded in the woods in the middle of the night in desperate need of heat, or simply trying to impress your friends with your top-notch scouting skills, finding and making dry tinder to start your fire can be tricky. The key to making your own tinder is finding small bits of easily combustible, dry material that can be nurtured into a larger flame or can transfer heat to a burning coal.
Steps
Method 1
Method 1 of 2:
Finding Dry Tinder in Nature
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1Use tree bark. The type of tree will vary depending on your location. The most important characteristic of the bark is that it is dry. Break off the inner bark and shred or break it into small strips or chips, depending on the strength of the wood.
- Do not strip bark unless absolutely necessary. Cutting bark can damage or kill trees. Ideally, pick bark that is on dead trees, on the ground, or the like. Peeling bark off trees should only be done in an actual emergency.
- Different barks burn differently. As natural material, they also will burn differently depending on your environment, the season, and in your weather conditions.
- Choose cedar, if possible. You can spot a cedar tree by its reddish-brown fibrous bark that is easy to shred with your hands.
- Cut off a chunk of cottonwood bark with whatever sharp tool you have and whittle away the outer bark until you can see the cord-like strands on the inside. Cottonwood bark has a soft characteristic that can, like cedar bark, be stripped into small pieces.[1]
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2Search near bodies of slow-moving water for cattails, sometimes called bull rushes. Cattails are common throughout Europe and America and are abundant around swamps and ponds.[2]
- You want to use the bushy, cotton-like material on the top of the stem which flourishes in the fall as the plant goes to seed. Simply snap it off and ignite.
- In mid to late summer, cattails bloom into a brown sausage-shaped substance on the top of the cattail. This part of the plant works for tinder as well. Snap it off and break or cut it open to get to the driest material possible.
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3Locate trees with patches of tinder fungus, a specific growth that works excellently as tinder. Cut off a large piece and break it into smaller chunks if it is sufficiently dry.
- Tinder fungus predominantly grows on birch trees, which can be identified by their white bark, and has the appearance of a chunk of burnt or blackened crusty bark.
- If the material is wet, you can slowly air-dry the fungus over time for later use.[3]
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4Whittle bamboo reeds into thin shavings.
- Holding a knife at a right angle with the blade pointing away from your body, run the blade back and forth to create small shavings. Your shavings should look similar to sawdust.
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5Gather other plant materials in nature. In a pinch, almost any dry plant material can be used as tinder. This includes dry grass, leaves, sticks, dry pine needles, cotton fabric, or natural twine or rope. These may not be the easiest materials to ignite, but they will kindle a fire in desperate situations.
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Method 2
Method 2 of 2:
Using Man Made Material
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1Make char cloth squares using pieces of cotton fabric. This material is an invaluable resource to take with you when you venture into the outdoors.[4]
- Place several small squares (about one square inch in size) of cotton fabric into an airtight container that can withstand heat, such as a metal water bottle.
- Set the container atop an already flaming fire for about five minutes.
- Remove the container from the fire using tongs and allow to cool.
- Open the container and observe the squares. They should be blackened in color.
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2Purchase steel wool from a supermarket or hardware store. The steel wool you use to scour your pots can be excellent tinder and all you have to do is light it.
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3Collect dryer lint from the screen in your clothes dryer. Finally, that annoying lint that you have to clean out of your dryer every time you put in a new load has a use! Simply collect enough lint to form it into a long rod-shaped mold and ignite.[5]
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4Soak cotton balls in petroleum jelly and store them in an airtight container. The petroleum grease ignites extremely easily.[6]
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5Tear up whatever paper products are available to you into long shreds. A rolled-up newspaper, the cover of a paperback novel, or whatever paper material is available to you will help get a fire started. While you wouldn't want to turn your map into tinder, any spare paper can work to ignite a fire, though it requires more patience than some of the other methods.
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Community Q&A
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QuestionDoes being trapped alone in the wild count as an emergency? Would it be wise to burn wood to keep myself warm?wikiHow Staff EditorThis answer was written by one of our trained team of researchers who validated it for accuracy and comprehensiveness.
Staff AnswerwikiHow Staff EditorStaff AnswerIf you are trapped in the wild, that would count as an emergency. In that case, you may want to signal for help by flashing a mirror, building a smoke signal by burning green wood or leaves, and yelling for help when you hear passersby. If you have to build a fire to keep yourself warm, you should do that. Also, insulate yourself from the ground while sleeping by placing pine needles or other material beneath you while sleeping, because you lose more body heat from the cold ground than from the cold air.
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Warnings
- Make sure to put out your fire properly when you are finished with it by smothering it with sand or water.⧼thumbs_response⧽
- Whenever dealing with fire, be sure to use caution to prevent accident or injury.⧼thumbs_response⧽
- Always tend fires responsibly, and as prescribed by authorities, on all public lands.⧼thumbs_response⧽
- Make sure you are legally allowed to start a fire in the wilderness. Certain conditions may warrant a fire ban.⧼thumbs_response⧽
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References
- ↑ http://www.wildwoodsurvival.com/survival/fire/tinder/findingdrytinder.html
- ↑ https://www.outdoorlife.com/blogs/survivalist/survival-skills-5-survival-uses-cattail-fluff/
- ↑ http://wildwoodsurvival.com/survival/fire/tinder/tinderfungus/true.html
- ↑ https://www.outdoorlife.com/blogs/survivalist/survival-skills-5-survival-uses-cattail-fluff/
- ↑ https://glampingorcamping.com/home/9-sure-fire-campfire-tinder-hacks-includes-dryer-lint-hack/#Dryer-Lint-Campfire-Tinder-Hack
- ↑ https://glampingorcamping.com/home/9-sure-fire-campfire-tinder-hacks-includes-dryer-lint-hack/#Dryer-Lint-Campfire-Tinder-Hack
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