Quote: Originally posted by madelinew on 01/6/2008
I love camping at sites that allow fires and have just come back from one such place. I have managed to cook once over a fire in the past with my cast iron pot but the bottom got very burnt as it cooked very quickly. I noticed that Ray Mears (all bow before the God Mears) used a mesh on legs device over the top of a fire recently. Where can I get such a thing and what else can anyone recommend for cooking over a fire.
Definitely need a toasting fork - the kids were desperate to do toast but the marshmallow skewers weren't up to the job.
Oh and I'm very chuffed with myself. I managed to light damp firewood without firelighters because the firelighters had got too damp to light. My arms still ache from fanning the resulting smoke with a metal plate for hours on end but we had a fabulous blaze by the time I'd finished. We were the subject of 'fire envy' from others....
a mesh on legs device over the top of a fire You weld them up yourself if you have the skill or take a pic of it to local fabricator. They should be able to make one in a couple of hours.
what else can anyone recommend for cooking over a fire. Have a read of the various Bushcraft forums. These people are pretty sound CLICKY
desperate to do toast but the marshmallow skewers weren't up to the job Toast is always difficult. Were you car camping or backpacking? Car camping and you have got room for a toasting fork: Backpacking and you wouldn't want the extra weight.
Oh and I'm very chuffed with myself. I managed to light damp firewood without firelighters because the firelighters had got too damp to light. Well done. There is a Fire lighter product that will light even when wet but I'm sorry I cannot fidn the name of it at the moment. It comes as little waxed paper bits and you break a bit off to use it. - Some Silver Birch will also do the trick as will the old fail-safe of vaseline rubbed into a piece of cotton wool
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