Survival Fire
Book Details
Author(s)James Nugent
PublisherEld Inlet Services
ISBN / ASINB00V9G71R4
ISBN-13978B00V9G71R3
Sales Rank1,584,563
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
The ability to make a fire for warmth in cool and wet environments is critical for survival. Without fire you may die within a few hours. I have spent my life living and playing in the Pacific Northwest in the United States. In my neck of the woods, challenges of staying alive and avoiding hypothermia are constant.
Except for a few warm and dry weeks in the summer; anybody outdoors is generally just a few hours from dying if they are wet. The remedy for this constant threat is: to stay dry, dress correctly and know how to instantly start and maintain a small fire. Fire means life in a survival situation.
This book presupposes that you know the basics of how to start a fire under normal conditions. If you haven’t done this very often, I suggest that you research the topic and practice starting a fire in a fireplace without anything except: paper, matches, kindling and fire wood. Practice until you can do it instantly and reliably.
It is a lot harder than you think. Check out any Boy Scout manual if you need some tips or directions. Don’t be embarrassed. Modern first world dwellers almost never have basic wilderness skills.
Although there will be a brief basic discussion of fire building in this booklet; the focus of this work is how to get that first spark of an ember that will lead to fire, heat and life. Without this initial spark, all is lost. Without some kind of ignition source even under superior circumstance you will not get a fire going.
Except for a few warm and dry weeks in the summer; anybody outdoors is generally just a few hours from dying if they are wet. The remedy for this constant threat is: to stay dry, dress correctly and know how to instantly start and maintain a small fire. Fire means life in a survival situation.
This book presupposes that you know the basics of how to start a fire under normal conditions. If you haven’t done this very often, I suggest that you research the topic and practice starting a fire in a fireplace without anything except: paper, matches, kindling and fire wood. Practice until you can do it instantly and reliably.
It is a lot harder than you think. Check out any Boy Scout manual if you need some tips or directions. Don’t be embarrassed. Modern first world dwellers almost never have basic wilderness skills.
Although there will be a brief basic discussion of fire building in this booklet; the focus of this work is how to get that first spark of an ember that will lead to fire, heat and life. Without this initial spark, all is lost. Without some kind of ignition source even under superior circumstance you will not get a fire going.

