I am usually ready to eat and sleep, so generally no camp fires here either. I also don't think it makes to much difference to the animals.
Never worried too much about the smoke smell, but we often camp and hunt above or in the tundra where fires arent possible.
A tip for the Alaska hunters: the braided moss found on the north slope and above timberline in much of the interior lights easily and burns with a hot flame. I don't have a really good photo of the plant , but it grows in long strands (often in rocky areas) that look like flat braids.
The smoke is nasty, but it will dry your socks out or boil water for a meal when your stove fails. The stuff made life much more bearable while sheep hunting during a freak August cold snap a few years ago.
Yk
A tip for the Alaska hunters: the braided moss found on the north slope and above timberline in much of the interior lights easily and burns with a hot flame. I don't have a really good photo of the plant , but it grows in long strands (often in rocky areas) that look like flat braids.
The smoke is nasty, but it will dry your socks out or boil water for a meal when your stove fails. The stuff made life much more bearable while sheep hunting during a freak August cold snap a few years ago.
Yk
I do, never noticed it scare anything and smoke is a great cover scent.
All I have time for is food and sleep. Up an hour before light and back an hour after dark makes for a short nights sleep anyways.
haha is that cause you build small fire and stand close instead of a big fire and stand far awayAbsol generally an Indian fire though!
ElkNut1