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Pitch stumps to be exact!Dude, its called a stump![]()
When I worked in the woods, I’d dig them out of the ground so my landing man could build us a lunch fire.
Who’s to say we didn’t use said fuel?You got 2 types of fuel plus oil on hand and yer digging for pitch stumps to start the lunch fire?![]()
4 day old B&G tray, 2 empty red an tackys, box o delo,3 count of red and a shot of saw gas cuz fawk it.Who’s to say we didn’t use said fuel?![]()
Smacked a few old stumps with the hatchet, nothing, well except a blister!
My parents had a lot of “pitch pine” on their North Idaho farm, which was a good thing since they heated with wood. They always had a bunch they used for kindling. My mom probably still has some left from what I cut up several years ago.There are quite a few in SW Idaho. I’ve got a pretty good rick of them by my wood pile. When I worked in the woods, I’d dig them out of the ground so my landing man could build us a lunch fire.
I mainly use it for my wall tent stove. I don’t think I’ve used it to start a fire in the wood stove in the house.My parents had a lot of “pitch pine” on their North Idaho farm, which was a good thing since they heated with wood. They always had a bunch they used for kindling. My mom probably still has some left from what I cut up several years ago.
Of course, when I was working in the woods in the winter, diesel was the firestarter of choice.
He was a funny dude. His name was Matt, but he liked fire so much that we called him Matches. I think that may have been his downfall.My knot bumper was a fire bug, he loved to have a fire burning all day on the landing. Pitch stumps were his fuel of choice.
Yep, and the 50 other branches, logs, downed trees and whatever else looked like Ponderosa.You got a blister from that?