I’ve got my titanium stove in my pack. That obviously requires fuel. What do people run for firewood collecting? Heavier hatchets or lighter fold up saws?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I know this isn't what you want to hear but leave your saw, hatchet, stove, etc at home! A fire will coat your clothes with smoke anyways! I hunt from before daylight to after dark and the last thing I want to do at the end of a super long day is find and cut firewood!
I know this isn't what you want to hear but leave your saw, hatchet, stove, etc at home! A fire will coat your clothes with smoke anyways! I hunt from before daylight to after dark and the last thing I want to do at the end of a super long day is find and cut firewood!
It also warms your cold wet body, dries your clothes, and boost your morale. Animal is gonna smell you if they have your wind anyway. Might as well enjoy a nice fire.
I have found that a kukri is a great knife/tool for anything camp related. I use mine to help breakdown some of the big stuff we collect for fires, to clear out the willows or brush from around the moose before we clean it, have used it to cut and shape supports for my friends wall tent. For backpacking I would probably leave it behind as I have the Hunters Axe from Gränsfor Bruks thats 19” long and gets used for moose processing (ribs, sternum, spine, pelvis bone and taking the lower part of the legs off when I’m in a hurry) as well as being able to be used for everything the kukri does. I just try to keep the axe ready for processing and camp chores would add some time to my routine.
You need a Silky Saw. You pick the size you like but I run the big boy. You can get a full nights worth of wood in 10 minutes. It is no problem to cut 6 to 8 inch trees so you get a long burn
This type set up I have found works very well.Instead I use a Silky Gomboy saw and a full tang knife. Combined they weigh less than the axe alone and are more multi-purpose.
Also I think a knife is just safer than the axe. I can baton firewood with my knife just as well as with an axe, with the wood that’s usually available.