I’m looking to get the most out of my wall tent stove for overnight burn duration. I live in WI, but hunting elk in the snow and cold.
My current strategy is - I try and get the best looking dead, dry aspen I can find. Get a good bed of coals right before I go to sleep and pack the four dog night stove as full as I can with the biggest pieces I have. That usually lasts 4-5 hours. I drink about 40 oz of water right before bed so I wake up. Pack the stove again, and my alarm goes off about 45 minutes before I need to get up, at that time I pack the stove a second time and get the tent hot for the morning.
Does anybody have a strategy that extends my burn time (that doesn’t include propane or bringing oak from home)? I’ve heard of folks pushing all the coals to the back of the stove to burn from the back, forward. Does this make a difference?
My current strategy is - I try and get the best looking dead, dry aspen I can find. Get a good bed of coals right before I go to sleep and pack the four dog night stove as full as I can with the biggest pieces I have. That usually lasts 4-5 hours. I drink about 40 oz of water right before bed so I wake up. Pack the stove again, and my alarm goes off about 45 minutes before I need to get up, at that time I pack the stove a second time and get the tent hot for the morning.
Does anybody have a strategy that extends my burn time (that doesn’t include propane or bringing oak from home)? I’ve heard of folks pushing all the coals to the back of the stove to burn from the back, forward. Does this make a difference?