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in: Featured, How To, Skills, Visual Guides

• Last updated: June 2, 2021

How to Build a Summer Fire

How to make a summer fire illustration guide.

Nothing caps off a day quite like a roaring campfire. But, one of the cruel ironies of summer is that even though we spend more time outside, the warm weather makes those perfect day-ending fires less comfortable to be around. Luckily, there’s a smarter way to build a fire that suits the season, so you can enjoy its crackle, smell, and glow, without having to break a sweat.  

Building a summer fire starts with sourcing the right wood. Unlike most fire-building techniques, a summer fire demands that you start with some green, unseasoned wood. Ideally, your green logs come from a slow-burning species of wood like white oak, ash, or birch. It’s also useful if they come whole and unsplit. Such wood won’t blaze as big, bright — or hot. Use the above tips to enjoy a cozy fire even in the heart of summer. 

1: Source eight logs of green wood in a range of sizes, the biggest of which should be about 6 inches in diameter and two feet long.

2: Create a 4-story log cabin-style structure out of your green wood, with the largest logs on the bottom.

3: Add tinder, dry sticks, and other fire-starting materials inside the structure.

4: Use spilt logs and dry, seasoned wood to build a teepee structure over your tinder.

5: Light your tinder bundle beneath the teepee and add dry wood as necessary to maintain your inner fire.

6: Prevent your green wood from burning too quickly by periodically dousing it with water as it catches fire.

Like this illustrated guide? Then you’re going to love our book The Illustrated Art of Manliness! Pick up a copy on Amazon.

Illustrated by Ted Slampyak

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Collins

Submitted by: Collins in Philadelphia PA
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