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| #185476 - 10/16/09 02:08 AM  Finding tinder in wet woods |  
|   Pooh-Bah
 
 Registered:  02/16/08
 Posts: 2463
 Loc:  Central California
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Aside from bringing your own, or finding birch bark or tinder fungus, how do you find viable tinder in wet woods?  
 Edited by dweste (10/16/09 02:08 AM)
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| #185485 - 10/16/09 02:31 AM  Re: Finding tinder in wet woods
[Re: big_al] |  
|   Pooh-Bah
 
 Registered:  02/16/08
 Posts: 2463
 Loc:  Central California
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No, what part of the US are YOU in?  
 Seriously, if your knowledge is wider than one area, please share all.
 
 Thanks.
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| #185487 - 10/16/09 02:36 AM  Re: Finding tinder in wet woods
[Re: dweste] |  
|   Product Tester
 Pooh-Bah
 
   Registered:  11/14/04
 Posts: 1928
 Loc:  Mountains of CA
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| #185489 - 10/16/09 02:40 AM  Re: Finding tinder in wet woods
[Re: dweste] |  
|   Veteran
 
   Registered:  07/23/08
 Posts: 1502
 Loc:  Mesa, AZ
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I have found that unless I'm in a double canopy or triple canopy jungle, I can find dry tinder by looking under logs or rock outcroppings. Mostly grasses or weeds. Some wood can be scratched under the surface. 
 I think the situation also depends on what your using to start a fire. A Mg block is going to be harder to spark wet tinder than say a road flare or bic.
 
_________________________Don't just survive. Thrive.
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| #185495 - 10/16/09 03:20 AM  Re: Finding tinder in wet woods
[Re: comms] |  
|   Crazy Canuck
 Carpal Tunnel
 
 Registered:  02/03/07
 Posts: 3266
 Loc:  Alberta, Canada
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First stop around here is a big spruce tree. Underneath you'll find the best tinder around -- fine, dead branches. The only exception is if there has been a (rare) penetrating fog, which saturates the best tinder with amazing effectiveness.
 A dead pine tree is another good source. They turn bright red; not hard to spot. In very wet weather, you need at least the sustained heat from a Bic to get them going.
 
 I've heard congealed evergreen sap from a wound is quite effective. I haven't tried it on its own, but worked into a bit of cotton cloth (jeans pocket) or a paper napkin as a wick, it takes a flame readily.
 
 Snow in this part of the world doesn't have much effect. Unlike coastal or Great Lakes snow (mashed potato snow I call it), it's very dry, matching the low humidity. So unless there's been a freeze/thaw it's like blotting paper. With the heat from a Bic, even dry grass buried in dry, powdery snow will usually go.
 
 None of the above is quite fine enough to ignite with a simple spark. Unless it's a modern ferro-whatsit-firesteel, which is plenty hot enough.
 
 Edited by dougwalkabout (10/16/09 03:20 AM)
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| #185500 - 10/16/09 03:32 AM  Re: Finding tinder in wet woods
[Re: dweste] |  
|   Addict
 
   Registered:  01/04/06
 Posts: 586
 Loc:  20mi east of San Diego
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shaved wood from a fat wood pine or take the lose bark from a juniper and smash some of it up with a rock and then lay the rest of the bark on top and light with a flint stick,match or lighter. 
_________________________Some people try to turn back their odometers.
 Not me, I want people to know "why" I look this way
 I've traveled a long way and some of the roads weren't paved
 
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| #185507 - 10/16/09 04:05 AM  Re: Finding tinder in wet woods
[Re: big_al] |  
|   Member
 
   Registered:  09/20/09
 Posts: 158
 Loc:  MO, On the Mississippi
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I have heard cattail heads. I have yet to try them in the rain, but since they grow in water i would guess they will be fine.  I used one to light a fire and it worked great, it was late summer/fall.  
 Morning glories.  The weed not the flower, they have pods filled with seeds that have a bit of fluff that makes them float on the wind.  You have to break up the fluff into a cotton-like tangle.  I have been told I am nuts and it does not work, but I have fashioned a torch to light a bonfire with them.
 
 
 
 
 
_________________________Jim
 Do you know where your towel is?
 Don't Panic!
 I have an extra.
 
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| #185511 - 10/16/09 04:29 AM  Re: Finding tinder in wet woods
[Re: EchoingLaugh] |  
|   Geezer
 
 Registered:  01/21/04
 Posts: 5163
 Loc:  W. WA
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Jim, are you sure you don't mean milkweed pod seeds (Asclepias) instead of morning glory/bindweed?  http://www.pbase.com/salty_one/image/70700472 I guess I haven't wadded enough into a large enough lump, as I find they flash-burn so fast that they're useless. Conifers: look for those tiny little short dead branches still attached to the tree trunk or the bases of the lower branches, the ones that are about the thickness of a pencil lead.  I don't know that they will start with a firesteel, but they work well enough with a lighter.  They never seem to be wet, even when it's raining. Sue |  
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