If you have Pine trees in your area, you are sure to have some "fatwood" "pitchwood" or whatever you call it locally. It is the yellowish, hard, pitchfilled wood from an old stump or fallen tree. Where a branch joint was usually. Have someone that knows wood point out how to find some, it is all over in a pine forest. Shave some of that into a tinder nest and spark away, should take right off.
Around here the goal is to find what they call a "lightered" stump. Take a hatchet and knife, or a machete, with you and find an old, partly rotted, pine stump. Often you will see a section of the sump hasn't rotted or burned sticking up. You might need to dig it out a bit. Cut into the solid section and give it a sniff. What you should smell is some thing like turpentine or pine oil. Cut out a section big enough to liberate a matchstick size piece.
I like to hold the test piece in the pliers head on my Leatherman because burning pine resin is like napalm. If it gets on you it tends to melt on and take the skin with it. Touch a flame to it. The fire should catch very quickly and the piece should burn hot and for a long time for its size. The combination of strong smell, quick ignition and long hot burn tell you you have the real deal.
Chop out a goodly section. try to get a piece about the size of a small paperback book. Once you have your prize cover up any wood chips and signs of your being there. The exposed lightered wood, being a light color, shows up well so I cover it with branches or mud. Once you camouflage your find look around and make mental bores of where it is so you don't have to go hunting when you need more.
In much of the rural south people have their favorite lightered stumps and they keep them a secret. Often the location of a really good stump or stumps is handed down from generation to generation. Around here they aren't that rare, find some old pine stands that have been harvested or burned and there is almost always a one or two, but if you find one that is particularly good you still don't advertise it.