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Chapter 8: Outdoor Preparedness
If You Get Lost (continued)
Build a Fire
Build a fire where heat will radiate into the shelter. Your sleeping
area should be located between the shelter wall and the fire.
- If there is snow on the ground, build a fire on a platform of green logs or
rocks. If the terrain is dry, clear a patch of bare dirt to avoid starting
a grass or forest fire.
- Gather everything you need before starting a fire. Pile fuel, ranging from
small twigs to fuel logs, next to the fire site. Collect more fuel than you
think you can use; you may need more than you estimate.
- Pile fine twigs, grass, or bark shavings loosely as a
base. If you can’t find dry kindling, remove bark from trees. Use
your knife to shave dry wood from the inside of the bark.
- Find green or damp leaves to make the fire smoke a great deal during
the day. Don’t smother the fire, but make it smoke. At night, skip
the smudge (smoke) but build the fire up brightly and keep it going.
A large fire will keep you warmer and possibly signal rescuers.
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Lenses from disassembled binoculars can concentrate and magnify sunlight to start a fire. |
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