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Sometimes having a fire pit in the city can be a problem. You could find an old Weber or other charcoal grill that someone is throwing away. Dig out a pit somewhat larger than the diameter of the grill and prop it up on come bricks so you can get some draw from the bottom.
My preferred method is fire pit, meat or bannock on a stick. Flat rocks as a pot rest in the coals. Fire bans often forces propane/coal. I'm in between stoves. Last one was a old school dual burner. Big and heavy. Passed it on to a friend living on a sail boat. I have a coal fire pot with a grill top in its own case. Again a heavy sucker.
Two towns south of me is Fayetteville and just to the northeast is Eureka Springs, the Buffalo River headwater is almost due east, not to mention the influence of WalMart and other major employers that have created a major influx of folks from many other areas for the job market, so I live in an area that has many sandal loving folks.
Si I fired up the fire pit to see if I could get a file to a working temp and it did: Fire pit file heating - YouTube But when I hit it with a hair dryer, the pit itself started turning orange. So I would need cement or something in there. I am still secretly lusting for an old iron forge with a hand-powered blower.
Table top Fire Pit. Thread starter tleek; Start date Nov 30, 2023; Prev. 1; 2; First Prev 2 of 2 Go to ...
Yep, I second that. I bought two spools of it when I got my first flint and steel, and I have used it for lighting the BBQ, and my fire pit with both flint and steel, and a fire piston. If you want a pre-made tinder in a nice, compact package, jute twine is hard to beat.
The Takibi Fire and Grill is made of durable stainless steel and designed in Japan for a lifetime of use. Packable, portable and modular, use the Takibi Fire and Grill to create a gathering anywhere. The five-piece set includes Grill Net, Grill Bridge, Pack & Carry Fireplace L, Baseplate, and...
So I have some extra cash and I'll finally have time to go to the woods and hit some trails after grinding my way to the top at work and came to a thought. My cooking set is meh at best. I have an emberlit fireant that is stainless and a cheap I think 3 piece pot set from Walmart I think they're ozark brand.
Does water have oxygen? If water has oxygen how does it put out fires? :33::34: I literally had to google it. We were lighting our fire pit and talking about how blowing on it helps make the fire bigger.
Seems like that'll be perfect for what I want, plus really happy about the reduced smoke as we have a fairly constant northerly wind that blows smoke right to the neighbors house - they don't mind really but I try to be considerate at least and sometimes I'm less inclined to light up the full fire pit if I just want a quick smaller fire fast.