Hi All,
I've read a few of the posts re. heating a tent with candles etc. and the arguments about the dangers or otherwise of naked flames. I was wondering if anyone had tried the following. When I was a kid we (me + brothers) used to camp sometimes in a field beside the house. This was generally in summer but the evenings could get nippy. We used to light a camp-fire surrounded by stones and cook sausages for dinner. Then when we wanted to retreat to the tent, we'd take some of the stones from the camp-fire and pile them up in a biscuit tin which we put inside the tent. Our tent didn't have a groundsheet so there was no danger of melting plastic. It was a long time ago but my recollection is that it worked well enough to make a difference when the night was a bit chilly. Given all the concern about CO poisoning, am I right in assuming that hot stones don't give off any significant amounts of dangerous gases? I was thinking that in a tent with a groundsheet you could make a small bed of green wood and lay a single large flat stone (flat, so it's less likely to roll off) which you had heated at your fire for the purpose of heating your tent later on. Of course you need a tent with sufficient space. Likewise if you have a water bottle/flask that can take hot water and use it in your sleeping bag like a hot water bottle. If it's very hot, shove it inside your socks (having removed your feet first!) to protect you from burns and also to ensure dry, toasty socks in the morning...
Mike.
I've read a few of the posts re. heating a tent with candles etc. and the arguments about the dangers or otherwise of naked flames. I was wondering if anyone had tried the following. When I was a kid we (me + brothers) used to camp sometimes in a field beside the house. This was generally in summer but the evenings could get nippy. We used to light a camp-fire surrounded by stones and cook sausages for dinner. Then when we wanted to retreat to the tent, we'd take some of the stones from the camp-fire and pile them up in a biscuit tin which we put inside the tent. Our tent didn't have a groundsheet so there was no danger of melting plastic. It was a long time ago but my recollection is that it worked well enough to make a difference when the night was a bit chilly. Given all the concern about CO poisoning, am I right in assuming that hot stones don't give off any significant amounts of dangerous gases? I was thinking that in a tent with a groundsheet you could make a small bed of green wood and lay a single large flat stone (flat, so it's less likely to roll off) which you had heated at your fire for the purpose of heating your tent later on. Of course you need a tent with sufficient space. Likewise if you have a water bottle/flask that can take hot water and use it in your sleeping bag like a hot water bottle. If it's very hot, shove it inside your socks (having removed your feet first!) to protect you from burns and also to ensure dry, toasty socks in the morning...

Mike.