the washing up???

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blackfeather

Settler
Jun 13, 2010
889
0
west yorkshire
sooty pans and washing up. hi guys when ive been out and about i always end up with sooty pans etc so before i pack them i end up wahing them till they are soot free. so. who takes their stuff home sooted up.and if you dont does anyone know a way of getting soot off without having to go to the lengths of taking the washing up bowl lol any help guys?
 

Hugo

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Nov 29, 2009
2,588
1
Lost in the woods
I'll have to ask SHMBO, by the time I have had a bath on getting back from camp all my stuff is washed and ready. :rolleyes:
 

ex-member BareThrills

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Dec 5, 2011
4,461
3
United Kingdom
same here, bung in a stuff sack and only do the insides. I generally try to only use pouch meals when im out and that saves me washing anything apart from my plate and cup
 

Shewie

Mod
Mod
Dec 15, 2005
24,259
24
48
Yorkshire
I wipe the bottom on a bit of moss or grass and that's about it, eventually you get a crusty layer which is hard to get off and doesn't muck up everything else.
 

rik_uk3

Banned
Jun 10, 2006
13,320
24
69
south wales
Why bother, just clean the insides and pop in a plastic bag ready for the next trip. Cleaning soot off pans is borderline OCD.
 

shaggystu

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Nov 10, 2003
4,345
33
Derbyshire
I'll have to ask SHMBO, by the time I have had a bath on getting back from camp all my stuff is washed and ready. :rolleyes:

i believe that's what we refer to as a "keeper" there my friend, well done that man!
 
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bilmo-p5

Bushcrafter through and through
Jul 5, 2010
8,168
9
west yorkshire
...eventually you get a crusty layer which is hard to get off and doesn't muck up everything else.

That's true; you don't need to scrub it back to shiny every time, but you will always get a bit of 'surface sooting', as it were, which wipes off easily enough.
 

blackfeather

Settler
Jun 13, 2010
889
0
west yorkshire
cheers guys i love the smell of woodsmoke but it tends to find its way in to everything i also know that a blackened layer is good for heat transfer when cooking the coating stuff with washing up liquid works really well on steel not so good with aluminium inho. and the gras / moss one from shewie works so well when you use hexamine going to try the tea bag one next time cheers guys...
 

Andy BB

Full Member
Apr 19, 2010
3,290
1
Hampshire
I wash the worst off. Bit of bacon fat and ashes works a treat! (Despite that I'll still bring some washing-up liquid along.......)
 
Just an addition to the "just wipe it off and stuff it in a plastic bag" advice...I have nesting billies and try to put each one in a thin plastic bag, then "nest" them together, so that the soot from the outside of one isn't transfered to the inside of another.
Gets a bit fiddly and messy though.
 

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