Long introduction, short question.
This weekend I camped in a four-season no-vehicle area. Snow was forecast. I had packed a Whisperlite. At the trailhead I threw in my home-made sheet-metal stovelet just for fun (cf. Nimblewill Nomad) along with a hatchet and Bahco Laplander to feed it. I had adequate layers of clothes and bedding to hammock over snow. My plan was for a small fire just for enjoyment.
When I reached the site I had picked on the map I found that someone had chain-sawed a load of wood. Marks in the snow pack showed that the half-dozen chunks were left over from their bonfire party on the lake ice. This presented an opportunity to make a winter warming fire in front of a lean-to shelter.
I could not split those chunks of birch with my hatchet. The axe back in my car might have done it. Wedges didn't work. The wedges worked on a chunk of pine in the pile. I built a fire on top of the split pine then stacked the birch on top.
What would you have done? This is not a survival situation.
This weekend I camped in a four-season no-vehicle area. Snow was forecast. I had packed a Whisperlite. At the trailhead I threw in my home-made sheet-metal stovelet just for fun (cf. Nimblewill Nomad) along with a hatchet and Bahco Laplander to feed it. I had adequate layers of clothes and bedding to hammock over snow. My plan was for a small fire just for enjoyment.
When I reached the site I had picked on the map I found that someone had chain-sawed a load of wood. Marks in the snow pack showed that the half-dozen chunks were left over from their bonfire party on the lake ice. This presented an opportunity to make a winter warming fire in front of a lean-to shelter.
I could not split those chunks of birch with my hatchet. The axe back in my car might have done it. Wedges didn't work. The wedges worked on a chunk of pine in the pile. I built a fire on top of the split pine then stacked the birch on top.
What would you have done? This is not a survival situation.