I've been working my way through the Time-Life series of first-hand account CW books and just finished reading Detailed Minutiae Of Soldier Life In The Army Of Northern Virginia.
He mentions the use of small cooking fires several times. In one description, he tells how three men were detailed for picket duty. The old vet put the two newbies in a rifle pit and scared them half to death with stories of what the Yankees would do if they captured them. Then he went back a few yards, lit a very small fire, cooked some food, boiled some coffee, had a smoke . . . and went to sleep.
Being career Army I turned my nose up at that and thought "Wow . . . . that was pretty "un-tactical."
But then I thought it through a little and realized that everyone for miles around had cooking fires so the smell would not give the position away. It was night, so no smoke could be seen. All he had to do was mask the fame and a small fire could be perfectly "tactical' even yards away from the enemy.
The old vet knew what he was doing (which is why he had probably survived long enough to be an "old vet.")
Has anyone here practiced using "very small fires?"
I'm envisioning digging a small pit like maybe the depth of a coffee cup. Maybe put some wood around the top to mask the flames. Make small feathers or shavings with a knife. Use pencil-sized sticks for actual fuel. Etc.
But what did they use for tinder? Did they understand the use of fatwood or pine resin? Did they use petroleum-based products? Cotton fibers? Small candles?
How did they strike a spark?
I'm especially interested in the mechanics of fire making because the author even describes how there was always one man in a mess who could get even wet wood started!
Any help on CW fire-making greatly appreciated.
Thank you
He mentions the use of small cooking fires several times. In one description, he tells how three men were detailed for picket duty. The old vet put the two newbies in a rifle pit and scared them half to death with stories of what the Yankees would do if they captured them. Then he went back a few yards, lit a very small fire, cooked some food, boiled some coffee, had a smoke . . . and went to sleep.
Being career Army I turned my nose up at that and thought "Wow . . . . that was pretty "un-tactical."
But then I thought it through a little and realized that everyone for miles around had cooking fires so the smell would not give the position away. It was night, so no smoke could be seen. All he had to do was mask the fame and a small fire could be perfectly "tactical' even yards away from the enemy.
The old vet knew what he was doing (which is why he had probably survived long enough to be an "old vet.")
Has anyone here practiced using "very small fires?"
I'm envisioning digging a small pit like maybe the depth of a coffee cup. Maybe put some wood around the top to mask the flames. Make small feathers or shavings with a knife. Use pencil-sized sticks for actual fuel. Etc.
But what did they use for tinder? Did they understand the use of fatwood or pine resin? Did they use petroleum-based products? Cotton fibers? Small candles?
How did they strike a spark?
I'm especially interested in the mechanics of fire making because the author even describes how there was always one man in a mess who could get even wet wood started!
Any help on CW fire-making greatly appreciated.
Thank you