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SilentFeathers
13th October 2012, 04:34
I got one of these and have cooked full course meals with bark, twigs, and sticks....they work great!

A great tool to have, "JUST IN CASE!"


Heavy Duty Grover Rocket Stove: A Minimal Wood Using Cooking Stove

http://stockstorage.com/images/heavy_duty_grover_rocket_stove_6.jpg

This is the most heavy duty rocket stove that you can get on the market today and it is new for our customers. It is made of mostly 11 gauge cold rolled steel with a 5 year warrantee under normal use and conditions. This 17 lb. rocket stove is built like a rock and you won't be disappointed in owning it.
What do you do when your propane runs out, and you don't have large quantities of wood to devote to cooking? Of course you need some alternate source of combustible material. Wood works great but in conventional wood burning stoves you will waste a great deal of wood in heat energy that didn't go towards cooking the food. This Heavy Duty Grover Rocket Stove eliminated that problem entirely by allowing you to use small twigs, leaves, and pretty much any dry plant matter will do, such as weeds, dry sage brush, etc.
http://stockstorage.com/heavy_duty_grover_rocket_stove.html

Buy the Heavy Duty Grover Rocket Stove today for only $160.00 plus get Free shipping to the lower 48 via UPS Ground. Please allow up to 3 business days for shipping. Please call or email for Hawaii, Alaska & Canada for shipping estimates.

Highlights of the Heavy Duty Grover Rocket Stove:
• Really Heavy Duty Cold Rolled Steel with the body made of 11 gauge steel (1/8"). Double the thickness of the original Grover Rocket Stove
• Stands around 13 inches tall. - Top surface 8" wide with corner to corner being 11 inches wide. Widest area of stove 13 inches wide with the handle and tongue.
• Weighs around 17 lbs. and is made entirely of steel with insulation inside.
• A steel handle for easy portability and dumping of ashes.
• Portable fun for the kids to cook hot dogs, or to boil water, or cook serious meals.
• Burns extremely efficient, you can cook a meal with extremely small amount of wood.
• Aluminum 7" top plate accessory included to even out the heat on your cooking pot and for using small cans or pots for cooking.
• Made in the USA!!!

Grover Rocket Stove Review
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Build A Rocket Stove, Step-By-Step
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How to Make a Brick Rocket Stove for $6.08
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Build a Rocket Stove
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Canning on a Wood fire ( Rocket Stove)
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Rocket Kitchen
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Note: Use fire bricks when building these out of BRICKS! Regular blocks will crack and break after a few hot fires and you'll be back to eating cold beans again!
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TargeT
13th October 2012, 07:02
Another interesting option:

Swedish Fire Log (Finnish Candle)

This is something that I’d heard of but only ever seen in a TV program by Ray Mears, so when someone turned up at a BCUK meet up with a log prepared for this I was interested to see how it would actually work.

The log is prepared by cutting lengthways with a chainsaw to about a foot from the bottom.

In this case the log, pine, was cut three times giving six vertical segments.

The cuts are then loaded with birch bark and other tinder or kindling and this is lit to ignite the log segments.



In this particular case some small twigs were also added to the kindling which turned out to be a mistake as they blocked the vertical air flow needed to ensure good ignition.

After a slightly discouraging start these twigs were removed from the cuts and with just bark the result was much better.

The original idea behind the fire log is to create a controllable fire which can be lit on snow as the base does not heat up and can be packed into the snow to keep the log vertical.

Once the fire is burning well, a billy can, kettle or skillet can be placed directly on the top for cooking or heating.

This is an interesting technique if you have a chainsaw, but a similar effect can apparently be produced by splitting the trunk with an axe and packing the sections carefully apart.



http://ravenlore.co.uk/html/swedish-fire-log.html

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bennycog
13th October 2012, 09:14
yes they are pretty cool and great to have around.. im getting one next week.. the XL stove

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http://camping.about.com/od/campinggearreviews/gr/woodgasxl.htm

The WoodGas Camp Stove XL has all the features of the standard model that I tested last year. These WoodGas stoves are efficient cooking devices that burn almost any fuel that you can find in nature. Sticks, twigs, leaves and pine cones all work well with this stove, which uses a battery powered fan to force air into the burning chamber to create a robust cooking flame. The XL weighs in at 2 pounds 3 ounces, making it a viable choice weightwise for backpackers, but the overall dimensions may be considered too big. The WoodGas Camp Stove XL as well as the smaller LE model are great for emergencies

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im pretty sure you can do the same thing by digging a hole in the ground certain way too.. i have it somewhere in my papers..