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Building fires and cooking over them is one of the most exciting parts of any outing. In this episode, we’ll be covering safety practices for fires, fire building basics, and suggested kaper roles for a cookout.
Remember, your council may require specialized training before taking your girls camping or doing fire building activities. Contact your council or check their Safety Activity Checkpoints to be sure you are following their guidelines.
Safety Practices
As they say, safety first! It’s important to go over the safety rules for the campfire area prior to building the fire.
Prepare for Emergencies
Fire Building Basics
There are many types of fires, but these are the most popular.
Types of Wood
Tinder is tiny. This is the stuff we light. Wood shavings, cat tail fluff, and birch bark make excellent tinder. If you are collecting twigs, they should be about as long as your fingers and narrower than your pinky finger.
Kindling is the middle sized sticks. It is used to feed the fire until the larger logs catch. They shouldn’t be longer than your forearm and the diameter ranges between your fingers and your wrist.
Fuel is your logs, large pieces of wood, as thick as your wrist or larger. This is what keeps your fire going.
When you ask girls to collect these difference supplies, follow this rule, dead, down, and dry. The branch should be dead, not connected to a standing tree or bush, and ideally dry.
An edible campfire is fun and delicious activity where girls learn the basics of fire building as they assemble their own miniature fire. You can do at a meeting in anticipation of your camp-out or as a snack activity before you make the real thing.
Your free resource is on its way to your inbox! Check there in just a couple minutes.
Suggested Cookout Kapers
If you have a big troop and a big campout coming up, you might want to consider kapers, or chores, specifically for cookouts. Each meal, you can rotate them.
Firebuilders
Cooks
Hostesses
Clean up
By Stacie Simpson5
2020 ratings
Building fires and cooking over them is one of the most exciting parts of any outing. In this episode, we’ll be covering safety practices for fires, fire building basics, and suggested kaper roles for a cookout.
Remember, your council may require specialized training before taking your girls camping or doing fire building activities. Contact your council or check their Safety Activity Checkpoints to be sure you are following their guidelines.
Safety Practices
As they say, safety first! It’s important to go over the safety rules for the campfire area prior to building the fire.
Prepare for Emergencies
Fire Building Basics
There are many types of fires, but these are the most popular.
Types of Wood
Tinder is tiny. This is the stuff we light. Wood shavings, cat tail fluff, and birch bark make excellent tinder. If you are collecting twigs, they should be about as long as your fingers and narrower than your pinky finger.
Kindling is the middle sized sticks. It is used to feed the fire until the larger logs catch. They shouldn’t be longer than your forearm and the diameter ranges between your fingers and your wrist.
Fuel is your logs, large pieces of wood, as thick as your wrist or larger. This is what keeps your fire going.
When you ask girls to collect these difference supplies, follow this rule, dead, down, and dry. The branch should be dead, not connected to a standing tree or bush, and ideally dry.
An edible campfire is fun and delicious activity where girls learn the basics of fire building as they assemble their own miniature fire. You can do at a meeting in anticipation of your camp-out or as a snack activity before you make the real thing.
Your free resource is on its way to your inbox! Check there in just a couple minutes.
Suggested Cookout Kapers
If you have a big troop and a big campout coming up, you might want to consider kapers, or chores, specifically for cookouts. Each meal, you can rotate them.
Firebuilders
Cooks
Hostesses
Clean up