The Survival Punk Podcast

Fire Starting Under Real Conditions | Episode 608


Listen Later

Hard Fire Starting

 

Fire Starting Under Real Conditions (Not YouTube Conditions) | Episode 608
You Think You Can Start a Fire—Until You Actually Try

Everybody thinks they can start a fire.

You’ve watched the videos. You’ve seen the ferro rod sparks. Maybe you’ve even messed around with a lighter and some dry leaves.

And in your head, you’re like, “Yeah, I got this.”

Until you don’t.

Because real-world fire starting is not YouTube fire starting.

YouTube Makes It Look Easy

You watch survival channels and they make it look effortless.

Hand drill, bow drill, ferro rod—boom, fire.

What you don’t see is the setup.

Perfect tinder. Perfect conditions. Dry materials. Multiple takes. Editing out all the failures.

I’ve tried hand drill fires multiple times.

Never successfully done it.

Got close once. Ember, bird’s nest, little flame… then nothing. Gone.

And that’s the part people don’t see. Fire starting is not guaranteed. Sometimes you have to earn it.

Conditions Matter More Than Skill

You can know exactly what you’re doing and still fail.

Humidity, damp wood, bad tinder—those things will shut you down fast.

Tennessee isn’t a rainforest, but it might as well be half the year with the humidity.

I’ve been in situations with other experienced people, trying to start a fire in a burn barrel with a lighter… and still struggling.

That should tell you something.

It’s not always about skill. Sometimes nature just says no.

Laziness Will Bite You

When you get comfortable with a skill, you start cutting corners.

You stop building a proper fire structure.
You don’t prep your materials well enough.
You just try to brute force it.

Sometimes it works.

And that’s the problem.

Because when it does work, it reinforces the laziness. So the next time, you do the same thing.

Until one day… it doesn’t work.

And now you’re stuck.

At some point, you have to step back and say, “Alright, I’m not respecting the process.”

Then you slow down. Build it right. Do it properly.

Don’t Be an Idiot With Fire Starters

Let’s talk about the dumb stuff.

Gasoline.

Don’t.

Even I know better than that—and that’s saying something.

Gasoline doesn’t just burn. It explodes. There are way too many horror stories of people getting seriously hurt trying to start fires with it.

There are better options.

Charcoal starter fluid is safer. Alcohol works. Even simple things like vegetable oil soaked newspaper can burn long enough to get a fire going.

That’s actually one of my go-to methods for charcoal chimneys—newspaper with vegetable oil. Works almost every time.

Long Burn Time Solves Most Problems

If there’s one trick that will massively increase your success rate, it’s this:

Use fire starters that burn longer.

Cotton balls soaked in coconut oil or Vaseline.
Paraffin-coated pads.
Even simple oil-soaked materials.

The longer something burns, the more time you have to get your fire established.

And time is everything when conditions suck.

I’ve had fire starters burn so long I didn’t even need the whole thing.

That’s the advantage.

Find the Right Wood (Or You’re Screwed)

Your materials matter.

Standing deadwood is your best friend. Especially the inner core.

If it’s laying on the ground, there’s a good chance it’s soaked, rotted, or useless.

If it’s standing or leaning, you’ve got a much better shot at finding dry material inside.

And if you can find cedar? Even better.

Different woods behave differently. Knowing that gives you an edge.

More Tools = Better Odds

This is where gear actually matters.

Not in a flashy way—but in a practical one.

Ferro rods, char cloth, magnesium blocks—these all increase your chances.

Just don’t cheap out.

A bad ferro rod that falls apart when you need it? That’s useless.

The goal isn’t to rely on one method.

It’s to stack the odds in your favor.

Because some days, you’re going to need every advantage you can get.

Sometimes You Have to Earn It

There are days where fire just isn’t easy.

Where everything is damp. Where nothing wants to catch.

And you either put in the effort… or you don’t get a fire.

That’s reality.

So don’t train in perfect conditions.

Don’t rely on edited YouTube success.

Go out and try it when it’s harder.

Because that’s when it actually matters.

This has been James from SurvivalPunk.com. DIY to Survive.

 

Amazon Item OF The Day

bayite 4 Inch Survival Ferrocerium Drilled Flint Fire Starter, Ferro Rod Kit with Paracord Landyard Handle and Striker, 4″(Long) x 3/8″(Diameter)

 

Think this post was worth 20 cents? Consider joining
The Survivalpunk Army and get access to exclusive
content and discounts!

 

Don’t forget to join in on the road to 1k! Help James Survivalpunk Beat Couch Potato Mike to 1k subscribers on Youtube


Want To help make sure there is a podcast Each and every week? Join us on Patreon

 

Subscribe to the Survival Punk Survival Podcast. The most electrifying podcast on survival entertainment.
  •  Itunes
  • Pandora
  • RSS
  • Spotify 
  •  

    Like this post? Consider signing up for my email list here > Subscribe
     

    Join Our Exciting Facebook Group and get involved Survival Punk Punk’s

    The post Fire Starting Under Real Conditions | Episode 608 appeared first on Survivalpunk.

    ...more
    View all episodesView all episodes
    Download on the App Store

    The Survival Punk PodcastBy Survival Punk

    • 4.4
    • 4.4
    • 4.4
    • 4.4
    • 4.4

    4.4

    27 ratings


    More shows like The Survival Punk Podcast

    View all
    The Survival Podcast by The Survival Podcast

    The Survival Podcast

    1,783 Listeners

    Casual Preppers Podcast - Prepping, Survival, Entertainment. by Casual Preppers

    Casual Preppers Podcast - Prepping, Survival, Entertainment.

    1,033 Listeners

    Raised by VHS by V6 Media, Bleav

    Raised by VHS

    84 Listeners