no it's your mom
Check the box for more tinder, please. This tinder is wet. Without dry tinder, we'll have no fire.
1) tear bark from a tree 2) pull dry grass 3) wood carvings Note: to make the tinder better rub bark and grass between hands to make finer pieces that will ignite more easily
Tinder is anything that can help "fuel" a fire. Common materials for tinder are birch bark, sweet chestnut inner bark, dry grass, dry leaves, dry bracken, feather sticks, fine wood shavings, punk (rotten) wood, bird or plant down, dried wood or cloth, fungus, cramp balls, horse's hoof and cotton wool.
The baby
no what you need to have to start to start a fire is lots of diff stuff you need fuel... like wood, dry grass or tinder paper. Air...oxygen. Heat ... fire!
Carefully place small, dry kindling over the burning tinder Prepare adequate amounts of tinder, kindling, and fuel Use a platform
A bit of dry tinder will get the fire's fuel hot enough to combust.
No, soap will kill grass and has no helpful qualities for dry grass.
To create fire using sticks and rocks, one can use a method called friction fire starting. This involves rubbing a stick against a rock to create enough heat to ignite tinder, such as dry leaves or grass. By rapidly rotating the stick against the rock, friction generates heat that can eventually create a spark and ignite the tinder, leading to a fire.
San people traditionally use a fire stick method to create fire. This involves rubbing together a stick against a baseboard to generate friction and heat, eventually causing a spark. The spark is then transferred to ignite dry grass or tinder.
Dry grass looks yellow in colour because it has lost its moisture content.
For a fire to burn, three things are needed: fuel, oxygen, and heat. The fuel provides the material that burns, the oxygen is necessary for the combustion process, and the heat initiates and sustains the chemical reactions that produce fire.