KayakMacGyver
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jun 8, 2018
- Messages
- 353
First trip with a titanium stove in a tipi on a late season hunt. We had built nice fires for several nights in an area with lots of usable oak and mixed in some pine too. I never gave it much thought. We would keep it going through the night in single digit temps by rotating wakeup duties between two of us .
We moved areas into a spot with TONS of dead fall full of pine. Looked like a fire had gone through many years ago and this was all leftover collateral damage. This is in Arizona, so very dry.
We had grown comfortable with filling the box and falling asleep. First night in low country I packed the box heavy with plans to sleep for as long as possible before having to refill. I remained awake while fire built still and my wife passed out hard.
Soon, I started to hear a dripping sound in the firebox I hadn't heard before. Turned out that dripping sound was creosote (right word?) liquifying inside the stove pipe. Just a minute later it began dripping onto the firebox and then smoking like a 5 alarm fire.
I had to shake my wife to wake her up and was beginning to have a hard time breathing. We were fortunately fine, but I don't know if I'll ever be able to sleep and burn again.
The only other variable we had was the dampener. Still learning the equipment, I mistakenly shut the dampener (small circle of titanium with holes like swiss cheese). I'm sure it was clogged from a heavy wood pack, but don't really understand how that led to liquifying creosote.
Thoughts or ideas on what caused this to happen? The wood we burned, or the closed dampener, or both combined?
We moved areas into a spot with TONS of dead fall full of pine. Looked like a fire had gone through many years ago and this was all leftover collateral damage. This is in Arizona, so very dry.
We had grown comfortable with filling the box and falling asleep. First night in low country I packed the box heavy with plans to sleep for as long as possible before having to refill. I remained awake while fire built still and my wife passed out hard.
Soon, I started to hear a dripping sound in the firebox I hadn't heard before. Turned out that dripping sound was creosote (right word?) liquifying inside the stove pipe. Just a minute later it began dripping onto the firebox and then smoking like a 5 alarm fire.
I had to shake my wife to wake her up and was beginning to have a hard time breathing. We were fortunately fine, but I don't know if I'll ever be able to sleep and burn again.
The only other variable we had was the dampener. Still learning the equipment, I mistakenly shut the dampener (small circle of titanium with holes like swiss cheese). I'm sure it was clogged from a heavy wood pack, but don't really understand how that led to liquifying creosote.
Thoughts or ideas on what caused this to happen? The wood we burned, or the closed dampener, or both combined?