Day 53: How to Start a Fire in the Rain

Skill: Lighting a Fire When Everything’s Wet

Rain makes fire-starting hard — but not impossible. You just need the right method, the right materials, and the mindset to make it happen.

What It Does

  • Gives you heat and light in cold, wet weather

  • Helps dry clothes and gear

  • Boosts morale and keeps predators away

How to Do It

1. Find Dry Tinder
Look under logs, tree bark, or deep inside your pack. Great options:

  • Birch bark

  • Fatwood (pine resin sticks)

  • Cotton balls with petroleum jelly

  • Dry grass or dryer lint (if packed)

2. Use a Wind Block
Find cover: a fallen tree, big rock, or tarp. Keep the rain and wind off your fire base.

3. Build a Platform
Lay down a base of bark or sticks to lift your fire off the wet ground.

4. Split the Wood
Even wet logs have dry cores. Use your knife or hatchet to split them and take the inside.

5. Start Small, Go Up
Light your dry tinder first. Then add pencil-thin sticks, then thumb-thick, then wrist-thick wood.

6. Add a Firestarter (If You Have One)
Ferro rod, waterproof matches, or a lighter — even in rain, they work with dry tinder.

Tips

  • Look for dead branches up off the ground — usually drier

  • Pine and cedar trees are gold mines for fire material

  • Keep your fire small and close — easier to shield from rain

Bottom Line

Rain doesn’t mean no fire. With the right prep and dry core wood, you can light a fire, stay warm, and stay alive.

Build smart. Burn hot. Stay dry.

If you ever do need to start fire immediately this 12 inch hemp fire rope is perfect grab it above now.

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Day 52: How to Avoid Hypothermia