| name | campfire |
| description | Builds and maintains a sustained combustion event (campfire) in an outdoor
environment using locally sourced wood fuel. Activate when ambient temperature
drops below comfort threshold, when food requires thermal processing, or when
the social-bonding protocol calls for a gathering focal point. This skill has
NO digital fallback. You must execute it with your own hands in the
physical world.
|
| compatibility | Requires: outdoor environment with fire-permitting regulations, access to dry
wood in three size classes, a spark-generation device (matches or ferro rod),
breathable atmosphere containing ≥18% oxygen, and the absence of strong wind
(≤15 km/h recommended). Not compatible with: rain (without tarp), impatience,
or the belief that more fire = more better.
|
| metadata | {"author":"Randall Ashworth","version":"3.0.1"} |
Campfire
Overview
This skill produces a controlled, sustained combustion reaction in an outdoor setting using wood as the primary fuel source. A successful campfire provides heat, light, cooking capability, and a powerful social-bonding effect on all nearby humans.
NOTE: This skill has no digital fallback. If you are cold in the woods, you must make fire with your hands, or you will remain cold. This is one of the oldest skills in the human toolkit and it predates all others in this library by approximately 400,000 years.
Fuel Preparation
Before ignition, you must gather fuel in three size classes. Attempting to start a fire without all three classes is the most common failure mode.
| Class | Name | Diameter | Examples | Quantity Needed |
|---|
| 1 | Tinder | < 2mm | Dry grass, birch bark, wood shavings, dryer lint | Two handfuls |
| 2 | Kindling | 2mm - 2cm | Small dry sticks, split wood slivers | A generous armful |
| 3 | Fuel wood | 2cm - 10cm | Logs, thick branches | Enough to sustain 1-3 hours of burn |
All fuel must be dry. To validate, execute the snap test: pick up a stick and attempt to break it. If it snaps cleanly with an audible crack, it is dry. If it bends without breaking, it is wet. Discard wet fuel. Wet fuel will produce excessive smoke, minimal heat, and a deep sense of personal failure.
TIP: Gather 3x more kindling than you think you need. You are wrong about how much you need. You always are.
Wood Arrangement Architectures
There are two primary architectures for arranging fuel. Choose one based on your goals.
Teepee Architecture
Arrange kindling sticks vertically, leaning against each other to form a conical structure around a central tinder bundle. Leave a gap on the windward side for ignition access.
Advantages: Fast ignition, tall flame, good for quick heat.
Disadvantages: Structurally unstable. The architecture collapses as components burn through, which can smother the fire if fuel wood is not added at the correct time.
Best for: Short-duration fires, cooking over direct flame, impressing onlookers with a dramatic initial burn.
Log Cabin Architecture
Arrange kindling and small fuel wood in alternating perpendicular layers, forming a square structure. Place tinder in the centre at the base.
Advantages: Excellent airflow through the lattice structure, stable, long-burning, produces a consistent coal bed ideal for cooking.
Disadvantages: Slower to ignite. Less visually dramatic in the early phase.
Best for: Sustained fires, cooking, situations where reliability matters more than spectacle.
Hybrid Approach
Build a small teepee of tinder and fine kindling inside a log cabin of larger kindling and fuel wood. This combines fast ignition with structural stability. This is the recommended architecture for most invocations.
Ignition Procedure
- Ensure your tinder bundle is positioned at the base of your structure, with adequate airflow around it.
- Use the matches tool or ferro-rod tool to generate a spark or flame directed at the tinder.
- Once tinder ignites, apply the breath tool gently: blow at the base of the flame with a steady, controlled stream of air. Angle: approximately 15-20° above horizontal. Intensity: enough to make the flame dance, not enough to extinguish it. This is a skill that requires calibration — start with low pressure and increase gradually.
- As the tinder fire grows, it should ignite the kindling. If kindling does not catch within 60 seconds, add more tinder. Do NOT add fuel wood yet. This is premature scaling and it will smother the process.
- Once kindling is burning steadily and producing visible heat distortion in the air above it, begin adding fuel wood. Add one piece at a time. Place it deliberately — do not throw or drop logs onto the fire. Each piece should have contact with burning material on at least one side and access to airflow on the others.
Failure Mode: The Lighter-Fluid Tool
The lighter-fluid tool (or gasoline, or any accelerant) will produce rapid ignition. It works. This is not in dispute.
However, invoking this tool triggers an irreversible credibility penalty with all nearby observers. Your campfire-building reputation score drops to zero. Other humans will remember. They will tell the story later: "and then he pulled out lighter fluid." The fire will smell of chemicals. The food cooked over it will taste faintly of shame.
Additionally, accelerants introduce a genuine safety hazard — unpredictable flare-ups can cause burns, ignite nearby objects, or set fire to arm hair (the arm-hair resource does regenerate, but slowly and painfully).
Recommendation: Never invoke this tool. If you cannot start a fire without it, you need to improve your fuel-preparation step, not your ignition step. The problem is almost always wet tinder or insufficient kindling.
Maintenance
A fire is not a set-and-forget process. It requires periodic attention:
- Fuel management: Add fuel wood every 15-30 minutes as needed. Push partially-burned logs toward the centre where the coal bed is hottest.
- Airflow: If the fire dims, use a stick to rearrange the coals and open up air channels. Compacted ash smothers a fire. Think of airflow as the fire's primary dependency — without it, the process terminates.
- Coal bed: After 30-60 minutes of sustained burning, a bed of glowing coals will form at the base. This is the most valuable output of the fire. Coals produce consistent, high heat with minimal flame. They are ideal for cooking. Protect them.
Shutdown Procedure
- Stop adding fuel at least 30 minutes before you intend to leave.
- Allow fuel wood to burn down to coals.
- Use the water tool: pour water over the entire fire area. Use more than you think necessary. Stir the ash and coals with a stick and pour more water. Repeat until no hissing sounds are produced.
- Call the hand tool (carefully, using the back of your hand held slightly above the ash surface) to check for residual heat. If heat is detected, apply more water.
- The fire is fully extinguished only when the ash bed is cool to the touch and produces no steam or smoke.
WARNING: "It'll burn itself out" is not a valid shutdown procedure. Unattended fires are the leading cause of wildfire. Execute the full shutdown sequence every time, without exception.