Burning Brush

   / Burning Brush #11  
Wow! Is brush that hard to light? I guess I have been doing it wrong with a little piece of paper and stuff it down inside the pile and in about five minutes I have flames roaring out the top.

The OP lives in Maine which means the brush is probably a lot of pine - that stuff will light quickly and burn hot.

C'mon Mate. The bloke is just asking a question of our collective TBN knowledge to see if there's an alternative way to light the pile.

Heck, the reason I even looked into this thread was to see if there were some new ways of doing it... I may try Steve's 'bog-roll soaked in diesel' method the next time I burn and my trees are predominately eucalyptus variants.
 
   / Burning Brush #12  
I have a routine / ritual with my brush fires. First, I mow a low cut circle around the brush to keep the fire contained. I wait for one or two days following a decent rain. Same day should also be low wind so as not to blow embers too far. I plan to light on the side facing the oncoming wind so the wind will blow the flames into the pile. To start the fire, I take some diesel and used motor oil, mix and distribute in my intended ignition area. Let set for 5 mins to soak. Then cram a section with newspaper and twigs and then light it up. If the pile is dry enough since the rain and the wood is dried out, it should be fine. Now that said, since I personally don't like burning piles with the possibility of there being wildlife in it, my vet said the best time of the year is following the first frost. Great idea but that usually means I have to wait a while since the rain comes less frequently that time of year.

If you run into a situation where it just won't stay lit, a leaf blower can do wonders. Remember that the more oxygen you feed a fire, the hotter it gets. So, if you have trouble, Get as much wood burning as you can and use the leaf blower to crank it up.
 
   / Burning Brush #13  
I second the propane burner! I've got an inexpensive Harbor Freight one with the piezo lighter. Had a non-lighter one for a while, but someone decided they needed it more than me. Anyway, I have NO more issues with parts of a burn pile that are a little too loose or damp to get started easily. Works awesome on all size piles from campfire to several acres worth of slash. Way less smoking while a damp pile is just feebly starting, so neighbors are happier too.
 
   / Burning Brush #14  
Around here we always burn in the rain. Piles are usually wet but a propane burner, leaf blower plus some accelerant and we quickly get a fire storm going. Rain keeps the smoke away from the neighbors and makes sure nothing else gets burned. Seldom do be have an inversion during rain around here. BTW were talking light rain/mist not a downpour.

Ron
 
   / Burning Brush #15  
Once you have a decent fire going a leaf blower helps it spread. image-812445592.jpg

image-2382489582.jpg
 
   / Burning Brush #16  
It was over 60 years ago, but I remember a farm boy, when brush that was too loose to burn, who would build a small fire of sticks, then place a pint+-, capped bottle of gasoline a couple of feet in front of the fire. He would then go back 20 yards or so and shoot the bottle with a 22. It made a great fireball, and the brush burned.

Bruce
 
   / Burning Brush #17  
Stacked since fall it will be dry and easy to light. Even in a rain just s spash of diesel will get it going. Stuffing paper well into the pile also works but is slower.

Getting a pile of green brush going is a whole other problem. There repeated applications of diesel plus a leaf blower is a good answer.
 
   / Burning Brush #18  
A roll of toilet tissue dipped in diesel works for me in getting a brush pile lit.

Steve
+1 On a larger scale, starting with a bale of straw soaked in diesel fuel works well too. A backpack blower will get things hot enough to keep even green brush burning.
 
   / Burning Brush #19  
A backpack blower will get things hot enough to keep even green brush burning.

For those times when I have large pieces of wood to burn (logs, stumps) especially if it's punky or not-quite-dry, I use a length of 4" pipe (heavy wall, not thin conduit) and build the pile over the opening. A cheap electric blower goes in the other end. Really speeds things up.

Gets hot enough to melt the occasional screw. I do a stack of pallets that way and wind up with a ball of melted-together screws and nails when it's all done.
 
   / Burning Brush #20  
I would always have trouble getting a pile going. Our burn season here is Jan15-Apr 1. Typically the brush is soaked. Last couple years I have driven down to the local Home Depo and grabbed 3 or 4 old pallets from their scrap pile, cut them up and tossed a gas soaked old T shirt under them. Then lit it with a bbq lighter. Those old oak pallets burn fast and hot. Gets the brush going good.
 

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