17 Oaks
Silver Member
I have been lighting brush piles for years, some are big as in 10 ft tall x 65ft x 80 ft and some if not most are about ⅓ that size and since I am burning volatile wood [cedar] which is near explosive. Here is how I do it:
Check the prevailing wind direction and speed, I don't burn if its gusting or speeds much above about 5 mph and unless I just have a breath of air movement I start my burn downwind. This makes for a slower but more controllable burn.
I stack my hardwoods on top my brush, limbs and cedar as they take longer to burn and need more heat to to a complete burn to ash.
I pick a spot downwind at the furtherest point of my burn pile.
I use a gas diesel mix of about1/3 to almost ス diesel to gas.
I pour liberally and quick about chest height and watch to get a drip to ground.
Then I pour a trail of about 25+ feet or so from the pour site.
I take my burn brew can back to my tractor which is about 75+ feet away.
Walk back to where I stopped the trail pour which I marked with a stick or rock and use a butane BBQ lighter to light.
There is enough gas to make it move quick but not so fast that you get caught in the WHOOOOP as it ignites.
We have a water hose on site and one of us stays close in a watch mode as the other begins the brush drag from various piles we have set up to be burned.
KEY POINTS: Always use a mix of gas and diesel or a fast burn and a slow burn
Start the burn downwind so it has to back burn against the wind, this is critical if your are buring cedar/pine and other high resin trees/limbs.
Mark your burn trail so you know where to light
Check the prevailing wind direction and speed, I don't burn if its gusting or speeds much above about 5 mph and unless I just have a breath of air movement I start my burn downwind. This makes for a slower but more controllable burn.
I stack my hardwoods on top my brush, limbs and cedar as they take longer to burn and need more heat to to a complete burn to ash.
I pick a spot downwind at the furtherest point of my burn pile.
I use a gas diesel mix of about1/3 to almost ス diesel to gas.
I pour liberally and quick about chest height and watch to get a drip to ground.
Then I pour a trail of about 25+ feet or so from the pour site.
I take my burn brew can back to my tractor which is about 75+ feet away.
Walk back to where I stopped the trail pour which I marked with a stick or rock and use a butane BBQ lighter to light.
There is enough gas to make it move quick but not so fast that you get caught in the WHOOOOP as it ignites.
We have a water hose on site and one of us stays close in a watch mode as the other begins the brush drag from various piles we have set up to be burned.
KEY POINTS: Always use a mix of gas and diesel or a fast burn and a slow burn
Start the burn downwind so it has to back burn against the wind, this is critical if your are buring cedar/pine and other high resin trees/limbs.
Mark your burn trail so you know where to light