Gary,
Two weeks back I burned my first really big pile. It was
roughly 20 feet by 30 feet by 8 feet tall. We finally had a
couple of weeks of rain with more forcast a few days after
I would have been done burning. No wind was in the forecast.
To shorten this, a bit I was three hours late starting the fire.
I had problems with the lock on my gate, my brush cutter
failed to start, and the battery on the tractor was DOA.
/w3tcompact/icons/frown.gif That was three strikes so I almost went home!
/w3tcompact/icons/smile.gif But I stayed.
This pile was mainly dead stuff with some green. It was from
twigs to big 36+ stumps. It was also packed togather real
tight and wet. I have gallons of old engine oil, the truck uses
15 quarts an oild change, so I use it to start the brush
fire. I put old newspapers all over the place and then pour
the the oil all over the wood. I try like heck to not get it on
the ground. I ended up used close 9 gallons of oil. I like the
oil since it sticks to the wood. If I have old gas I might mix
the gas and oil. But using gas is REAL dangerous.
Anyway I got the fire started ok but I had to dig through the
pile to feed the fire and help it spread. And this was hand
digging. The fire was not going enough to use the tractor.
After about 4 fours the fire was still only in 20% of the pile so
I knew I would be sleeping over on the property. The tractor
battery was partly dead due to cold weather so I really did not
want to spend the night but I had to watch the fire. Around
1900-2000 hours I was finally able to pushe the fire with the
FEL. But that was a good 10 hours after I had started.
By sunrise, 20 hours or so after starting the fire was burned
down to a good pile of coals with 5-6 big stumps still hanging
on. I brought over 10+ FEL loads and buried the burn. It was
still smoking but it was buried in a pile a good 6-7 feet tall. I
went home.
It rained pretty much all the next week after the burn and
on the next Saturday. Last Saturday I went out to work.
Did not do a danged thing but yak with the neighbors, but
I went to work! /w3tcompact/icons/smile.gif
We had had a good 2-3 inches of rain since I had buried the
fire. THAT DANGED THING WAS STILL SMOULDERING!!!!!! I
pulled up my driveway and that son of a gun was still smoking!
The pile was 6-7 feet tall when I had left with 5-6 stumps
buried. It was now about 3 feet tall and only two stumps
where left! I was floored! There was no way for the fire to
spread and it was not sending up embers but that thing had
cooked on the inside for two weeks!!!!!
I also put gas on this fire. I knew it was dangerous. I KNOW
why it was dangerous and I did it anyway to see what would
happen. Well I REALLY KNOW what will happen at this point!
/w3tcompact/icons/smile.gif Dont use gas. /w3tcompact/icons/smile.gif I was very careful. I thought
about what to do and the dangers. I'll NEVER do it again.
/w3tcompact/icons/smile.gif After the load explosion, the fireball, and fire, not a
thing was accomplished in regards to starting a fire in the
burn pile. /w3tcompact/icons/smile.gif I did need a new pair of Fruit of the Looms
and my ticker was a rac'n but never again! /w3tcompact/icons/smile.gif
This is a long way of saying use old oil or diesel. Maybe kero
but that is more expensive. DONT EVEN THINK about gas.
/w3tcompact/icons/smile.gif Be prepared for a long day/night/morning. A big
pile is HOT. I had to wear long pants/shirts/gloves and my
logging helment to stay near the fire for more than a few
seconds....
BE careful. I had a pile that was small brush up to 2-3 inches
in diameter and about 12 feet by 20 feet by 10 feet burn one
day. The forecast said no wind. Well the wind kicked up
real bad. White caps on the lake. That is very scary with
a fire this size......
Good Luck,
Dan NeverUseGasAgain McCarty