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Do you think campfires are a necessary part of camping?
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NorthCascades
Posts: 10,970 Member
in Debate Club
Camping itself isn't a fitness activity, but it's often done to facilitate things like hiking, swimming, and canoeing.
Everybody loves a good campfire. Some people require one. In the national parks, it's easier to get a permit (because there's less competition) for a backcountry site that doesn't allow campfires than one that does.
Do you typically have fires when you camp? Will you camp without one? Does this change for you based on the weather, or whether you're in the front or back country?
Everybody loves a good campfire. Some people require one. In the national parks, it's easier to get a permit (because there's less competition) for a backcountry site that doesn't allow campfires than one that does.
Do you typically have fires when you camp? Will you camp without one? Does this change for you based on the weather, or whether you're in the front or back country?
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Replies
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Yes, we generally have a campfire when possible and it's certainly part of the whole camping tradition for us, but it's not a make or break. We've camped in the rain, or where fires weren't allowed or when we just couldn't get any wood, and never considered the trip diminished at all, since our primary focus is playing in the outdoors, and roasting marshmallows and dozing in front of the embers is just a great add-in.3
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Yes! How else would you make s'mores ?!
C'mon, man. Use your head.10 -
Do you typically have fires when you camp?
Yes.
Will you camp without one?
Yes. We've had to camp without fires the last few years because of dry weather, forest fires and the resultant fire bans. Preventing forest fires makes for REALLY big fires once it actually eventually starts.
Does this change for you based on the weather, or whether you're in the front or back country?
Not often.3 -
I'm from Australia. You can't camp without a fire, it's the only thing that keeps the dropbears away.14
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Alatariel75 wrote: »I'm from Australia. You can't camp without a fire, it's the only thing that keeps the dropbears away.
Dropbear...?
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Alatariel75 wrote: »I'm from Australia. You can't camp without a fire, it's the only thing that keeps the dropbears away.
Dropbear...?
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not directly. but coffee is . . . so.
personally, i think the real question should be 'is camping necessary?' probably noticed i'm not a big fan.3 -
Alatariel75 wrote: »dropbear
wowsers. i looked that up and found this.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marsupial_lion
sure, long long ago . . . but how cool is that. a marsupial lion.
sorry bout that. carry on.
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I usually prefer without a fire. You can't see many stars from the middle of a big city, so the night sky is a treat for me. When I camp, I can see the Milky Way. The Perseid meteor shower is going to peak this weekend. A campfire distracts from all of this. Also, the best camps here are at high enough altitude that trees are scarce and fires are prohibited.0
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First of all, I count camping as a fitness exercise!
-squats setting up the tent
-windmills swatting away real and imagined bugs
-wind sprints and blood curdling screams each time I see something that looks like a snake, skunk, scorpion, spider, bear, bobcat, coyote, chainsaw killer, sasquatch, fog, etc... (I should have NEVER watched horror movies.)
Secondly, I am one of those who requires a camp fire. I will camp out ONLY if there is a camp fire! I also need toasted marshmallows, cuddling under the stars, and someone who will stay up all night killing everything that comes within a quarter mile of the campsite.
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I like campfires, but I don't like starting them. I know how and can do so, but I was burned badly as a kid and am pretty avoidant of activities that can burn me again.2
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Campfires are my fave part of camping. But, half the summer has a fire ban because it gets so dry where I live, so i make due without.2
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Alatariel75 wrote: »Alatariel75 wrote: »I'm from Australia. You can't camp without a fire, it's the only thing that keeps the dropbears away.
Dropbear...?
OMG it's a vampire koala!
I don't need a campfire, but I like to camp in a hotel room6 -
We always have a "safe" camp fire and are fully aware of putting it out correctly. Camping isn't camping without a good campfire.
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Alatariel75 wrote: »Alatariel75 wrote: »I'm from Australia. You can't camp without a fire, it's the only thing that keeps the dropbears away.
Dropbear...?
This would make me think twice about camping...1 -
It truely depends on where and when we camp.
We generally don't do campfires late spring to early autumn.
We camp in the BC (canada) interior and it is a tinderbox.
My SO was with the ministry of highways, and his best friend MO forestry. We are too aware of what can happen to even think of having a camp fire most of the year.
I love the romance of them, but heck, I have a vivid imagination and can make romance out of a tin of beans.
Cheers, h.
Eta, we are still experiencing the heavy smoke from the fires in northern BC, I am close to the USA border and on an island.4 -
My husband has asthma, and has breathing problems around a campfire, so no.
We have been known to move our camp if someone in the area has a fire, which is why we prefer backcountry camping where there are less (or no) people. We would never camp in a "campground" because we understand that this is a part of the experience for most people. But, no, we can't do it.2 -
NorthCascades wrote: »I usually prefer without a fire. You can't see many stars from the middle of a big city, so the night sky is a treat for me. When I camp, I can see the Milky Way. The Perseid meteor shower is going to peak this weekend. A campfire distracts from all of this. Also, the best camps here are at high enough altitude that trees are scarce and fires are prohibited.
BTW, I'm heading to the Boundary Waters in Minnesota next week for a canoe trip....I'm hoping to still catch some of the Perseid meteor shower.4 -
I have camped without a fire an 2 occasions when the weather had been so dry that open fires were banned at the time. You could only burn charcoal for cooking. No wood fires. It wasn't nearly as much fun.
Yeah, I definitely want the campfire. But I will camp without it.1 -
A campfire is a nice-to-have, not a necessity. When we go on family campouts, they are almost nearly a requirement. Same goes for Cub Scout camps and Boy Scout weekend campouts.
For backcountry campouts, it's a different matter. We've been out where there have been burn warnings, and no fires were allowed. We've also been out when it has poured rain, and there's no dry fuel for the fire.3
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