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DIY: Eco-Friendly Fire Starters

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Over the past week, I've slowly revealed my love of fire (here, here, and here in case you're curious). I thought it would be best to let out the secret slowly. I wouldn't call myself a pyromaniac exactly, but I've never turned down an opportunity to sit around a campfire and I've never pooh-poohed the gift of a sweetly scented candle. Last week after I wrote about the best kinds of firewood for a blazing fire, someone asked for tips for starting said fire. In an effort to persuade our earth-minded readers away from dousing perfectly seasoned logs with petrochemicals, or wrestling too much with newspaper and matches, we've made a set of eco-friendly fire starters to use all winter—or to give as gifts during this solstice season. The concept is simple: fill an egg carton with good-smelling and flammable botanicals, and cover them with beeswax.

Here's what you need:

  • An empty egg carton
  • Wood shavings
  • Beeswax candle nubs or beeswax cakes for melting
  • A tin can 
  • A small saucepan
  • Cotton wicking
  • Pine cones, cinnamon sticks, or any other dried herbs 

Photographs by Erin Boyle. Photography shot with the Canon EOS 70D digital SLR camera, with Dual Pixel AF technology and built-in Wi-Fi.

eco-friendly fire starters | gardenista

Above: An old egg carton makes the perfect combustible base for DIY fire starters. 

eco-friendly fire starters | gardenista

Above: Other things to gather include wood shavings of any kind you can get your hands on (5 Cups of Organic Red Cedar Shavings is $5.99 from Stress Tamer Spa, and the shavings smell delicious).

You also need beeswax: I used a combination of old candle nubs and beeswax cakes from my local health store; a 3-Pack of Beeswax Cakes is $8 from Make A Basket.

From your spice cabinet, you'll need several cinnamon sticks, cut into 3/4-inch pieces. From your yard (or florist): pine cones, preferably with a few sweet-smelling needles still attached.

From the craft store: Cotton Square Braid Wicking, sold for $.50 per yard at Brushy Mountain Bee Farm. (For one-stop shopping, you can also get 1 pound of Raw Settled Beeswax for $5.95 from Brushy Mountain).

eco-friendly fire starters | gardenista

Above: I'm not 100 percent sure on the ID on these tiny cones, but I found branches full of them at the Flower Market and lugged them home with me. 

eco-friendly fire starters | gardenista

Above: Now that you have your materials, fill the base of each empty egg slot with a bedding of wood shavings. Because we're using beeswax and not the more flammable paraffin wax, I included a short length of wick to make sure the fire starters light without trouble.

eco-friendly fire starters | gardenista

Above: Clean out a 28-ounce aluminum can to use to melt your candle nubs or beeswax cakes. Add your hardened beeswax to the tin can and place inside a larger saucepan that's filled with an inch or two of water (the idea is to create a makeshift double boiler, without having to sacrifice a kitchen pan). Bring the water to a boil and keep an eye on your wax as it begins to melt. I ended up melting more wax than I needed: to make a dozen fire starters you'll need just enough melted wax to fill the 28-ounce can about one-third of the way.

eco-friendly fire starters | gardenista

Above: After the wax is melted, pour it into each egg cup. I recommend pouring each cup one by one and pressing a pine cone and a piece or two of cinnamon stick into each as you pour. The wax hardens fairly quickly, so you'll want to make sure that you stick the botanicals in fast so they'll stick. Make sure your wick stays above the surface of the wax so you can light it when the time comes.

eco-friendly fire starters | gardenista

Above: After the wax has hardened, use a pair of garden scissors to cut apart each cup.

eco-friendly fire starters | gardenista

Above: Fireplace-less as I am, I'm planning to give away my dozen, so I nestled them into the egg carton lid and tied them up with ribbon and bit of cedar.

Looking to have more fun with beeswax? See Justine's The Romance of the Homemade Candle.


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