As my fire starter, I fill a large jar 1/2 way with diesel fuel and drop charcoal briquetts in the jar and let them soak. Retrieve briquettes from the jar using bbq tongs. I can usually get a good fire going pretty quickly using a single briquette. Store the jar a safe distance away, of course.
@@woodnyardjunkie Try the charcoal in diesel or kerosene, cheapest and easiest no-fuss way I've come across. I just lay the charcoal in between my firewood and light the corner, leave the stove door ajar while it's catching up. If your firewood is anywhere near dry, you'll have a decent fire in no time. Charcoal might be on sale right about now, I may have paid $5 for my last large bag. The diesel is stale fuel from my tractor, I drain the tank for fresh occasionally.
i love how it says “kitchen cooking” blow torch in the description on amazon, probably some sort of regulatory work around, that thing is like a flame thrower 😂😂