★★☆☆☆ Easy 20-40 min

DIY Fatwood Fire Starters

Harvest and prepare nature's best fire-starting material from resinous pine stumps. Burns hot and catches fast, even when wet.

What You'll Need

  • Dead pine stump or fallen pine log Look for resin-saturated wood
  • Knife or hatchet For splitting wood
  • Ziplock bags For storage

Step-by-Step Instructions

  1. 01

    Find a resinous pine stump

    Look for old pine stumps (dead 2+ years). The heartwood concentrates resin as the surrounding sapwood rots away. Good fatwood is heavy for its size, feels waxy, and has a strong turpentine smell.

  2. 02

    Test the wood

    Shave a small curl and touch a flame to it. Real fatwood ignites instantly and burns with a bright, smoky flame. If it just chars, the resin content is too low — keep looking.

  3. 03

    Harvest sticks

    Split the resinous heartwood into finger-thick sticks 4-6 inches long. The darker and more amber-colored the wood, the higher the resin content. You want pieces that look almost translucent.

  4. 04

    Prepare shavings for tinder

    Use your knife to scrape fine curls off one end of each stick. These curls catch a spark instantly. A single stick with a feathered end can start a fire from a ferro rod in one strike.

  5. 05

    Store for your kit

    Keep processed sticks in ziplock bags. Fatwood is waterproof — the resin repels moisture. Store shavings separately for quick access. A dozen sticks will last months of camping.

Pro Tips

  • Fatwood lasts indefinitely when stored dry. It's been found still burnable in hundred-year-old cabins.
  • In the Southeast US, pine stumps are abundant. In the Pacific Northwest, look for Douglas fir.
  • You can also make DIY fatwood by soaking wood shavings in melted wax or petroleum jelly.
  • A single fatwood stick replaces an entire box of commercial fire starters.