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Lump Coal for Hunting Camp Stove
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<blockquote data-quote="CogburnR" data-source="post: 487968" data-attributes="member: 29174"><p>To clarify a bit...the wood we cut is piled up to cure and hidden for the next year. The wood piles for the most part are undisturbed except for a few the next year. We hunt in some of the more remote areas of the Black Hills of South Dakota but anywhere in the Black Hills can be accessed by logging trails and you can't set up camp more than 100 yards off the trail and only in approved areas. Even if you packed in you could not be more than a mile or two from a trail.</p><p></p><p>The problem is local kids going up there to party and burning the wood(even with a ban on campfires).</p><p></p><p>Where I am hunting in Colorado(Routt) this year is accessed by logging trail and has the same limitation on camping now that the forest service has implemented the new "travel plan". It is pretty easy to haul 10 or 15 bags of pellets on top of the horse feed and camp gear. In Colorado the wood would never make it a year...the next group of hunters would burn it all though it is the last place you can camp on without packing it all in. We usually just take a horse and drag deadfall in to cut up as we need it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="CogburnR, post: 487968, member: 29174"] To clarify a bit...the wood we cut is piled up to cure and hidden for the next year. The wood piles for the most part are undisturbed except for a few the next year. We hunt in some of the more remote areas of the Black Hills of South Dakota but anywhere in the Black Hills can be accessed by logging trails and you can't set up camp more than 100 yards off the trail and only in approved areas. Even if you packed in you could not be more than a mile or two from a trail. The problem is local kids going up there to party and burning the wood(even with a ban on campfires). Where I am hunting in Colorado(Routt) this year is accessed by logging trail and has the same limitation on camping now that the forest service has implemented the new "travel plan". It is pretty easy to haul 10 or 15 bags of pellets on top of the horse feed and camp gear. In Colorado the wood would never make it a year...the next group of hunters would burn it all though it is the last place you can camp on without packing it all in. We usually just take a horse and drag deadfall in to cut up as we need it. [/QUOTE]
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