Primitive Camping & Bushcraft

Wet Wood Won’t Apologize — Building Fires When It Matters

Episode Summary

In this episode of the Primitive Camping & Bushcraft Podcast, Chris tackles one of the ultimate outdoor challenges: starting a fire with wet wood using only one match. Broadcasting straight from under the tarp at Camp Wut-Da-Heck in the middle of a thunderstorm, he shares practical fire-starting advice and a faith lesson about rekindling your spirit when life gets soaked.

Episode Notes

Today we’re camped under the tarp at Camp Wut-Da-Heck, rain beating down hard and frogs cutting loose in the woods, digging into one of the truest tests of primitive camping — starting a fire with wet wood and just one match.
Chris walks through real-world fire-building skills forged from hard days in the field: how to find dry material when it feels like nothing’s dry, how to split and feather soaked wood, and how to build a fire lay that breathes life into soaked sticks when the rain just won't quit.

But this episode isn’t just about survival skills — it’s about the mindset it takes when comfort fails and grit has to kick in.
Between thunder cracks and raindrops hammering the tarp, Chris shares hard lessons learned about trusting your preparation, finding strength when you're waterlogged, and leaning on more than just gear when life gets heavy.

Drawing from Isaiah 42:3, you’ll hear a powerful reminder that even when storms leave you soaked and spirit-heavy, God sees the dry core inside you — the part that's ready to catch fire again.
Because whether it’s in the woods or in life, one spark, one small act of faith, can reignite everything.

If you've ever wondered if you could still cook your meal, warm your bones, or stand your ground when the storm comes in sideways, this is the episode you need.

In everything you do, acknowledge Him.

Mentioned in this episode:

Field-proven fire-starting techniques for wet conditions

Finding and using fatwood, birch bark, and pine resin

Building a fire lay that breathes in wet weather

Why preparation beats bravado when the storms hit

Faith encouragement based on Isaiah 42:3

Here is the link to the all weather matches I discussed: https://youtu.be/HsMzcpZbEAA?si=L4PBGfGx6S5IQhG8

In everything you do, acknowledge Him.

Episode Transcription

(upbeat music)

 

All right, welcome back to the

 

Primitive Camping & Bushcraft Podcast.

 

My name's Chris Speir,

 

and today we're going to be

 

getting into something

 

that separates the real

 

from the fair weather campers,

 

and that is one match, and wet wood.

 

I mean, how

 

realistically, how often are you

 

really gonna go out into

 

the woods with a match,

 

or one match, but, you

 

know, in the event of,

 

and something like that happen,

 

are you still gonna be

 

able to cook your dinner?

 

Are you still gonna be able to

 

boil your water, or whatever?

 

So, yeah, coming to you live from,

 

well, I can't say live,

 

but I'm coming to you,

 

and underneath the tarp

 

of Camp Wut-Da-Heck,

 

in the middle of thunder and rain.

 

So you may hear

 

thunder in the background,

 

and you may hear some raindrops hitting,

 

and you're gonna hear

 

some frogs here in a minute,

 

and it is slam full

 

of mosquito bugs today,

 

and skeeter bugs don't play,

 

especially down here

 

by Camp Wut-Da-Heck.

 

And these things are atrocious.

 

So, because out here in the woods,

 

when it's rained, when it's been raining,

 

and what a better day to talk

 

about this subject than today,

 

because it has been raining.

 

It has been raining all day.

 

All the woods wet, everything's wet,

 

except for the dry ground

 

right here under the Camp Wut-Da-Heck

 

Camp Wut-Da-Heck

 

And, you know, when the

 

rain's coming in sideways,

 

and everything you own gets soaked,

 

it's not about bragging

 

rights, it's about survival.

 

It's about grit.

 

We're not out here just rapping.

 

Well, I mean, sometimes

 

you will brag, but, you know,

 

yeah, it's not a very

 

good idea to be the bragger,

 

be that guy that always, you know,

 

one time I had one match

 

and it was slightly wet,

 

but I still got it to

 

light and a little fire,

 

and I saved all the

 

people in my expedition.

 

No, it's not that

 

kind of stuff, you know.

 

Essentially, it's a reality check.

 

So, you know, weather

 

doesn't care about your plans.

 

They really don't.

 

I can't tell you how many times

 

that I have scheduled

 

me or Dave, you know,

 

we will schedule a

 

kayaking trip or a camping trip

 

or something to the

 

effect, and it will just flood.

 

It will just be a downpour.

 

Like, nobody wants to just head out

 

into the woods

 

camping like that, you know.

 

Camp is supposed to be a relaxing time,

 

but it can be done, you know.

 

If you're, and everybody

 

hears this quote unquote

 

survival situation stuff, and that's not,

 

that's not really what I'm talking about

 

when I'm doing this podcast.

 

What I'm talking about is

 

praying with the camping,

 

you know, heading out,

 

hiking out, setting up,

 

enjoying your time,

 

and catching use of food,

 

and hiking back, and going home.

 

That's what I'm talking about

 

when we're talking

 

about praying and camping.

 

I'm not talking about going out

 

with just the deer hide sitting on it

 

and carving some arrowheads or a knife

 

or whatever like Jake

 

Trent or Donnie Dust

 

or any of those guys.

 

You know, what I'm talking about

 

primitive is, you know,

 

you're going out and

 

you're just going camping

 

without all the modern

 

conveniences in the world.

 

Now, that's not being

 

like bushcraft, you know.

 

Bushcraft is you're going out with just,

 

ooh, there's some lightning.

 

Bushcraft is you're going

 

out with just a couple of,

 

a knife and a ferro rod, you know.

 

Not to say that they can't be done

 

because it absolutely can.

 

But, you know, when it gets down to,

 

there's some thunder, I

 

wonder if y'all can hear that.

 

But when it gets down to it,

 

wet wood doesn't apologize.

 

It's not going to apologize.

 

And one of the things that really

 

is going to separate you from the others

 

is being wet outside,

 

starting a fire when it's wet.

 

It can be done.

 

It can be done when

 

everything is completely soaked.

 

It takes you a little bit longer.

 

I mean, you got stuff that's been soaking

 

in the water for a month.

 

You're not going to get a

 

bow drill out of it, you know,

 

most of the time.

 

But I've seen some people that have.

 

I've seen people on, let's say that TV

 

show alone, you know.

 

I've seen people actually

 

pull it off on that show.

 

And it was like, it

 

took them days to do it,

 

but they actually got it.

 

So if you cannot start

 

a fire under pressure,

 

you're probably not going to eat.

 

But you brought like something

 

that don't have to be cooked.

 

Right here, bump the microphone again.

 

Right here, got my little blue Nalgene.

 

I have used this thing for years.

 

It is amazing keeping my water.

 

I usually carry a metal water bottle

 

whenever I, metal water bottle

 

when I go into the woods in the event of,

 

I have to boil some water.

 

But you know, this

 

Nalgene, I have used it for years,

 

transport water back and forth.

 

And it serves me fine.

 

So, but anyway,

 

Wet wood, like I was saying,

 

is not going to apologize.

 

If you can't start a fire under pressure,

 

you might not eat that night.

 

And this is if you didn't

 

bring any like MRE style

 

or something that could be

 

eaten without being cooked.

 

And whenever your morale

 

is literally bleeding out

 

and it's cold outside and a single flame

 

can mean the difference

 

between pressure and giving up.

 

A lot of times, you're

 

going to have more than one way

 

to start a fire.

 

And that's what I've been preaching for a

 

couple of years now.

 

And especially through my book,

 

Primitive Camping in Bushcraft,

 

which by the way, I am just

 

now launching three eBooks.

 

I have three eBooks

 

available on my website,

 

spareoutdoors.com.

 

And if you go over

 

there and check those out,

 

there's one on

 

shelter, there's one on fire,

 

and there's one on water.

 

The three, the big trifecta.

 

And you can check

 

those out, they're on sale

 

for like 40 some odd

 

percent off right now

 

for $5 or $6 a piece.

 

And you can buy the whole

 

bundle of all three of them

 

for like $11.99.

 

So when you go to do your fire,

 

the first thing you're gonna do is pick

 

your location, right?

 

So that's gonna be half of the battle.

 

You're gonna pick your site

 

that you're gonna start your fire.

 

And a lot of times with that,

 

you're gonna pick a nice little spot

 

that's got some

 

firewood around, you know,

 

where your camp is.

 

You're not gonna wanna spend all day

 

dragging firewood to your camp.

 

Let's see, Monday I'm

 

leaving for a kayaking trip.

 

We're gonna paddle 18 to

 

20 miles down the river.

 

And we're going to camp out overnight.

 

And so we're gonna try to select a spot

 

where it has some firewood there

 

and we could just pull the firewood up

 

and go ahead and cook our dinner.

 

But, you know, you're

 

gonna look for cover,

 

thick trees, natural rock shells,

 

anything that keeps the rain off.

 

You know, be careful when

 

you're doing it around rocks,

 

they heat up, sometimes they crack and

 

can fall or explode.

 

You know, you don't wanna really

 

do it around the rocks too much.

 

So it's starting to rain a little bit.

 

Maybe y'all can hear that.

 

And hopefully it doesn't get too loud.

 

But you're gonna look for cover,

 

thick trees, natural rock shells,

 

anything that keeps the rain off.

 

And you're gonna wanna be

 

camping in higher ground

 

because it's gonna drain faster.

 

Valleys stay wet longer.

 

And that's because all the

 

water's gonna be draining

 

down in there.

 

So you don't wanna be, like

 

here in South Mississippi,

 

you don't wanna be

 

camping in the high water mark

 

because right now

 

everything's flooded anyway.

 

And with this rain right here, the water

 

will come up a foot.

 

And it's crazy.

 

So you wanna build a

 

barrier if you have to,

 

something that is going to

 

protect your fire from the rain.

 

Now I've talked about this many times.

 

My son and I went onto a camping trip

 

and we were out there for eight days

 

and it rains for six solid

 

days and six solid nights.

 

I thought was gonna have to build an art.

 

And the river come up to 35 feet.

 

It was the second

 

highest flood stage since 1920

 

that it has ever been.

 

It was 35 feet.

 

And there was not a

 

piece of dry land anywhere.

 

It was all underwater

 

except for where we were camping

 

was the only dry spot.

 

And then it rained so hard.

 

The only way we can have a fire

 

was to use fat wood as our firewood.

 

And no, we didn't cook over,

 

I mean, we cooked in a bush pot,

 

but we had a cast iron Dutch oven

 

that we hung up over

 

the fire and cooked in.

 

But other than that,

 

that's the only way we was

 

able to get a fire started

 

or to burn because of the rain.

 

So with wet wood can

 

still give you dry stuff

 

to start your fire with.

 

When you split that wood,

 

it should be dry in the middle

 

depending on the type of wood

 

and how long it's been submerged

 

or how long it's been wet or whatnot.

 

And I'm thinking that this rain

 

is gonna be a little bit

 

too loud for this microphone.

 

We'll find out here shortly, huh?

 

So you can split a

 

log, you can split a stick

 

and it's still gonna be

 

relatively dry in the middle

 

and that's gonna be able

 

to get you some kindling.

 

You'll be able to do some feather sticks,

 

stuff like that.

 

You wanna peel your bark off the logs

 

to get to the dry layers underneath.

 

And the bark usually is

 

gonna have a barrier in between

 

that's gonna be like

 

soaking up the water.

 

Your water is gonna

 

stick in between the wood

 

and your bark.

 

So take the bark off if you can, if not.

 

And we're talking about stuff

 

that's been laying

 

down for a little while.

 

We're not talking

 

about your giant oak trees

 

that you just cut.

 

So you wanna hunt for dead branches

 

that haven't touched the

 

ground that are still hanging up.

 

And you can walk through the woods

 

and find tons of dead branches.

 

I mean, these things

 

will be laying everywhere

 

in these vines and

 

other branches of trees

 

and brush and stuff like that.

 

You'll find branches all over the place.

 

So when you're

 

finding these dead branches,

 

pick them up, break

 

them up, make them small,

 

cut them small, you know, and

 

then find you some fat wood.

 

Find some fat wood.

 

If you got resinous

 

trees, you have fat wood.

 

If you got pine trees, you got fat wood.

 

And birch bark, pine resin, you know,

 

those things are

 

nature's way of starting a fire.

 

And they are extremely flammable.

 

And I've preached about those for,

 

I can't tell you how long, you know,

 

since I started with this book,

 

since I started this podcast,

 

I've been telling you about fat wood,

 

birch bark or pine resin, you know,

 

all those things have oils in them.

 

Cypress bark, cypress

 

bark has a lot of oils in it.

 

And you could break that

 

down into real fine fibers.

 

And every year the tree exfoliates,

 

I think that's what they call it,

 

where it sloughs off the bark

 

and grows new bark underneath it.

 

And you take the old bark

 

and you could break it down

 

into like cotton ball size threads.

 

And that is what gets it.

 

That separates the wheat from the chaff.

 

That right there is what

 

actually starts your fire

 

is those cotton ball size threads

 

that you can get from a resinous tree

 

such as a cypress or cedar or whatever.

 

So now we're gonna set the stage.

 

You know, you're gonna do

 

fire building one-on-one.

 

It's the same thing, the same process.

 

The only thing, the

 

only thing that's different

 

in this whole process is

 

you're starting wet wood.

 

It's wet outside.

 

The ground's wet, but that should be it.

 

Everything else should not be wet.

 

Your fire tender should not be wet.

 

You could find fire tender.

 

You know, if you got fat wood, birch

 

bark, or pine resin,

 

you don't have to

 

worry about the fire tender

 

because that's what it is.

 

You just make some shavings with the

 

backside of your knife

 

and make a pile and just

 

these dudes are gonna start you

 

a fire regardless.

 

And you know, tiny, tiny shavings.

 

You can make feather sticks.

 

You do pencil-sized lead

 

kindling, pencil-sized lead,

 

pencil-lead-sized kindling.

 

(laughs)

 

So you're gonna do

 

pencil-lead-sized kindling.

 

And you know, it's gonna be damp,

 

but if it was up off the ground,

 

it's not gonna be

 

saturated, it's not gonna be soaked.

 

It may be damp, but there's a difference.

 

Once you get your fire lit,

 

that stuff will easily catch on fire.

 

If that catches on fire,

 

then the bigger stuff catches on fire.

 

And then so forth, so

 

on, so forth, so on.

 

You know, so, you know, a fire lay,

 

you wanna make a fire lay that breathes.

 

A fire lay that breathes

 

is a fire lay that lives.

 

A fire lay that

 

breathes is a fire that lives.

 

Let's see if I can

 

spit that out correctly.

 

You know, don't choke it.

 

Build it right the first time.

 

Don't choke it out.

 

Give it plenty of room.

 

Give it plenty of space to breathe.

 

Get it, you know, plenty of chaos

 

to actually develop the flame.

 

You know, I think it,

 

one of these survival

 

schools or something,

 

I saw a video sometimes,

 

it says, "Fire Loves Chaos."

 

And that has stuck in my mind ever since,

 

because if you think

 

about it, it really does.

 

Fire is a chaotic being.

 

Fire is alive.

 

And you know, it has to have oxygen.

 

It has to breathe in order to eat.

 

It is like a mold or

 

a bacteria or a virus

 

that it has to eat in order

 

for it to continue to grow.

 

And there was a big

 

old snake just slithered

 

right across in front

 

of me on the ground,

 

10 feet away in the woods.

 

That is crazy.

 

It looked like a

 

black racer or something,

 

but still nonetheless,

 

that is why we are doing

 

this in the great outdoors

 

at Camp Wut-Da-Heck.

 

Now we got the frogs in the background.

 

We got the rain on the tarp.

 

This is starting to turn real, guys.

 

This is really starting to turn real.

 

So remember, your one

 

match deserves a fire

 

that is ready to catch.

 

So we're pretending

 

like you have one match.

 

If you have one match,

 

make it a fireproof match.

 

(laughs)

 

A fireproof match,

 

make it a fireproof match.

 

(record scratch)

 

Whoa, whoa, whoa, wait just a second.

 

All right, after

 

listening to this podcast back,

 

I had to jump back in here and say,

 

there is no such thing

 

as a fireproof match.

 

What I was trying to

 

convey was the windproof

 

or stormproof or waterproof matches.

 

Okay, back to the show.

 

I saw some videos the other day.

 

That was pretty cool

 

because they took regular matches,

 

dipped them in wax or something,

 

then they took the striker

 

and somehow they taped it

 

in there with the matches

 

and then they put the

 

whole thing in a rubber balloon

 

and sealed it off and

 

then they just pulled the top

 

and it struck and the rubber balloon

 

became a fire extender and it

 

actually, it was pretty cool.

 

You gotta see, if I can think of it,

 

if I remember when I'm editing this

 

and putting the podcast up,

 

I will see if I can find that link

 

to put into the show notes

 

because that was pretty doggone cool.

 

And if I have one match,

 

that would be the match I want.

 

Typically, I don't even

 

waste my time with matches.

 

I either have a ferro

 

rod or a big lighter,

 

but we're gonna pretend like

 

we're using a match on this trip.

 

So, we got our fire lay

 

and we're making our

 

fire layup off the ground

 

where it's not going to get

 

put out whenever it starts

 

because if the ground's wet

 

and you're starting

 

to fire on the ground,

 

odds are it's gonna put out your fire.

 

And so, we're not gonna choke it out.

 

We're gonna let it breathe.

 

We're gonna let the

 

fire just grow on its own.

 

There's some thunder.

 

Remember, this one match deserves a fire

 

that is ready to go.

 

Not one of you,

 

not one of you is gonna

 

hope that it don't catch.

 

I mean, because

 

everybody's gonna be like,

 

"Dear God, please let this fire catch."

 

So, there's a picture in all of this

 

that we've been talking about

 

that if you really think about it,

 

in life, storms will come.

 

It's not an if, it's a when.

 

Storms are gonna come and no matter what,

 

just like I'm sitting out here

 

at Camp Wut-Da-Heck right now

 

with rain beating down on top of the tarp

 

and the lightning going

 

and the thunder going,

 

storms in your life are gonna come.

 

And sometimes you'll feel like that

 

soaked piece of wood,

 

weighed down,

 

waterlogged, no spark left in you,

 

but God sees the dry heart inside.

 

Now, Isaiah 42 verse three says,

 

"A bruised reed he will not break

 

and a smoldering wick

 

he will not snuff out."

 

Now, you may feel like

 

you're too beaten down

 

to catch fire again.

 

You're too used up.

 

You don't have any,

 

you're soaked with all

 

the troubles of the world.

 

You may feel like you're

 

just weighed down and tattered,

 

but he isn't done with you.

 

Just like when you

 

split that law a while ago

 

to find the dry core,

 

more thunder.

 

Just like when you split that law

 

to find that dry core

 

inside to make a feather stick

 

or to make shavings

 

or do whatever you're

 

gonna do to start a fire.

 

God splits through

 

all of our circumstances

 

to reach that part of us

 

that still is ready to burn for him.

 

So he doesn't need perfect conditions.

 

Kind of like we don't need perfect

 

conditions to go camping.

 

He don't need perfect conditions.

 

What he needs is you to be

 

willing to catch fire again.

 

So back to our one match mentality.

 

You gotta prep like

 

your life depends on it

 

because sometimes,

 

and I haven't had to put

 

in that situation, but one time,

 

but that could been the one

 

time that it had to apply.

 

But you want to prep

 

like your life depends on it

 

because sometimes it does.

 

You want to practice

 

like your life depends on it

 

because sometimes it does.

 

You practice like

 

somebody's life depends on it

 

because sometimes it does.

 

When we were in the

 

military, I was a medic

 

and we practiced like

 

somebody's life depended on it

 

because it really did.

 

People's lives depended on me,

 

depended on the people

 

that work with me or under me

 

and the doctors and all that above me,

 

people's lives depended on it

 

and we had to practice like

 

their lives depended on it.

 

So what I mean by this

 

is double your tender,

 

triple your feather sticks.

 

Make as much, make it

 

start, make it start.

 

Don't worry about how

 

long it takes you to do this.

 

It's not a race.

 

You just go ahead and make it start.

 

You make it work.

 

You do the job that needs to be done.

 

If you're trying to get a

 

fire started, get it done.

 

Build this thing slow,

 

think about it smartly

 

and set yourself up for success.

 

Do not, do not just go in there and say,

 

"Hey, I got this one little twig.

 

I got this right here,

 

I'm gonna burn my match."

 

You're not gonna have a fire.

 

If you only have one match with you,

 

you're not gonna get a

 

second chance and with life,

 

you're not getting second chances.

 

That match, I mean,

 

it's really not realistic

 

to be out in the woods with one match,

 

but in the event of, and

 

I'm not gonna say never

 

because it possibly could happen,

 

but in the event of you

 

don't want to take a chance

 

that you're not gonna be

 

able to get the fire lit.

 

So fire aids, what I mean by fire aids

 

is tools in your pocket, nature's tools.

 

These things are aids, fire aids.

 

That's what I'm talking about.

 

That birch bark that I mentioned earlier,

 

we got some form of variation.

 

I think it's a river

 

birch or something like that,

 

but it's not as good

 

as that stuff up north.

 

But I mean, it's still

 

feasible, it's still usable,

 

it's still paper thin.

 

I just don't think it has the oil residue

 

or the oil content that

 

the Northern birch does,

 

the stuff that they

 

get up north from here.

 

Birch bark, pine

 

resin, pine resin is good,

 

but here's the thing

 

with the pine resin is

 

if you're going to start a fire,

 

you better have a lot of it,

 

especially if you got one match

 

because it's gonna take a

 

bit for it to get started.

 

Dry grass, all right.

 

So Chris, we're sitting

 

here talking about wet wood

 

and starting a fire or a wet fire,

 

and you're wanting to

 

guess that you have dry grass.

 

Well, yeah, you're right.

 

But if you think about it,

 

you will be able to find some dry grasses

 

underneath thickets.

 

They will be drier than the other stuff.

 

Like right now, sitting out

 

here at Kent, what the heck,

 

I am looking around and I can tell you,

 

I see two, maybe three

 

different species of weeds

 

that I could use as a

 

tinder even when they're wet.

 

No lie.

 

So it can be done.

 

You can find grasses, you can find weeds,

 

you can find different

 

tenders for different things.

 

Now, that's not to

 

say that you can't bring

 

man-made backups like cotton

 

balls soaked with some Vaseline

 

or petroleum jelly or whatever.

 

My favorite, blackberry fire plugs.

 

And I tell you what, I

 

just revamped the website

 

and they are top of the list.

 

I carry with them, I carry

 

them with me everywhere I go.

 

I got a bag of them dudes

 

and I'm telling you right now,

 

they are worth every

 

penny, every pretty penny.

 

And those things are awesome.

 

They start a fire.

 

I have not been able to not start a fire

 

with a blackberry fire plug.

 

Did that make sense?

 

Not been able to not.

 

Now, here's one thing

 

that I've recently upgraded

 

my ferro rod from a, just a

 

regular plain ferrocerium rod

 

to the all weather fire starter.

 

Now, I got an

 

affiliate link for this thing.

 

I really, I don't get paid

 

anything, but you get 10% off.

 

You know, you use my co-sphere outdoors.

 

But these all weather fire

 

starters, they're expensive.

 

They're 35, 45, $50, but

 

I'm telling you right now,

 

it is the absolute

 

most amazing fire starter

 

I have ever, ever used.

 

You know, I've emailed

 

Edmund a couple of times

 

and you know, he is

 

so fired up about this,

 

this venture he's doing.

 

These fire starters are amazing.

 

And I'm telling you right now,

 

they are the best fire

 

starters on the market.

 

So what they are is they

 

are probably not a half inch.

 

It's like a probably a

 

three eights ferro rod,

 

a ferrocerium rod, which is

 

drilled into a one inch diameter

 

magnesium block.

 

And we're talking some awesome magnesium,

 

not that cheap Harbor

 

Freight stuff that you get,

 

you know, at the

 

checkout counter for a $1.99.

 

No, we're talking,

 

we're talking real deal,

 

Holyfield, real school stuff.

 

And that striker that he uses on there

 

is the most amazing strikers.

 

I'm telling you now,

 

I don't know what kind of striker he's

 

got on these things.

 

And I don't know how

 

much it costs him to source

 

all this material from all over the world

 

to build these things.

 

And I'm telling you right now,

 

this is the most

 

amazing fire starting tool

 

I have ever used.

 

And when he says all

 

weather fire starters,

 

I promise you, they will

 

start fire in all weather, rain,

 

snow, actually I used them

 

to start a fire in the snow.

 

I've used them to

 

start a fire in the rain.

 

I've used them to start a

 

fire in the dry, you know,

 

and they are amazing.

 

So, you know, if you're gonna use

 

something like that,

 

magnesium shavings are

 

amazing in wet weather

 

to start a fire,

 

especially with some kind of tinder

 

that is damp, say you had the damp grass

 

and you throw some

 

magnesium shavings in there.

 

Well, kind of like I

 

mentioned a while ago,

 

don't go half-hearted,

 

don't go half-cocked.

 

Go ahead and spit some shavings into it.

 

Cause some things burn at 5,000 degrees

 

and that's plenty enough

 

degrees to dry out that grass

 

before it catches it on fire.

 

And I'm telling you right

 

now, you will have a fire.

 

You will have a fire.

 

So, you know, I cannot

 

explain to you enough

 

how much or how awesome

 

it is to start a fire with,

 

the all weather firestorm.

 

All right, the rain is

 

really coming down now,

 

but listen, the rains are going to come.

 

Life is going to get heavy,

 

but if you've built the skill,

 

if you tended the fire of your faith,

 

one spark is all it

 

takes to reignite everything.

 

One flame reignites everything.

 

And I guess that's the hole

 

just behind this one match episode today.

 

So out here, starting

 

a fire with wet wood

 

is called survival or

 

bushcraft or a primitive camp

 

and whichever way you want to go.

 

But in life, keeping

 

your faith is eternal.

 

Keeping your faith burning is eternal.

 

So in all your ways, acknowledge him

 

and let him always direct your path.

 

Stay sharp, stay ready, stay faithful.

 

And when the storms come, trust the one

 

that can split the hardest wood

 

and set your heart on fire again.

 

Thanks for spending time

 

with me out here at camp.

 

What the heck?

 

With all the dogs, they

 

got Leia and Ranger and Tess

 

out here and I really enjoyed it.

 

And it's been different out

 

here in the rain this time,

 

but we'll see you next time.

 

God bless you.