Posts Tagged ‘campfire’

Myron Carter’s Underground Campfire Chicken

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

This recipe is from Myron Carter, a Facebook camping buddy. Enjoy!

Underground Chicken
This sounds crazy, but we had this at Thanksgiving and I thought this would be a great camping recipe. The result was some of the best-tasting chicken I have ever had.

inject a whole chicken with lemon garlic sauce in the breasts and legs and as many other places as you want. Pour the remainder of the sauce into a bowl and add parsley, black pepper, oregano, and garlic powder. Stir, and generously brush on this concoction all over the chicken. Put the chicken into a zip-lock baking bag and pour in the remainder of the mixed sauce of spices. Let it marinate overnight in the refrigerator or icebox. When you get it out the next day, wrap it in two layers of heavy duty aluminum foil.

Dig a hole about two feet by four feet. Then, build a fire at one end of it. After the coals get hot, shift the fire to the other end of the hole, leaving plenty of coals. Cover the coals with a half inch layer of dirt. Place the chicken on the dirt-covered coals and cover the chicken with another shallow layer of dirt. Move the fire back over the covered chicken. Sit back and enjoy the campfire, but make sure the fire stays burning. After about two hours and fifteen minutes, carefully dig out the chicken with a shovel. You’ll know it’s ready by the sound of sizzling juices and the aroma.

“Camping in Color: Lighting a Campfire”

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

“Through the Eyes of the Young and Naive: Spontaneous Camping Trip”

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

This post by a bride one week out from her wedding includes a poetic description of the campfire experience that I think speaks for many of us.

“Daily D.I.Y.: Quick Camping Tip”

Sunday, September 13th, 2009

Here you’ll learn to start your campfire with a potato chip. Spiffy!

Improperly Extinguished Campfires

Saturday, September 5th, 2009

Reading this article was an eye-opener for me– I didn’t know that an improperly extinguished campfire in the fall could cause a wildfire in the spring! This is from a paper in Alberta, Canada, but physics is physics everywhere, so it’s worth remembering that “We really mean it when we say ‘it’s not out until you can touch it!’”

“My Eclectic Mess: Memories are Made of This”

Friday, August 7th, 2009

Speaking of her tent camping family reunions and the campfire family tales told from year to year, Beth writes, “These family stories are fun to share. I remember listening to the last two generation’s stories when I was young and they made me feel connected to a time and a place as well as the people. My kids are growing up away from that place and most of those people. It makes me sad at times that they don’t have that sense of connectedness. Little things like holidays together and trips like this one help ease the gap and hopefully help them stay connected with our family heritage.”

I think family reunions are family tent camping at it’s finest hour, and posts like this one prove why. As I’ve mentioned before, my little family of three is the first generation of our family to enjoy camping, so we’ll have to start the tradition when my son grows up and gets married, but I definitely will do so then, God willing.

“Campfire Talk” by Antler

Saturday, August 1st, 2009

An excerpt of the poem “Campfire Talk” by Antler:

The flames recede,
The logs fall in among themselves,
Sparks fly up, a puff of smoke, a sigh,
the fire dies down.
The cold creeps in and you draw nearer
the ebbing flame,
And then the embers, the embers glowing
softly red
While above the startling stars
and forest smell rush in
as eyes adjust to the dark.

The towering ancient trees nearby
Cease being lit
by flickering light.
Warm your hands one last time
over the dying fire.
Remain. Remain long
after the fire is out,
Long after the cold creeps in.
Look up at the stars
longer than you ever have
and maybe ever will.

The poem in its entirety can be found at www.antlerpoet.net.

This Is Just Sad…

Saturday, August 1st, 2009

fake indoor campfires for sleepovers? That’s how it was advertised in Google’s “Sponsored Links” section. Puh-leese! I could see using something like this as a prop for theater, but for crying out loud, get outside and have a real campfire for a sleepover!

Here’s their promotional video:

I’m downright cranky this morning.

I need to go camping…! We’re scoping out some sites for the Boy Scouts to camp at later this afternoon, so that’ll cheer me up.

“Simple Steps to Stay Green While Camping,” Canwest News Service

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

Simple steps to stay green while camping

It’s possible to carry your environmentally friendly habits to site

There were dark clouds as far as the eye could see, and the kids were entertaining themselves in the back seat by counting the seconds between the flashes of lightning and the rumbling of thunder.

We were on a car ferry crossing Lake Champlain from New York state to Vermont, our van crammed with sleeping bags, pillows, stickers, marshmallows and a tricycle — all ready for our first camping trip of the summer, while Mother Nature put on a light and water show for us.

Luckily, the forecasters were wrong and what was supposed to be a rain-soaked weekend turned out to be sunny and warm, giving us a chance to try to camp in an environmentally friendly way. It started with requesting adjoining sites with the other family we were camping with. That meant one campfire for all of us, instead of two separate ones emitting wood smoke — with its fine particulate matter and other pollutants — into the air.

For kindling, we left branches on the trees and instead the men channelled their inner Daniel Boones and chopped firewood into smaller pieces, and rolled up old newspapers into logs to get the fire going. When camping, use the site’s fire pit to build your fire, and don’t burn garbage in your fire.

Speaking of garbage, even though you’re away from home, you can still sort your trash. Divide your waste into recyclables, garbage and compostables, if there is composting on site, or if you compost at home.

Most campgrounds offer garbage and recycling collection, and some also have composting facilities. If you’re bringing your compostable waste home, we’ve learned to designate a sealed container or a Ziploc-style bag to hold it and thus keep the smell contained.

You can make green camping choices before you even leave home. Second-hand gear can be picked up at garage sales, on Craigslist or by checking out Mountain Equipment Co-op’s online gear swap service. If you’re a first-time camper, try to borrow camping equipment to see whether you like living in the great outdoors before you invest in your own gear.

When we camp, it seems like we eat, clean up and then get ready to eat again.

You can cut down on waste by buying food in bulk at home, and then repackaging it into smaller containers to take camping. We do that with GORP (good old raisins and peanuts), by buying large bags of almonds, pretzels, raisins and chocolate chips and then mixing it all in small reusable containers to take with us. You can put peanut butter, cereal, sugar, cocoa, salt, pepper, olive oil and other food into small containers and bring them to the campsite with you.

We made pesto and grated parmesan cheese ahead of time to mix with pasta. You can preboil potatoes or precook other food at home. Since our electricity comes mainly from hydroelectric sources, that’s less polluting than cooking things up on propane-fired camping stoves at the campsite.

You can buy roasting sticks or roasting forks to use — and reuse, and reuse — for toasting marshmallows or cooking hot dogs over the fire.

Use real dishes, cups, cutlery and other cooking utensils, instead of disposable ones, to cut down on your waste. You can buy those items and leave them in your camping gear, or just use sturdy dishes, mugs and cutlery from home for your camping trips. While you’re at it, bring real napkins, dish cloths and dish towels to use at the site instead of paper towels and napkins. The linens can all be washed when you get home.

On the topic of washing, choose biodegradable and phosphate-free soap to wash your dishes and yourself. My sister collects rainwater in her rain barrel at home and then transfers it to water containers to bring along for dish washing. If that’s too hard core, reuse the water from the melted ice in your cooler to wash your dishes.

As for water, there’s no need to buy bottled water for camping. You can pick up large water containers at hardware and camping stores that you can fill ahead of time and bring with you.

Just refill it with clean drinking water at the campground, and remember to bring your reusable water bottles to use for your drinking water if you head out on day trips, to the beach or to go fishing.

“Camping in Texas vs. Country Clothesline Soap”

Thursday, July 9th, 2009

Autumn Frymark writes in her blog, Autumn Asks Why, about her experience camping with her daughter a t a youth camp out. She started a fire, “Without the lighter fluid the wussy men were going to use. And they call themselves campers. Phfffff. Whatever,” she battled a June bug, she passed on an air-conditioned bunk and a shower because she doesn’t want to teach her daughter to “take the easy way out. And if I had used the shower, the other campers would have wanted to and it could have started something,” and she got to go home to some awesome-looking soap from Great Cakes Soapworks.

Autumn used the country linen scent…

countryclothesline

and I just  ordered some watermelon soap!

fragranthandmadesoapwatermelon

Who doesn’t love a great soap to come home to after camping?!