{"title":"How to Start a Fire: A Beginner's Guide to the Log Cabin Method","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/adulting/how-to-start-a-fire","category":{"slug":"adulting","name":"Adulting"},"creator":{"name":"Little Campfires","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCSfvxoHCAZH5C7Qq0u2A4CQ","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3HZgCgHcSaA"},"tldr":"Build a one-match fire in a fire pit using the log cabin method. Eagle Scout walks through tinder, kindling, fuel wood, and safe lighting in 7 steps.","totalDurationSeconds":499,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["Matches or lighter","Ferro rod (optional, for survival practice)","Hatchet or small axe","Pocket knife (for making feather sticks)","Metal shovel","Leather work gloves","Fire pit or cleared dirt ring"],"materials":["Tinder (dryer lint, cotton balls, fatwood, or feather shavings)","Kindling (pencil-thick dry twigs)","Fuel wood (split logs, dry hardwood)","Newspaper or DIY wax fire starter","Bucket of water (for extinguishing)"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Gather Your Three Sizes of Wood","text":"You need three tiers of wood and you need them sorted before you strike a match. Tinder is the smallest stuff - feather-thin shavings, dryer lint, cotton balls, or a handful of dead pine needles - and its job is to catch a spark and pass the flame up the chain. Kindling is the next size up, dry twigs anywhere from pencil-thin to thumb-thick. Fuel wood is the split logs that keep the fire going for hours.Have all three piles within easy reach before you build. Once the match is lit you do not want to be hunting for sticks. Dry is the word for all of it - any wood you can snap cleanly is dry enough; anything that bends or crushes is too damp to burn well."},{"number":2,"title":"Lay the Two Base Sticks","text":"Place two parallel sticks of fuel wood across the floor of the fire pit, about a hand's width apart. These are the foundation walls of your log cabin. Pick split pieces with at least one flat side so they sit still and do not roll when you load them up.The gap between them is where your tinder bundle goes, so size it to your hand - too narrow and you cannot reach in to light it, too wide and the kindling on top has nothing to rest on. About 4 to 5 inches works for most home fire pits."},{"number":3,"title":"Add Newspaper and Tinder Between the Base Sticks","text":"Loosely crumple a sheet or two of newspaper into a ball and tuck it down between the base sticks. Loose is the key word - tightly packed paper smothers itself and burns out before the wood catches. You want air gaps inside the ball so oxygen can move through it.Drape your tinder shavings across the top of the paper, fluffed out so they make a fuzzy little blanket. If you are using a DIY wax-and-sawdust fire starter or a piece of fatwood, set it in the middle of the paper instead. The whole pile should look like a bird's nest, not a brick."},{"number":4,"title":"Build the First Crossbar Layer","text":"Lay your first cross layer of kindling-size wood at a right angle to the base sticks, resting the ends on top of them. Use four or five pieces spaced about a finger's width apart - tight enough to support the next layer, open enough to let flames climb through.Sprinkle a second handful of tinder shavings or thin twigs across this layer. As the fire rises out of the tinder bundle below, this layer is what catches next. Skip it and your flame burns through the paper and dies before the fuel wood ever lights."},{"number":5,"title":"Add the Top Crossbar Layer","text":"Add a second crossbar layer running the same direction as your base sticks - so it crosses the first kindling layer at a right angle. This time tuck the ends in slightly so the wood sits over the flame zone in the center, not out at the edges. The video calls this a small variation from the log cabin purists, but it puts the top tier directly where the heat will rise and catches it faster.You can keep stacking another layer or two if you want a tall structure, but two crossbar layers is plenty for a normal fire pit. Higher than that and the top tiers fall in before they catch."},{"number":6,"title":"Light the Bottom in Two or Three Spots","text":"Strike your match and reach all the way down to the bottom of the fire pit before you touch it to the paper. Going deep does two things: it shields the flame from any wind across the top of the pit, and it lights the fire from the bottom up - which is the only direction fire actually wants to go.Touch the match to the newspaper in two or three places if you can - one on each side, maybe one in the back. Lighting in multiple spots gives you redundancy if one side fails to catch and stacks the odds toward a one-match start. Jon's claim in the source video is that you should only ever need one match if your build is right."},{"number":7,"title":"Feed the Flame and Let It Burn Down","text":"Once the tinder catches and the kindling starts to crackle, hold back. The instinct is to pile more wood on right away, but a young flame needs oxygen more than fuel. Let it grow for a minute or two on the structure you already built.When the flames are reaching the top crossbar and you can hear the fuel wood beginning to pop, lay in another piece or two from the side. If you plan to cook, stop there and let it burn down to a bed of orange coals - food cooks on coals, not on open flame. If you just want warmth and ambience, keep feeding it. When you are done for the night, drown the coals with water, stir with a shovel, drown again, and feel the ground with the back of your hand before you walk away."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-21T13:56:15.345Z","published":"2026-05-20T14:27:24.723Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}