How To Find Pitchwood

pitchwood

If you live in an area with pine trees, you probably have access to pitchwood, one of the most effective waterproof firestarters ever.

In the northwest pine forests where I hang out, there is generally an abundant supply of pitchwood.

If you know where to look, it is usually simple to find enough of this flammable material to get a good fire started quickly, regardless of the weather.

Before you can start looking, though, you need to know: What is pitchwood?

(Also commonly referred to known as Fatwood or “fat lighter,” “lighter wood,” “rich lighter,” “pine knot,” “lighter knot,” “heart pine” etc.)

According to the Forestry Forum: “…pines produce resin/pitch as a defense mechanism for wounds or insect attack.

When the bark is wounded, the tree pumps out resin to protect the wound from fungal attack or to expel an offending insect.

Over time as the heartwood forms with age, excess resin over the tree’s needs is shunted into the heartwood.

Over more time, this resin can totally permeate the heartwood to create a “pitch soaked” condition.

This high concentration of resin creates a very decay resistant heartwood. If the tree dies and falls over, the sapwood (the living functioning part of the wood), decays fairly rapidly.

However, the pitch soaked heart can last for decades.

pitchwood

This resin-impregnated heartwood becomes hard and rot-resistant.  The joints where limbs intersect the trunk, can also be harvested. Most resinous pines can produce fatwood.

Fatwood is scar tissue of a damaged or injured pine tree, according to Forestry Forum. A lightning strike will scar a tree sometimes top to bottom without necessarily killing the tree. The result scar of burnt bark will “scar” over with resin. Once hardened, the wood and bark around the area becomes rich with the flammable hardened resin.  Again, resin will harden forming “scar” tissue rich in fatwood. Hard yellowish resin can be found around the wound area. This can then be scraped off and used as a fire starter

So if you’re in a forest with pines, you should be able to find pitchwood. Here’s where to look:

 

Find a dead branch on a living tree: This is usually the easiest place to find pitchwood. Saw the branch off even with the trunk, then saw off a three-inch chunk. That will probably be pitchwood, and you can split it into tiny pieces to help get the fire lit.

pine stump

Stumps: A retired forester friend of mine told me to look for old stumps that were about waist high. That indicates the tree was cut in about the 1930s with a hand crosscut saw. In other parts of the country, just keep an eye out for old pine stumps. If they haven’t rotted, there is a chance there may be some pitchwood in the middle.

Pine Knot

Pine knots: These are the preserved branch parts of an otherwise rotted tree. Because they are impregnated with resin, they last a long, long time, and you may be able to pick them up off the forest floor.

Click here to view the original article on Survival Common Sense.

Read more with these related articles from our site:

Choosing the Best Firewood

3 Quick Tips To Identify Dry Firewood

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8 Responses to :
How To Find Pitchwood

  1. CARL TAPP says:

    ANOTHER NAME FOR THIS STUFF IS ‘ LIGHTER PINE ‘. THE HURCULES COMPANY
    ( HURCULES POWDER COMPANY ) USES IT TO MAKE GUNPOWDER AND EXPLOSIVES .

  2. Ken says:

    Pine knots are also long burning (compared to an equal size piece of pine) and extremely bright. If you are trying to do something by firelight add a pine knot and life gets a lot easier.

  3. Frank says:

    Where I live in the south, it is considered only courteous when visiting a neighboring campsite to bring a lighter knot to add to their fire.

  4. Don Odom says:

    Like many Southern pronunciations, what we call it here in Lower Alabama doesn’t match any of the listed names. We always called it ‘lighterd’ pronounced as it’s spelled.

  5. nomo bo says:

    If you find a large, thick piece of litard, don’t cut or split it until you are ready to start using it. The more you split it it, the more surface area is exposed and the more likely the internal volatliles will evaporate, and thus make it less flammable.

  6. It’s also generally known as fatwood, or sometimes fat ligher.

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