
Native American fire bed work’s great for camping out sided when it’s cold , you can stay warm all night, real cold put more hot coal’s then cover it sand or dirt,( MAKE SHORE YOU COVER ALL HOT COAL’S UP) Camping tips
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Native American fire bed work’s great for camping out sided when it’s cold , you can stay warm all night, real cold put more hot coal’s then cover it sand or dirt,( MAKE SHORE YOU COVER ALL HOT COAL’S UP) Camping tips
Video Rating: 4 / 5
@HighlandsCastle Part Cherokee Indian.
Fantastic!
Are you Native American?
so cool
@TimWalkingBear that cool, That’s what the old ones did long time ago they would put rocks under the ground then put the dirt back the rocks would touch together to the fire pit in the middle of the teepee. Take care Bro.
Cool video. That’ll keep ya toasty all night. We don’t have a lot of sand here so we do it a little different. Same idea though. We heat rocks and put then under a thin layer of river gravel then build a bed of cedar and fir bows on top. I’ll make a video about it some day soon. Thanks for sharing.
Consider this constructive okay. T3j can you tell me what is wrong with this whole picture? Remember people will copy you.
@tim3jones Okay cool… thanks!
@siafulinux Yes you can or put some to the side to have a camp fire to.
Couldn’t you just burn the wood in the pit?
@MrDeerMeat thanks.
@chaz4551 nope.try not qouting made up stuff.you are seriously trying to demote this video.this is how it is done in real life ,no matter what country.this works.this is comonly used by homeless people as there way to survive.i dont know about russia or indians.but in usa it is illegal to be homeless,and to camp without permit.so homless people in mountains have to go out in woods year round.they get arrested for camping so they have to go far.it is illegal to feed homeless people without permit
I think It would be easier to just make the fire in the pit in sted of beside it
I prefer heating igneous rocks and burying them (sedimentary rock like my local limestone may explode with shrapnel when heated too quickly). He’s done this in a safe environment, but sometimes fire can run underground, especially in peat moss. Hot rocks are also good for boiling water and overall, you use less energy/fuel. The plus side of his method is that you can dig up coals to restart your fire if you have problems building them from scratch.
Have to agree build the fire in the pit.
@SimpleSurvival101 Many tribe’s used this that’s why i called it Native American fire bed, Yes it works good.
yes i have done this before and it workes well, i was told it was called a dakota fire bed? kind of like dakota fire hole for a shelter.
@PACER2320 Thank you.
Nice
@chaz4551 Old northern Cheyenne man told me how they did this long time ago.