Home  |   Emergency Supplies   |  Water Storage Containers  |   Wilderness Survival Shop   |  Top 10 Natural Disasters  |  Contact
Food Supplies  |  Car Emergency Kit  |  Cold Weather Supplies  |  Propane Camp Stoves  |  Hunting Supplies  |  Fishing Supplies

Wilderness Survival

How to Cross Snow-Covered Mountains on Foot

How to Cross Rivers, Streams, and Rapids

 

Propane Camp Stoves for Cooking

In the event of disaster, you should have both propane and a propane camp stove to use to cook food with. You may be without electricity or natural gas for a number of weeks or months, and it important to have both fuel to cook with, and a camp stove to cook on, that burns a specific fuel type.

Propane is the most common fuel source to keep around (store it in your garage, in a shed, or outside under a tarp -- don't store it in your home, as it can have a slow leak and poison the air).




2 Burner Outdoor Camp Stove



Rather than use your propane to fuel a full size bar-b-cue, we suggest you buy a much smaller compact propane stove, as commonly used for camping, as the right stove will be much more efficient, and use the least amount of propane.

IMPORTANT: Most propane camp stoves are made for miniature propane canisters, commonly carried by backpackers.

To connect a camp stove to a much larger propane tank, you need a special adaptor assembly.

The following product will work for connecting a large propane tank to a much smaller propane camp stove:




12-Foot Propane Hose Assembly








Monster Storm

Home  |  Water Storage Containers  |  Emergency Supplies  |  Cold Weather Supplies  |  Car Emergency Kit  |  Top 10 Natural Disasters
Food Supplies  |  Wilderness Survival Shop  |  Propane Camp Stoves  |  Hunting Supplies  |  Fishing Supplies  |  Contact



Copyright © 2008 SurviveAnyDisaster.com