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Tagged With "Alaska and Yukon"

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Re: Sistema Easy Egg Microwave Cooker

Carrie Johnson ·
We have two of the Systema Noodle Bowls and love them. I like to toss some cut up Yukon Gold potatoes with a little olive oil, seasonings, diced onion, diced bell peppers and microwave them in one of the bowls for about six minutes in the Lance microwave. These containers also work well with canned soups. The fastenings are very user friendly and open easily. You're unlikely to end up wearing your meal when you take the lid off. Now you've got me thinking about this egg bowl....
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Camp Chef Yukon Double Burner Stove

HavaBrew22 ·
FEATURES Two cast aluminum burners, 30,000 BTU/hr each Three-sided windscreen Fully adjustable heat-control dials Burner housing limits hot/cold spots and gives extra protection from wind Regulator and 3 ft. hose included Removable/adjustable legs for storage Out of the box ready to cook in seconds Emergency preparedness recommended SPECIFICATIONS Cooking Surface Dimensions: 14" x 32" 448 square inch cooking grate Cooking Height: 29" Total Output: 60,000 BTU Weight: 38 lbs. Warranty: One...
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Re: Solo Stove Bonfire

VigII ·
However, I also bought a Yukon that came with the stand. I use it on the lawn and the lawn remains undamaged. I need to remember to move it to let the sun get to the grass beneath the big pit.
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Re: Camp Chef Yukon Double Burner Stove

VigII ·
I looked at the Yukon and was concerned about the weight. It is a very nice system when you incorporate the accessories. I eventually bought the Ranger II for our rig and it fits nicely in the corner of our 2285 slide. The Ranger II at 17 lbs, less than half the Yukon's weight, isn't a lightweight but I know the blind stove works well for it's planned use. I can't say I've needed more than it's 34,000 BTU output and I hope I'll say the same when family starts camping with us. I agree that...
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Re: Camp Chef Yukon Double Burner Stove

Mountain Mitch ·
Your Yukon looks great - but kinda large! If you can make room to store and transport it then I’m sure it’s a good unit. Another Everest user here. Excellent stove and I really like being able to cook everything outdoors during the summer. The storage bag is super practical for dealing with transporting the stove.
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yukongeoff

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PairODocs

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Surrey Richard

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Yukon Gold

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Laoutlaw

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Yukon Chad

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Re: Solo Stove Bonfire

VigII ·
It's the King of Combustion (I should register that as a trademark!) and once at operating temperature there's little smoke. Think about this, smoke = particulates. I sit around soooo many camp fires I see complete combustion as a health benefit! I'm not really joking about that either. Ha! (i have three: 2 Bonfires and a Yukon for the yard!) This is why I converted our travel Bonfire to dual fuel. We were in AZ and NM this winter so I added a propane ring to the Bonfire. To convert to...
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Re: Solo Stove Bonfire

Hoppy Camper ·
Alternate product idea here. Before I knew about the Solo product (my brother has a Solo Yukon in his backyard and that bad boy does a great job of completely burning wood mostly smoke free), I picked up a Pop Up Firepit from Fireside Outdoor, also mostly smoke free. Kind of like one of those collapsible chairs you travel with or use around the campfire. With the heat shield and ember mat, it's a great lightweight, ground safe firepit that fully burns wood, manufactured logs, and charcoal...
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Re: Solo Stove Bonfire

ESCART ·
Ordered the Solo Stove Yukon…for those on the fence: product lives up to the hype. We are big campfire people at our house. I wasn’t bothered by the ubiquitous campfire smoke in my clothes, but wife and some guests were. This solved that issue. Other concerns were that this type of fire pit would not produce much radiant heat…it was not an issue in 40ish degree weather. Actually had to backup a couple of extra feet. Yes…wood pellets work, AFTER you get a good log fire going. If considering...
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Re: Solo Stove Bonfire

VigII ·
Don't know how I missed your pellet question. Sorry and I'm glad you figured it out. SoloStove has redesigned their pits. The two components that were previously welded are now removable. This makes emptying the ashes much easier. It should also make replacing the bottom possible, idk. Possibly because of the redesign they sent an email notifying the previous model of the 27" Yukon is now selling for $399 . I haven't seen sales on the Bonfire model.
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Re: Solo Stove Bonfire

VigII ·
I should have included this video link of the Yukon 30" burn. I added a few pieces of White Ash bark toward the end of the burn while there was still a big bed of coals. It's a good example of primary and secondary burn. https://youtube.com/shorts/X818ZQnSj-g
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Yukon Johnny

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Re: Smokeless fire pits are cool!

VigII ·
I have tried building on top of an existing fire base in my Bonfire. This didn't work as well as filling to a chosen height and lighting the pellets from the top due to the way these pits manage air flow. If you want to do this it works well if you feed pellets scoop by scoop, it just takes more attention but the results are just as good as filling with pellets and lighting from the top of the pellets. The pits have two different air feeds supplying the fire: One from beneath the fuel - the...
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