Category
page 1Procedural knowledge
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camping
thumb|Tent camping in Sierra Nevada National Park
thumb|Tent camping in [[Turkey]]

campfire
thumb|200px|right|A campfire made using twigs and pine cones.
A campfire is a fire at a campsite that provides light, warmth, and heat for cooking. It can also serve as a beacon and an insect and predator deterrent. Established campgrounds often provide a stone or steel fire ring for safety. Campfires are a popular feature of camping. At summer camps, the word campfire often refers to an event (ceremony, get together, etc.) at which there is a fire. Some camps refer to the fire itself as a campfire.
procedural knowledge
ability to do something
outdoor cooking
practice of cooking food outdoors
batoning
thumb|Batoning a piece of wood
Batoning is the technique of cutting or splitting wood by using a baton-sized stick or mallet to repeatedly strike the spine of a sturdy knife, chisel or blade in order to drive it through wood, similar to how a froe is used. The batoning method can be used to make kindling or desired forms such as boards, slats or notches. The practice is most useful for obtaining dry wood from the inside of logs for the purpose of fire making.
woodcraft
thumb|upright=1.4|Campfire instructions from ''The American Boys' Handybook of Camp-lore and Woodcraft'' (1920)
Woodcraft or woodlore is skill and experience in living and thriving in the woods, either on a short- or long-term basis. It includes skills as hunting, fishing, and camping. Traditionally, woodcraft was associated with subsistence lifestyles and hunting-gathering. In modern developed countries it is more commonly associated with outdoor recreation or survivalism. Woodcraft is one form of bushcraft.