Boys, you steered me wrong.
After reading of the almost magical pyrogenic properties of dryer lint, I decided to try it about three days ago. We had done a bunch of laundry, trying to get it all done before the hurricane, and I cleaned enough lint out of the filter to make a wad as big as my two fists. The day had come.
The timing was perfect. We had an infestation of webworms (tent caterpillars) in a little redbud tree out front. The best way to deal with those little *******s is to clip off the affected tree limbs with shears and incinerate them, limbs, webs, worms, and all.
I prepared the fire lay first, with a little natural tinder, some fatwood splinters, and dry red cedar twigs and sticks. All it needed was a flame.
I then went and clipped the webworms nests off my tree. I had a good wheelbarrow load of them, and brought them right back to the fire ring in my back yard. You want to incinerate them as soon as you can after cutting them out, before the worms have time to crawl away. As a matter of fact, I had a few of them on me by that point already.
Anyway, I struck steel to flint, and on the third lick got a bright little orange glow on my charcloth. I tucked it in my dryer lint "bird's nest" and commenced to blow. I very quickly had a coal that would have gladdened the heart of Old Nick himself, and the lint was smoking and smoldering...
Let us pause here. Recall (see post #19) that my wife and I share our home with a Cairn terrier, a cat, and a German Shepherd. Consequently, everything we own has more or less animal hair on it. On wash day, the dryer's lint filter yields slabs of felted dog hair intermixed with the expected cotton and polyester threads shed by the fabrics. That day was no different...
So, I was blowing and my lint/tinder ball was a'smokin' and a'smolderin' and the char cloth was a solid orange glow. They say smoke follows beauty, but I'm here to tell you, smoke follows ugly, too, and I am living proof. Actually, beauty or ugly has less to do with it than the Bernoulli effect, but in any event, I was enveloped in a stinking cloud of dog hair smoke and there was no gettin' away from it. Upwind, downwind, crosswind... it didn't matter. I was in the thick of it. This continued for a bit, until my char cloth simply burned out. The lint continued to smolder and smoke for a brief time, but it was clearly not going to grow a flame. I finally got disgusted and threw it in the fire pit. I grabbed a handful of dead Spanish moss (my usual "go-to" tinder) and another bit of char cloth, struck steel to flint and had fire in a trice. I put the flaming mass under the wood and was gratified to see the flames climb to the top of the stack and there was a roaring blaze in no time flat. Whatever was left of the dog hair/lint ball went on the fire with the webworms.
Lesson learned. Fooey on dryer lint, as far as I'm concerned. I expect I'll continue to use the dead Spanish moss, palmetto fiber, or shredded cedar bark that I gather from the woods. If I need store-bought tinder, I can unravel some jute twine, which also works exceedingly well. Dryer lint will go in the garbage.
You can't say I didn't try, though.
Best regards,
Notchy Bob