Coffee, tea or a hot shave in minutes
Our Storm Kettle is for those who find it impossible to begin the day without a hot beverage, or for those whose idea of camping does not include shaving with cold water. Kettles like this one have accompanied fishermen, hikers and campers for more than 100 years. Unique design makes it the focus of attention wherever it's used.
Smart, simple design-The hollow kettle, made of double skinned aluminum, surrounds the fire you build in the base. The water absorbs the fire's heat in an amazingly efficient manner. Add fuel (paper, leaves, sticks, wood) through the 2"OD vent on top. Boil 40 oz of water in 3 minutes. Cork on brass chain can be inserted to keep water hot or from splashing out while in transit. 12"H (15"H including base) and 6"OD, 2 1/2 lb. Made in the UK.
Review Summary
|
Average Rating:
Total Reviews: 3
|
 |
Review Breakdown:
3 reviews
| 5 Star: |
|
3 reviews |
| 4 Star: |
|
0 reviews |
| 3 Star: |
|
0 reviews |
| 2 Star: |
|
0 reviews |
| 1 Star: |
|
0 reviews |
|




Ingenious Storm Kettle
Item#: 77456
"I bought a storm kettle to give my kids who camp in Colorado, but I had to test it first because it sounded to good to be true. At 3500' with pencil sized twigs it comes to a full boil in about 4 minutes. About to buy one for me."
2011/07/27




Ingenious Storm Kettle
Item#: 77456
"I use the smaller one when I go back packing. After all is said, I boil water when back packing. nothing is lighter, no need to carry fuel. My Boy Scout troop also uses these. Summer, fall, spring and snow camping. They are super."
marvin, nevada - 2009/10/09




Ingenious Storm Kettle
Item#: 77456
"We bought one of these for our fairly minimalist version of car camping about 7 years ago. What a great little device! Rather than pack a big campstove and liquid fuel, we cook simple foods over a fire at dinnertime, but use the Storm Kettle to boil water for oatmeal, tea, coffee, soups, etc early in the day. That was what I was missing (desperately!) when we camped without it. We usually start it up with a small solid fuel pellet and then use little sticks to keep it going until the water gets as hot as we need."
willo L, MA & OR - 2009/09/06