Maverick Holzofen
Fortress Titanium Multifunktionsherd
Maverick Holzofen
Antarktis-Zeltofen
About Our Camping Wood Stoves Collections
Wood Burning Stoves for Camping, Bushcraft, and Beyond
Fire Maple has engineered outdoor cooking gear since 2003, trusted by campers and backpackers across 50+ countries. These wood burning camp stoves are designed to perform in real field conditions — rain, wind, and remote terrain included. No gas canisters, no resupply logistics — just reliable heat from whatever fuel the trail provides.
Rugged Wood Burning Stoves for Bushcraft and Basecamp
The Maverick Wood Stove is built for high-output fires at the campsite, not the summit. Available in two stainless steel configurations — the Square version at 41.3 oz (1,170g) for a full grilling platform with grate, or the lighter Triangle version at 21.8 oz (617g) for solo or duo trips where pack weight matters more. Both run entirely on foraged wood and charcoal, with no gas canister needed.
Titanium Construction for Ultralight Backpacking
At 7.7 oz (219g) and just 0.4 in (11 mm) thick when packed flat, the Fortress Titanium is the lightest wood burning stove in our lineup — built for thru-hikers and gram counters. It runs on foraged wood or a standard alcohol burner, assembles tool-free in seconds, and its elevated design keeps the fire off the ground for Leave No Trace camps.
Hot Tent Stoves for Winter and Base Camp Use
The Antarcti Stainless Steel Hot Tent Stove is a purpose-built wood burner for solo campers or cold-weather pairs. Constructed from heavy-duty stainless steel with a full firebox, sliding ash drawer, and a 55 in chimney pipe system (2.4 in / 6 cm pipe diameter) that nests inside the firebox for transport, it’s rated for all-season hot tent use. The flat stainless cooktop doubles as a cooking surface for kettles and pans while the tent stays warm.
Frequently Asked Questions
What fuel does a camping wood stove use?
What fuel does a camping wood stove use?
Camping wood stoves burn natural biomass fuel — dry twigs, sticks, bark, and wood scraps found on the trail. This makes them a solid choice for long-distance hiking and bushcraft where carrying gas canisters isn’t practical. No fuel canister is needed.
Can I leave a wood burning stove burning unattended overnight?
Can I leave a wood burning stove burning unattended overnight?
No — and this applies to all open-fire stoves regardless of design. A wood burning camp stove should always have a person nearby who can manage the fire, control airflow, and respond if conditions change. For extended warmth overnight, the Antarcti Hot Tent Stove has an adjustable air intake dial that lets you dial the burn rate down to a slow smolder — but it still needs monitoring.
Is a titanium wood stove worth it for backpacking?
Is a titanium wood stove worth it for backpacking?
Titanium runs roughly 40–60% lighter than stainless steel at similar strength — and it cools down faster after cooking, so you can pack up sooner. The trade-off: it costs more, and it can warp under sustained, very high-output flame. For PCT and AT thru-hikers focused on base weight, the weight saving is worth it. For weekend bushcraft trips where pack weight is less critical, stainless steel is often the better value.
Can I use a wood burning stove inside a hot tent?
Can I use a wood burning stove inside a hot tent?
Yes, but only with a stove specifically designed for hot tent use, like the Antarcti Stainless Steel Hot Tent Stove. It includes a flue pipe connection and is rated for enclosed shelter use. Never use a standard backpacking wood stove inside a tent — hot tent models are purpose-built with ventilation and safety clearances in mind. Always pair a hot tent stove with a fire-resistant stove jack and use a battery-powered CO detector inside the tent — these aren’t optional add-ons.
How do I choose between a folding wood stove and a basecamp stove?
How do I choose between a folding wood stove and a basecamp stove?
Folding wood stoves like the Fortress Titanium pack flat at 7.7 oz — built for backpackers who need minimal weight. Basecamp stoves like the Maverick are heavier stainless builds designed for car camping, bushcraft, and canoe trips where durability and cooking surface matter more than pack weight. Choose based on how you’re getting to your campsite.

