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Fire Skills

by HowToUseHumans · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.0 · MIT-0
cross-platform ✓ Security Clean
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Description
Practical fire building, management, and safety skills. Use when someone needs to build a campfire, use a fireplace safely, learn to grill, or needs fire eme...
README (SKILL.md)

Fire Skills

Humans have used fire for at least 400,000 years. It's arguably the foundational technology — cooking, warmth, light, protection. And yet most adults in 2026 can't build a reliable campfire, don't know what their fireplace damper does, and would panic if a grease fire erupted on their stove. This skill covers the practical fire knowledge you actually need: how to build and maintain fires for recreation and warmth, how to grill without poisoning anyone, and critically, how to respond when fire becomes an emergency instead of a tool.

# Localization note — fire regulations and emergency systems vary by region
- Burn bans, open-fire regulations, and fire danger rating systems are
  jurisdiction-specific. Detect user location and swap:
  US: Local fire department non-emergency line, NFPA guidelines, fire danger
      rating from NIFC (National Interagency Fire Center)
  UK: Fire and Rescue Service, Gov.uk fire safety guidance
  Australia: CFA/RFS fire danger ratings, total fire ban systems
  Canada: Provincial fire bans, FireSmart program
  EU: Country-specific fire brigade numbers and regulations
- Emergency number: US 911, UK 999, AU 000, EU 112
- Grilling customs and equipment vary — charcoal/gas ratios differ by country.
  Adapt fuel types to what's locally available.
- Firewood species references are North American. Swap for local hardwood/
  softwood equivalents.

Sources & Verification

When to Use

  • User wants to build a campfire and doesn't know where to start
  • User has a fireplace and isn't sure how to operate it safely
  • User is learning to grill (charcoal or gas) and wants safety basics
  • User had a kitchen fire or small fire and wants to know what to do
  • User wants to know which fire extinguisher to buy for their home
  • User needs to create a home fire escape plan
  • User is going camping and wants fire safety basics
  • User asks about smoke detector placement or maintenance

Instructions

Step 1: Determine what kind of fire knowledge the user needs

Agent action: Ask the user which situation applies. Route to the relevant section.

FIRE SKILL CATEGORIES:

A. CAMPFIRE BUILDING -- How to build, maintain, and extinguish a campfire
B. FIREPLACE OPERATION -- Using an indoor fireplace safely
C. GRILLING BASICS -- Charcoal and gas grill safety and technique
D. FIRE EXTINGUISHER KNOWLEDGE -- Types, placement, and use
E. KITCHEN FIRE RESPONSE -- What to do when cooking goes wrong
F. HOME FIRE SAFETY -- Escape plans, smoke detectors, prevention

Step 2: Campfire building

Agent action: Walk the user through fire building from scratch.

BEFORE YOU START:
- Check for burn bans. Call the local ranger station or check
  the fire agency website for your area. Fines run $500-$5,000+.
- Use an existing fire ring if one exists. Never build on bare
  ground in the backcountry unless it's an emergency.
- Clear a 10-foot radius of leaves, pine needles, and dry debris.
- Have water or a shovel within arm's reach before you light anything.
- Wind check: if sustained winds exceed 15 mph, don't build a fire.

MATERIALS YOU NEED (gather before you start):
1. Tinder -- dry, fine material that catches from a spark or match
   Examples: dryer lint (bring from home), cotton balls with petroleum
   jelly, dry grass, birch bark shavings, newspaper
   Amount: two handfuls minimum

2. Kindling -- small sticks, pencil-thickness or thinner
   Must snap cleanly (if it bends, it's too wet)
   Amount: two armfuls

3. Fuel wood -- wrist-thickness to arm-thickness logs
   Hardwood (oak, maple, hickory) burns longer and hotter
   Softwood (pine, fir, cedar) lights easier but burns fast and sparks
   Amount: enough for your planned burn time, plus extra

NEVER BURN: treated/painted wood, plywood, trash, plastic, poison ivy/oak
TEEPEE METHOD (best for beginners):
1. Place a tinder bundle in the center of your fire ring.
2. Lean kindling sticks against each other over the tinder,
   forming a cone shape (like a teepee). Leave a gap on the
   windward side for airflow and lighting access.
3. Light the tinder at the base from the windward side.
4. As kindling catches, add more kindling — don't smother it.
5. Once kindling is burning steadily (3-5 minutes), lean
   small fuel wood against the structure.
6. Gradually increase wood size as the fire establishes.
7. A good fire takes 15-20 minutes to fully establish.

LOG CABIN METHOD (best for cooking, longer burn):
1. Place tinder in the center.
2. Lay two parallel sticks on either side of the tinder.
3. Lay two more sticks perpendicular on top, forming a square.
4. Repeat, building up 3-4 layers, decreasing size as you go.
5. Fill the center cavity with kindling.
6. Light from the bottom center.
7. This structure creates excellent airflow and collapses into
   a flat coal bed — ideal for cooking.

MAINTAINING YOUR FIRE:
- Add wood before the fire gets low, not after it's almost out.
- Feed from the upwind side.
- Blow gently at the base if it needs oxygen — not at the flames.
- For cooking: let it burn down to coals. Flames = soot on food.

EXTINGUISHING (do this EVERY time):
1. Stop adding wood 30-45 minutes before you want to leave.
2. Spread coals out with a stick (don't pile them).
3. Pour water slowly and steadily — it will hiss and steam.
4. Stir the wet ashes with a stick, exposing hidden embers.
5. Pour more water. Stir again.
6. Touch the ashes with the back of your hand (carefully).
   If warm, repeat steps 3-5.
7. "If it's too hot to touch, it's too hot to leave."

Step 3: Fireplace operation

Agent action: Walk the user through safe indoor fireplace use.

BEFORE YOUR FIRST FIRE OF THE SEASON:
- Get the chimney inspected annually. Creosote buildup causes
  chimney fires. Cost: $150-$300 for inspection and cleaning.
- Check the damper: open it fully. Look up — you should see daylight
  or the flue liner. If you see blockage, stop and call a sweep.
- Check for birds' nests or debris (common after summer).
- Make sure smoke detectors and CO detectors are working.

OPERATING THE FIREPLACE:
1. Open the damper FULLY before lighting anything.
2. Prime the flue: hold a rolled newspaper (lit) up near the
   damper opening for 30 seconds. This warms the air in the
   flue and establishes draft. Skip this and smoke fills the room.
3. Build a small fire first (tinder + kindling only).
4. Once draft is established, add 2-3 logs. Don't overload.
5. Use a fireplace screen or glass doors to contain sparks.
6. Never leave a fire unattended. Period.
7. Don't close the damper until ashes are COMPLETELY cold (24+ hours).

WHAT NEVER GOES IN A FIREPLACE:
- Treated, painted, or stained wood
- Cardboard (fine for starting, but not as primary fuel)
- Christmas trees (explosive — resin ignites violently)
- Trash, plastic, or wrapping paper
- Accelerants (lighter fluid, gasoline, kerosene)
- Duraflame-type logs + real wood at the same time

CREOSOTE: THE HIDDEN DANGER:
- Creosote is a tar-like residue that builds up inside chimneys.
- It's flammable. Enough buildup = chimney fire.
- Burns hot enough to crack chimney liners and ignite walls.
- Minimized by: burning dry/seasoned wood, maintaining hot fires
  (not smoldering), ensuring good airflow.
- Annual cleaning is not optional.

Step 4: Grilling basics

Agent action: Cover charcoal and gas grill safety and technique.

CHARCOAL GRILLING:
Setup:
1. Use a chimney starter — it's a $15 metal cylinder. Fill with
   charcoal, stuff newspaper underneath, light the newspaper.
   Ready in 15-20 minutes when top coals are ashed over (gray).
2. NEVER use lighter fluid. Petroleum taste, dangerous flare-ups.
3. Pour coals into grill. For two-zone cooking: pile coals on one
   side (direct heat) and leave the other side empty (indirect heat).
4. Let grate heat for 5 minutes, then clean with a wire brush.
5. Oil the grate: fold a paper towel, dip in vegetable oil,
   hold with tongs and rub across grate.

Temperature guide (hold your hand 5 inches above the grate):
- High (450-550F): 2-3 seconds before pulling away
- Medium (350-450F): 4-5 seconds
- Low (250-350F): 7-8 seconds

GAS GRILLING:
Safety checks before every use:
1. Check gas hose for cracks, brittleness, or leaks.
   Leak test: spray soapy water on connections. Bubbles = leak.
2. Open the lid BEFORE turning on gas. Gas pooling under a
   closed lid + ignition = fireball.
3. If it doesn't ignite within 5 seconds, turn gas off, open lid,
   wait 5 minutes for gas to dissipate, try again.

FOOD SAFETY ON THE GRILL:
- Chicken: 165F internal, no exceptions
- Burgers: 160F internal (ground beef must be fully cooked)
- Steak: 145F for medium-rare (whole cuts are safer rare than ground)
- Pork: 145F internal + 3-minute rest
- Use a meat thermometer. Color is not a reliable indicator.
- Never put cooked meat back on the plate that held raw meat.

AFTER GRILLING:
- Charcoal: Close all vents. Let ash cool 48 hours before disposal.
  Dump in a metal container, never plastic or cardboard.
- Gas: Turn off burners, then turn off the tank. In that order.
- Never store a propane tank indoors or in a car trunk.

Step 5: Fire extinguisher knowledge

Agent action: Explain extinguisher types and placement.

FIRE EXTINGUISHER CLASSES:

Class A -- Ordinary combustibles (wood, paper, cloth, trash)
Class B -- Flammable liquids (gasoline, grease, oil, paint)
Class C -- Electrical equipment (wiring, outlets, appliances)
Class K -- Kitchen fires (cooking oils, animal fats — commercial
           kitchens mainly, but good to know)

WHAT TO BUY FOR YOUR HOME:
- Kitchen: 5-lb ABC-rated extinguisher (covers A, B, and C)
  Cost: $25-$50 at any hardware store.
  Placement: mounted on wall near kitchen exit, NOT next to the stove
  (you need to reach it while backing away from a fire, not reaching
  through flames).
- Garage/workshop: Second ABC extinguisher.
- Each floor of the home: consider one per floor.
- Car: small 2-lb ABC extinguisher. $15-$20.

HOW TO USE (P.A.S.S.):
P -- Pull the pin
A -- Aim at the BASE of the fire (not the flames)
S -- Squeeze the handle
S -- Sweep side to side at the base

CRITICAL NOTES:
- A home extinguisher gives you about 8-10 seconds of spray.
- Stand 6-8 feet back.
- If the fire is bigger than a wastebasket, GET OUT. Call 911.
- After ANY extinguisher use, the fire department should still
  be called to check for hidden fire in walls or ceilings.
- Check the pressure gauge monthly. Replace or recharge if the
  needle is in the red zone.
- Replace every 10-12 years even if unused.

Step 6: Kitchen fire response

Agent action: Cover the most common home fire emergencies.

GREASE FIRE (the most dangerous common kitchen fire):

NEVER WATER. NEVER. Water on a grease fire causes an explosive
fireball. This is the single most important fire fact to know.

WHAT TO DO:
1. Turn off the heat source (if you can reach the knob safely).
2. Cover the pan with a metal lid or cookie sheet. Slide it on
   from the side — don't drop it from above.
3. Leave the lid on. Do not peek. Fire needs oxygen.
4. If no lid available: dump baking soda on it (lots of it).
   NOT baking powder. NOT flour (flour is explosive).
5. If it's beyond a single pan: use your extinguisher (Class B).
6. If it's beyond your extinguisher: GET OUT. Close the kitchen
   door behind you. Call 911.

OVEN FIRE:
1. Keep the door closed.
2. Turn off the oven.
3. The fire will self-extinguish without oxygen.
4. Don't open the door to check — that feeds it air.

MICROWAVE FIRE:
1. Keep the door closed.
2. Turn off or unplug the microwave.
3. Wait for it to self-extinguish.
4. If smoke is pouring out, use an extinguisher and call 911.

Step 7: Home fire safety plan

Agent action: Help the user create an escape plan and prevention checklist.

HOME FIRE ESCAPE PLAN:
1. Draw a floor plan of every level of your home.
2. Mark two exits from every room (usually a door and a window).
3. Make sure windows actually open. Test them.
4. Designate a meeting point outside (mailbox, specific tree, etc.).
5. Practice at night — most fatal fires happen while people sleep.
6. Practice with eyes closed or in the dark.
7. If you have kids, do it twice a year. Make it routine.
8. If you have elderly or mobility-limited family members, assign
   someone to help them. Have a backup assigner.

SMOKE DETECTOR PROTOCOL:
- One in every bedroom
- One outside every sleeping area
- One on every floor, including the basement
- Test monthly (press the test button)
- Replace batteries every 6 months (daylight saving time changes
  are a good reminder)
- Replace the entire unit every 10 years (check the manufacture
  date on the back)
- Interconnected detectors (when one sounds, all sound) are far
  safer. Cost: $25-$40 each, hardwired or wireless.

CARBON MONOXIDE DETECTORS:
- Required on every floor if you have gas appliances, a fireplace,
  or an attached garage.
- Replace every 5-7 years.
- CO is odorless and colorless. You won't know without a detector.
SEASONAL FIRE SAFETY CHECKLIST:

FALL:
[ ] Chimney inspection and cleaning ($150-$300)
[ ] Test all smoke and CO detectors
[ ] Replace batteries in all detectors
[ ] Check fireplace damper operation
[ ] Clear dry leaves from gutters and within 5 feet of house
[ ] Inspect space heaters — 3-foot clearance rule from anything
    flammable

SPRING:
[ ] Replace detector batteries again
[ ] Check fire extinguisher pressure gauges
[ ] Inspect grill for gas leaks, hose condition, spider webs
    in burner tubes (common cause of gas grill fires)
[ ] Clean dryer vent — lint buildup is a leading cause of home
    fires. Cost for professional cleaning: $100-$200.

YEAR-ROUND:
[ ] Never leave cooking unattended (leading cause of home fires)
[ ] 3-foot rule: keep anything flammable 3 feet from heat sources
[ ] Unplug space heaters when leaving the room or sleeping
[ ] Don't overload outlets or extension cords
[ ] Candles: extinguish when leaving the room. Use holders on
    stable, heat-resistant surfaces.

IF YOUR CLOTHES CATCH FIRE:
Stop. Drop. Roll. It actually works. Proven to be the most
effective response. Do NOT run — running fans the flames.
Cover your face with your hands while rolling.

If This Fails

  • If a fire is larger than a wastebasket or beyond a single pan, stop trying to fight it. Get everyone out and call 911.
  • If you can't get a campfire started after 15 minutes, your materials are wet. Look for dead standing wood (off the ground) or use commercial fire starters brought from home.
  • If your fireplace smokes into the room every time, the flue may be undersized, the damper may be damaged, or your house may have negative pressure issues. Call a certified chimney sweep (CSIA certified).
  • If your fire extinguisher won't discharge, it's likely depressurized. Leave immediately and call 911.
  • If someone has a burn: cool running water for 10-20 minutes. No ice, no butter, no toothpaste. Cover loosely with a clean cloth. Seek medical attention for burns larger than 3 inches, on the face/hands/feet/groin, or blistering burns.

Rules

  • Never leave any fire unattended — campfire, fireplace, grill, or candle
  • Always have a suppression method within reach before starting a fire (water, extinguisher, dirt, lid)
  • Never use gasoline, lighter fluid, or any accelerant on an established fire
  • Grease fires and water do not mix — this overrides any instinct to throw water on flames
  • Smoke detectors are non-negotiable in every sleeping area and on every floor
  • When in doubt about whether you can handle a fire, get out and call for help. Property is replaceable.

Tips

  • Dryer lint is the best free fire starter in the world. Keep a ziplock of it in your camping gear.
  • Cotton balls smeared with petroleum jelly light instantly and burn for 3-4 minutes. Cost: basically nothing.
  • Seasoned firewood has been dried for 6+ months. It's lighter than green wood, sounds hollow when you knock two pieces together, and has cracks on the end grain. Wet wood = smoke, no heat, and creosote.
  • A chimney starter pays for itself immediately by eliminating lighter fluid forever. Weber brand is the standard — $15 at any hardware store.
  • The "back of the hand" test is the real standard for whether a campfire is out. If the ashes are warm to the back of your hand, they can still restart.
  • Kitchen fires double between Thanksgiving and New Year's. Stay in the kitchen when frying or broiling.

Agent State

fire_skills:
  user_context:
    primary_need: null
    has_fireplace: null
    has_grill: null
    grill_type: null
    goes_camping: null
  safety_audit:
    smoke_detectors_tested: false
    co_detectors_present: false
    fire_extinguisher_locations: []
    extinguisher_pressure_checked: false
    escape_plan_created: false
    escape_plan_practiced: false
    chimney_last_inspected: null
    dryer_vent_last_cleaned: null
  skills_covered:
    campfire_building: false
    fireplace_operation: false
    grilling_basics: false
    extinguisher_knowledge: false
    kitchen_fire_response: false
    fire_escape_plan: false
  follow_up:
    seasonal_checklist_date: null
    next_detector_battery_change: null

Automation Triggers

triggers:
  - name: seasonal_fall_reminder
    condition: "month IS October AND fire_skills.safety_audit.chimney_last_inspected older than 12 months"
    schedule: "annually in October"
    action: "It's fall — time for your annual chimney inspection and smoke detector battery replacement. Want to walk through the seasonal fire safety checklist?"

  - name: grilling_season_check
    condition: "month IS April OR month IS May AND fire_skills.user_context.has_grill IS true"
    schedule: "annually in spring"
    action: "Grilling season is starting. Before your first cookout, check your grill's gas hose for cracks and do a soapy water leak test on all connections. Also check for spider webs in the burner tubes — it's a common and dangerous issue after winter storage."

  - name: detector_battery_reminder
    condition: "fire_skills.safety_audit.smoke_detectors_tested IS true AND days_since(fire_skills.follow_up.next_detector_battery_change) >= 0"
    schedule: "every 6 months"
    action: "Time to replace batteries in all smoke and CO detectors. Test each one after replacing. A detector with a dead battery is the same as no detector."

  - name: escape_plan_practice
    condition: "fire_skills.safety_audit.escape_plan_created IS true AND fire_skills.safety_audit.escape_plan_practiced IS false"
    action: "You've created a fire escape plan but haven't practiced it yet. Practice is what makes it work in a real emergency — especially for kids. Try a nighttime drill this week."

  - name: extinguisher_expiry_check
    condition: "fire_skills.safety_audit.fire_extinguisher_locations IS NOT EMPTY"
    schedule: "monthly"
    action: "Monthly reminder: check the pressure gauge on your fire extinguishers. If the needle is in the red zone, replace or recharge it immediately."
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install fire-skills
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /fire-skills
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.0
Initial public release of Fire Skills — practical fire safety, building, and emergency guidance. - Covers campfire building, fireplace operation, grilling safety, fire extinguisher selection, kitchen fire response, and home fire escape planning. - Includes detailed, step-by-step instructions for building and extinguishing campfires (teepee and log cabin methods). - Provides region-specific fire safety and emergency info, adapting guidance based on user location. - Lists trusted sources such as NFPA, US Forest Service, and Red Cross for verification and further reading. - Emphasizes critical safety checks before starting fires and clear steps for emergency response.
Metadata
Slug fire-skills
Version 1.0.0
License MIT-0
All-time Installs 0
Active Installs 0
Total Versions 1
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Fire Skills?

Practical fire building, management, and safety skills. Use when someone needs to build a campfire, use a fireplace safely, learn to grill, or needs fire eme... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 133 downloads so far.

How do I install Fire Skills?

Run "/install fire-skills" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Fire Skills free?

Yes, Fire Skills is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Fire Skills support?

Fire Skills is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created Fire Skills?

It is built and maintained by HowToUseHumans (@howtousehumans); the current version is v1.0.0.

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