Ashwood & Agar
Agar Agar
Ash, what’s your take on starting a fire when the wood’s wet and the wind’s strong? I’ve been testing a minimalist method, but curious how you handle that in your VR scenarios.
Ashwood Ashwood
If the wood’s wet and the wind’s a full‑on gale, ditch the big logs and go for the tiniest tinder. Use a dry moss or a handful of pine needles, and lay them in a fan‑shaped heap to catch the wind. Light a tinder bundle with a flint or a fire‑starter and protect it with a damp leaf or a small stone to block the wind. In VR, I start the loop by showing the exact wind direction, then show you building a small, wind‑defiant structure, so you learn to shield the spark and let the dry tinder catch before the wind blows it away. It’s all about controlling the micro‑environment first, then letting the fire do the rest.
Agar Agar
Good plan. Just remember to keep the tinder dry enough that it doesn’t absorb the damp leaf. In the VR loop, I’ll show you the exact wind vector and how to rotate the fire pit to face into the wind—keeps the spark from being blown out. Need help setting that up?
Ashwood Ashwood
Sure thing. Start by marking the wind direction in the environment, then set a small triangle of rocks pointing into the wind to shield the spark. In the loop, show the user rotating the fire pit so the flame faces the wind, and add a quick check: if the wind speed goes up, the pit angle should adjust automatically. That keeps the spark alive even when the breeze hits hard. Let me know if you want the exact code snippets or a step‑by‑step walk‑through.
Agar Agar
Sounds solid. Just give me the snippet for the wind‑aware pivot, and I’ll see how it fits into the loop. No fluff, just the essentials.