Posted on 06/11/2011 8:52:12 AM PDT by Second Amendment First
They said it was like napalm: it exploded in a flash, stuck to skin and clothing, and refused to stop burning.
A 14-year-old Long Island boy is fighting for his life after he was slathered with blazing, jellylike citronella fuel on May 28, when his cousin tried to light a ceramic firepot to prepare for a backyard wedding reception, but the quart bottle of fuel he was pouring instead burst into flames.
In Manhattan, a 24-year-old man has been on and off a ventilator after an almost identical blaze nearly killed him and badly wounded his best friend on June 3 as they were relaxing on the friends terrace.
The two accidents, less than a week apart, involved the same product: a gel fuel for ceramic firepots, scented with citronella to ward off insects on hot summer nights, and purchased from Bed Bath & Beyond.
The fuel is marketed by the retailer as FireGel, the Safe Pourable Gel. But survivors and witnesses to the two blazes likened it to a Molotov cocktail without so much as a wick.
Its just like gasoline in a bottle, said Nancy Reyer, a single mother whose only child, Michael Hubbard, has been clinging to life in a hospital in Stony Brook on Long Island for nearly two weeks. Watching my son just go up in flames like a tree it just devastates me. I cant get that image out of my mind.
Relatives of the victims, and one survivor of the two local blazes, said the products came with understated warnings that gave no sense of how dangerous they could be to operate safely, and called for a recall or a ban.
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
It sounds like the bottles of gel could be weaponized with the addition of a fuse. Keep pests like flash mobs away at the beach.
Hmmmm.... Yeah. That's exactly what I was thinking.
Check. Added to my Zombie Apocalypse shopping list...
Fire safety ping!
Hope the zombies hold off till the new labels are ready.
Enterprising grape farmers produced liquid and semi-solid grape concentrates, often called “wine bricks” or “wine blocks”. This demand led California grape growers to increase their land under cultivation by about 700% in the first five years of prohibition. The grape concentrate was sold with a warning: “After dissolving the brick in a gallon of water, do not place the liquid in a jug away in the cupboard for twenty days, because then it would turn into wine.”
Amazon has it.
http://www.amazon.com/Napa-Firelite-NAPAfire-Citronella-Ounces/dp/B003IT66EO/ref=sr_1_4?ie=UTF8&qid=1307807120&sr=8-4
It’s another form of Sterno only more explosive!
My mama says that during prohibition, the packets of yeast sold in the stores had the recipe on the back for making home-made mash, with a warning that following those directions would be a violation of federal law.
That is the case, the flame may not be visible leading one to believe it is out. As with all fire related items, caution should be used, but one simple error in judgement can be catastrophic.
...gasoline, styrofoam, a glass bottle, and a rag?
Now that’s real “truth in labeling”.
yeah, something along the lines of do not mix this product with malted grains or sugars and allow to ferment, otherwise an illegal alcoholic beverage may result...
It seems that many “modern men” have not yet discovered fire!
Oh, well, back to the cave.
PS, NEVER pour volatile liquid fuel on a lit fire!
Were I them, I’d be inclined to add something to the mix that would colorize the flames.
Screened in porch and ceiling fan bttt !.......:o)
Thank goodness I saved those 55 gallon drums of DDT !
Don’t forget the benzene.
Ivory soap flakes. Citronella oil (for the mosquitos).
Yes, 55 gallons seems like a lot but then we have a
lOT of mosquitos...
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