![]() ![]() Packed up in the bags from Blue Ridge Overland Gear. In the photo below the bag is holding the Skottle (with burner and windscreen attached), the lid, the table top, cherry wood spatula, and two 1 pound canisters of propane. We feel it was an excellent investment, and fits the Skottle itself, plus room for any extra components that we might use in cooking a meal. It feels virtually indestructible, and even though we have used and abused it for over a year, it shows no signs of wear at all. Tembo Tusk, along with Blue Ridge Overland Gear, has created a storage bag for the Skottle, made from the same type of vinyl that bounce houses are made of. ![]() ![]() This allows it to be used anywhere, using a standard single burner propane stove and it does this while still quickly breaking down for easy storage. Tembo Tusk has taken the shallow wok like bowl of the harrow disc and made it more versatile than what was used in the farms by adding legs and a burner supported by a simple framework. In an effort to simplify our load out, we picked up a Skottle last year, and it has easily replaced all of that. All of that adds up pretty quickly both in weight and in the amount of real estate it takes up in the truck. These are the discs that are pulled behind a tractor or mule to till the ground and prepare it for planting.īefore the skottle we traveled with a 3 burner Coleman white gas stove, along with a cast iron skillet, cast iron griddle, and an assortment of pots and pans, and don’t forget the jug of white gas. The Skottle (Pronunciation: Skō Til or Skaw-Til) originated from the farms of South Africa, where harrow discs were put to use as cooking tools in the fields. Ribeye Steak with onions, potatoes carrots and peppers High in the San Bernardino National Forest It is not often that I find a piece of camping gear that actually changes the way I camp, but the Skottle from Tembo Tusk has done just that. ![]()
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