Pocket Bellows
Get air to the coals.
Fire follows.
A struggling fire isn't a wood problem, it's an oxygen problem. The pocket bellows solves that. Extend it, aim it at the base of the fire where the coals are hottest, and blow. Focused airflow hits the embers directly instead of spreading out and dying before it gets there.
The telescoping design collapses to under 4 inches so it disappears in a jacket pocket, a pack, or a glovebox. At 1.6 oz, you won't notice it until you need it. The stainless steel tube handles the heat of a fire without warping, and the keychain loop keeps it clipped and ready.
Works on campfire, fire pit, wood stove, charcoal grill, or anywhere you're trying to push a fire from struggling to going. No batteries, no fuel, nothing to break.
Directs your breath straight to the base of the fire where it counts. Blowing on a fire with your mouth scatters air. This concentrates it.
3.66 inches collapsed. Fits in a jeans pocket, a daypack, a field kit. At 1.6 oz you'll forget it's there until you need it.
Won't warp from heat, won't rust from weather. Same material philosophy as the rest of the OakStoke line.
Extends far enough to keep your face out of the smoke and your hand off the heat. Aim at the coals, not the flames.
Build out your fire kit.
The Pocket Bellows is the tool you reach for before the fire gets going. Pair it with the gear you'll use once it does.
Get the fire going with the bellows. Put the grill over it. That's the whole system.
Stake it, extend it, hang your cook pot. The bellows gets the fire hot enough to cook over.
One piece of stainless steel. No bristles, no wires. Clean your grates before every cook.
Common Questions
Campfire, fire pit, wood stove, charcoal grill, or any fire that needs more air to get going. If there are coals or embers, the bellows will work. Aim at the base of the fire where the heat is concentrated, not at the flames.
It extends to 19 inches. That's enough reach to aim at the base of most campfires without getting your face in the smoke or your hand near the heat. Collapsed, it's 3.66 inches.
The tip end gets hot if you hold it in the fire. Keep the tip aimed at the coals from a short distance rather than buried in the flames. The mouthpiece end stays cool during normal use since the airflow keeps heat moving away from you.
Yes. Pocket bellows, fire blower, blow pipe, fire tube, they all refer to the same tool. This one telescopes so it packs down small, which is what separates it from a fixed-length blow tube.
30-day return window on unused products and a 1-year limited warranty covering manufacturing defects. See our full policy on the Warranty & Returns page. Questions? Email support@oakstoke.com.
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