







Hot Tent Wood Stove with Built-In Oven – Stainless Steel, Glass Door, Temperature Gauge, Secondary Airflow | 2-in-1 Heater & Camp Oven
Heat Your Tent and Cook Real Food — Off Nothing But Wood You Find on the Ground
A camp stove and a separate camp oven are two heavy items to carry, two things to set up, two things that can fail. This 2-in-1 hot tent wood stove with built-in oven does both in one unit — heats a canvas or hot tent from single-digit temperatures while simultaneously baking bread, roasting meat, simmering stews, or boiling water in the oven compartment above the firebox. Fueled by wood you gather on-site. No propane, no electricity, no resupply.
At $439, this is a serious piece of equipment for serious outdoor use — built from high-temperature stainless steel with a secondary airflow combustion system, heat-resistant glass door, temperature gauge, and a full accessory kit. This is not a camping novelty. It's a field kitchen and heating system in one unit.
Secondary Airflow System — Cleaner Burn, More Even Heat, Better Baking
The difference between a basic firebox and a functional camp oven comes down to combustion control. This stove uses multiple secondary air inlets that feed additional oxygen into the firebox after primary combustion — a technique borrowed from high-efficiency wood stoves that dramatically improves:
- 🔥 Combustion completeness — wood burns more fully, producing more heat from less fuel
- 🌡️ Temperature consistency — secondary air stabilizes the burn rate, reducing the spikes and drops that ruin baking
- 💨 Cleaner exhaust — less creosote buildup in the chimney pipe, less smoke inside the tent
- 🍞 Even oven heat distribution — no hot spots that char one side while undercooking the other
Built-In Oven Compartment — Actually Bake in the Field
The oven sits integrated into the stove body, with its own enclosed chamber that reaches and holds baking temperatures when the firebox is properly loaded. The included temperature gauge gives you a real-time read on oven temperature so you're not guessing when to put the bread in. Bake sourdough, roast a haunch, heat a Dutch oven casserole, or simply use it as a warming shelf for food and water simultaneously. This is the feature that separates a hot tent stove from a hot tent stove with cooking capability.
Heat-Resistant Glass Door — Monitor Fire Without Opening the Stove
The heat-resistant glass front door lets you monitor fire behavior and fuel level without breaking the seal on the firebox — which drops temperature, disrupts the draft, and lets cold air flood the combustion chamber. You can see the burn, gauge when to add wood, and watch for flare-ups without touching the door. It also functions as a visual anchor point in the tent at night, which anyone who's spent time in a canvas tent in January understands the value of.
High-Temperature Stainless Steel — Built for Extended High-Heat Use
Standard mild steel warps, cracks, and eventually fails under repeated high-heat cycling. This stove is built from high-temperature stainless steel that maintains its structural integrity through long fires, overnight burns, and season after season of hard use. Corrosion-resistant in humidity, snow, and rain exposure. The stainless construction also means the exterior cleans up properly between uses rather than rusting into the surface it's stored on.
Full Accessory Kit — Complete System, Nothing Extra to Source
Everything needed for first-use is included:
- ✅ Temperature gauge — mounted on oven for real-time baking control
- ✅ Chimney smoke pipe — proper venting for tent use
- ✅ Adjustable control valves — airflow and combustion regulation
- ✅ Heat-resistant gloves — safe handling at operating temperature
- ✅ Hanging hooks — suspend cookware, tools, or drying gear from the stove
- ✅ Anti-slip feet — stability on uneven ground, dirt floors, and tent platforms
Built For
- ⛺ Hot tent camping — primary heat source for canvas, bell, and hot tent setups in winter
- 🦌 Hunting base camp — heat and cook for multi-day camps without propane logistics
- 🧑🌾 Bushcraft & wilderness survival — off-grid cooking and heating from foraged fuel
- 🏔️ Winter expeditions & mountaineering base camp — reliable heat in extended cold conditions
- 🚐 Overlanding & off-grid cabin use — supplemental heat and cooking in remote structures
- 🪖 Emergency preparedness & grid-down scenarios — independent heat and cooking with any dry wood
Pro tip: For tent heating efficiency, position the stove near the center of your tent with the chimney exiting through a stove jack rather than an open flap. The stainless pipe radiates secondary heat along its entire length, effectively turning the chimney run inside the tent into an additional heat source. This dramatically reduces the amount of wood needed to maintain comfortable sleeping temperatures overnight.
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