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Writer's pictureSara F. Hathaway

Scented Orange Candles


The pin of the month for this month comes from Sarah Liploff over at a site called popsugar.com. As a someone who thinks that everything could be saved and reused at a future date, I have tons of old candles laying around for the day when I might need them. In reality, I had no idea what I would use them for but then I saw this little beauty of a pin. 

After thinking about how easy this project would be to do in a survival situation, I suddenly realized I need to add candle wicks to my stores of backup supplies. I know it is possible to use moss to make wicks but wouldn't it be nice to have a big supply waiting for you?


So let's take a look at how it's done from a survivalist's point of view:

      What we are going to need:

  • 1 orange  (really all you need is any type of container that can be filled with wax)

  • 2 candlewicks  (lets just buy a bunch and add them to the backup supplies)

  • 20 drops citronella (any mixture of basil, catnip, cedarwood, juniper, lemon, lemongrass, myrrh, palmarosa, pine, rose geranium, rosemary and cinnamon essential oils will work)

  • 4-6 ounces candles (this is where all those old candle stumps get used up)

  • small glass or metal bowl (Sarah suggest that you can also use a can cleaned and rinsed which is perfect for a survival situation)

  • Tray

     Steps:

  1. In step one Sarah scoops out the orange. As I mentioned I think it would be possible to substitute any type of container for this step.

  2. Then Sarah fills a saucepan with 1 cup of water and places it on medium heat. She then puts the bowl on top of the saucepan with the candle ends in it to form a double boiler. She uses the can instead of the bowl to make cleanup easier but I'm thinking in a post-apocalyptic situation if all you could find was two old cans you could still make this work and be able to produce some great candles. Candles would be useful for a very small amount of light when you didn't want to attract attention or for cooking food as well. 

  3. While the wax is melted you add the citronella oil to the wax and then remove it from heat. I'm thinking here if you couldn't buy the oils you could use smashed up versions of the plants listed in the ingredients and they would produce the same effect. It just wouldn't look as pretty.

  4. Then Sarah places her orange on a tray, nestles a candle wick in the center, pours in the wax mixture and lets them cool. The tray is just to collect overflow so you don't make a mess but in a survival situation you may still want to use the tray because every bit of that wax will be very precious.

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