IN STOCK · SHIPS IN 24 HRS FREE U.S. SHIPPING OVER $75 LIFETIME FIELD WARRANTY MFG. KELLY KETTLE CO., CO. MAYO, IRELAND · EST. 1890
MODEL · KKU-KTTLE-L / 54 FL OZ · STAINLESS

Boil
anywhere
there's
wood.

A 130-year-old Irish design that cooks 54 oz of water on whatever you can scrape off the forest floor. No canisters. No pump. No fumes. Light a palmful of twigs — drop the kettle on top — three to five minutes later you're pouring.

How it works
Cap. 54 oz 1.6 L · 5 mugs
Height 13 330 mm
Weight 2.55 lb 1.16 kg packed
Boil 3–5 min full kettle · dry fuel
Fuel $0 found on the ground

A kettle that carries no fuel — because it doesn't need any.

§ 01 · FIELD REPORT

Filed from the Kelly workshop in County Mayo, where this kettle has been built by the same family since the late 1800s.

The Kelly Kettle has been built on the shore of Lough Conn in County Mayo by the same family for well over a century. It was sold first to anglers who needed hot tea on windswept banks, and later to half of continental Europe's outdoor clubs. The trick is the chimney: feed a small fire through the center and it boils water in minutes using whatever's lying around — sticks, pine cones, bark, dry grass.

The Base Camp is the largest model in the family. Fifty-four ounces, enough for four or five mugs before anyone's tied their boots. It's what you bring to the group trip, the fishing weekend, the emergency shelf, or the long morning you know is coming.

"No fuel to carry. No canister to run out of. Just the kettle, the ground, and a match."

Anatomy of a self-fueling kettle.

§ 02 · EXPLODED VIEW

Four stainless components. One very old idea. Every part is field-serviceable and built to outlive the buyer.

Base Camp Kettle exploded view N 54°03′ W 09°17′
A · 01

Water jacket

Double-walled stainless shell that cradles 54 oz of water around the chimney. Every rising BTU goes through it.

A · 02

Central chimney

The hollow core acts as a rocket stove — fire draws upward, stays hot, stays lit in wind and rain.

A · 03

Fire base

Vented stainless cup that holds your kindling. Keeps the flame off wet ground and concentrates airflow.

A · 04

Whistle stopper

A rubber plug with a metal whistle baked in. Seats in the spout and alerts you the moment water hits a rolling boil — before any steam gives it away.

Four moves. Zero fuel. One hot kettle.

§ 03 · OPERATION

The whole procedure fits on a postcard. The Base Camp is a field tool, not a gadget — it does the one thing, and it does it fast.

STEP 01 / 04

Fill the water jacket

Pop the whistle, run 54 oz of stream water, tap water, or canteen water into the body of the kettle. Seal.

STEP 02 / 04

Light what you found

A palmful of twigs, cones, bark, or dry grass goes in the fire base. One match. No pump priming. No cartridge to thread.

STEP 03 / 04

Seat the kettle

Drop the kettle onto the fire base. The chimney pulls flame up through the middle. Feed more sticks from the side as needed.

STEP 04 / 04

Wait for the whistle

Three to five minutes with dry fuel. The whistle lets you know before the steam does. Pour. Brew. Get moving.

See it work.

§ 04 · IN THE FIELD

One kettle. A handful of sticks. A few minutes. Shot unedited so you can see the whole thing, chimney-to-whistle.

In the field · 54 oz kettle · found-fuel demo Silent autoplay · tap speaker for audio

Four fuels. All already at your feet.

§ 05 · COMBUSTIBLES

You never pack fuel for a Kelly Kettle. You pick it up as you walk. Here's what the chimney eats.

F · 01 PRIMARY

Sticks

Pencil-thick, snap-dry. A double handful will carry a full boil from cold.

Burn time
~4 min
Availability
Ubiquitous
Prep
Break to 4″
F · 02 HOT & STEADY

Pine cones

Resin content makes them burn hotter than sticks. Free kindling in every conifer zone.

Burn time
~3 min
Availability
Seasonal
Prep
None
F · 03 WET-WEATHER

Bark

Birch is the classic — even damp, the papery outer layers light like tissue and get things moving.

Burn time
~2 min
Availability
Forested
Prep
Peel
F · 04 STARTER

Dry grass

Fast flare for the first catch. Pack an alternative tinder if you're headed somewhere green and wet.

Burn time
~30 sec
Availability
Open ground
Prep
Dry on body
Tested in all weather. The chimney design shelters the flame from wind and rain that would flood a canister stove. Confirmed in everything from Irish coastal drizzle to alpine sideways snow.

The whole kit. Nothing else to buy.

§ 06 · IN THE BOX

One kettle, one fire base, one whistle, one bag. You add water and a match.

Kit · As shipped Kit contents
ITEM · 01

Stainless steel kettle

54 fl oz Base Camp body — the largest model Kelly Kettle makes. Heirloom-grade 18/0 stainless.

SKU · KK-BC54
ITEM · 02

Stainless fire base

Vented cup that holds kindling and lifts the flame off wet or delicate ground. Nests under the kettle in transit.

SKU · KK-FB-LG
ITEM · 03

Whistle stopper

Rubber plug with a metal whistle inside. Seats in the spout and warns you the kettle is at boil before any steam gives it away.

SKU · KK-WS-01
ITEM · 04

Carry bag

A simple drawstring sleeve sized to the kettle. Keeps soot off the rest of your pack on the ride home.

SKU · KK-BAG

Field applications.

§ 07 · USE CASES

Where the Base Camp earns its weight. A 54 oz body is built for groups, long mornings, and the bad weeks.

Use case Why it works Group size Rating
Car Camping 54 oz is enough coffee for the whole tent. Throw it in the kit box, forget the stove. 3–5 ●●●●● ESSENTIAL
Fishing Driftwood on a gravel bar means hot cocoa or shore-lunch soup without hauling a burner. 2–4 ●●●●● ESSENTIAL
Emergency Kit No canister means no expired fuel. Pulls its weight every power outage or hurricane week. Family ●●●●● ESSENTIAL
Canoe / Paddle Portage-friendly weight and indestructible stainless. Any landing becomes a coffee stop. 2–4 ●●●●○ RECOMMENDED
Backcountry Heavier than a pocket burner, but no fuel to carry. Trade-off worth it on long trips. Party of 3+ ●●●○○ TRADE-OFF

Full specifications.

§ 09 · DATA SHEET

For the gram-counters, the base-weight builders, and the people who check the numbers twice.

Capacity 54 FL OZ 1.6 L · ~5 mugs
Height 13 IN 330 mm
Packed weight 2.55 LB 1.16 kg w/ base & bag
Material 18/0 STAINLESS non-reactive · food-safe
Fuel BIOMASS sticks, cones, bark, grass
Time-to-boil 3–5 MIN dry fuel · full kettle
Includes 4 PIECES kettle · base · whistle · bag
Origin IRELAND Co. Mayo · est. 1890
Warranty LIFETIME normal field use

Common questions.

§ 10 · FAQ

Answers to what we get asked most. Email us for anything we missed.

Is it hard to light?+
No. The chimney draws air up through the fuel, which is exactly what a fire wants. If you can light a fireplace, you can run a Kelly Kettle on the first try.
Does it work in the rain?+
Yes. The flame lives inside the chimney and the fire base keeps the embers off wet ground. Start with dry tinder; once it's going, a steady rain won't shut it down.
How long to a full boil?+
Three to five minutes for a full 54 oz kettle with decent kindling. A breezy day helps. Damp fuel or cold water pushes it toward six or seven.
Can I cook on it?+
The Kelly Kettle is purpose-built for boiling water. Kelly sells a pot-support accessory that lets you perch a small pot or pan over the fire base once the kettle is off — but out of the box, this is a water boiler.
Is it legal in a fire ban?+
Varies by jurisdiction. The fire is contained in a steel cup, which is generally more controlled than an open fire — but check local rules. Ranger stations and fire-district websites are the source of truth.
Will it rust?+
It's stainless steel. In normal use, no. Let it cool, wipe the soot, store it dry. Kelly family kettles 30+ years into service still work fine.
Who's it for?+
Car campers, cabin owners, emergency-kit builders, canoe trippers, and the kind of person who considers "one boil of hot water" a solved problem for the next fifty years.
§ 11 · CHECKOUT

Hot water, anywhere. For the next fifty years.

One kettle. One fire base. One whistle. One bag. The kind of tool you buy once, hand down, and never replace.