[Please could one of the firewalkers on the net contribute a paragraph
or two for this section. PAJ]
FAQ Contents
6.1: Is fire-walking possible?
Yes. It is possible to walk on a bed of burning wood without being hurt.
FAQ Contents
6.2: Can science explain fire-walking?
There are a number of theories which have been put forward to explain firewalking. Any or all may be the explanation for a particular event.
Firewalking is usually done in a religious or spiritual context. This would tend to reduce the level of pain experienced by firewalkers without affecting the amount of physical damage done to the feet.
Some firewalkers put forward mystical explanations of why firewalking is possible without serious physical harm. A few skeptics have challenged these firewalkers to stand on hot metal plates instead of coals. Others have pointed out that making such a challenge in the belief that the firewalker would be seriously hurt is of dubious morality.
Jay Mann from New Zealand writes:
The NZ CSICOP had a mass firewalk at its annual meeting
in
Christchurch about 5 years ago. We had a lengthy afternoon
talk by a professor of physics, complete with demonstrations of tossing
hot bread loaves back and forth. The fire was built in mid-afternoon, and
the firewalk took place after the society banquet, that is, about 10 p.m.
One *never* walks on live coals. The fire is lit hours
before the actual walk. Large burning coals are removed. The firebed is
carefully raked to provide a continuous smooth layer of ashes over all
burning embers. By this time, it is dark and the firebed is seen to glow
ominously. It is still hot, and potatoes can be cooked in the ashes.
On the other hand, the rate of heat transfer through the ash is time-limited.
If participants take steady strides, even city-folk with soft soles can
manage at least five steps. In the Christchurch version, we stepped
in a small puddle of water at the end of the firewalk; I have seen at least
one description of a "commercial" firewalk where cooling water was also
provided.
In Christchurch, dozens of people went across. Some
went back for two or three passages. The bed was re-raked periodically
to restore the ash layer. There were two or three minor burns and blisters
the next day, mostly people who had kicked embers up between their toes.
Having done a firewalk is a wonderful conversational topic, and most people
will not believe that you didn't have some sort of mystic faith and determination
to "protect" your body.
Denis Dutton, then president of the NZSCICOP, later went
to New Guinea on a professional trip. There he trained one local
tribe in firewalking as way to attract the tourist dollar. The first
few firewalkers, in a private test, were cautious, but eventually the whole
tribe-- man, woman, and child -- gleefully ran through the "fire".
For public performance, the tribe added a lot of magical incantations and
rituals. Denis asked them how they would explain their knowledge of the
trick. They replied that they would say "an alien from the skies came and
taught us". You can imagine that people with tough soles from barefoot
walking could tolerate more exposure soft-soled city people.