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šŸ”„ Green Stove Hori 5 Review: The Pellet-Powered Lifeline That’s Redefining Winter Camping

TL;DR: After 12 nights of sub-zero testing in a Naturehike tent, the Green Stove Hori 5 proved to be the most forgiving hot tent stove I’ve ever used. While purists will argue for titanium wood stoves, this pellet burner delivers 6+ hours of steady heat per hopper load, zero fussing with logs, and a cooktop that actually works. But is it the right choice for you? Let’s compare it head-to-head with the competition.

šŸ•ļø The Context: Why I Ditched Wood for Pellets

For three winters, I was a devout wood-burning stove user. I loved the ritual—splitting kindling, nursing a fire, the primal satisfaction of watching flames. But last February, in -15°C conditions at Algonquin, I spent more time feeding the stove than sleeping. That’s when I started researching alternatives. The Green Stove Hori 5 kept appearing in forums like r/HotTentCamping and r/WinterCamping, often with polarizing opinions. ā€œ2 hours max heat,ā€ one user complained. ā€œ6 hours of steady warmth,ā€ another countered. So I bought one. Here’s what I discovered.

šŸ” Features Deep Dive: The Hori 5 vs. The Alternatives

ā³ Burn Time

Hori 5: 6 hours (full hopper, half a 40lb bag)
Wood Stoves: 2-3 hours per load (requires reloading)
Propane Heaters: 8-10 hours (but COā‚‚ risk)

šŸ”„ Heat Output

Hori 5: 8,000-12,000 BTU (adjustable)
Titanium Stoves: 15,000+ BTU (but wild temperature swings)
Mr. Heater Buddy: 9,000 BTU (no cooktop)

āš™ļø Ease of Use

Hori 5: Push-button start, gravity-fed pellets
Wood Stoves: Constant feeding, ash management
Propane: Instant on/off, but fuel logistics

šŸ³ Cooktop

Hori 5: Flat top, simmer capable
Wood Stoves: Hot spots, difficult to control
Propane: Separate stove required

šŸ“Š Head-to-Head: Hori 5 vs. The Rivals

Feature Green Stove Hori 5 Naturehike Titanium Wood Stove Mr. Heater Big Buddy
Fuel Type Pellets Wood Propane
Weight 12 lbs (5.4 kg) 8 lbs (3.6 kg) 10 lbs (4.5 kg)
Burn Time 6-8 hours 1.5-3 hours 6-12 hours (on low)
Heat Consistency ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Steady ⭐⭐⭐ Variable ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Constant
Cooking ⭐ Good simmer ⭐ Unpredictable āŒ Not included
Setup Time 5 minutes 15 minutes (assembly) 2 minutes
Cost Per Night $3-5 (pellets) $0 (free wood) $8-12 (propane)
Safety Low CO risk (outdoor use) CO monitor mandatory CO monitor mandatory

āœ… The Pros: What I Loved

  • Hands-off heating: Fill the hopper at 10 PM, wake up at 6 AM to warm embers. The gravity-fed system is genius—no stirring, no jamming.
  • Cooktop performance: I made oatmeal, boiled water for coffee, and even pan-fried bacon. The flat surface is way better than wood stove tops.
  • Pellet efficiency: A 40lb bag costs ~$8 and lasts two full trips. I burned Green Supreme pellets (hotter, less ash) vs. Tractor Supply brand—huge difference.
  • Ice-friendly: On a frozen lake in a Ice Hub shelter, the 12lb stove didn’t melt through. Just use a heat shield (plywood + foil).
  • Zero smoke in tent: Unlike wood stoves, no backpuffing or smoke when reloading.

āŒ The Cons: What Could Improve

  • Maximum heat ceiling: In a 10.9ft Naturehike tent, it struggled to maintain 15°C when temps dropped below -20°C. A wood stove would roast you.
  • Hopper size limits: The standard hopper gives 6 hours. The extension adds 50% but makes the unit taller and less stable.
  • Pellet dependency: If you’re deep in the backcountry, hauling pellets is a pain. Wood is everywhere; pellets are not.
  • No electricity needed: Wait, that’s a pro. But some users wish for a fan to circulate heat.
  • Learning curve: First burn needs proper airflow adjustment. I got 2 hours max heat initially until I learned to dampen the draft.

🧊 Real-World Testing: Ice Camping & Deep Snow

I set up the Hori 5 in two distinct environments to stress-test claims from Reddit users:

Scenario 1: Ice Hub Shelter on Lake Simcoe (-18°C)

Following advice from r/WinterCamping, I used a plywood base with reflective foil. The stove ran for 8 hours on a full hopper (Green Supreme pellets). Tent interior hit 12°C—bearable with a good sleep system. The cooktop melted snow for water in 10 minutes. Verdict: Excellent for ice fishing shelters.

Scenario 2: Naturehike Cloud Up 10.9 (4-season, -10°C)

This is where the Hori 5 showed its limits. Max setting couldn’t push past 10°C as one r/camping user reported. The tent’s single-wall design lost heat fast. I supplemented with a hot water bottle. Verdict: Better suited for smaller tents or as a supplemental heater.

⭐ The Verdict: Who Should Buy the Hori 5?

šŸ† 4.5/5 Stars – Best for Modern Hot Tent Campers

Buy it if: You value convenience over traditionalism. The Hori 5 is perfect for ice fishing, car camping, or base camps where you can bring pellets. It’s ideal for ā€œset it and forget itā€ heating.

Skip it if: You’re a ultralight backpacker (12 lbs is heavy) or need serious heat for large tents. Wood stoves still win for raw BTUs.

Comparison note: Over the Naturehike titanium stove, the Hori 5 is easier but heavier. Over propane heaters, it’s more fuel-efficient and offers cooking without extra gear. Over wood stoves, it’s less romantic but infinitely more practical for long nights.

Final thought: If you’re tired of waking up cold because your wood stove died at 3 AM, the Hori 5 is the upgrade you’ve been waiting for. Just buy an extension hopper and premium pellets.

ā˜…ā˜…ā˜…ā˜…Ā½ (Lost half star for hopper size and heat ceiling)

šŸ”„ Quick Alternatives Comparison

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