Every gram on your back eventually speaks to your knees, so the portable camping stove is the one you forget until hunger surfaces like a trout at dusk. Modern screw-top burners weigh less than the smartphone you left in the car, yet they still balance a pot of ramen while you stretch hamstrings against a cedar. Leave the heavyweight grill at home; instead, pack a foil windscreen cut from a weekday cookie sheet—after supper it doubles as a spoon rest. Choose a canister size that ends empty as the trail meets road; finishing fuel feels like completing a sentence without filler words. For morning coffee, measure water by the cupful rather than guessing; the stream you dipped from is cold and hides extra ounces in every splash. When the hike is done, the stove slips into a side pocket, a loyal minnow riding the dark aquarium of your pack. Ultralight is not deprivation—it is the art of noticing how little stands between you and the smell of pine, the first sip of cocoa, the crackle of a flame you can silence with a gentle twist.