As wildfires increase in extent and severity, we need new tools to rehabilitate burned landscapes. We tested the effectiveness of adding fire moss tissue, produced in the greenhouse, as a bio-inoculant to severely burned soils in dry mixed conifer forests. We conducted three sequential experiments using knowledge gained from previous experiments to fine-tune fire moss delivery methods. The first two experiments began in July 2017, less than ten days after a wildfire in Arizona, United States. First, we added disaggregated (passed through a 2 mm sieve) cultivated moss tissue to burned soil surfaces, which was immediately collected by ants. In a second experiment, we added two preparations designed to reduce ant collection: moss rolled into pellets using diatomaceous earth and moss ground to a powder. Pelletization increased Bryum argenteum cover (F-[3,F-55] = 12.32, p < 0.001) and the number of distinct moss colonies (F-[3,F-55] = 11.87, p < 0.001) when compared to untreated control plots, although cover remained low (1%). A third experiment took place four months postfire in New Mexico. Sieved moss, pelletized moss, and pelletized moss at a high (5x) application rate were added to a burned forest. The high-rate pelletized treatment increased B. argenteum colony count by 140% compared to controls (F-[3,F-44] = 2.37, p = 0.084), but did not increase cover (F-[3,F-44] = 1.19, p = 0.325). At both sites, an extreme drought (Palmer Drought Severity Index < 4) during the winter of 2017-18 likely reduced success. We recommend further refinement and testing of pelletization in non-drought conditions.