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The
Wood Heat Organization: Answers to your questions about burning wood for heat and enjoyment. |
Visitors have their sayFunny, down-to-earth, thought provoking, heartwarming, charming. Just a few of the things our visitors are. Read on. To email us, send to feedback(at)woodheat.org Patrick is too polite to gloatAfter
a week of bragging about your site, a co-worker and good friend of mine
decided to visit your site and view the wealth of information.
He is also a wood burner, and for the past two years, we have
been harvesting wood together. Last year, as we were unloading some wood at his house, I was a bit
critical of his stacking techniques. He
was stacking the wood on the ground in rows of two, and kind of just
tossing the wood in each row. At
that time I had suggest raising the wood off the ground, and building
pillars on the ends of the rows to assure strong, tight stacks. His response, "nope, too time consuming". Well,
this year we were way ahead of the game, having twice as much wood as
last year. On a visit to my
property to load his truck, his wife was very impressed with my single
row, symmetrical stacks of wood. She
made a couple comments to her husband, but it fell on deaf ears.
That very day, as he was unloading his wood and creating his
stack, it fell over... all of it. The
next day I got the call from his wife asking for the name of your
website. No more falling stacks and moldy wood, thanks to woodheat.org. And I didn't even have to say "I told you so"! Patrick Eric is hooked on wood heatI'm
sitting in my family room looking at my stove. It's 60 degrees on a
January day in Connecticut and I'm itching for a fire, but I'll save my
wood. I only split three cords this year. It's my first year with a wood
stove and I had a late start on gathering wood (July). Lucky for me most
of my wood came from trees that had already fallen and were fairly dry. You
have a fantastic site. Your advice has been a huge help. Although I
should have heeded the 4-5 cord estimate, and split more wood. I
never thought someone could get so addicted to wood heat. It's all I
could talk about for months after the first cool November day when I
first fired it up. My wife and the guys at work are tired of hearing
about it, but my wife sure likes cranking it up and sitting in front of
it. Now after working outside all day I can't wait to come home and
relax and watch the fire. It beats TV any day. I
also would like to mention the importance of protecting your kids and
grown-ups from your stove. My two year old daughter promptly tells all
my guests "no touch the fire is very very hot OK, only Daddy do
it". She also scolds her younger brother if he crawls within the
vicinity of the protective screen.
One of my co-workers is recovering from serious burns to the
hands after falling on his stove while he was trying to keep the dog
from jumping on it. So I hope you continue to mention the importance of
wood heat safety Well,
since its 60 degrees out, all the snow has melted and I can continue
working on next years wood supply. Keep up the great site and thanks for
all the useful advice. Eric My lame chimneyThanks for your answers
about this poorly designed and ill conceived chimney
in the house we've rented for 13 years. A good smoke free fire is
rare thing. Today as it billowed from the hearth and the room filled
with smoke I finally said screw it. I pretended I live outdoors
and opened the windows and doors to get rid of the smoke. At first
the smoke continued to fill the place (I feel like I should be singing
camp songs by how smokey I smell) then finally it gave up and decided
to go back up the chimney, defying all laws of thermodynamics. If
we ever build our own house, you can bet it will have a chimney on the
inside. Thanks, Cindy is a very happy newbieOkay.
I have to tell you about my wood stove... Aubrey is happy to eat his wordsWhen I was a boy growing up in
Newfoundland my family burned wood to heat our home. As a child it was
less than ideal for me to haul wood, summer and winter, in all weather
conditions. I always told my father "you can make me haul the
firewood but you can't make me enjoy it". Boy was I wrong. As an
adult I burn wood to heat my home and I love every minute of it, from
cutting down the tree to taking the ashes out of the stove. My father
has since given up burning wood due to his health but loves the feel of
wood heat in my home when he comes to visit. And he always jokingly reminds
me of my youthful statement, which I could not imagine uttering from my
lips now. Joe's excellent firewood tipsThis is a great site. I just bought a high efficiency wood stove for
my home and I love it. I'm 26 years old and some
of my best memories as a child are of splitting
wood with my dad in the spring for our farm house in Ontario. I now
split wood with my father-in-law and we have a great time with it. He bought a stove two years ago and he too is in love with
it. I have a tip for some people that may be
thinking of going to wood heat. Don't listen to everyone
that says hardwood is the only wood to heat with. I burn 75% softwood
and 25% ash. The area that I live in is mostly softwood with very little hardwood. The softwood throws a great amount of
heat, but you have to burn more of in in a day.
This is no problem, I save what little hardwood I do have for right
before I go to bed at night. Softwood is very easy to
work with, dries faster, easy on the chain saws, easy to split and light
to handle. I also take trees that nature has
knocked down for my supply. Take a walk where you
get wood and look around at all the wood just lying on the ground
waiting to be taken . I also take the whole tree. A good supply of small branches and twigs make for great fire starter
without having to mess with skids and scrap wood.
One tip: only take the trees that have been down for
less than about two years - less chance for bugs and rot. Take what
nature has felled first. I cut and split 14 cords
of wood in the last two years and I have yet to fell a tree. Happy Burning and respect the forests. We couldn't agree more, Joe. Bob's great vacationI just spent a week on the farm with my brother cutting wood for next year, and even though it was in the 90's every day with matching humidity, I couldn't have had a better time. This from a guy who griped as kid with his dad cutting wood. The difference between a dull and bent bladed buzz saw and two new chainsaws, 25 ton splitter, two tractors with loaders, an ATV with trailer and willing help is amazing. I'm sure dad would say we've got more money invested than he spent to buy the farm. I just wish dad could have been with his two sons and enjoy it with us. Well, I've got to get ready to go back to something tomorrow that I'm tired of doing but will think of the week in October when I can do it again. Thanks again for the web site. Its the best by far. Bob Kenneth has warm feelings for wood heat and woodheat.orgAll the things that are explained on your site are things that I never really thought of until now. It is simply amazing how we take things for granted. Here I am reading your material and then it suddenly hits me -- that there are so many people out there who really do not know how to take care of a wood burning stove and how to keep a fire going and maintaining it. I have been using wood heat ever since I can remember, back in the time when we had no electricity. I hated cutting wood, splitting it, carrying it to the house, but, now it is one of the real enjoyable things in my life. I simply would not give it up, even in my old age. Fire is very soothing. Fire cures pretty near all of my ailments, colds, sniffles and chills, and aaaaarthritis is easier to live with. I would like to thank you for the very well written articles on fire and wood heat. You sure did one fine job of raising awareness of one of the simplest things in life. Keep up the good work, keep on informing people. Your site has really made my day this morning. Thank you very much, yours in wood heat. Kenneth As a kid he griped, but now he loves itI'm sitting here drinking coffee enjoying your web site. It's nice to know I'm not alone in my love for wood stoves and burning wood. People think I'm crazy when asked about hobbies or what I'll do in retirement and I say burn wood. I was raised in a seven bedroom farmhouse with only wood to keep from freezing and did not enjoy cutting wood with Dad. But now I'm in my fifties and love looking at my rows of wood in the back yard. I'm sure Dad would laugh after all the griping he heard back then. I bought a Kent stove when we build our house and could not be happier. Only worry is if my Kent needs replacing I'm sure I'd drive wife and myself nuts deciding on the next one. Thanks to everyone who helps keep this site up and going. Bob Jim's not so nuttyI thought I was kinda nutty the way I get into my woodstove, but I see there are plenty of folks out there just like me. My home sits in the middle of an eight and a half acre parcel, most of it is wooded. I have an old Allis Chalmers tractor and a Stihl chainsaw. I have lived here for two years and have not cut a live tree yet. I always select the standing dead and those limbs that mother nature brings down for me. It is funny how, in mid winter, I can remember where each piece of wood came from as it is pitched into the stove. Splitting wood is a favorite pastime of mine. There is nothing better than that perfect swing and watching the two pieces fall from the stump where one log once stood. Sort of like what a golfer must feel on a perfect drive. The woods surrounding my home consist mostly of cherry and silver maple. Before cutting I always make sure that nobody's home is coming down with the tree. Should I see a squirrel , raccoon, or bird's nest, I will let the tree stand. My wife may sometimes become annoyed when I choose to spend the day in the woods rather than shopping or visiting, but I can always give the "I told you so" on that first brisk night in October when I go to the basement and bring up some bone dry maple and a few pieces of white pine kindling! All the best, Jim Larry takes control . . . maybe he just needed an excuse.For the last
four months I have hauled home load after load of wood. I have cut,
split and stacked loads of apple trees destined for the wood chipper. I
followed a local tree cutting company to their job site and relieved
them of countless loads of black walnut and locust from the local city
park. I volunteered
to do away with friend's backyard shade so they can build that new
garage. My backyard is sporting a new woodshed I built back in February,
now filled to the gunnels with fruitwood and black walnut, along with a
neatly stacked pile of wood along my driveway. My neighbors just shake
their heads, wondering why on earth I go to so much trouble. They watch
me work up a terrific sweat splitting applewood and chain sawing odd-shaped
pieces and stacking, stacking all of this wood. Why? one of them asked. "Why are
you going through so much trouble when you don't even own a woodstove!
or a fireplace?" Why I replied? I show them my power bill from last
winter. They have one too but people have very short memories when the
sun is shining. I could have fed a family of four all winter on one
month of what I paid last winter. I'm not one to forget a 46% increase
from the local utility. So I decided
to do something about it. I am preparing for next year. I will buy my
stove in the middle of summer when it's 95 degrees outside. I expect my
local stove professional to be up on my roof installing my chimney. Yes,
I expect more looks this summer as they are hauling a woodstove into my
house. I expect the delivery boys will be in shorts and T shirts shaking
their heads too. It has been a
lot of work, but I expect it to get easier the more I do it, however, I
have gotten pretty good wielding my Stihl and maul. Larry Fond memories of the 'Nantucket Knot'Finally! I
have done several searches of the web, but with no success. Even the
Nantucket Knotworks folks never heard of the thing. However
the "nice lady with an English accent" seems to have perfectly
described what I was looking for, and the photos on your web page indeed
show the knot. My father introduced the term to me and our kids now use the term all
the time, but NOBODY seems to have an inkling of the source. Has anyone
else heard of Nantucket knots? Hi
Robin, More on the Nantucket KnotSearching for the derivation of this name I came across
Robin's query to find if anyone else has heard of (or uses) Nantucket
Knots. Our family does! All the time. And we
proselytize . . . I looked at the referenced
site with photos
and have only
one suggestion based upon our use: make the loose roll from a corner of
the couple of sheets of newspaper. This allows an easier knot.
We use 8-10 for a nice fireplace starter that requires no kindling. I
learned about Nantucket Knots from Capt. Wm. Phillipson, a retired
submariner now deceased (rest his soul). He had all sorts of
practical ideas! The utility of the knots so fascinated me that I
neglected to seek the origin. I thought it had something to do
with the lack of kindling on the Island and lots of newspapers--
necessity being the mother of invention; perhaps someone else knows the
reality. Lee Still interested after 40 years of wood heatingGreetings, Here is something I have been doing
for many years. I and my family and anyone else I can talk into it to
save their toilet paper tubes. I use them to make a kindling pile
(empty). Now here is the real deal. Take fifty tubes and an
armload of newspaper and head to your local lumber yard. Put a little
newspaper in one end scoop up a tube full or so of sawdust and then seal
the other end with the newspaper. Caution! Anytime you deal with fine sawdust and the right air mixture it becomes very volatile. Enjoy!!!!!!!!! Leroy It is 2:00 am, but not too late to say thanksI
could not go to bed without thanking your organization for providing the
information on your Web site. I
have been on the web getting information for a friend of mine who has an
open fireplace. She complains that it does not work properly and after
talking to her new neighbors, has found the previous owners never had a
good fire anytime. Your site tells it like it is, and although it looks
like she has a lot of work to do you have provided the answers to the
unsolved mysteries. Keep
up the good work and all the best to your members. Regards Take
note, prospective woodburners:
February
24, 2001 So,
wait until spring, go out and cut and split everything in sight so you have
a good supply for next winter, and turn up the gas furnace and enjoy the 70
degree heat this time around. Jeannie It's no joke when you're a woodcutterI've
enjoyed your site and have learned much from it. In return, here's a
story you might like. A
Woodcutter and his buddy heard they were hiring in the big city and decided to go check it out.
Finding a big building with a big sign out
front which said
"Employment Office", they went in and got in line with
everyone else waiting to be
interviewed. (Ba-da-boom,
Ba-da-bing) Doris discovers the joys of woodburningWe just installed a woodburner this fall and are learning all the little quirks and tricks of our stove. It is definitely a different type of heat then the electric baseboard heat in the house. We live in a one story ranch house with a full basement in Northern Ohio. We put our stove in the basement and cut holes for registers in the floors. We use ceiling fans in the living areas upstairs to circulate the heat and so far it has worked great. (I do have the thermostats set at 60 degrees for when we are away and early morning hours.) The floors stay nice and warm from the heat coming upstairs, which we never had with the electric heat. The true test will be this winter, since we haven't experienced any true chill yet! At first I was worried about having a fire going at night while we sleep. But now, after I have started the fire, tended and watched it from start to finish, I feel comfortable knowing what is happening inside that firebox. I am learning how much wood to use and how to set the damper so that the fire goes all night. Of course my husband seems to know more and is more comfortable since he had lived in a home with woodburners before. I, however, wanted to make sure everything in sight wasn't going to catch fire while we slept. Getting to know what is happening and experiencing it for yourself is exciting and satisfying. I have a feeling we will always have a woodburner in our home and I hope my boys will grow up willing to try heating their homes in a most enjoyable and beneficial manner. Doris It is safer for Larry to turn up the thermostatMy name is Larry, and I
live in Bergen County NJ, probably one of the richest county's in the
country. In
1979 when Carter put on the front page of the Daily News "there
might not be any heating oil on the east coast this winter",
then I said to my wife I no longer trust the
GOV. or the oil companies or the countries behind them. That was when I
made the mistake of installing my first wood stove. This stove next to
my boiler in the basement exhausted to a common chimney (allowed in
those days) needless to say ruined the chimney. We then had a new
chimney installed on the outside of the house, and at the same
time had an addition put on the living room
to hold stove #2 (I also put one in my garage). Well to make a long
story short from 1980 to 1990 I went through a trailer, three pickup
trucks, three chain saws, a bad cut on
one knee, my two kids today hate me for raising them on firewood, and
guess what? my wife and I did not save a dime. If I had to do it all
over again I would definitely let some one else save the country and I
would turn up my thermostat. Thank You, (Too bad Larry didn't
get some good advice before he started heating with wood. - ed) Rob chooses wood in the nick of timeHi, my name is Robert from Cornwall, Ontario. Me and my wife Diane purchased a bungalow in May 1995. Since the basement was finished when we made the purchase, I had always thought why not install a nice airtight wood stove but we had started to renovate on the main floor first. With a purchase of a computer, I was starting to really think about it more and more since our computer was in the cellar. Our son Brandon was born on December 18 '97 and my father-in -law (Allan) told me he had an extra stove if wanted it. Since Al was an experienced wood burning kind of guy, he offered to help with the installation. So I decided, why not after all I always wanted one, the existing hole in the foundation was still there from previous owners which made our job a little easier. Al and I decided to get going on this thing, so we installed it with some safety tips from a friend of mine and a local lumber yard which was a certified installer. The only funny or very weird thing was we installed it three days before the major ICE STORM here in Eastern Ontario in early January '98. It was as if someone or something had told me to put the stove in as soon as possible. Our son was now only maybe five or six weeks old, but let me tell you, we did not go without heat in the house. I felt it was the best investment in my life since we were keeping our family toasty warm in a middle of a crisis. My in-laws stayed and helped us out since the father-in-law had lots of wood cut, split and ready to burn, we also had lots of help with Brandon, our new addition to the family. All and all, we were great survivors of the most severe ICE STORM of the century thanks to the gentle warm glowing flame of a real wood burning fireplace. Thanks for listening, take care and remember, BURN WOOD SAFELY!!!!!! Rob Words of Wisdom from CyberBikerBobWhen I was a boy back in the fifties
wood was what we used to heat with. It was rare that we
cut a living tree as at that time here in Michigan we
were at the height of the Dutch Elm die off. Elm was one
of the ultimate firewood's when cured and there were so
many dead trees standing in fence rows that there was no
reason to cut anything live. Even in this day and age
people using wood, who cut their own, have little need to
fall live trees. Here in Michigan you can get permission
to harvest standing deadwood in many of the State
Forests. With the advances in furnace and stove
technology, wood is a very efficient heating fuel. It
also gives the benefit of heating twice, once when you
work at cutting it and then again when you burn it. Old
fashioned, maybe, a smart choice if you don't mind doing
some work. The Kentucky Redneck WoodsplitterI live in western Kentucky and heat my home with wood, as
do many of my neighbors. I feel that wood heat is better
than nonrenewable fuels in many ways. Most of the time it
is less expensive and sometimes it is downright free,
provided you don't mind putting in the manual labor. If
you are driving down the road and see a sign that says
FREE FIRE WOOD don't you believe it! Most of the time it
is a tree that has fallen on their property and they just
want it cleaned up without paying someone to do it, and
they are too lazy to do it themselves. But free wood is
available if you know where to look. I look where the
electric company cuts under power lines, they cut it in
stove lengths and leave it laying and are more than happy
when someone comes and picks it up. Also I bring wooden
pallets home from work where they would just lay and rot
otherwise. Super Dad Goes Top DownHello this is Jim in Pennsylvania U.S.A. I just found
your web page about a week ago and I love it. I read the
page on the top down starting method and thought you were
out of your mind, so I thought I would put it to the
test. I watched the weather report every day until
finally we were going to get some cool nights and I could
try it. I did everything just the way you said and much
to my surprise it worked the first time. I thought it
must have been beginners luck so I tried it again and it
worked like a charm and now I am convinced. Wood is my
primary heat and this method will save me a lot of time
when I get home from work. I am a single parent with two
preschoolers and when we get home they want heat and
supper at the same time and now I can almost do it. Keep
up the good work. Firewood Jim loves his workHi, it's me Firewood Jim. I live in Bend, Oregon and cut and sell firewood for a living. About 400 cords a year. I love it. It gives me a chance to be with my two boys and teach them a few things about being "in tune" with our natural environment. We camp and fish all summer while we cut and deliver wood to my customers. In the winter I still cut wood while the boys are in school. This wood I "stockpile" until the following fall so it will have a chance to season well. Our air quality standards are stringent here in the high desert, and for good reason; we have clean air and want to keep it that way. Wood is a renewable resource, and gathering standing dead wood to heat with helps keep the threat of catastrophic wild-fire down. 90% of the wood I sell is lodge-pole pine, the remaining 10% is Juniper. Bend is on the fringe of the 3,000,000 acre Deschutes National Forest. The Freemont National Forest is close as is the Ochaco National Forest. From the Forest service I buy contracts through competitive bidding for areas with high concentrations of standing and down dead lodge-pole pine. This wood is largely "beetle-killed" trees from Red Pine Beetle infestation. If man was not in the picture natural wild-fire would keep the forest "clean" of this type of dead-wood. Alas, this is not the case so nature needs a helping hand. It is a complicated issue that is going to take some time to correct. My customers are from all walks of life. I have quite the variety. I have customers that are elderly on fixed incomes with just enough to survive on. They use wood-stoves for primary heating of their homes (they get special treatment, and are my most loyal customers!) I have a few elderly, retired customers that are worth millions. Some use woodstoves because they like too. Some for "back-up" heat, fireplaces (indoor and outdoor). Outdoor fireplaces or pits are popular here in the "high desert". It can frost any night of the year. We've had to build a fire and put on coats to watch fourth of July fireworks. I have "yuppie" customers, ranchers, farmers, nurses, doctors, our vet is a customer of mine. Several of my customers work for the City of Bend, from the sexton of the cemetery to city engineers, and the guy that runs the street sweeper. One group buys wood from me to use in their Native American sweat-lodge ceremony. They have a sweat-lodge every Saturday evening. It is a recognized religious function. Like a Catholic going to Mass on Sunday. I barter wood for mechanic work on my trucks and for the fuel to run them. I sell bundled camp-wood for people vacationing in this area. I traded a cord of split wood for a nice fishing boat and trailer last spring. Came into a good over-head camper the same way this winter! Well, time to go cut!
Remember, "BURN HOT, BURN CLEAN" Bob will stick with wood heat until he's too old to lift a logHi. I live at Mile 66.5 of the Alaska Highway in North Eastern B.C. When my wife and I moved here from Calgary in '89 I was concerned about heating this house with wood. Horror stories about chimney fires etc. were common place. After doing research on maintenance and burning practices we have never had a problem. We upgraded the original airtight black box to a modern recirculating type and heat this 1100 sq. ft. house with 4-5 cords of pine per year. As we live in a sparsely populated area which is mostly dense forest, wood is readily available. In one weekend I can bring in all I need for the winter. A few boxes of Beer for a couple of friends and some T-Bones for the crew get it done. Never a green tree is cut. I have kept track of my costs for the last 7 years and I average per year a cost of $20 gas & maintenance of the chain saw, $40 in fuel for my propane powered pick-up, $5 gas for my wood splitter, and $50 in Beer & Beef for my buddies who come over anyway. Now last year the Gas Company ran a line down my access road. It is only going to cost me $1600 to run the line to my house (my driveway is 1/8 mile long) then it's going to cost $3500 to install a furnace & ducts. There is something wrong with this equation. Then they estimate I will spend about $75 per month on gas. Particulates in the air is not a problem up here because of the sparse population so I am going to stick with it until I am too old to lift a log. Great Page. |