[AT] firewood

John Wilkens jwilkens at eoni.com
Sun Nov 26 10:00:50 PST 2006


I'd sure like to try that ash wood.  Sounds about perfect.  Dry Yew 
wood is super too but it is scarce as hen's teeth.  We have two 
Vermont Castings air-tight stoves in the house which run most of the 
winter.  I don't mind the occasional trips out to the woodshed on a 
cold winter night with my wood carrier.  It gives me a good stretch 
and fresh air.  We have a good furnace but there's nothing like wood 
heat.  I kinda think "a house without a hearth is a home without a 
heart."  (Not true of course).    I've got an old wood burner in the 
shop that consumes my wet or dry aspen (from a big aspen grove behind 
the shop) and other junk wood too big or wet to burn in the 
house.  That old stove burns hot so moisture isn't a problem.    John


At 03:37 AM 11/26/2006, you wrote:
>
>I burn a bit of Tulip poplar. I have a lot of it on my property. It does
>burn hot and fast. It rots fast so I can't leave the tree down in the woods
>for long.
>
>My favorite wood to burn is Ash. Pretty much dry when cut, burns hot and
>long with very little waste left in the fireplace.
>
>Besides Ash, I have found that the best wood to burn is "dry" wood.
>
>I had a tree specialist come out to visit me, I asked him if he burned wood
>due to his  endless supply.. He said "no way, I have a pellet stove".
>Burning wood was too much work for him, he said "Wood heats you in many
>different ways". I guess he was right, wood does take a lot of time and
>energy to harvest.
>
>I figure I burn about 3 cords a year. I am trying to keep at it and would
>like to have 6 cords supply built up. I would love to get to the point where
>I can season the wood two years... I always seem to run out and burn stuff a
>little greener than desired...
>
>Regards,
>
>Will Powell
>Pottstown, PA
>
>
>_______________________________________________
>AT mailing list
>Remembering Our Friend Cecil Monson 11-4-2005
>http://www.antique-tractor.com/mailman/listinfo/at


                    In the wide-open spaces of NE Oregon
   





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