Third, when you burn it.
Second, when you split it.
First, when you cut it.
If using a maul for splitting, a temperature of thirty to forty degrees is very comfortable. In your shirtsleeves.
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Nice Ed, the fire place and mom fixing breakfast for them, I am sure it did not come out of the microwave. My mom too, but no warm hearth to sit by. Then the uphill walk to school about a half mile in knee deep snow, it was uphill on the way home tooEd in Tampa wrote:When I moved from Ohio to Florida I left behind 8 full cord of split, dried and stacked firewood.
They were honest cords 4ftx4ft x8 ft stacked under a shelter. I had cut and split all this wood. Each piece was 16 inches long. I did use the neighbors splitter on about half of the wood.
I well know the work, enjoyment and sense of satisfaction that comes from laying up lumber for winter. We had a fireplace in the center of the house all masonry that I could heat up and it would remain warm until morning.
Fireplace was a closed combustion system with an outside air source. So I could safely go to bed with a reasonable fire still burning. Creosote was a problem and had to be burned out every year.
Every morning the kids would run out of bed and sit on the hearth until their mother fixed breakfast for them.
Not really. I assume that they are trying to prevent destruction by the emerald ash borer. It's been illegal to transport firewood here in Central Ohio since shortly after they were discovered several years back. And for good reason ... the larvae live under the bark and feed on the cambium, eventually girdling the tree. I've exposed probably a thousand of the little buggars while cutting my own dead ash trees into firewood.reible wrote: Anyway I was interested to see no one mentioned the link I provided about firewood and WI. They are pretty strict on that, so a lot of people end up buying firewood for their camping experience now. Most of the parks have it for sale. For those that read it were you shocked?
Ed
In your house, if not UL listed will void your home owners insurance and not cover and damage/fire damage!!!Skizzity wrote:A rocket stove. Very efficient. I wanted to make this one a while back but finding one H block was hard. https://youtu.be/kmDYUrVHPWcERLover wrote:Basically those logs act like a fire in a chimney with air being drawn up from below to feed the combustion, not just the air around the flame, a minny forge. They have been using that design in India and other countries were wood is sparse, for cooking, you take a small canister, small an air inlet in the bottom, twigs inside, cooking grate on the top, like a jet engine. My nephew made on for giggles out of one of those small beer kegs of import beer that are a few litters. He explained to me, I know the principal, I said lets fire it up. He put his sap kettle on it with some hand full of twigs and about a half gallon of water in the kettle boiling in a few minutes, faster then a stove. 4lb of h20 at about 60* to 212*, ruffly 600BTUs from some twigs in about 3 minutes.
Could only find them by the pallet.
Cheaper than the store bought log but more cumbersome to move.