I must be stupid. Really stupid.
Chain saws, fireplace insert w/liner, 2 wood stoves in the basement that turned into a single wood boiler, two tanks with a crap load of pipe and pumps, splitter, tractor with logging winch and chipper, wood shed that's too small so I need another plus spare parts for all the above.
Now one can say the winch and chipper are luxuries but I needed the tractor no matter what so we will only carry 25% of it to wood burning.
Can any sane person alive tell me how close to 40K is saving me money on heating the house? I turn 60 next month. What was I thinking?
Funny. My wife had a girls week at Moosehead and like many others the power went out. Her friend said to her I like Rob's list of "must haves". Not sure if they fired up the insert but I suspect she did. She likes the extra warmth as much as me and the dog do.I figure some of my expenses related to wood burning aren't just expenses for wood burning . . . in other words I would own a chainsaw, ATV and ATV trailer regardless of whether I heated with wood or not. Some expenses -- like the wood splitter -- however are admittedly only due to burning wood.
Now as for saving money burning wood . . . the way I look at it is this . . . when prices are relatively cheap for heating oil and folks are laughing at me toiling away . . . well . . . they are right . . . I look a bit foolish. However, if and when heating oil prices skyrocket again to $4 plus and they are scrapping vacation plans and lowering their thermostats to 60 degrees to save money while I am comfortably cavorting about the cabana sans pans with a toasty 74 degree temp . . . or when they are huddled about a stinking kerosene heater last used in 1998, and worried about freezing pipes bursting and eating cereal for the third time that day due to a power outage while I am comfortably seated in my living room , cooking up a steak on the coals with nary a worry . . . well then the cost of heating with wood doesn't seem to be so bad.
Welcome! Yes it’s a lifestyle. Part of that lifestyle is “prepping” like you said. I work in a school during the day and after work find that I need a lot of outdoor type work and manual projects so that I don’t lose my mind.I am new here, but gotta throw in my 2 cents!
I have been cutting firewood since I was 12. with the crankiest old McCullough saw ever made. 24" blade and I was terrified of it at first.
grew up (obviously) with wood heat, moved into the city for a year and heated electric - never been back. ok, well not to live!
it is a lifestyle - I didn't realize that until I found this forum. awesome bunch of people here with fantastic knowledge/experience. stumbled in while looking for loglifter ideas for my wood splitter. I figure I have at least partially earned the privilege - I retired last March.
living a bit rural requires a bit of what they call a "prepper" attitude - we have enough to get by for months - and firewood for a few years. understanding what it takes to use wood heat safely and be comfortable probably does seem foreign to someone new to it - stick with it for a year and use this forum for questions and you will be fine!
this is such an awesome supportive group - I am so glad I found you all!
I will try to get a photo on the woodshed forum soon - just for the fun of it. some of you on here make me feel like an amateur! Kudos to you all!
Right on!This is great to read. I'm new here as well and here's my experience:
I grew up in a wood burning house and occasionally helped but I never was into it. It was more an obligation to help my dad than it was to spend quality time together. My parents have a stone wall that runs the length of their backyard and they used that to stack wood on, probably 5 cords fit on it as it was not deep. I didn't know about the seasoning process and I don't think my dad did it solely for that reason, at least he never mentioned it. We had an 80's Noble stove so it burned whatever. He was more concerned about having a supply to not run out. Ten years and a house later I got back into it. My wife in the beginning didn't think it'd last, she was all for it but couldn't see me spending my weekends splitting and stacking. I wasn't sure where to start but knew if I started sooner it'd be better than starting later. I wanted to have a large supply to have but my current setup could only afford 2 cords so I started there. I had a small VC intrepid from the previous owner which did a nice job heating. It also gave me the opportunity to re-learn wood burning on an EPA stove with a catalyst.
My first year hurdle was scavenging for wood and getting the wood to my house (my first burn I ordered a cord to get us by). I had a utility truck with a 6ft bed and I found one house on FB that had a tree down that was bucked and the owner wanted gone for free. He had a handful of rounds that were large but I managed to transport every piece back across 3 or 4 trips. Split and stacked was just under 2 cords on pallets in a spot the previous owner had setup. I ran out of space to stack but I kept on the lookout for more rounds and put them aside. As I burned down the pile, I would split and stack the new wood to get somewhat ahead of next season.
It helped that I'm not 100% reliant on the stove for heat and both the wife and myself are at work during the day. Last year was the first season burning 24 hours (except for a 3 week window where I swapped stoves). New stove is a F45 v2 and it was amazing not having to worry about burning down long pieces. My current storage setup allows for ~4 cords split between pallets and two 1 cord racks. Every year I upgrade the setup a bit. I started with a husky maul from HD and split every round I gathered by hand. Last year my wife got me a fiskars splitting axe which made splitting a treat. This year I got a fiskars maul to help with the really large/knotty pieces, totally replacing my husky. Next year I may try my hand at a wood shed if lumber prices come down, this would up my storage to possibly 6 cords. Maybe eventually spring for a hydraulic splitter
I've now become the wood guy on my block. I've setup my wood pile to be neat and clean, it's almost self advertising from the road. Neighbors call me when they have a tree down. I don't have a saw to buck large trees but they'll call tree guys to buck it for them and I'll come and haul it away to save them some trouble. I live in a mixed area where it's half urban and half rural, all trees. I'd say majority of homes have chimneys but not a lot of people burn, at least not wood. Aside from months of no new listings for wood, every year there seems to be a healthy supply to pickup. Unfortunately, I'm all loaded up on what I can store as rounds and it's killing me to miss out on fresh ash rounds but there'll be others.
This hobby has become my workout with my current job being behind a desk. From Dec-Apr when we're not traveling on weekends I'll split and get a pile ready to stack in place of wood burned. It works out and now I have a system in place to find, retrieve and process wood. Still working on adequate storage to hold a multi year supply but it's something to work toward.
Right on!
I never knew there was any kind of kinship with this, I hardly know anyone around here that burns.
I have ten acres of timber - but not ready to cut yet. I do grab any standing dead asap!
I am a pretty good wood scrounge, and I get permits for the national forest when I have time. I retired in March, we will see what this year brings.
my wife is the lead shipper in a plant that has a wood shop - and she seems to get first pick at what they are tossing - and we never wonder where our first pieces for fire-starting are going to come from. I have Cedar on the property, and it seems to die often enough to keep us supplied.
I can cut and split it down to about 3" diameter - then I use a crazy sharp knife to slice off starter pieces - kind of like the "feather sticks" they do in survivalist circles - but I slice them free of the stick- but being a bit of a survivalist/prepper - I almost never use a match - those paper thin cedar pieces will catch a spark and go - the wife and I compete for 1 strike status with the steel and the little ferro rods! something I can do more consistently than she can - but she is determined to win it!
kind of fun for a couple seniors.
I have lit the stove every night for over two months using a fire piston - was a fun time - and I did twice (second time to be sure it wasn't an accident) light the stove from an ember from a bow-drill. knowing I can do it is good enough for me! what a lot of work!
we also practice lighting it in the dark - we have a lot of power outages - one this morning in fact - but we do use a headlamp to see enough to be safe.
My primary (prevailing?) wind is from the south - and I inherited a 10X18 steel quonset hut deal. we finally figured out it could make a good woodshed - I have it aligned north/south, with doors on the south side, but a gap completely across the bottom and a large vent above the doors with a roof over it to keep the rain out - but with it open on the other side, we fill it from one side and use the older side first, then fill the side we just used and go to the other side the next year. it holds just over 5 cord, and we never us a full three cords a year here. and I leave the south doors open all summer - so it power-ventilates - naturally aspirated!
I have a tarp shelter with pallets on the ground that we keep the next stage of wood under - and it gets stacked in the woodshed at a year old.
I have to laugh at myself, my friends give me a hard time about all the effort I put into it - but then I got on here and found I am more of an amateur!
my next project is a lifter for the big rounds to go on my hydraulic splitter - that is how I found this awesome site.
5 years ago I was gifted more big oak than I could haul with 10 trips with my one ton truck. we mostly use that for overnight, and really cold days.
We will be out of that in 2024. but at my age I feel those big oak rounds for a few days after messing with them. the last of them get split this month!!
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