Hello,
My neighbor dropped by while I was down in the yard splitting wood. He wanted me to go rabbit hunting with him the next day but I told him I had to get my hickory split so it's ready to burn. He couldn't believe I was turning rabbit hunting down to split wood. I probably am crazy and might regret that later. I don't know.
Anyway, he is a logger who gets shipped around the country in "super crews" when disaster strikes to clean up all the downed trees. He began pointing to the various logs I had stood on end for splitting and telling me species each was. When he pointed to the cedar he said it's good wood and will make the house smell nice.
While I was splitting yesterday I was trying to figure out how the aroma of cedar burning could ever escape the firebox of an EPA stove since they don't put smoke into the room while burning. Can any of you tell me how or if the aroma of wood burning gets out of the stove into the household air in an EPA stove (specifically non-cat)?
My neighbor dropped by while I was down in the yard splitting wood. He wanted me to go rabbit hunting with him the next day but I told him I had to get my hickory split so it's ready to burn. He couldn't believe I was turning rabbit hunting down to split wood. I probably am crazy and might regret that later. I don't know.
Anyway, he is a logger who gets shipped around the country in "super crews" when disaster strikes to clean up all the downed trees. He began pointing to the various logs I had stood on end for splitting and telling me species each was. When he pointed to the cedar he said it's good wood and will make the house smell nice.
While I was splitting yesterday I was trying to figure out how the aroma of cedar burning could ever escape the firebox of an EPA stove since they don't put smoke into the room while burning. Can any of you tell me how or if the aroma of wood burning gets out of the stove into the household air in an EPA stove (specifically non-cat)?