That's the way I used to run the house when we had a pellet burner + woodstove. The pellet stove was on a digital thermostat.
Exacty my game plan. Heating goes in my stack of bills, so there's no real incentive for anyone but me to haul wood or pack the stove unless I disconnect the thermostat remotely through my cell phone using a z-wave module.At less than $2 US a gallon, I'll set the T stats @ 62 F, and work the house temps up from there. Save fire wood, save $$$'s? I'm good with it.
And our co-op made the brilliant move a few years ago to break away from a long term agreement to purchase power from a group because it was depending too much on natural gas. And got us long term committed to generation plants using coal.
Your stack of bills? Who pays your other bills for you?Exacty my game plan. Heating goes in my stack of bills, so there's no real incentive for anyone but me to haul wood or pack the stove unless I disconnect the thermostat remotely through my cell phone using a z-wave module.
But it doesn't come to that, often.
BrotheBart: What was the impact on cost? Isn't coal still cheap or was it a bad move since NG got cheaper than coal?
At less than $2 US a gallon, I'll set the T stats @ 62 F, and work the house temps up from there. Save fire wood, save $$$'s? I'm good with it.
Long story short I'm a kept man.Your stack of bills? Who pays your other bills for you?
My wife an I have been together for 25 years. We're still getting to know each other.What difference does it make who pays the bill, it still got spent. It seems that splitting them up creates more work.
By all means.My wife an I have been together for 25 years. We're still getting to know each other.
The problem I have supplementing with wood is the inefficiency of constantly starting up a cold stove. It wastes wood, takes longer to get the fire going, and results in the need to clean the flue more often. That's why shoulder season is harder on us die-hard wood burners.
I also think it's harder on the stove and it actually takes more effort to burn part time.
I usually spend my money to save money. The wood stove is along that line of thinking. First year burning in the new house was 2008 when heating oil dipped to 1.50/gallon. Still, there I was scrounging for pallets and burning green oak (start your wood pile BEFORE you're serious about burning wood) and loving all that "free heat". Chainsaw, chaps, woodshed, insert, liner, brushes, sticks, cap, etc and I'm 5k into a new hobby. Saved squat first year, then better, then better, then it got to be work and I remember my father's incursion into wood burning back in the 1970s. Now my philosophy is to keep the thermostat at 62 and start a fire when I get home. No more burping heat into an empty house while I'm at work. The weekends are for burning, but with 3yrs of wood on hand I don't sweat starting up a cold firebox. When we remodeled the kitchen I opened up the wall between the family room where the stove is located and the rest of the house. Now we don't need fans anymore and the heat is much more easily distributed. I still bring home pallets when I find them. Got a stack of about 20 waiting to get chopped up. I thought by now the wife would be after me to reduce the eyesore but last time I took it down she berated me for chopping up "the baby dogs" jungle gym. The chase the chipmunks into them and spend hours whining about it.
Thought about a fire this weekend, house was 65. Winter's coming, and I'm not ready.
Holy "carpola" . . . in 2008 heating oil prices up here were going through the roof and were close to $4 in some places . . . while I had always wanted a woodstove those prices were the motivation I needed to get one.
Now my philosophy is to keep the thermostat at 62 and start a fire when I get home.
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