Easy Livin’ 3000
Minister of Fire
Three good hobbies to have. Add investing, fishing and hunting, and you are really in business. Should also mention home brewing and bee-keeping.Except maybe farmers and gardeners.
Three good hobbies to have. Add investing, fishing and hunting, and you are really in business. Should also mention home brewing and bee-keeping.Except maybe farmers and gardeners.
I used to feel that way, but I'm getting to the point where sitting on my ass is pretty satisfying. Particularly next to the stove. Guess it's old age.The more I burn, the more I get to cut. I look at it like hunting. Bringing home a deer or a nice load of wood is more satisfying than sitting on my ass.
Hmm, I have all of the above except bee keeping and hunting. I'll also add engine/car repair as useful.Three good hobbies to have. Add investing, fishing and hunting, and you are really in business. Should also mention home brewing and bee-keeping.
Where in Alaska? Would like to hear more about that adventure.Wood is our only heat source, but it doesn't get too cold here. The rain makes it uncomfortable without heat, though, and since we line dry our clothes, we need the stove going when the humidity is high or they stay damp for a few days.
Our wood is from our own land (oak, manzanita and some gray pine) and some free wood from a neighbor now and then. We save branches on down to the size you can make with your thumb and index finger. I've taken an interest in wood carving, and am currently shaving down a thick slab of wood I rescued from the landfill. My antique planer is making a nice pile of fluffy shavings I can use as fire starts.
For my one winter in Alaska, wood was my only heat. The stove was too large for my one-room cabin. I had the hardest time staying comfortable, and a couple of times woke up with frost on my bedding. I had one chimney fire and I managed to catch my stupid outhouse on fire.
as a skier, we often say, "ski good or eat wood"Except maybe farmers and gardeners.
Your wife is happy with it, you bet!
Flipping the switch on the gas logs, No Dice. Not the same.
The woman who watches a man build a wood fire will want to be friendly with that man, it is in their DNA.
We do burn to save money.Do you ever think that all this work with the stove, wood, cleaning the chimney etc.is worth it? I have been way behind with my 3 year plan and I starting thinking about all this work. I don't burn to save money on gas but just enjoy the fire and maybe the time has come to just to turn the heat up. Has anyone else gone through this or stopped? Fespo
Fortunately I’m a country boy, I’d have all those tools and equipment even if I didn’t burn the wood. Got to do something with all these downed trees! May as well heat my house!I've heard people say that they enjoy the free heat. That is absurd. You earn every BTU. Add up the cost of the stove and chimney, installation (if), cleaning, wood buying or "finding", time spent cutting, splitting, stacking, Chainsaws, splitters, storage means. Truck, trailer wear and tear. Time tending the stove...etc.All said it is a large undertaking. If you love doing it, then it is a hobby, and one of the few hobbies that can pay for itself. But make no mistake, you pay for some of it and earn all of it. Certainly not the worst thing you could choose to endeavor.
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