Getting closer here as well . . . there is a bit of a chill in the air, but things still aren't quite cold enough yet for me to want to fire up the woodstove.
By the looks of the weather forecast, the pine should heat the house until November gets here.Love me some dry pine to crackle and ping, just a touch of piney smell in the house to drive out the chill. So much more festive than full time dead of winter heating.
Nice mix but no oak?By the looks of the weather forecast, the pine should heat the house until November gets here.
After we stop burning pine, we'll have Yellow Birch, Red & Sugar Maple, Cherry, Ash and American Hophornbeam for the coldest months.
We never had any Oak growing on any of our land we have. I did plant some smaller Red Oak years back but I'll never be around when it's big enough for burning.Nice mix but no oak?
BeautifulWhite Birch and a piece of pine, not really early season wood, but I brought home too much Birch on the last load, so instead of leaving it in the rain it went in the stove.
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Better be cold out or it may get warm in the house, looks toasty!
I seasoned that Oak for 4 years {2 top covered} and some still pizzed water back at me.I'd trade all my oak for cherry anyways, smells so nice, seasons quick and love the color, never had yellow birch but they tell me it's nice.
When we started burning, the majority of our firewood was Cherry with maybe two face cord of Sugar Maple. Since our wood stove is in the basement, when it turned colder out, the Cherry doesn't do the job.I'd trade all my oak for cherry anyways, smells so nice, seasons quick and love the color, never had yellow birch but they tell me it's nice.
oh man, i looked at this pic and actually felt radiative heat flush across my cheeks. i can't wait to light the stove, but first these record-setting temps are gonna have to drop off. beauty fire man!White Birch and a piece of pine, not really early season wood, but I brought home too much Birch on the last load, so instead of leaving it in the rain it went in the stove.
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120*F what?!?! I experienced these temps in Death Valley…..chasing wild donkeys…..Last night I started the first of this year's break-in fires with a bunch of pine 1x scraps as kindling. Worked pretty well with the stove top peaking at 120F. Tonight I've started the next step with two small walnut splits and a couple pieces of kindling. Aiming for not much beyond 200F, so we'll see.
There's a lot of latitude within the goal of getting the stove warm enough to dry it out but not hot. It's still warm enough here that we don't need heat yet (40s at night, 60s during the day), so this is a bit early to be sure. I'm ready for fall though.120*F what?!?! I experienced these temps in Death Valley…..chasing wild donkeys…..
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