skelm said:
Getting new hardwoods in, wonder if I need to put anything over them next to the fire- or just leave them as-is. They do have a big piece of slate that will provide most of the cover. Anyone put anything in front of theirs just incase the odd coal rolls out during cleaning
Thanks
Yes, but all you need is any rug of recent vintage. A lot of places make a big deal out of selling hearth rugs that are fire-retardant, but when I researched it a little bit, I discovered that all new rugs sold in this country have been required to be flame-retardant for more than 20 years now. Just your ordinary wool or wool-blend rug, color, shape and design of your choice will protect your floor.
There are various degrees of fire protection in textiles, but unless you think there's a chance an actively flaming log will roll out of the stove and lie on the rug for half an hour unnoticed, they don't matter for practical purposes. Anything less than that and the worst you'll get is a small melted spot on the rug. The plastic-y ones another poster mentions are the most super-duper fire-retardant you can get, but most of them are ugly-- and just not necessary.
Also, fwiw, in three years of burning full-time, I've had exactly one small spark hit my hearth rug and make a small superficial charred/melted spot. I am glad it didn't burn the (very old softwood) floor, though.
I'd suggest buying something reasonably attractive, dark and with a busy pattern like a fake Persian rug, as cheaply as possible. You want a hearth rug that it won't break your heart or your budget if you do get a little burn mark on it and want to replace it, not to mention the general wood debris, ashes, etc., that will collect in it.
When my very elderly mother, a cigarette smoker, passed away a few years ago and I first went into her home office, I was horrified to see that the cheap, old indoor-outdoor carpeting she had over the hardwood floor was just covered with dozens of large and small blackened, melted spots from dropped cigarettes. But the floor underneath was pristine. She'd clearly been losing track of her lighted cigs for years, but never even burned an actual hole in the carpet, never mind burned the house down. (It's pure luck she managed not to do that anywhere on the bare hardwood floors in the rest of the house.)