I'm kinda like Jags and BackwoodsSavage: The stove gets fired up when the house temp is below 65 deg. My house is located about 1300' elevation and is exposed to wind on all sides. We have had many cold, damp and windy days and nights so the stove has been on slow burn 24/7 for about two weeks. A rough estimate is that I have burned about 10 cubic feet of wood so far. Most of this has been cookies, chunks and small rounds. Larger rounds and splits are being saved for winter burns.
I am building a wall of book shelves in the great room. Stove heat speeds drying of the spackling paste, caulk, glue, primer and paint. Recently purchased one of those ole timer folding clothes dryer racks and placed it in front of the stove to dry as much laundry as possible without using propane. This should also help dry clothing after snow blowing this winter. Even though I have an ultra high efficiency propane boiler, I still shudder when I hear it turn on.
Yesterday was two years and ten months since my stem cell transplant and my oncologists gave me truly excellent news. Please forgive my need to shout this out from the highest hilltop.
Life is good.
John_M
I am building a wall of book shelves in the great room. Stove heat speeds drying of the spackling paste, caulk, glue, primer and paint. Recently purchased one of those ole timer folding clothes dryer racks and placed it in front of the stove to dry as much laundry as possible without using propane. This should also help dry clothing after snow blowing this winter. Even though I have an ultra high efficiency propane boiler, I still shudder when I hear it turn on.
Yesterday was two years and ten months since my stem cell transplant and my oncologists gave me truly excellent news. Please forgive my need to shout this out from the highest hilltop.
Life is good.
John_M