Weekend Warrior
Pre-takeoff checklist
- Joined
- Jul 29, 2019
- Messages
- 425
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Mr Madman
In my mid-twenties, I bought a house with a woodstove on 5 wooded acres. I thought I would save all kinds of money by heating the house with wood during the cold winters of the upper mid-west. The experience taught me an important lesson (and actually several other valuable lessons): mainly that my time is worth money. I learned this lesson after several years of wood heating by one day "doing the math" of my time of cutting, hauling, and splitting (by hand with a maul and axe -- I was young) of the wood vs. what it would cost me to heat with propane / gas. The math showed I was working that woodstove for about $2 an hour. I realized a second part-time job, even at minimum wage, would be more efficient than my woodstove and I stopped heating with wood.
Some other lessons I learned before I stopped: 1) A modern, efficient (read oxygen-starved) woodstove can backdraft, with "explosive" results -- got knocked across the room and lost all the hair on my legs which leads to the second lesson: 2) don't open the door to a back-drafting stove, especially in your underwear. 3) Maul's split feet much better / faster than they split wood. 4) Splitting wood by hand when the chopping block is surrounded by previously chopped logs can sometimes create a natural fulcrum which can send a log flying right at your head while simultaneously sending your maul at your foot. 5) The local doctor, and later sheriff, can be hard to convince that you, and not your spouse, cut your own foot AND gave yourself a black eye from your unintentional log-splitting fulcrum. 6) Chain saw blades can be bought for $15 with a 30 minute trip to the store (this was 1995) while sharpening a blade by hand takes hours and never is quite right afterward. 7) Different types of wood burn at DRASTICALLY different temperatures (see backdraft lesson #1 above).
So all this being said, now 25 years later I just moved into a house with a previously-installed woodstove, and I've started heating with wood again. I guess I never learn! Why would I heat again with wood? As I've aged, I've found a few reasons other than money saving. I'm doing it now because I like the independence of recovering my own "fuel" from my own acreage. I also like when I get a chill, I can just go sit by the fire for a few minutes, and the chill is gone. I no longer split by hand, but I have a nice hydraulic splitter. Unlike my stove from the 1990's, this current stove has adjustable air intake, to avoid a backdraft. And, I don't hold any dreams of saving tons of money, but just some independence.
Anyone else heat with wood?
Some other lessons I learned before I stopped: 1) A modern, efficient (read oxygen-starved) woodstove can backdraft, with "explosive" results -- got knocked across the room and lost all the hair on my legs which leads to the second lesson: 2) don't open the door to a back-drafting stove, especially in your underwear. 3) Maul's split feet much better / faster than they split wood. 4) Splitting wood by hand when the chopping block is surrounded by previously chopped logs can sometimes create a natural fulcrum which can send a log flying right at your head while simultaneously sending your maul at your foot. 5) The local doctor, and later sheriff, can be hard to convince that you, and not your spouse, cut your own foot AND gave yourself a black eye from your unintentional log-splitting fulcrum. 6) Chain saw blades can be bought for $15 with a 30 minute trip to the store (this was 1995) while sharpening a blade by hand takes hours and never is quite right afterward. 7) Different types of wood burn at DRASTICALLY different temperatures (see backdraft lesson #1 above).
So all this being said, now 25 years later I just moved into a house with a previously-installed woodstove, and I've started heating with wood again. I guess I never learn! Why would I heat again with wood? As I've aged, I've found a few reasons other than money saving. I'm doing it now because I like the independence of recovering my own "fuel" from my own acreage. I also like when I get a chill, I can just go sit by the fire for a few minutes, and the chill is gone. I no longer split by hand, but I have a nice hydraulic splitter. Unlike my stove from the 1990's, this current stove has adjustable air intake, to avoid a backdraft. And, I don't hold any dreams of saving tons of money, but just some independence.
Anyone else heat with wood?