Giantsfan1954
Senior Member
Yup,got family near Wilmington, said apparently they didn't go far enough south...
This is the humble little burner that saved the day. In a pinch, it'll heat the place all by itself...in any weather.
[/FONT][/SIZE]These Wood furnaces are well worth the money....if you have access to firewood. We retired to the country in 2002, on 40 acres of forestland...and the first Winter, our electric bills went over $400 a month during the coldest months. The next Summer, I had a Bryan outdoor wood furnace installed, and that has saved us between $1000 and $1500 a year on the heating bills. That unit has paid for itself several times over in the past 14+ years....plus, I get the benefit of all the good physical hard work throughout the year going through the forest and harvesting the dead/damaged trees...keeps me fit at age 75. Starting a few days ago, and extending for at least the next week, we will be having a near record cold spell, so the furnace will be cranked up to the max until the weather returns to more normal.
I hear you...I even split my wood manually with wedges and a sledge hammer. I have friends who offer to lend me their electric splitters, I politely decline...to their amazement. I'm 73 and in good shape yet due to practices like the one we're discussing and a lifetime of preference for blue collar jobs. We only have seven acres but there is lots of standing fuel.
Splitting is probably the hardest job. The first year, I split with a sledge and wedge, but I was spending more time doing that than everything else. When the Winter ended, I found a good sale on a Brave 25 ton splitter, and now I can get a couple weeks of wood split in just a couple of hours. I probably go through 7 or 8 cords of wood every Winter, so the splitter is a Must. Given that a cord of Oak weighs almost 4,000 pounds, and that I handle every piece of that wood at least 4 or 5 times...from the forest to the furnace....I get plenty of good "exercise" with just that one task...That, plus all the yardwork and gardening, etc., is like going to the gym on a regular basis. When I feel I can no longer handle this type of "labor", that will be the cue to sell this place, and move to some sort of senior facility, in a larger city/town....I dread that day.
Splitting is probably the hardest job. The first year, I split with a sledge and wedge, but I was spending more time doing that than everything else. When the Winter ended, I found a good sale on a Brave 25 ton splitter, and now I can get a couple weeks of wood split in just a couple of hours. I probably go through 7 or 8 cords of wood every Winter, so the splitter is a Must. Given that a cord of Oak weighs almost 4,000 pounds, and that I handle every piece of that wood at least 4 or 5 times...from the forest to the furnace....I get plenty of good "exercise" with just that one task...That, plus all the yardwork and gardening, etc., is like going to the gym on a regular basis. When I feel I can no longer handle this type of "labor", that will be the cue to sell this place, and move to some sort of senior facility, in a larger city/town....I dread that day.
A question. what do you do with the ashes?
I use the ashes for "fertilizer". I keep a metal trash can next to the furnace, and empty the ashes into that. When it gets about half full, I carry it over to the garden and empty it there, or onto areas in the yard where the grass isn't growing very good. That "carbon" gives the soil some added nutrients which helps grow things better. In the Springtime, when I till these ashes into the soil, it helps loosen up the hard clay soil we have, and the rains allow the ashes to be absorbed...where they give the garden and grass seed a jump start. I've found ways to use/recycle almost everything...I don't even pay for trash pickup service. I collect waste metal, glass, plastic, etc., and take that stuff to a local recycle center. Any "edible" waste, we toss into an area at the end of the yard, and it gives the local "critters" a snack, that evening. I built a burn pit from the leftover concrete "slag" the contractors left behind when they poured the concrete for the basement/foundation, and every week, I burn all paper, etc., in the pit. If it were financially feasible, I would put up a bunch of solar panels, and become virtually self sufficient....but the costs of such a system are still way too high.
I use the ashes for traction on our graded driveway when ice and sleet make the climb difficult. And also, the garden thing along with lime to break down the high acid pine humus. We have primarily sand and light soil...it takes a lot of doctoring. I too have no trash pickup and follow the same methods as you. I'm toying with the idea of a "passive" solar converter where water is pumped up to the roof into a large coil of dark PVC and exposed to direct Sun. The very hot water that issues from my garden hose on sunny days is testament to the viability of such a system. I'd use it for our pool. Are you a fan of Henry Thoreau?