Wood stove season
A small wood stove is our heat source for our horribly cold room. There are drafts, holes and absolutely no insulation. It is drywall, studs and then exterior brick. Nothing to hold the heat in or keep the cold out. One of the windows is broken with plastic taped over the holes. Oh, and the ceiling is open to the rafters…
Last Winter was our first season in the room and our first time using wood heat. We learned a lot in the process:
- We cut wood as we needed it instead of stockpiling. This led to some shortages and some work in the dark as we scrambled for a night’s worth of wood.
- We didn’t have a damper in the stove pipe. This led to most of the heat going up and out the chimney. It also meant that we had to feed the fire every three hours. I guess it was like having a newborn baby but with way more cussing and shivering.
- We didn’t have electricity run, so we didn’t have an overhead fan. Heat went up and up and out.
So we fixed some things, and we are in a little different place this year. First, we have a ceiling fan wired up. It keeps the hot air down at our level and helps with heat distribution.
Second, I put a damper in the stove pipe. This closes off the stove from the chimney, allowing the wood to burn longer in the stove. Since the stove is pretty old, it is not airtight. Without the damper air is sucked through the openings in the stove, making the fire burn hotter and shorter.
Third, we started cutting and splitting wood when it warmer outside and not needed for burning.
Last night we fired up the stove for the first time this season. We went through eight pieces of wood from six in the evening until morning, much less than our average last year and with no need to load it after we went to bed. The fire kept the room very toasty all night long. It was so warm that I slept on top of my sleeping bag. Kristin felt is was uncomfortably hot under her covers. This tells me that we might have figured out the formula to keep warm this year.
February 25, 2010 at 11:57 pm
I live in an urban house – we have an oil furnace, but I mostly use my airtight woodstove fireplace insert. I buy “energy logs” by the pallet (kind of like big presto logs with no additives, made from wood processing waste sawdust), stored in my basement, and trade homemade pickles and cookies for woodscraps from local millwork/cabinet guys. I love the kind of involvement the fire demands, the figuring out part, finding the balance of air flow and types of wood – turning up the heat means throwing in some soft wood scraps, cedar is the best when you can find it, and makes a wonderful crackling sound and miniature fireworks.
I love reading your blog. I need to live in the city, but your writing wakes up that ache for the country.