Wood Burners
Right then, as the winter will soon be upon us :thumbdown: I've like many others have got to start sorting out my wood burner. Have just been through the local rag in search on a company to supply and have just noticed you can order more than one type of wood. I presume this entails wood that burns at different rates and for some perhaps gives of a different sort of smell whilst burning, but need I be concerned about what wood I burn or would those with wood burners suggest a mixed load?
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Re: Wood Burners
Originally Posted by simonmarkellis
(Post 6107297)
Right then, as the winter will soon be upon us :thumbdown: I've like many others have got to start sorting out my wood burner. Have just been through the local rag in search on a company to supply and have just noticed you can order more than one type of wood. I presume this entails wood that burns at different rates and for some perhaps gives of a different sort of smell whilst burning, but need I be concerned about what wood I burn or would those with wood burners suggest a mixed load?
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Re: Wood Burners
puriri is very good as it burns slowly and gives of a huge amount of heat.
Gum is ok. We burn anything that is kicking around the farm! If you're getting wood delivered ask if it's seasoned - it will burn longer and better if it is. Oh and check its dry! |
Re: Wood Burners
Originally Posted by pixi-dust
(Post 6107390)
puriri is very good as it burns slowly and gives of a huge amount of heat.
Gum is ok. We burn anything that is kicking around the farm! If you're getting wood delivered ask if it's seasoned - it will burn longer and better if it is. Oh and check its dry! |
Re: Wood Burners
Originally Posted by danny.f
(Post 6107376)
Sorry mate-of no use to you-just wanted to post a reply.
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Re: Wood Burners
Originally Posted by pixi-dust
(Post 6107390)
Oh and check its dry!
i recall my nan having a trail of soot across her living room when a ball of fire shot out and scampered into the kitchen |
Re: Wood Burners
I had a wood-burning stove in the house I rented in France. Used to buy my wood in early summer and store it under cover (not under a tarp, but if you don't have cover, tarp is certainly better than nothing), outside. I used to buy mine early so I could buy it still slightly damp. That way it was a damn sight cheaper. :D And it had plenty of time to dry out before winter. :thumbsup:
Can't help with type of wood, sorry! I just remember having great fun chopping it all. :eek: |
Re: Wood Burners
Originally Posted by simonmarkellis
(Post 6107297)
Right then, as the winter will soon be upon us :thumbdown: I've like many others have got to start sorting out my wood burner. Have just been through the local rag in search on a company to supply and have just noticed you can order more than one type of wood. I presume this entails wood that burns at different rates and for some perhaps gives of a different sort of smell whilst burning, but need I be concerned about what wood I burn or would those with wood burners suggest a mixed load?
Ideally, you need to get your wood in a year in advance of when you use it, and store it so its dry and ready to burn. Otherwise, you dont know what you are gonna get -recently cut wood may not burn very well. |
Re: Wood Burners
Originally Posted by Yotty
(Post 6107687)
Can't help with type of wood, sorry! I just remember having great fun chopping it all. Quote from Maz... :ohmy:
Good to see you, Yotty. Not on MSN tonight, but ping me another time, OK? Need to catch up. |
Re: Wood Burners
Yer ther is a difference you appartenly are better off getting a mix because one type starts a fire well and one lot burns for a long time can't rember what they called but this will bump this up and i will ask OH
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Re: Wood Burners
Apparently you can only burn softwood in some woodburners. Mine doesn't specify, so I burn anything... :D Gum burns hot, pine burns quick. Big lumps burn slower than small bits. It's like being a Girl Guide all over again :lol:
Buy now and store - we bought late in the season and the wood we got was wet. :-( |
Re: Wood Burners
You'll also get really fast at lighting it. When we first got here I used to faff about for ages getting it to light. But after a wee while you can do it in your sleep, in about a minute!
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Re: Wood Burners
Originally Posted by simonmarkellis
(Post 6107297)
Right then, as the winter will soon be upon us :thumbdown: I've like many others have got to start sorting out my wood burner. Have just been through the local rag in search on a company to supply and have just noticed you can order more than one type of wood. I presume this entails wood that burns at different rates and for some perhaps gives of a different sort of smell whilst burning, but need I be concerned about what wood I burn or would those with wood burners suggest a mixed load?
We use dry flax leaves , pine cones & some douglas fir chopped into kindling to start the fire. Then move onto douglas fir split logs to get a good blaze. Once we have the heat stoked up in the fire box we use the gum logs and keep the flue & door shut. Makes for a long , hot ,slow burn & uses less wood. Any wood you collect yourself should be seasoned over the year to dry. Don't burn 'green' wood . Green wood is unseasoned wood. You'll get a smoky fire and a build up of creosote in your flue. Not good for your wood burner. HTH |
Re: Wood Burners
Tea tree is the one that burns really hot and well, but is a bugger to catch so you need somthing else to catch it.
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Re: Wood Burners
Originally Posted by BEVS here
(Post 6111618)
....Green wood is unseasoned wood. You'll get a smoky fire and a build up of creosote in your flue. Not good for your wood burner....
Not sure what the recommendations are about sweeping here but in UK it was suggested as an annual event for solid fuel fires/stoves by the Sweeps Association (NACS or something like that) - but then they would say that......... THinking out loud - frequency would depend upon how well your burner was working, where the flue runs/its orientation and how much unseasoned/gummy stuff you burned. I'd be interested in finding out more about chimney/flue sweeping. Anyone with any info? TIA :thumbup: |
Re: Wood Burners
Originally Posted by lardyl
(Post 6117460)
or for you/your home *if* you get a flue/chimney fire which can happen with gummed up flues.
Not sure what the recommendations are about sweeping here but in UK it was suggested as an annual event for solid fuel fires/stoves by the Sweeps Association (NACS or something like that) - but then they would say that......... THinking out loud - frequency would depend upon how well your burner was working, where the flue runs/its orientation and how much unseasoned/gummy stuff you burned. I'd be interested in finding out more about chimney/flue sweeping. Anyone with any info? TIA :thumbup: |
Re: Wood Burners
Originally Posted by swstephenwood
(Post 6117597)
does any one know if it is cheaper to buy a wood burner in uk or in aus we are moving to victoria :blink:
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Re: Wood Burners
Just because its a wood burner fella doesn't mean you can only burn wood,
You can burn anything!!!:curse: Wood, coal, kids, rubbish by the time it knackers the enviro we will be long gone. LOL Just burn anything to keep warm. I'm sure Dannyf would give out lots of heat on a burn up:D |
Re: Wood Burners
We use pine ones and soft wood for getting the fire going and once it's been burning for an hour or so and is very hot we put in big hard wood logs, which burn slower and hotter but only if you've got the fire up to temp with fast burning soft wood.
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Re: Wood Burners
I must get round to ordering some more this week:thumbup:
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Re: Wood Burners
Originally Posted by lardyl
(Post 6117460)
...I'd be interested in finding out more about chimney/flue sweeping.
Anyone with any info? TIA :thumbup: This year, the neighbour is lending us his brush. It's just... on the roof, pop the cap off, brisk sweep into "door closed" burner, then clean up. As for the wood. We light pine fitch with a firelighter, then burn the native woods. A mixed load is fine, but were told we need to avoid one of the natives as it burns too hot for our older burner, but have forgotten which one. However, the newer burners apparently struggle to burn through the night, so we'll just keep going. |
Re: Wood Burners
Originally Posted by hazeandsteve
(Post 6130384)
We had ours swept when we moved in last year, cost about $40.
This year, the neighbour is lending us his brush. It's just... on the roof, pop the cap off, brisk sweep into "door closed" burner, then clean up. .... |
Re: Wood Burners
I used to love burning manuka, hell but it was hot. The air quality will improve this winter now that we're not there anymore:D
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