I was re-reading an old thread moments ago, and one of you folks made a comment that I think is worth re-visiting. It was stated that "overnight wood" was used at night (makes sense......lol).
But it begged the question........is there a type or size or condition for the wood burned overnight that is more suited for the long unattended hours? I haven't taken the time yet (and I should) to learn the different kinds of wood by sight, so if any of you are simply going to say: "use Maple" or "use ____________" then I'm gonna be lost until I get better educated.
Suffice to say it should be a hardwood, (and I rely on my trusted wood delivery person to ensure that every piece he gives me is truly "hardwood"), but does size matter? Round, unsplit -vs- split?
I'd imagine that a good flaming fire before I go to bed, with the added BIG chunk or two, would be logical, but is it that simple? Are there any rules to follow for the way the wood is stacked for an overnight burn? (I can't stack NS in my stove; not with 18" pieces anyway).
-Soupy1957
But it begged the question........is there a type or size or condition for the wood burned overnight that is more suited for the long unattended hours? I haven't taken the time yet (and I should) to learn the different kinds of wood by sight, so if any of you are simply going to say: "use Maple" or "use ____________" then I'm gonna be lost until I get better educated.
Suffice to say it should be a hardwood, (and I rely on my trusted wood delivery person to ensure that every piece he gives me is truly "hardwood"), but does size matter? Round, unsplit -vs- split?
I'd imagine that a good flaming fire before I go to bed, with the added BIG chunk or two, would be logical, but is it that simple? Are there any rules to follow for the way the wood is stacked for an overnight burn? (I can't stack NS in my stove; not with 18" pieces anyway).
-Soupy1957