What Is In Your Stove Right Now?

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It looks like we're in for a few days of warmer weather before we get another shot of Arctic Blast.
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I already told my wife that I plan to let the stove burn out this Wednesday so I can remove the outdoor clean-out cap and see if it's fouled up yet. This mixed mystery wood is a little past seasoned, and about half of it has white fungus growing on it. It's burning good and hot, and I have it "drying" out in the two racks next to my stove. We do a hot burn with it every other day, and it smokes very little to none after filling the stove. It's just a precautionary check on my part.
 
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I already told my wife that I plan to let the stove burn out this Wednesday so I can remove the outdoor clean-out cap and see if it's fouled up yet. This mixed mystery wood is a little past seasoned, and about half of it has white fungus growing on it. It's burning good and hot, and I have it "drying" out in the two racks next to my stove. We do a hot burn with it every other day, and it smokes very little to none after filling the stove. It's just a precautionary check on my part.
I cleaned ours after burning about five face cord of pine in the shoulder season, not much came out but it's nice to see what's in the pipe.
 
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Below zero tonight and strong north wind gusts. Loading shagbark hickory for coals and been adding pine slabs in between loads for a quick btu supplement.
 
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Almost every kind of wood I wish I didn't have. In SW Idaho, we have literally nothing but softwoods. I have Doug Fir 2x12 boards, some white and grand fir, plenty of ponderosa and lodgepole, and a bit of tamarack (western), all sourced from nearby Payette National forest. If you're a scrounger like me around here, you'll only be disappointed. Down here it's desert like northern Nevada, so most scrounge finds here are sh*t maple (silver, smells like a buck of bluegill), poplar (don't get me started), willow (I only use it for black powder charcoal), and cottonwood (the holy grail of awful smelling foulness). However, if you're willing to knock on a couple of doors, a lot of river bottom properties will have a grove of Black Locust they're happy to be rid of, and usually can be had free if you're willing to clean up thorns and kill the underground runner so they don't come back. No other hardwoods are available,with one exception. I'll segue into that in a minute.

If you're willing to drive around all day, there is also a lot of Juniper in the Owyhees that the BLM lets go on permit for 1 dollar per cord, and it's decent stuff if you can stand the smell (which I happen to like). The real treasure is when you find a dead and downed Mountain Mahogany near the Juniper. You can't cut them even standing dead, but I'll snag one on the ground every so often. It is the best firewood I have ever used, it's relative density is 1.11 (meaning it will sink like a stone when dropped in water), roughly 1.5 times that of oak or locust. It's right up there with Hop Hornbeam/Desert Ironwood, smells much better, and it's a dang sight better than Osage Orange in BTU output. A few years back a guy on arboristsite.com in my neck o' the woods got some and did an endurance test in his Blaze King, and still had coals and heat output nearly 48 hours later, all in single digit temperatures outside. Most of what we have is doodoo, but a couple are excellent.

In the future I'm going to switch to mostly juniper. The high altitude ones we have in the Owyhee mountains are really dense for a softwood, 10 percent or so more than our next best conifer, Tamarack. My buddy had some still green, and when I picked a round of it up, the best guess i had (based on weight) was Shagbark Hickory. I was wrong. So I bummed a couple rounds to split and try, and after seasoning I got a better burn time from it than when I was burning cherry or apple (which are likewise hard to get even with all the orchards around here). The mahogany is great stuff. Perfect BBQ wood, and it lasts longer and is easier to control than even anthracite in a hand fired stove. One day if I ever find a piece straight enough, I will have myself one heck of a beautiful rifle stock.
 
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We had -15 for a regular temp with some good winds (realfeel ?) the last of the wood we planned on for January went in the Liberty, beech with a few rounds of ironwood.

I'll be making some spaghetti sauce and then around noon we'll poach some eggs in the sauce, once the eggs are cooked we'll put it on toast, pancetta and cheese for lunch. :)
 
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nothing, coldest day of the year and there's nothing in the stove.
 
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I just loaded up the Liberty with beech, this is the wood we planned on burning in February.

I did poach some eggs in spaghetti sauce with some pancetta with cheese over toast, we both thought it tasted great. I saw my grandmother do this once but we saw it on a cooking show the other morning so I decided to cook it for the boss.
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Looks really tasty on a cold day like today.

Looks like we are in for a much colder than average February next month too. This is why we have to keep two years worth of seasoned wood on hand.
 
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Looks really tasty on a cold day like today.

Looks like we are in for a much colder than average February next month too. This is why we have to keep two years worth of seasoned wood on hand.
We still have just under eight face cord of good hardwood covered and just under two face cord of shoulder season wood covered so we should be fine.

I saw that forecast on the weather channel for Feb. - March, lets hope they're wrong. Last year put a good dent in our better hardwood and this year is doing the same.

I have a few more meals I promised the wife that I would cook (Braciole) and another I can't think of at the moment.
 
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Looks really tasty on a cold day like today.

Looks like we are in for a much colder than average February next month too. This is why we have to keep two years worth of seasoned wood on hand.
A couple of cold ones coming up, this is from NOAA but Tuesdays wind chill doesn't make any sense...does it?

Tonight
Mostly clear, with a low around -22. Wind chill values as low as -35. West wind 6 to 11 mph.
Tuesday
Increasing clouds, with a high near 16. Wind chill values as low as -39. Southwest wind 5 to 7 mph.
 
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Last winter was much colder, and longer, than expected. I litterally ran out of firewood in March, and that was my normal "average" seasons worth of firewood. I was forced to order an emergency 5 face cord to get me through the rest of winter. Thankfully, a lot of it was soft maple, seasoned for 6 months. It dried out pretty good sitting in the two racks next to my stove. I used about half of that wood last spring and the other half last fall.
 
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Last winter was much colder, and longer, than expected. I litterally ran out of firewood in March, and that was my normal "average" seasons worth of firewood. I was forced to order an emergency 5 face cord to get me through the rest of winter. Thankfully, a lot of it was soft maple, seasoned for 6 months. It dried out pretty good sitting in the two racks next to my stove. I used about half of that wood last spring and the other half last fall.
Last year tested the wood inventory that's for sure. I think our neighbor will run out of wood because he never put a bunch of ash in he bought, I even offered to help but he was busy running around to comic con, he never even covered it.!!! They've pulled this chit before and I was out in -25 degree weather splitting wood for him but he'll need to hire a young kid, my days of doing that are over.
 
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Last year tested the wood inventory that's for sure. I think our neighbor will run out of wood because he never put a bunch of ash in he bought, I even offered to help but he was busy running around to comic con, he never even covered it.!!! They've pulled this chit before and I was out in -25 degree weather splitting wood for him but he'll need to hire a young kid, my days of doing that are over.

That's crazy! Our winters are too unpredictable to not be over-prepared. I put my log splitter away by the end of October. If not don't have my wood split by then, shame on me;em
 
A couple of cold ones coming up, this is from NOAA but Tuesdays wind chill doesn't make any sense...does it?

Tonight
Mostly clear, with a low around -22. Wind chill values as low as -35. West wind 6 to 11 mph.
Tuesday
Increasing clouds, with a high near 16. Wind chill values as low as -39. Southwest wind 5 to 7 mph.

No, doesn't sound right. Maybe -9 not -39.
 
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Tonight will be -16 without the wind chill. It was -13 this morning, with a -30 wind chill. So a -39 wind chill is possible in tonight with the right wind.
 
running my best wood - white birch - through the stove right now. it hasn't gotten above -30*C in almost 5 days here. minus 40*C territory with the windchill. next few days it's supposed to warm up ten degrees or so, then drop off again. i've tapped the birch stack that is meant to be next year's wood. will be a busy spring getting firewood for me.
 
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-14F here right now without the wind, which is howling outside, been burning a lot of pine today, quick hot fires, not a lot of coal build up, which is nice since we're pushing the madison harder than normal, day off though so I don't mind filling it a few extra times, the load for tonight will be mostly beech and yellow birch. stay warm folks
 
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I did poach some eggs in spaghetti sauce with some pancetta with cheese over toast, we both thought it tasted great. I saw my grandmother do this once but we saw it on a cooking show the other morning so I decided to cook it for the boss.

Ahhhhh! That looks great. My boss is a huge poached egg girl. I'll have to give this a try. Thanks.

16F with wind gusting at 35-38mph currently. Not real pleasant outside! Looking to load up some pine soon.
 
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Ahhhhh! That looks great. My boss is a huge poached egg girl. I'll have to give this a try. Thanks.

16F with wind gusting at 35-38mph currently. Not real pleasant outside! Looking to load up some pine soon.
I cracked an egg into a small bowl and then slid it into the sauce, we cooked them for five minutes and at the four minute mark put the cheese on and then put the cover on. You use the cover when your poaching the eggs too.
 
I just loaded up the Liberty with a row of beech on the bottom with some ironwood on the top row.
 
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Some of you guys make it sound so technical when you load wood into your stoves:)

For me it's a much simpler approach. Take unknown wood from rack, load the stove, heat the house, repeat when needed>>