Would this be considered anal, even for you guys?
So, here is how the story goes:
This is the end of my second month with my new Woodstock Keystone (love it!). I lit a break in fire during the second week of November, and it hasn't been out since. I haven't even used a single stick of kindling this whole time, just regular rounds and splits. This has meant a lot of days with open windows.
Today the weather man said it would be in mid fifties, so I decided it would be a perfect day to let it burn down, give it a good old inspection, vacuum it out and give the cat a little cleaning too. Everything looks great, cat is in pristine condition, and the chimney has zero signs of creosote.
Now, here's the anal part: Instead of letting it burn all the way down, I let it get down to a small bed of coals and shoveled those coals into my ash bucket. Set the bucket outside with the cover off. I then let the stove cool down to around 200 degrees and went ahead with my cleaning and inspection. After everything was spic-n-span, instead of lighting a new fire, I shoveled the coals from the ash bucket back into the stove, threw a few logs on (still no kindling) and away it went - flames before I even got the door closed. It's now back to regular operating temps.
So, does anyone else do something similar to keep the same fire going all season long, or I am just over the top?
PS. Hope everyone had a happy holiday
So, here is how the story goes:
This is the end of my second month with my new Woodstock Keystone (love it!). I lit a break in fire during the second week of November, and it hasn't been out since. I haven't even used a single stick of kindling this whole time, just regular rounds and splits. This has meant a lot of days with open windows.
Today the weather man said it would be in mid fifties, so I decided it would be a perfect day to let it burn down, give it a good old inspection, vacuum it out and give the cat a little cleaning too. Everything looks great, cat is in pristine condition, and the chimney has zero signs of creosote.
Now, here's the anal part: Instead of letting it burn all the way down, I let it get down to a small bed of coals and shoveled those coals into my ash bucket. Set the bucket outside with the cover off. I then let the stove cool down to around 200 degrees and went ahead with my cleaning and inspection. After everything was spic-n-span, instead of lighting a new fire, I shoveled the coals from the ash bucket back into the stove, threw a few logs on (still no kindling) and away it went - flames before I even got the door closed. It's now back to regular operating temps.
So, does anyone else do something similar to keep the same fire going all season long, or I am just over the top?
PS. Hope everyone had a happy holiday