Ja, a lot of folk don't realize how little one of those puts out versus a humidifier.Hogwildz said:A little stove top kettle would never cut it here.
The old stove had a cast iron trivet with a large cast iron pot on it. Both rusted and made rust marks on the stove. Don't want that to happen to my new pretty Englander! I was thinking of one of those enameled cast iron ones but after reading these posts, maybe not? We have a lot of lime deposits from our water so that was an issue in the old pot too. Perhaps a small humidifier with one of those silver anti bacterial things in it might be the ticket.....fossil said:You want some nice smells in your house...get a container of some sort, and a trivet/whatever if needed, put some potpourri and water in there and let it steep/simmer atop your wood stove. Can be most pleasant. If you're serious about increasing the relative humidity in your home, get a humidifier. Rick
fossil said:You want some nice smells in your house...get a container of some sort, and a trivet/whatever if needed, put some potpourri and water in there and let it steep/simmer atop your wood stove. Can be most pleasant. If you're serious about increasing the relative humidity in your home, get a humidifier. Rick
Bub381 said:For those that have it available,go break some 3' to 4" branches off a fir tree and use it in the pot.The smell is wicked good.It also prunes the tree.

Bought a ceramic steamer from Lowes. I am going to a local Wood Stove company next week to purchase a ceramic trivet. I hope that it doesn't rust the top of my new Osburn?
Fredo
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