Wood here in the Boston area is $450 a cord seasoned mixed hardwood.
Wow, at those prices it would be cheaper for me to just run my furnace. Can you get green wood cheaper?
Wood here in the Boston area is $450 a cord seasoned mixed hardwood.
We call it a walkout basement around these here parts.In my area we call the described basement a daylight basement

We call it a walkout basement around these here parts.![]()
at $200 a cord for oak (mixed birch, poplar, ash, maple is cheaper), buying enough wood to run all winter could cost me more than my electric heating system does.
Echoing Highbeam's sentiment. Could be a face cord?Sounds like a deal to me, as well. That was the price for mixed hardwoods here, years ago; I haven't checked lately.
Don't expect wood from a dealer to be dry, though. Here, I need two years split, stacked and top-covered, at least, for most woods, three years for Oak. Now, if your stacks get a lot of wind and you have low humidity most of the time, you may be able to get wood dry faster. Regardless, I'd start stacking some of that Boxelder ASAP; That should dry pretty quickly, I'd think.
Yep, a thrown-in pickup load is about 1/3 of a cord, or a rick (face cord) cut at 16", 4x8' row.a lot of guys call a pickup load a cord. But I don't think that's a full cord....Our electricity is about $.09 per KWH at full price and off peak is around $.052.
![[Hearth.com] Blazeking or Pacific Energy - 1st time buyer [Hearth.com] Blazeking or Pacific Energy - 1st time buyer](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/342/342428-ec8ca338d921a32474c4b63280669d0f.jpg?hash=WYJyPoedrJ)
yes, unseasoned, split hardwood mix is 275-300 a cord. I have very limited storage area so I can't buy the unseasoned until the spring, in which case, I'd be better off buying the seasoned wood. Although the seller I use knows his wood. He runs a very large tree service North of Boston and all the burnable wood he sells as firewood. He splits them a little big so I maul them down or cut them in half so I can load n/s in my stove. The seasoned wood he sells is very seasoned and even the oak is 16% and better.Wow, at those prices it would be cheaper for me to just run my furnace. Can you get green wood cheaper?
Here is what the utilities cost in MA and the charges they add into our bills. Above when I said tax, the correct term should probably be surcharge to the utility provider, who in turn pass their increased costs on to the consumer :yes, unseasoned, split hardwood mix is 275-300 a cord. I have very limited storage area so I can't buy the unseasoned until the spring, in which case, I'd be better off buying the seasoned wood. Although the seller I use knows his wood. He runs a very large tree service North of Boston and all the burnable wood he sells as firewood. He splits them a little big so I maul them down or cut them in half so I can load n/s in my stove. The seasoned wood he sells is very seasoned and even the oak is 16% and better.
Unfortunately, NG Propane and Electricity are taxed very high in MA and the state has pushed the utilities for funds to help low income people and with subsidies, grants, low interest loans and rebates, that are all paid for when we buy those utilities. I will go look up our local rates and get back to the thread in a bit.
Here is my favorite cost calculator comparison.I didn't look at my bill close enough. I have some surcharges and flat rates as well. So rates are closer to $.11 and a monthly rate of $45+/-. But still cheaper than you guys. But thats because I live in coal country. ND had lots of coal power plants. Talking with my wife tonight, she stated that across the river in MN their power company is going to raise rates by $.18 per kwh because they want to be more environment and don't want to buy coal powered electricity. She also pointed out how the power demand of AI data servers. Electricity could get expensive in the future. I'm all electric, so my wood stove might see more use than I am currently anticipating. So that might make the Blazeking more appealing if I have to run it more long term.
Thank you for posting that. Based on my rates here for a year it costs 2448 per year to heat with firewood. That is for 5 cords.Here is my favorite cost calculator comparison.
Residential Heating System Cost Calculator | Efficiency Maine
Our heating cost comparison calculator can help you estimate your annual home heating costs for different heating systems.www.efficiencymaine.com
I would like to see average cost of new system and retrofit in a chart. But is so variable. Wood heat is still the cheapest but if you have cheap electricity and have to pay for wood a heatpump can be cheaper.Thank you for posting that. Based on my rates here for a year it costs 2448 per year to heat with firewood. That is for 5 cords.
I realistically burn about 2 cords which is 950 per year and electrical baseboard heat is actually the most expensive heat at 9267 per year. I have a large family room addition of 900 s/f that is where the woodstove is located. The room has 2 wall mounted electric heaters. One I have never used and the other one I only run sporadically based on outside/ inside temps.
Most of the heating season I only run the woodstove in the family room and one baseboard heater in our living room. The woodstove and baseboard heat both contribute to keeping the kitchen warm. Our house is a balcony cape cod style house and the second floor is open to the living room. The heat from the living room rises to the bedrooms upstairs and we've never run any of the baseboard in the bedrooms or bathroom upstairs.
My actual electric use is about 4000 per year and that includes all of the electric used in my house.
There is a discount rate for electricity for those who use heat pumps.
That HUGE firebox of a true king must be a contributing factor......to an extent?I’ve never burned a PE so I can’t comment on one of those, but am on season 11? with my blaze king. It’s everything you read about, boring to operate, sips wood, steady consistent heat with long burn times. I ripped out a free breathing tube stove to install this when my work had a change of shift times and I’d be away much longer than previous. I wanted to come home to something at least. Today since reloading 37 hours earlier I still have a warm house with a coal bed enough to keep the stove around 200+ degrees ready for a reload off wednesdays coals. This is with hardwoods, with softwoods cut that time roughly in half.
Any other questions feel free to ask.
Mine is the same with something like 33 windows. All need to be re glazed.Our house is an old farm house with too much glazing so not the best for holding heat.
Absolutely. It’s 4 cubic feet and I try to use most of it. I heat 2400 sqft floor space with a great room with 2 story ceilings with a loft if that equaled floor space it would be 3ksqft. The BK line in general have the same characteristics, princesses can go 24+ hours as well. Especially with a smaller house and relevant thermostat setting. This was the 37 hour tank of fuel;That HUGE firebox of a true king must be a contributing factor......to an extent?
Thanks for posting that. It might not be perfect but its really easy to get an idea of what you have. I noticed they used the price of a delivered cord of wood. That makes sense. My wood at $200 a cord is if I pick it up. So its probably twice that if I can even get it delivered. So, if you guys were talking about the cost of wood delivered, my wood is not as cheap as I thought it was.Here is my favorite cost calculator comparison.
Residential Heating System Cost Calculator | Efficiency Maine
Our heating cost comparison calculator can help you estimate your annual home heating costs for different heating systems.www.efficiencymaine.com
Wow thats impressive. Do you know specifically which hardwoods you had in there? I'm guessing the wood quality was a big factor.I’ve never burned a PE so I can’t comment on one of those, but am on season 11? with my blaze king. It’s everything you read about, boring to operate, sips wood, steady consistent heat with long burn times. I ripped out a free breathing tube stove to install this when my work had a change of shift times and I’d be away much longer than previous. I wanted to come home to something at least. Today since reloading 37 hours earlier I still have a warm house with a coal bed enough to keep the stove around 200+ degrees ready for a reload off wednesdays coals. This is with hardwoods, with softwoods cut that time roughly in half.
Any other questions feel free to ask.
Do you use your fans or is just the radiant heat enough. It seems like the fan might be able to better move the air to get it up to my staircase. But so would a cheap stand fan or box fan. How often do you use your fans?If you need to push the stove hard to heat the space regularly or heat a cold space up quickly you want the blower.Hey guys, do you recommend the stove fan kit for $450? It seems kind of crazy expensive compared to a box fan from Walmart for $20.Do you use your fans or is just the radiant heat enough. It seems like the fan might be able to better move the air to get it up to my staircase. But so would a cheap stand fan or box fan. How often do you use your fans?
(I'm ordering the Ashford 30.2. I can cancel if it doesn't ship on time.)
This is with hardwoods, with softwoods cut that time roughly in half.
Do you use your fans or is just the radiant heat enough.
I will second putting the stove where you spend the most time.Is your basement ceiling insulated? Do you spend most of your time in the basement? Some folks prefer putting the stove up on the main floor where they live or even two stoves.
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