Hi all,
This is my first post on this forum so hopefully I'm doing this in the right place.
My wife and I are closing on our first home and inside is a wood stove that we're 95% sure the owners are leaving with us (they're moving to Florida so I don't think they'll have any use for it). I know very very little about wood stoves and was hoping to get some info.
From the disclosure we know the chimney is lined and was last cleaned in 2019. I'll attach a photo in hopes it could maybe be identified but the house itself was built in 1925 so I have no idea when the stove was installed. Also knowing the current owners I'm fairly confident they wont have a clue either. I apologize the photo is a bit distant, it's all we have currently.
Any information on the stove would be great as well as tips for a new owner.
Another concern is where to stack and store the wood. There's no good location with an overhang besides the porch and I'm a bit concerned about stacking the wood against the house since it has wood siding and is a wood construction house...though maybe that isn't a concern.
Considering how much snow we get up in Bethlehem, NH I don't really want to use a tarp to cover the wood if I can avoid it.
Thank you so much for your help, I'm very excited to have a wood stove. Since moving to the North Country five years ago, I've always wanted a wood stove for heating.
![[Hearth.com] Buying house with wood stove [Hearth.com] Buying house with wood stove](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/264/264810-17bb5b1f6b1a2cde43ad0653140ce262.jpg?hash=I_VCVxgo3E)
This is my first post on this forum so hopefully I'm doing this in the right place.
My wife and I are closing on our first home and inside is a wood stove that we're 95% sure the owners are leaving with us (they're moving to Florida so I don't think they'll have any use for it). I know very very little about wood stoves and was hoping to get some info.
From the disclosure we know the chimney is lined and was last cleaned in 2019. I'll attach a photo in hopes it could maybe be identified but the house itself was built in 1925 so I have no idea when the stove was installed. Also knowing the current owners I'm fairly confident they wont have a clue either. I apologize the photo is a bit distant, it's all we have currently.
Any information on the stove would be great as well as tips for a new owner.
Another concern is where to stack and store the wood. There's no good location with an overhang besides the porch and I'm a bit concerned about stacking the wood against the house since it has wood siding and is a wood construction house...though maybe that isn't a concern.
Considering how much snow we get up in Bethlehem, NH I don't really want to use a tarp to cover the wood if I can avoid it.
Thank you so much for your help, I'm very excited to have a wood stove. Since moving to the North Country five years ago, I've always wanted a wood stove for heating.
![[Hearth.com] Buying house with wood stove [Hearth.com] Buying house with wood stove](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/264/264810-17bb5b1f6b1a2cde43ad0653140ce262.jpg?hash=I_VCVxgo3E)
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, preferably in a sunny spot and then stack the wood on the pallets. There are various tricks to keep the stacks from falling over,some use pallets on the ends of the rows connected with ropes running across the stack, others use posts dug into the ground, some brace the posts with diagonals. I personally box in the ends of the stacks by stacking the wood. Now the important part, you have to cover the wood leaving it uncovered is going to stop seasoning and the wood will start to deterioate in few years. Just as important is you need to leave air space over the stacks to let air flow go through the stacks. Do not just cover the stack tight to the top with a tarp. Ideally stack the wood so the top of the stack is sloped and put something on top to provide an air space. A couple of pallets work well. Now if you are in it for the long haul, go to a local preferably none chain hardware store and buy some steel roofing. When roofing is shipped to the yard it comes with some sacrificial panels and many of the places set the sacrificial panels aside as well as scratched and dented panels. Now lay that on top of the pallets with some overhang. You will need to drill some holes through the metal and screw them to the pallets. I get pretty good at "Jenga" pulling wood from under the upper pallets from all sides equally and the upper pallets slowly sink down. Most folks end up with garden shed to keep the all the yard tools and it s usually not hard to add on an overhang to stack wood. No matter what you do, your long term plan should be leave space for tow years of wood usage to be stored.![[Hearth.com] Buying house with wood stove [Hearth.com] Buying house with wood stove](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/264/264922-c2cab6ab794bc3a600ada1cddd66a44c.jpg?hash=7GxAtQmr-F)