1. Wood stoves make life worth living in New York winters;
2. Cut more wood than you think you will need;
3. Cut your wood early so you are not fussing with mixing seasoned with dodgy wood trying to get the stove to hit cruising speed;
4. Wood from Craigslist sellers is likely to be dodgy--especially late in the season;
5. Woodbricks work better than dodgy Craigslist wood at the end of the season. Their price is a reminder to heed items 2 and 3;
6. Aside from warmth and comfort (and quiet
--no furnace wailing away in the background), halving your utility bill in the first year's burning make items 2 & 3 go faster;
7. Knowing about #6 makes those trips to the woodpile in the freezing cold if not joyous, then certainly tolerable. All I had to do was tell myself "Orange and Rocklland (aka Orange and Rapeland) will charge me $30 for gas today if I don't get going"...
Thanks to the collective wisdom of the board for getting me squared away this year!
Dean
2. Cut more wood than you think you will need;
3. Cut your wood early so you are not fussing with mixing seasoned with dodgy wood trying to get the stove to hit cruising speed;
4. Wood from Craigslist sellers is likely to be dodgy--especially late in the season;
5. Woodbricks work better than dodgy Craigslist wood at the end of the season. Their price is a reminder to heed items 2 and 3;
6. Aside from warmth and comfort (and quiet

7. Knowing about #6 makes those trips to the woodpile in the freezing cold if not joyous, then certainly tolerable. All I had to do was tell myself "Orange and Rocklland (aka Orange and Rapeland) will charge me $30 for gas today if I don't get going"...
Thanks to the collective wisdom of the board for getting me squared away this year!
Dean