Before I get flamed to death...please let me explain
It's going to be a long one!
Lets pretend the following:
1. You've got a 115 year old house with zero insulation. Its not drafty but looses its heat fast enough.
2. Your main heating system is ancient as well. It is a steam radiator type system and the boiler has a crack (above the water line thankfully), and a few radiators have cracks as well and leak condensate everywhere...yay! So you're trying to use the main heating system as little as possible.
3. Your wife just gave birth to a NEWBORN and wants to keep the house as toasty as possible during this winter.
4. Your wife is also not working for the winter to take care of the newborn, so money it tight to say the least.
5. You have a little over 4 cords of OAK that was cut down in fall of 2010 and split spring of 2011. You were hoping to use this wood as your main fuel source this heating season.
6. You just installed a Englander 30 that has 22ft of double wall stovepipe/chimney pipe. Its a straight up and out through the interior of your house (with a single 1ft long 45 degree offset just before the ceiling).
7. You're not new to woodburning but new to using and maintaining your own stove on a regular basis.
Oh boy!
So as you may have figured out.... it's me!
So my wood has moisture content of 23-25% according to my moisture meter. It would be ideal for next season but it is what I've got, so I have to use it this season. There isn't any money left in the piggy bank to go buy "seasoned" wood from a dealer either.
So now that the disclaimers are out of the way, I've just started burning this stuff and had some trouble the past few nights. I have some very dry pine that I've cut into small strips for kindling. I grabbed a bunch of smaller splits and chunks for what I had hoped was going to be a quick hot fire. The oak had a heck of time lighting up!
The kindling had burned down and dissappeared and only some of the oak was barely on fire. I had to leave the door cracked for over an hour just to get a descent fire going. Even then, with the air on full blast it was getting pretty lazy and smokey. I threw some very dry pine splits on there and it finally took off. Even then I had to keep the air 50% open to keep the flue temps above 400 degrees (probe type thermometer).
The outside air temp was 55 degrees and a weak storm system was approaching, so that may not have helped.
So what is your advice for burning less than ideal wood?!?!? I've read plenty of times to mix it with some dry stuff...but the problem is, I don't have any dry stuff
Thanks in advance
!!

Lets pretend the following:
1. You've got a 115 year old house with zero insulation. Its not drafty but looses its heat fast enough.
2. Your main heating system is ancient as well. It is a steam radiator type system and the boiler has a crack (above the water line thankfully), and a few radiators have cracks as well and leak condensate everywhere...yay! So you're trying to use the main heating system as little as possible.
3. Your wife just gave birth to a NEWBORN and wants to keep the house as toasty as possible during this winter.
4. Your wife is also not working for the winter to take care of the newborn, so money it tight to say the least.
5. You have a little over 4 cords of OAK that was cut down in fall of 2010 and split spring of 2011. You were hoping to use this wood as your main fuel source this heating season.
6. You just installed a Englander 30 that has 22ft of double wall stovepipe/chimney pipe. Its a straight up and out through the interior of your house (with a single 1ft long 45 degree offset just before the ceiling).
7. You're not new to woodburning but new to using and maintaining your own stove on a regular basis.
Oh boy!
So as you may have figured out.... it's me!

So my wood has moisture content of 23-25% according to my moisture meter. It would be ideal for next season but it is what I've got, so I have to use it this season. There isn't any money left in the piggy bank to go buy "seasoned" wood from a dealer either.
So now that the disclaimers are out of the way, I've just started burning this stuff and had some trouble the past few nights. I have some very dry pine that I've cut into small strips for kindling. I grabbed a bunch of smaller splits and chunks for what I had hoped was going to be a quick hot fire. The oak had a heck of time lighting up!
The kindling had burned down and dissappeared and only some of the oak was barely on fire. I had to leave the door cracked for over an hour just to get a descent fire going. Even then, with the air on full blast it was getting pretty lazy and smokey. I threw some very dry pine splits on there and it finally took off. Even then I had to keep the air 50% open to keep the flue temps above 400 degrees (probe type thermometer).
The outside air temp was 55 degrees and a weak storm system was approaching, so that may not have helped.
So what is your advice for burning less than ideal wood?!?!? I've read plenty of times to mix it with some dry stuff...but the problem is, I don't have any dry stuff

Thanks in advance
