Lesson learned - cover your chimney over the summer!

  • Active since 1995, Hearth.com is THE place on the internet for free information and advice about wood stoves, pellet stoves and other energy saving equipment.

    We strive to provide opinions, articles, discussions and history related to Hearth Products and in a more general sense, energy issues.

    We promote the EFFICIENT, RESPONSIBLE, CLEAN and SAFE use of all fuels, whether renewable or fossil.

Joacchim

Member
Dec 3, 2018
28
Chagrin Falls, Ohio
I have always covered my Central Boiler chimney over the summer months (since 2010), but I got lazy last spring and let it go. Yesterday I could not get a fire to start, just a faint wisp of smoke from the chimney. When I open the door great clouds of smoke escape, telling me my stack is plugged. Now toward the end of last winter I was burning some questionably unseasoned wood, so I assumed I'd creosoted up my chimney. I was planning to rent a tall step ladder and go up to unplug it, but instead tried one last thing - a drain snake. Boy, was I glad I did! We live at the edge of a woods, and wasps had made themselves quite a home up there. Luckily I was able to knock it loose from the bottom cleanout. Whew (sigh of relief). Photos show what came down. Won't neglect to do that again!
[Hearth.com] Lesson learned - cover your chimney over the summer![Hearth.com] Lesson learned - cover your chimney over the summer!
 
I have always covered my Central Boiler chimney over the summer months (since 2010), but I got lazy last spring and let it go. Yesterday I could not get a fire to start, just a faint wisp of smoke from the chimney. When I open the door great clouds of smoke escape, telling me my stack is plugged. Now toward the end of last winter I was burning some questionably unseasoned wood, so I assumed I'd creosoted up my chimney. I was planning to rent a tall step ladder and go up to unplug it, but instead tried one last thing - a drain snake. Boy, was I glad I did! We live at the edge of a woods, and wasps had made themselves quite a home up there. Luckily I was able to knock it loose from the bottom cleanout. Whew (sigh of relief). Photos show what came down. Won't neglect to do that again!
View attachment 341965View attachment 341966
Wow that's crazy. Yeah they can be persistent little buggers. I had sparrows trying to build nests in my chimney and I had to cut to fit some hardware cloth to stop them. I don't think it would stop bees though. What do you cover yours with?
 
I use a large black plastic trash bag with a bungee cord around the bottom to keep it on. Since the chimney top is about 12-1/2' off the ground I have to climb up onto the top of the adjacent furnace to put it on. Since I'm getting older that climb may have contributed to not doing it last spring.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Burnin Since 1989
I use a large black plastic trash bag with a bungee cord around the bottom to keep it on. Since the chimney top is about 12-1/2' off the ground I have to climb up onto the top of the adjacent furnace to put it on. Since I'm getting older that climb may have contributed to not doing it last spring.
How about a pole with a hook and a 5gal pail?
 
  • Like
Reactions: Burnin Since 1989
Twice i have had a Duck in up in a couple of my chimney's
Once at home, and once at my shop
Both times the duck lived.
 
I wonder what goes through a ducks mind that would make it aim for a chimney instead of a lake
 
  • Like
Reactions: Burnin Since 1989