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Hello all. Great to be here. I have been a long time AS forum member, thought I would give this a shot! This seems to be a great site. I run 2 wood stoves 24/7 here, both are Blaze King Kings. Love to cut wood!!
I have one in my 2200 sf house and 1 in my 2000 sf detail shop. They heat both quite well. I do have a bit of a build up problem in the house stove, I have to run it so low that she requires "regular" cleanings. Both of them are non cats. I replaced my Ashling Waterford in the house with a BKK, still getting used to that. I have had the one in my shop for years and years.
Cottonwood and pine are the main two woods. A bit of russian olive and some town trees every now and again. I go through about 12 cords a year, it feels like more sometimes.
Cottonwood and pine are the main two woods. A bit of russian olive and some town trees every now and again. I go through about 12 cords a year, it feels like more sometimes.
I figured the cottonwood and pine but not the russian olive. That stuff is spreading like wildfire around here. There doesn't seem to be many trees but most are still in the bush state.
12 cords per year is a goodly amount for sure. That should keep you out of trouble. lol
I remember that song quite well...but I never realized they were singing about chainsaws. Welcome to the forums from another softwood burner (maybe ~7 cords/yr in two stoves, depending of course on the winter). Rick
Cottonwood and pine are the main two woods. A bit of russian olive and some town trees every now and again. I go through about 12 cords a year, it feels like more sometimes.
I figured the cottonwood and pine but not the russian olive. That stuff is spreading like wildfire around here. There doesn't seem to be many trees but most are still in the bush state.
12 cords per year is a goodly amount for sure. That should keep you out of trouble. lol
The russian olive is a major problem here, the state is actually paying homeowners, ranchers, etc to get rid of it. Lots of trees biting the big one, They will never be gone though. It is really great wood, once it is in the stack, I call it blood wood, because you will shed some cutting, splitting and stacking the stuff. It burns OMG hot and long though. I have a candidate for the largest one that I have seen in my pasture, it has 4 arms that measure 18"dbh, the common stump is 42" and the treee is about 40' tall.