I hooked up my Hearthstone Heritage yesterday. It is a used stove originally purchased in 2007, but apparently was not burned once last year. Last night I did the first fire, got it up to around 200 (perhaps a bit hot... whoops!) and let it die, I did a second fire this morning up to about 250.
This stove is no virgin and the manual says you only need one season opener... So am I ready to go WFO (wide f*@king open) or do I still proceed with caution?
Do I bring it up to 350 and let it go out again? Or perhaps bring it up to 350 for the evening, bank it before bed then go hotter tomorrow? Or can I release the hounds and begin the hunt?! I am ready to be napping on the couch wearing shorts and a t-shirt... sweating! I don't need to get into the high 500s or anything like that... but it would be nice to see what she has got.
Besides, from what I read, really high temps may not be possible with my wood. In the basement I have about 1/2 cord of 14 month old Sugar Maple and Yellow Birch, small stuff unsplit, I am burning that first before I get into the 3-4 cords of Sugar Maple and Yellow Birch I cut down in March, split and stacked through June- July and put in the basement a few weeks ago. (I know, I am just now getting my act together. My goal is by the spring to be 2 years ahead). If I run through that I have 3 cords of the same outside of the same stuff. So perhaps I won't be able to get it REALLY ripping this year. But I had no trouble getting the house uncomfortably hot with the old stove (a small Elmira Stoveworks) so the Heritage should be even better, right?
Any thoughts? THANKS!
This stove is no virgin and the manual says you only need one season opener... So am I ready to go WFO (wide f*@king open) or do I still proceed with caution?
Do I bring it up to 350 and let it go out again? Or perhaps bring it up to 350 for the evening, bank it before bed then go hotter tomorrow? Or can I release the hounds and begin the hunt?! I am ready to be napping on the couch wearing shorts and a t-shirt... sweating! I don't need to get into the high 500s or anything like that... but it would be nice to see what she has got.
Besides, from what I read, really high temps may not be possible with my wood. In the basement I have about 1/2 cord of 14 month old Sugar Maple and Yellow Birch, small stuff unsplit, I am burning that first before I get into the 3-4 cords of Sugar Maple and Yellow Birch I cut down in March, split and stacked through June- July and put in the basement a few weeks ago. (I know, I am just now getting my act together. My goal is by the spring to be 2 years ahead). If I run through that I have 3 cords of the same outside of the same stuff. So perhaps I won't be able to get it REALLY ripping this year. But I had no trouble getting the house uncomfortably hot with the old stove (a small Elmira Stoveworks) so the Heritage should be even better, right?
Any thoughts? THANKS!