Hi all,
New to wood burning this year- using a Scandia stove that came with this house that I never used prior. Started burning in January when it was cold (I'm in NH btw).
Been burning some good wood (dry) I got from one source, some greener stuff I got from a not so good source
and Eco bricks. NP getting it to the safe zone temp wise and heating my 3 rooms.
Now that its warmer outside (low 50's today) I'm not sure how to run this stove in this warmer weather. Running it in the safe zone for temp quickly gets the place well into the 80's and that's a waste of wood and its not comfortable. Burning a small for or say just one eco brick warms the place nicely into the lower 70's but the stove temp never gets to the safe burning zone. What's the best strategy for this situation? Crank it into the safe zone and open the widows (seems wasteful) or burn small and don't worry about it? Or should I not burn and go back to making boat payments for my oil guy
Please say no to that one!
Thanks
New to wood burning this year- using a Scandia stove that came with this house that I never used prior. Started burning in January when it was cold (I'm in NH btw).
Been burning some good wood (dry) I got from one source, some greener stuff I got from a not so good source

Now that its warmer outside (low 50's today) I'm not sure how to run this stove in this warmer weather. Running it in the safe zone for temp quickly gets the place well into the 80's and that's a waste of wood and its not comfortable. Burning a small for or say just one eco brick warms the place nicely into the lower 70's but the stove temp never gets to the safe burning zone. What's the best strategy for this situation? Crank it into the safe zone and open the widows (seems wasteful) or burn small and don't worry about it? Or should I not burn and go back to making boat payments for my oil guy

Thanks