I had a 100'+ pine that was 48" at the base cut down last September because it was only 15' from the house and leaning over it. Had pros do the job and had them cut the trunk into 48" rounds. Shortly after I split and stacked it all. I live in high desert with very low humidity in the summer and it all has dried out nicely.
The previous winter was my first winter with a wood stove (Sirocco 30.2) and only burned juniper (juniper and pine is what most available in my area). I avoided pine because so many people said it's junk and it will clog up my chimney. Well, I wasn't going to let all the wood from that tree and a lot of other trees that I had to cut down on my property go to waste (beetle kill and trees that came down or snapped from a big storm we had past February). Started using the pine a couple weeks ago and have to say I really like it. First off, it splits uniformly and stacks easier than juniper. I can also load more into the stove and have lead dead space because it's more uniformly shaped than juniper which can be twisted and different, making it harder to really pack the stove to it's full potential.
Sure, juniper burns hotter and I really like the smell of juniper, but the pine just lights quick, and have gotten nearly as long burn times from it and I cannot imagine it creates more creosote than the juniper. I had the company who installed my stove come out and inspect the chimney and clean it in late August. They said whatever I did last winter was perfect because the chimney and stove looked great and if I continued to do what I did last winter I only needed to call them every other year instead of each year.
So why do so many say not to burn pine? It dried out pretty fast, can load more of it into the stove and it seems to light really early and burn well with no issues so far.
The previous winter was my first winter with a wood stove (Sirocco 30.2) and only burned juniper (juniper and pine is what most available in my area). I avoided pine because so many people said it's junk and it will clog up my chimney. Well, I wasn't going to let all the wood from that tree and a lot of other trees that I had to cut down on my property go to waste (beetle kill and trees that came down or snapped from a big storm we had past February). Started using the pine a couple weeks ago and have to say I really like it. First off, it splits uniformly and stacks easier than juniper. I can also load more into the stove and have lead dead space because it's more uniformly shaped than juniper which can be twisted and different, making it harder to really pack the stove to it's full potential.
Sure, juniper burns hotter and I really like the smell of juniper, but the pine just lights quick, and have gotten nearly as long burn times from it and I cannot imagine it creates more creosote than the juniper. I had the company who installed my stove come out and inspect the chimney and clean it in late August. They said whatever I did last winter was perfect because the chimney and stove looked great and if I continued to do what I did last winter I only needed to call them every other year instead of each year.
So why do so many say not to burn pine? It dried out pretty fast, can load more of it into the stove and it seems to light really early and burn well with no issues so far.