Dear Umbra,
I live in Maine, land of many loggers. My home is heated by an oil furnace, and I try to keep the temps down with thermostat timers to use as little oil as possible. I supplement my heat with a wood stove, as many Mainers do, and in my travels I have noticed a big variation in how much smoke is coming through chimneys and stovepipes. Is there a better type of seasoned wood to burn as far as reducing pollutants?
Wendy H.
Freeport, Maine
Dearest Wendy,
I just happen to have a Wise Man of the Eastern Forests visiting me, whose house has the same multisource heating system as yours, and who was happy to share his applied firewood knowledge with me. I checked out his information and it seems solid. The short answer is: buy a dense wood, buy it split or split it yourself, and give it six months to a year to dry. Mayhap what you see in one chimney vs. another is smoldering, or wet wood, or variation caused by weather and stove type. What you want is a hot, efficient fire followed by well banked coals.
Pile it on.
Photo: iStockphoto
Apparently all wood has approximately the same BTU value per pound. (We spoke about the British thermal unit about a year ago. Feel free to make your own conjectures about why the British, of all people, quantified heat. Should they have called it the Please Let Us Stop Being Damp Unit?) The trick here is the corollary: a heavy log will contain more BTUs than a comparably sized light log, because it is denser. What makes one wood denser than another? Well, the dense log might come from a deciduous oak tree, which for a portion of the year is leafless and cannot photosynthesize, and hence grows slowly. There will be less pore space in the tree.
Slower growing, denser woods such as oak, beech, and hickory are known as "hardwoods." Wise Man of the Eastern Forests tells me this is not a botanical term, but is generally applied to deciduous trees. Evergreen trees are generally called softwoods. Softwoods burn easily but with less heat, and are good for kindling or the tail ends of the heating season, when less heat is needed. The more hardwood you can get in your firewood the better. Fruit woods apparently make lovely, hot firewood but take quite a long time to dry sufficiently.
Wetter wood will smolder as the fire struggles with the embedded moisture. You know I don't mean wood that was wet from the rain. Fresh wood is wet because trees contain moistness in their very beings: the moistness of the forest, the fresh sap running up and down the tree like a nutrient elevator, the tears trees hold inside when they think of all the sorrows of the earth. All this makes the wood wet. So burn well-dried, split wood with the telltale split ends, hollow clunking sounds when banged together, and dried-out skin tone.
The hotter the wood burns, the warmer the house, obviously, and the more heat for your money if you are buying cords of wood. A few other hot hardwood benefits include less creosote in your chimney and a more efficient burn with less smoldering, resulting in less air pollution (see my recent piece on burn barrels for depressing air-pollution tidbits).
A few last thoughts: check out the nice list of woods and their properties here, don't burn trash in your stove, and have a warm winter.
Oakily,
Umbra
Comments
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Barefoot Posted 4:01 am
17 Jan 2007
http://www.motherearthnews.com/Alternative_Energy/1994_Oc...
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inkedbuddha Posted 4:08 am
17 Jan 2007
But I have a question for Umbra (or anyone else). I live in the Sacramento area, where they are considering outlawing wood burning because during the winter, we have multiple days of "unhealthy" or "unhealthy for sensitive groups" AQI, in no small part due to the woodstoves (and yes, vehicles and industry play a role, too). Of course there are many problems associated with using oil heat, and electricity.
So what are we to do? We have been seeing record low temps for the Valley (in low 20's at night), which I believe we will continue to see each year. Short of dressing in heavy animal pelts (which, naturally, has other enviro concerns), what option is the "least bad" option for heating our homes?
(I should add that Sacramanto Municipal Utility District [SMUD] offers Greenergy, where you can very cheaply [~6 bucks a month] get the equivalent of your home energy use purchased from renewables. So maybe does that weight things in electricity's favor?).
Tara
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SMLowry Posted 9:33 am
17 Jan 2007
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Nucbuddy Posted 2:54 pm
17 Jan 2007
To resolve those needs, these logs are best:
http://images.google.com/images?q=nuclear+fuel+rods
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Sea Wolf Posted 12:08 am
19 Jan 2007
That said, to talk about what wood to burn without mentioning what stove to burn it in is like having a discussion about gas vs. biofuels without mentioning whether you're driving a Hummer or a Smart Car.
In the fall of 1991, not long after finishing building my own house in the Blue Ridge foothills south of Charlottesville, VA, the day came when it was cold enough to light my brand new Vermont Castings Intrepid stove, complete with catalytic combuster (which reburns the particulates in the smoke). I put some seasoned hickory in the stove, lit a fire, and when it was going good, I ran up the big hill near the house, so I could snap a photo of my snug little home with curls of storybook smoke rising from its chimney. Boy, was I surprised when I looked down and saw barely a hint of flickering heat wafting above the chimney, looking no more picturesque than the vent duct of a suburban gas furnace. Which of course is a good thing, and I quickly got over my disappointment, especially because my super-efficient stove meant splitting less wood. All to say, the stove you use (if you burn wood), like the car you drive (if you drive), makes a HUGE difference.
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willa Posted 12:43 am
19 Jan 2007
Softwoods only gum up your chimney (and your atmosphere) if you let them smolder.
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randino Posted 6:16 am
20 Jan 2007
One of the reasons the bug has spread so quickly is the trade in firewood where diseased ash firewood can be transported for hundred of miles, giving the bug a chance to spread to new areas.
So only burn wood that you know comes from your local area, and burn it completely. Otherwise you may be helping to drive another nail in the coffin of an important American hardwood. For more info: http://www.emeraldashborer.info
randino
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sunflower Posted 7:35 am
20 Jan 2007
We heat exclusively with sunlight and firewood, mostly Doug Fir. Burn it hot. We need about two chords per winter. (Western Washington has tons of windblown firewood from our storm.) One chord is worth 3 to 4 barrels of oil.
Our sun system is like an attached greenhouse. We get the equivalent of one barrel of oil per 14 days of sun. If you need to retrofit an existing building with an attached greenhouse then use a Trombe wall between the home and greenhouse and locate your hot water preheat somewhere in the greenhouse. I buried rows of plastic pipe in the greenhouse concrete floor for hot water preheat.
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