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#1 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Central MA
Posts: 2,358
Thanks: 18
Thanked 577 Times in 183 Posts
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We have plenty of wood on the island. Birch trees just fall down when we need them. Mix in a bit of ash and oak and we have nice fires. Pellets cost money and have to be transported. I am too old for that. A little chain saw and an electric splitter and we are good to go. Thanks for the suggestion.
IG
__________________
Island Girl ....... Make Lemonade |
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#2 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Tuftonboro
Posts: 1,275
Thanks: 196
Thanked 336 Times in 244 Posts
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Yotuls are great stoves like mentioned above. I have an old 602 that's heats my 800 sg ft and is great. Small stove that takes logs at 16 inch. I also have a yotul propane stove, model is the Lillehammer, that only gets used in early spring. I bought that at Woodmans Forge but after dealing with them for service I wouldn't buy a thing from them again.
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#3 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Florida (Sebring & Keys), Wolfeboro
Posts: 6,028
Thanks: 2,285
Thanked 789 Times in 564 Posts
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Quote:
![]() Birch logs should have their birch bark coverings split lengthwise with a utility knife—open up the bark about ¼ of each log's width, and the birch will season appropriately. (Birch bark itself makes an ideal fire-starter. To get a new fire started over the cold ashes of last night's fire, place the birch bark on a couple of pine cones and cover with tinder). He demonstrated on a log I'd cut last summer, and sure enough, it was soaked with moisture inside! Is it any wonder so many birch logs have rotted on the ground—yet appeared intact?
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