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Old 27-10-2009, 10:54 AM posted to uk.rec.gardening
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Default Burning wood in the house

On 2009-10-27 10:09:39 +0000, Judith in France
said:

On Oct 26, 5:54*pm, Sacha wrote:
On 2009-10-26 17:43:17 +0000, Judith in France
said:



On Oct 25, 10:26*pm, beccabunga beccabunga.
wrote:
geordief;867856 Wrote:


Can anyone tell me if when wood will spark and when it won't?
I mean I (think I ) know that burning resiny wood causes sparks.
And I also know that damp wood will cause sparks.
But what about bone-dry resiny wood(ie pine etc).Could that be safe?
My first impression *is that sparking is greatly reduced but I am s

ti
ll
wary.
Any one have * first hand experience here?
thanks


Any wood from pines or firs will/can spark, whether wet or dry. The
other one to watch for is willow, which is particularly explosive,
especially when burnt wet.


--
beccabunga


We have a woodburner and, on order, a wood burning Aga type cooker.
We burn mostly oak, seasoned at least 2 years, it burns well and no
sparks. *We also burn frene and some pine as we have a lot of pine
beams over 150 years old from the barn. *We had the roof replaced as
it was infested with Capricorne. *This pine doesn't spark but I doubt
there is any resin left in it after all this time.


Judith


Oak is very dense, so burns slowly so presumably that keeps a fire in a
long time and other stuff gingers it up? Some old wooden mantles were
made of oak because it was so hard to set alight easily. * We don't
have a wood burner but when the Aga dies and it must be around 50 to 60
years old, we're certainly not getting another one at those prices!
--
Sacha


The oak we burn is very dry, it doesn't just slumber away, cut to the
correct size it burns at a steady rate. When the oven needs to come
up to temperature, my neighbour tells me that it will need to be mixed
with a lighter wood. Agas certainly are a price, so is Godin but they
are supposed to last a lifetime. Even secondhand these monsters fetch
a good price.

Judith


Funnily enough, I noticed a 1974 Aga for sale at £950 in this morning's
local paper. I don't think our 1950s or 60s model would quite make
that. ;-) The oak sounds what I was thinking of - it's burning at a
steady rate but then helped along by hotter burning stuff.
--
Sacha

 
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