As a rookie hobby woodworker I make a point to utilize every piece of scrap even if it means for small splines or dowels. I'll make anything I can think of to use scraps in order to get the most practice out of my money. It's also oddly satisfying. But if I were a professional who needs to make unique, new, useful things constantly for content then I can definitely see how burning scraps could become viable due to time. I do love Pask Makes Scrapwood Challenges though. Having your own version would be awesome.
Awesome book that gives you step-by-step photos ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxTNB_zFBSnTo_O1PqfVUwgi7ityw0JlKt and directions to make every day project. I can see myself making a few of these projects and giving them as housewarming and holiday gifts!
Dude! I run two businesses using the offcuts and scrap from companies, literally strips as thin as 20mm from there burn bins etc , pieces which would be useless to most give me a sustainable business material “one man’s rubbish is anothers treasure as they” you could always sell your white oak and maple offcuts to help fund your drinks cabinet
I've been doing this with the Solo Bonfire stove for over a year. Nice commercial for east oak. Solo has the accessories for a huge cast iron griddle which i have so not only do i burn scraps, but I also make Tacos and Fajitas. lol. I made a cedar cover for my Solo.
I have to admit, as a self confessed woodworker and scrap wood hoarder, it was hard for me to watch you burn that wood. I think I may have a problem. And knowing and admitting it is half the battle. Thanks for being open and honest.
I definitely feel this while running a small custom cabinet shop. Running through 100+ sheets and 300+ board feet of raw material each month makes for a lot of scrap that I feel like I want to use. Pretty much have to throw away anything under 3 foot 😖
Yup, my Yukon gets rid of my scraps I don’t need. After a Segmented wood turner grab most of the scraps. Really like the removable ash tray but a M18 blower cleans ash fine ,never had any blockage
I would have never even dreamed of burning some of those pieces of scrap. I saw some nice jewelry boxes in there. Maybe even a knife rack or a paper towel dispenser. 😮
Depends on how much scrap you accumulate, how much space you have and people in the area willing to take it. For example I've got 5 or 6 board feet of teak I'm keeping but oak and maple scraps I couldn't give away. Made for great charcoal.
Always good to see the foreman. I guess I am going to have to rethink my Christmas gift strategy, I thought (apparently in error) that people would be thrilled to receive an nice cut-off, maybe a 1x1x3 inch chunk of American walnut. To me the possibilities seem endless with a gift like that, well actually I was hoping maybe they could tell me what those possibilities are because well, I have a lot of wood scraps lying around.
I love the original, Solo Stove. And scrap, yes it builds up. And sawdust! I mix my sawdust with candle wax pellets and make my own firestarters. They work great.
Little cut offs I have been using in my fire pit for a while now. Bigger pieces I save for small projects but have limited space. Once that space fills up I have a burn day then I put the ash after it has gone out on my compost pile. My sawdust goes in the compost is well mixed with grass clipping makes some beautiful soil amendments.
What you call scrap is very much like the raw materials that some of us have to start with. Dave Engels (Engels Coach Shop) uses his scraps to heat his shop - seems like a more economic solution to your offcut problem.
I am laughing hysterically at the comments. This guy has the best woodworking build content on UA-cam. He shows one way to dispose of wood in the shop in a fun way, like his other videos, in a sponsored product. Perhaps its time for everyone to kickback infront of your favorite heat source with a tasty beverage and enjoy the holiday weekend.
I installed a small tent stove in my shop to burn scrap wood. Might as well heat the shop. Don't have room or floor space for a regular wood burning stove so I bulit a shelf to hang a small tent stove off my french cleat wall system I have for holding tools. Just put an aluminum heat shield behind it. Works great!!!
I love the vibe of this video. Very dark. The nice thing is if you really have a problem with scrap wood, you can sell it in bundles to people like me looking for different types of wood to make small projects with.
this! i can see crafters or novice woodworkers who only need small pieces, or want to experiment with different woods making use of the scrap. if selling seems like too much time investment, you could always bundle up the more significant chunks and give it away or nominal fee. a ‘take this nicer stuff but also you have to take this other stuff off my hands’
I have an outdoor log burner in the garden, I've got a bin in the garage rapidly filling with scraps (small stuff). That's for use in the log burner......apart from Cherry, that'll be saved for the smoker next summer.....lol
If you have cutoffs and scraps, check with local Scout troops to see if they want them. With some of the bans in place to prevent transporting invasive pests (bugs, not the Scouts), it makes it harder to source firewood for camping. My kid's troop used to get some cutoffs from a cabinet shop, which helped to have a supply of wood that could travel (had been heat treated/dried). Better than getting to your destination and only having green wood to choose from. :)
I have a log stove in my shop. Makes heating cheap and scrap pieces aren't a thing. It's either a test subject or fuel to keep my body warm. But great idea.
I have so many branches that drop off my trees. So I built a 8' round fire pit. It was too small! So I made it slightly larger... 14'. This works for most of the time.
I love the "real confessionals of a woodworker" intro. You nailed the camera angles! ScienceFYI: You'll get steam out of a proper burn even if your wood was completely dry because combustion converts hydrocarbons and oxygen into CO2 and H2O (Carbon Dioxide and Water).
I have a woodstove for warming my house here in France so no problem with scrap woods. But i never burned plywoods or laminate in. These are full of glue and if you burn it, you will pollute and clog your stove.
WOW! Did my first burn. Amazingly easy to light and with just a couple of scraps of wood, it produces quite a bit of heat. Burned the wood down to almost nothing and very easy to clean. I already love it and can't wait to take it camping with us. Thanks for the tip.
This is a great idea for those who work with real wood all the time. I’m still in rookie mode and use a lot of plywood. Burning plywood would be very bad. When I graduate to real wood I will definitely consider this.
When I was a young framer working for someone else, we made a giant pile of scrap and burned it, 2x scrap, OSB scrap, spent adhesive tubes, etc. I said something in protest, and the response was, "Do you think it's better for the planet in the landfill?" And I don't know. Glue leaching into the ground water, or polluting the air? I burn all my scrap in a homemade barrel wood stove in the shop, now. But if I take a large trailer of scrap plywood to my local landfill, it goes on a pile they burn. Humans suck.
@@keithdavies52 many moons ago I lived on 50 acres of land. We could burn stuff at will. My current home has neighbours 12’ to the left and right. Not an option 🙄🙄🙄
Lol!! Great video! I love it. Seeing your truck going around the corner, down the road. And seeing these pieces of plywood flying out the window.. you should do another video like this for April fool's.. just a thought, take care man. Until next time.
"Be sure to drink your Ovaltine?" A crummy commercial! Ha! I like to get one of these. Planer vrs scrap wood burner. I just can't decide. This video helped a lot.
Remember everyone, a lot of shops have 'free wood' bin. Swing by the moulding and spindle shops. There is a tipping point where a pro shop just can't keep everything.
I hate it how everyone keeps on burning wood to get "rid" of it. Why do we keep on polluting on steroids? I'm a woodworker who lives in a forest and I barely ever burn scraps. I basically compost my scraps. Nature absorbs it pretty fast if you make the pieces small enough and the ecosystem loves it!!!
The struggle is real. I just finished a large scale project and had accumulated lots of scrap wood. Good thing I was able to put most of them into good use. Some scrap wood I accumulated in the past 15 years (some from 15 years ago) still unused.
I decided to try this fire pit out. It's not perfect, but it's better than the old rusty one I was using lol. Not sure if the affiliate link worked tho. The link only showed the smallest one, I had to search on Amazon to find the larger size
You just have to set some rules for yourself and stick to them. For framing lumber, I throw every scrap in a pile during the project, and when the project ends, everything less than 48” goes into the trash or the fire, depending on where I am and whether it’s treated, etc. Everything long enough to keep goes to the next job. Fine hardwood is a little different but the basic principle is the same. Pick some minimum sizes and anything less than that has to go. Another good rule is to have a storage space devoted to scraps. Anything that doesn’t fit has to go. You can sort things or swap out, or make a project to get rid of stuff, but the dedicated scrap volume is a hard line you don’t cross. (This also solves the dirty and unsafe piles everywhere.) And the third tip is to make sure you have good outlets for scrap so you feel better about sending scrap there. Habitat ReStore takes wood. Schools and community centers. Tool libraries. Some kid you know, maybe a craftsperson who works on a smaller scale, like lathe or cutting board.
I make all kinds of projects. I keep almost everything because it almost always ends up as inlays on the wood mugs I make. My solution.....make more mugs.🤔
Very rookie question, the glue in plywood means that you can't burn it in the same way, right? So what do you do with scraps of plywood that you can't / don't want to use?
I save my scrap as I do find uses & projects esp with a lathe for much of it. I do have a burn pile - i just wait 'til weather conditions (usually snow) Lathe makes so much chips & shavings I'd be burning daily
Hi, my name is Skeeeter and I too suffer from scrapwoodism. Just when I get past withdrawals and the shop is looking great, and feel I got the addiction beat, I relapse. It’s ugly too. I go full blown maniac on the miter saw and start cutting up completed furniture and all the new wood in my shop just to make precious scrap piles. There’s no more wooden furniture in my house and I have no large pieces to make any, but I have some amazing piles of scrap. If you send me one of these fire pits, I could once again get my scrapwoodism under control. Consider it a Christmas gift 🙏🏽 for the greater good 😅 But seriously this video had me rolling 😂
Me too! I've been planning on building one for my son and I get on UA-cam everyday hoping to see another video of that build lol He's keeping us in suspense.
@ 1:25 🤣, and for those upset about the wood he tossed in (its content, he is a woodworker and content creator its how he pays the bills) East Oak technically paid for the wood.
You New World inhabitants need proper recycling. Wood waste could be used for osb, chipboard, composites, engineered wood products... Considering emissions, one private woodworker's pile of wood might be negligible, but if worldwide ~10% of timbered wood ends up as waste, that is not nothing. Carbon emissions globally, particle emissions locally.
As a rookie hobby woodworker I make a point to utilize every piece of scrap even if it means for small splines or dowels. I'll make anything I can think of to use scraps in order to get the most practice out of my money. It's also oddly satisfying.
But if I were a professional who needs to make unique, new, useful things constantly for content then I can definitely see how burning scraps could become viable due to time.
I do love Pask Makes Scrapwood Challenges though. Having your own version would be awesome.
Awesome book that gives you step-by-step photos ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxTNB_zFBSnTo_O1PqfVUwgi7ityw0JlKt and directions to make every day project. I can see myself making a few of these projects and giving them as housewarming and holiday gifts!
Dude! I run two businesses using the offcuts and scrap from companies, literally strips as thin as 20mm from there burn bins etc , pieces which would be useless to most give me a sustainable business material “one man’s rubbish is anothers treasure as they” you could always sell your white oak and maple offcuts to help fund your drinks cabinet
Hahahahaha when you were throwing random cut offs into the corner I was laughing so hard! Wish I could’ve seen beind the scenes on that!!
I've been doing this with the Solo Bonfire stove for over a year. Nice commercial for east oak. Solo has the accessories for a huge cast iron griddle which i have so not only do i burn scraps, but I also make Tacos and Fajitas. lol. I made a cedar cover for my Solo.
that literally looks like a used washing machine spray painted by a boy scout 😂😂😂
‘Literally’? I do not think that word means what you think it means. -Inigo Montoya
@@jasonandersen5975 inconceivable
Yes. This would have been a good DIY washer tub build.
Just need to find a good broken washer with a SS tub... Set it on some bricks and you are D U N!
You mean painted by the girl/boy scouts? 🤣
This guy is so entertaining that I willingly watched an almost 7 minute ad
I have to admit, as a self confessed woodworker and scrap wood hoarder, it was hard for me to watch you burn that wood. I think I may have a problem. And knowing and admitting it is half the battle.
Thanks for being open and honest.
Ditto 😂
so you’re just going full blown infomercial now
They always do.
That is a very well-constructed advertisement.
You burn more wood in a day than I use in a year! 😂😂 But thanks for the full-length commercial.
Fun-est infomercial I've ever watched! Keep up the good 'work'.
I definitely feel this while running a small custom cabinet shop. Running through 100+ sheets and 300+ board feet of raw material each month makes for a lot of scrap that I feel like I want to use. Pretty much have to throw away anything under 3 foot 😖
One of the greatest paid ads on the internet! Well done brother!!👌
Well, I am so glad I got excited to see a new video just to find out it was just a very long ad.
Yup, my Yukon gets rid of my scraps I don’t need. After a Segmented wood turner grab most of the scraps. Really like the removable ash tray but a M18 blower cleans ash fine ,never had any blockage
One of the best commercials ever 😂
I would have never even dreamed of burning some of those pieces of scrap. I saw some nice jewelry boxes in there. Maybe even a knife rack or a paper towel dispenser. 😮
Depends on how much scrap you accumulate, how much space you have and people in the area willing to take it. For example I've got 5 or 6 board feet of teak I'm keeping but oak and maple scraps I couldn't give away. Made for great charcoal.
I tend to be a scrap hoarder too. I was able to keep building stuff during the shutdowns. But then I'm not a pro shop with large jobs and deadlines.
The first two minutes were absolute gold:))
Always good to see the foreman.
I guess I am going to have to rethink my Christmas gift strategy, I thought (apparently in error) that people would be thrilled to receive an nice cut-off, maybe a 1x1x3 inch chunk of American walnut. To me the possibilities seem endless with a gift like that, well actually I was hoping maybe they could tell me what those possibilities are because well, I have a lot of wood scraps lying around.
As a woodworker, I am mortified to watch you burn your scraps. 😢😂
I love the original, Solo Stove. And scrap, yes it builds up. And sawdust! I mix my sawdust with candle wax pellets and make my own firestarters. They work great.
A near 7-minute ad. Fun.
Sheee,ss the foreman lost his chair ! What a generous guy ! Lol
THANK-YOU....for making me laugh!!
I really enjoy your work and the added bonus of your kid like humor makes your channel a must watch.
😃 😀 😄 😁 🤣 😂
That hand shot at the beginning 😂
Little cut offs I have been using in my fire pit for a while now. Bigger pieces I save for small projects but have limited space. Once that space fills up I have a burn day then I put the ash after it has gone out on my compost pile. My sawdust goes in the compost is well mixed with grass clipping makes some beautiful soil amendments.
nothing wrong with making an ad, but at least be upfront about it, and not try to play it off as something else.
What you call scrap is very much like the raw materials that some of us have to start with.
Dave Engels (Engels Coach Shop) uses his scraps to heat his shop - seems like a more economic solution to your offcut problem.
I am laughing hysterically at the comments. This guy has the best woodworking build content on UA-cam. He shows one way to dispose of wood in the shop in a fun way, like his other videos, in a sponsored product. Perhaps its time for everyone to kickback infront of your favorite heat source with a tasty beverage and enjoy the holiday weekend.
I was thinking the same thing!
and the oscar goes to...... hahahaha. i felt your emotions when talking about scraps. i believed every word.
Just watched your video and you sold me on it. It gets delivered on Dec. 8th 😎
I use clean, natural wood cutoffs for cooking with fire using the Kudu grill
Jason has more "Scrap" than the supply of 4 hobbyists! Loved the vid.
I installed a small tent stove in my shop to burn scrap wood. Might as well heat the shop. Don't have room or floor space for a regular wood burning stove so I bulit a shelf to hang a small tent stove off my french cleat wall system I have for holding tools. Just put an aluminum heat shield behind it. Works great!!!
That’s a great idea that I’m definitely stealing 👍🏻
Do you consider that scrap wood isolates carbon which when burned releases that carbon into the atmosphere?
You can always put it in the soil/compost which gives beneficial bacteria (good for roots) a home and locks the carbon in
I love the vibe of this video. Very dark. The nice thing is if you really have a problem with scrap wood, you can sell it in bundles to people like me looking for different types of wood to make small projects with.
this! i can see crafters or novice woodworkers who only need small pieces, or want to experiment with different woods making use of the scrap. if selling seems like too much time investment, you could always bundle up the more significant chunks and give it away or nominal fee. a ‘take this nicer stuff but also you have to take this other stuff off my hands’
That's a GREAT idea!
This video is just a commercial.
Or give it away to people to heat their house
As a woodworker myself, I think I NEED this!
189 bucs, i have an oildrum. 10 bucs. But it looks great how its working.
I have an outdoor log burner in the garden, I've got a bin in the garage rapidly filling with scraps (small stuff). That's for use in the log burner......apart from Cherry, that'll be saved for the smoker next summer.....lol
Jason, thanks for the intervention.
Thanks for the chuckles.
If you have cutoffs and scraps, check with local Scout troops to see if they want them. With some of the bans in place to prevent transporting invasive pests (bugs, not the Scouts), it makes it harder to source firewood for camping. My kid's troop used to get some cutoffs from a cabinet shop, which helped to have a supply of wood that could travel (had been heat treated/dried). Better than getting to your destination and only having green wood to choose from. :)
Was not expecting an almost seven minute long commercial for a firepit. But I will admit it looks nice.
Your new office building looks pretty. Any chance you'll do a tour of the exterior and another full tour of the interior?
Does Chucking wood out of your car make you a Wood Chuck? And how much wood could you chuck?
How is the tree house coming along?
I have a log stove in my shop. Makes heating cheap and scrap pieces aren't a thing. It's either a test subject or fuel to keep my body warm. But great idea.
I have so many branches that drop off my trees. So I built a 8' round fire pit. It was too small! So I made it slightly larger... 14'. This works for most of the time.
I love the "real confessionals of a woodworker" intro. You nailed the camera angles!
ScienceFYI: You'll get steam out of a proper burn even if your wood was completely dry because combustion converts hydrocarbons and oxygen into CO2 and H2O (Carbon Dioxide and Water).
I have a woodstove for warming my house here in France so no problem with scrap woods.
But i never burned plywoods or laminate in.
These are full of glue and if you burn it, you will pollute and clog your stove.
Saw this video, ordered my East Oak stove, just got it this morning. I can’t wait to try it! 🔥
WOW! Did my first burn. Amazingly easy to light and with just a couple of scraps of wood, it produces quite a bit of heat. Burned the wood down to almost nothing and very easy to clean. I already love it and can't wait to take it camping with us. Thanks for the tip.
@@memohughes7463 what's that thing going for?
@@jesseshort8 it was a Cyber Monday deal so mine was about $140. You’ll have to check current pricing on Amazon. 😉
Jason, Thanks for sharing. That looked really tough. I could feel your pain. lol good stuff
For an info-mercial, not bad...
The Bourbon Moth HQ is looking really nice in the background!
This is a great idea for those who work with real wood all the time. I’m still in rookie mode and use a lot of plywood. Burning plywood would be very bad. When I graduate to real wood I will definitely consider this.
When I was a young framer working for someone else, we made a giant pile of scrap and burned it, 2x scrap, OSB scrap, spent adhesive tubes, etc. I said something in protest, and the response was, "Do you think it's better for the planet in the landfill?" And I don't know. Glue leaching into the ground water, or polluting the air? I burn all my scrap in a homemade barrel wood stove in the shop, now. But if I take a large trailer of scrap plywood to my local landfill, it goes on a pile they burn. Humans suck.
@@keithdavies52 many moons ago I lived on 50 acres of land. We could burn stuff at will. My current home has neighbours 12’ to the left and right. Not an option 🙄🙄🙄
Nice stunt double you have. Waiting for your next stunts...
Lol!! Great video! I love it. Seeing your truck going around the corner, down the road. And seeing these pieces of plywood flying out the window.. you should do another video like this for April fool's.. just a thought, take care man. Until next time.
"Be sure to drink your Ovaltine?"
A crummy commercial! Ha!
I like to get one of these.
Planer vrs scrap wood burner.
I just can't decide.
This video helped a lot.
Great Video !! Awesome Storytelling!!
You're getting better and better Videomaker!!!
Congrats
Remember everyone, a lot of shops have 'free wood' bin. Swing by the moulding and spindle shops.
There is a tipping point where a pro shop just can't keep everything.
I hate it how everyone keeps on burning wood to get "rid" of it. Why do we keep on polluting on steroids?
I'm a woodworker who lives in a forest and I barely ever burn scraps. I basically compost my scraps. Nature absorbs it pretty fast if you make the pieces small enough and the ecosystem loves it!!!
This is just an ad. 😢
You even make a product commercial entertaining! Big fan here, keep up the good work.
Thank you for sharing your expertise
How much wood can a woodworker chuck when a woodworker decides to chuck wood?
What about burning the wood to heat your house during the winter?
L A M E, the whole thing is a COMMERICAL
The struggle is real. I just finished a large scale project and had accumulated lots of scrap wood. Good thing I was able to put most of them into good use. Some scrap wood I accumulated in the past 15 years (some from 15 years ago) still unused.
I decided to try this fire pit out. It's not perfect, but it's better than the old rusty one I was using lol. Not sure if the affiliate link worked tho. The link only showed the smallest one, I had to search on Amazon to find the larger size
1:33 - pretty sure my kids would enjoy scrap wood for their bar/bat mitzvahs lol
That was about $20 worth of oak you tossed in the fire in the intro.😁
What happened to the smokeless fire pit you had a video on, did it not work as good as you liked?
I have a stick smoker and use some of my hardwood scraps in that.
You burn more wood in a day than I use in a year! 😂😂
Yea, scaps can get out of hand for sure. Been thinking of a fire pit just for this reason.
Is this made in the USA like Breeo? I've tried to find out on the web site.
Hell I want a tour of his property now! Wow
Outdoor woodburning furnace boiler
Or... you could have used your concrete smokeless fire pit, works too...
I guess this is basically one giant advertisement
@@twestgard2 of course, it's pure advertisement, but I found funny to make Jason's own work compete with Jason's advertising.
@@RegisMichelLeclerc haha, one is more expensive to ship
Seriously tho Jason, how do you decide which pieces to keep? What's the size limit? I keep way too much scrap
You just have to set some rules for yourself and stick to them. For framing lumber, I throw every scrap in a pile during the project, and when the project ends, everything less than 48” goes into the trash or the fire, depending on where I am and whether it’s treated, etc. Everything long enough to keep goes to the next job. Fine hardwood is a little different but the basic principle is the same. Pick some minimum sizes and anything less than that has to go.
Another good rule is to have a storage space devoted to scraps. Anything that doesn’t fit has to go. You can sort things or swap out, or make a project to get rid of stuff, but the dedicated scrap volume is a hard line you don’t cross. (This also solves the dirty and unsafe piles everywhere.)
And the third tip is to make sure you have good outlets for scrap so you feel better about sending scrap there. Habitat ReStore takes wood. Schools and community centers. Tool libraries. Some kid you know, maybe a craftsperson who works on a smaller scale, like lathe or cutting board.
@@twestgard2 4:) If you haven't used the saved scrap in X amount of time, get rid of it.
@@einy2crikey another good rule
I make all kinds of projects. I keep almost everything because it almost always ends up as inlays on the wood mugs I make. My solution.....make more mugs.🤔
I heat my house with wood. Saves thousands of dollars and very little of what passes through my hands goes to waste
Scoutmaster Lyons approves of your fire starting technique. Carry on.
Very rookie question, the glue in plywood means that you can't burn it in the same way, right? So what do you do with scraps of plywood that you can't / don't want to use?
Great thing for having fun with your beloved ❤😀
I save my scrap as I do find uses & projects esp with a lathe for much of it. I do have a burn pile - i just wait 'til weather conditions (usually snow) Lathe makes so much chips & shavings I'd be burning daily
Love it great idea 😌💡
Hi, my name is Skeeeter and I too suffer from scrapwoodism. Just when I get past withdrawals and the shop is looking great, and feel I got the addiction beat, I relapse. It’s ugly too. I go full blown maniac on the miter saw and start cutting up completed furniture and all the new wood in my shop just to make precious scrap piles. There’s no more wooden furniture in my house and I have no large pieces to make any, but I have some amazing piles of scrap. If you send me one of these fire pits, I could once again get my scrapwoodism under control. Consider it a Christmas gift 🙏🏽 for the greater good 😅
But seriously this video had me rolling 😂
You are my most favoritest youtuber, second only to adam savage !
Got to pay the bills video today. Looking forward to a tree/treeless house video tomorrow 😁
@Graham Whitmore Naw he will get it done 😁 like most of us probably just underestimated the amount of time and 💰 it would take to complete.
Me too! I've been planning on building one for my son and I get on UA-cam everyday hoping to see another video of that build lol He's keeping us in suspense.
@ 1:25 🤣, and for those upset about the wood he tossed in (its content, he is a woodworker and content creator its how he pays the bills) East Oak technically paid for the wood.
Wait, don’t you have a video about making one???
Buy the grind thing and make saw dust, then add glue to it and make Mdf panels with it
You have got yourself a beautiful family Sir, God bless.
You New World inhabitants need proper recycling. Wood waste could be used for osb, chipboard, composites, engineered wood products... Considering emissions, one private woodworker's pile of wood might be negligible, but if worldwide ~10% of timbered wood ends up as waste, that is not nothing. Carbon emissions globally, particle emissions locally.
Where is it made ?
what happened to the fire pit you built??
It doesn't pay the bills ;)
Wow, the forman is really getting bigger!☺️😊
This would be perfect for my patio! Too bad we already bought a new firepit last year.
You can always send me scrap wood... lol