BTW, I love the way you can stop a sentence right in the middle, change the subject, and then step right back into your initial discussion without missing a beat.
I too run my wood stove from about the third week of October clear through and tapering off in May. I'm pretty sure my neighbors thought I was crazy burning that late in the year, but if its 50 out, my house won't warm up without at least a small morning fire. (I'm a tiny old lady so I'm always cold.)
Most people who don't live in cold climates don't realize that it takes a house sometimes quite a while to heat up! The body of the house absorbs the warmth like a heat sink.
I just installed a woodstove on the 17th at my house, and now I'm considering getting rid of my big screen. All my rescue dogs absolutely love laying out in front of it, and they sleep like I've never seen before.
4:50 To avoid waking up at 2am because the stove went out and it is freezing cold you probably need thermal mass, so if you put a big pot with rocks in water on top, sometimes that will help radiate heat through the night. There are many other ways too.
@@juditharsenault2131 river rocks are most likely to explode because of trapped moisture inside. Open air granite is your best bet because of how dense it is.
This fire pit is one of a few covered pits that is on the list ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxAU9pOCSV9Y5JprooHvfxTpOrt4hx8uRM of approved products for Disney Fort Wilderness. The product served its purpose well and provided excellent fires throughout the evening. We were able to open the door and do s'mores, but I had to be careful because the handle was a bit hot on occasions. Additionally, I wish they had replaced some of the standard nuts with lock nuts in some places. We lost the door handle after just a couple of days of usage. Not a deal breaker, just a recommendation. I still give it 5 stars.
I remember way back when you were wiping down the windows, maybe daily, to try to control the moisture and mildew. I was really happy for you when you got that wood stove installed. Thanks for the update!
Every gallon of propane burned in a fire with no external flue creates a gallon of water vapor which condenses out on every cold surface in the house. LP is a lousy space heating fuel for it's cost or efficiency...but good for cooking. NG is bad for the environment but goes well in furnaces... If you have your own wood supply and cut it yourself...nothing beats wood....
We also sleep with a window open year round here in the California Sierras. We have a small fan because we love a cold breeze when sleeping. We have flannel sheets in winter and a down comforter, and we wear a bed cap too! Best sleep in winter is a cold bedroom and a cozy warm bed.
I'm with you on that one! My mother gifted each of her children with a beautiful down comforter and one year my dad got each of us a small one that was wrapped up with a strap for our cars in case we got stranded. We thought those were incredibly thoughtful 🎁 's!
Sleeping with the windows open was a practice related old forms of heating houses which caused carbon monoxide deaths. Sleeping with the windows open is not any healthier per se than sleeping with them closed. Due to criminals, I would never sleep with any windows open, day or night, in town or in the countryside.
To clean the glass on a airtight woodstove, just wet a paper towel, (not drippy) and dip it into the ashes inside. Then just scrub away the smoke marks on the glass with the ashes.
I have a smaller house 880 sq ft ranch and put a Vermont casting Aspen in, I love it and it keeps my house toasty warm in a very cold climate. Wood heat is the best.
When I married and had children, that was the end of sleeping with windows open, though that's what blankies are for! Ex-Hubby could not, for the life of him, "get" the concept. Invest in good blankets! I use Australian wool duvets. They were a tad costly but...they've been in use for 10 years and are in perfect condition. That's what duvet covers are for! 👍😎🌲🔥🇨🇦
I go to a sawmill. And buy there scraps edging. Its about 1 to 1and half thick . Oak hickory cherry . Burns great . 1 bundle is about 1/2 a cord . 10 bucks a bundle
Subscribed. Because of your knowledge about how burning pine vs deciduous trees really affects creosote production. Nice. Since my parents burned wood for heat when I was just a pup my body has been heated by wood, and at times overheated by wood, for many many years. Locally, burning pine is considered a no-no (ostensibly because of creosote buildup) and whenever I'd get in a discussion with someone anti-pine burning I'd ask what they thought people burn where there is no hardwood, the discussion would generally come to a stop.
Where the wind comes sweeping down the plain. I just cleaned my oversized fireplace that I wish had a heatalator. I’ll build that in when I create my own. Love putting big logs in and sitting close. Have had inserts and wood stoves and enjoyed their real heat. Always keep my galvanized bucket for ashes to go out and be real dead. Smokey the Bear has always been a personal icon.
I suggest a log hoop to keep your stack secure. All it would take is a large vibration or noise to loosen up your neat stack, fall against the stove and cause a fire.
My dr am to have a tiny home. On for me and one for my rescue kittys. I will connect the two tiny homes in between with an enclosed safe Catio they can come n go as they please to visit momma lol. I love my rescue kittys they rescued me . Adopt are rescue a kitty are doggie loyal n loving they never complained n happy to see there mom
I remember on our first holiday in the Alps. We also had a stove and my wife told me to put enough wood in there so it keeps us warm over night. It was really big, I put in a lot of wood and at around 3am, the thermometer said 35°C, or 95°F. It was -25°C (or -13°F) outside and we were in a sauna.
Hi, if that heat shield behind the stove was chrome it would reflect heat into the room and behind it would be cold. It wouldn't look as nice though. Just for fun you could cover it with cooking foil and feel the difference, it's really quite amazing 🙂
Stainless steel stove pipe will last a lifetime and you won't have to worry about a pipe rusting through and starting a fire.I switched to SS pipe after about 7 years when the steel pipe started to rust through from the inside out.I painted the SS pipe flat black for heat radiation and it is still great after 21 years of daily Winter use.Good Luck!
I've had a stainless pipe for 40 years. Unaffected by corrosion. Came in 3ft screw together single wall pieces. I put it up through a lined chimney and poured vermiculite to fill. The insulation prevents any carbon build up. I've never had to sweep the chimney. I look down the pipe and there is never anything sticking to the walls.
@@jointheir9594 Sure, the brick chimney was tile lined. I sealed up the fireplace with brick with cast openings, then poured vermiculite between the SS pipe and the lining. The pipe never develops any creosote; but I burn 5 year seasoned hardwood. So there's that.
Glad you were able to solve the issue with the wind cap. We just moved our Woodstock Soapstone wood stove to our camp in PA since we had to move out of our 100yo house to a townhouse (thanks, Covid). We have an older Woodstock wood stove too for the bunkhouse. Highly recommend Woodstock Soapstone wood stoves in Vermont if anyone is in the market. We went through the first winter w/o one and paid $1200 for 3 months of forced air heat. Placed an order the following spring and installed it over the summer. Nothing beats woodstove heating!
That and the fact that they are so beautiful! Many years ago friends of our family saved up to install one in their new home. Very effective and so well built. A real statement piece!
I remember when I was a kid going to my grandparents house at Christmas time they would have a wood stove to heat the house. I loved going there at Christmas time.
I love how you give details even down to the size of wood. I have been watch your videos for quiet a will. I am amazed how you flow through your daily workday like it is a breeze . Thanks !!!
You're good. your observations are accurate. I've been off -grid since '72 and live in a earth-buffered envelope house I designed- not tiny, but all the same principles. We burn 2 1/2 cords of wood/yr. for a 1250 sq. ft house in NH.Thanks for this.
"...I am way too lazy to do that... I've never gotten up in the night to stack my stove..." I object! LAZY is an adjective that could NEVER be accurately ascribed to this amazing woman!!! 😉👍💖 P.S. Thanks for all the great info, for all these years! 🙏
Well, can always check out pellet stoves. Some can look just like wood stoves but easier to refuel as you can do things like have a gravity fed container auto-refilling the stove, and it can even be controlled by a thermostat and timer for leave it and forget it like a modern furnace heater... They also sell versions for outdoor grilling/smoking... While, a larger home, you can opt for an exterior wood furnace that can feed the heat into the home, as well as act as boiler for hot water, and being much larger can run for many hours with just the occasional refueling...
I think 'Chimney' is one of the coolest words in the world as I hear it , 'cos I'm speak Hebrew, I'm from Israel. Also from a cold place (Golan) but not even close in the low degrees to your place. And Ariel you are such a cool person . Thank you for this awesome videos, I'm watching you a few years now. Cheers .
I once lived in a central chimney cape built in 1712.No insulation,single pane windows,and no central heat.All we had was a wood burning cookstove in the kitchen and a box stove in the living room.That was some cold in that house.
Bed warming pans are what they used. When my dad forgot to call the furnace oil company and we ran out I would heat up cookie sheets in the oven and place them in the beds to warm them up. A good old fashioned bed warmer would have been a great thing to have.
We heat with wood ….yes we use 4 to 5 cords ….1000 ft living space….our process though is the same at night…stack it full before bed and just let it burn as long as it does …there are always coals left in the morning and it doesn’t take much to bring it alive again… I actually like waking up to the cooler temps and savoring the toasty heat rising from it once it is rekindled each and every day … I love the miniature version 🙂
I have a cubic mini that I heat my 248 sq. foot tiny house. Its a very nice stove & heats well. I do also have propane heat for over night since the cubic doesn't keep heating through the wee hours of the night.
You have inspired me to build my own wood burning fireplace. Partly because I (a mother) worried about the safety of leaving that burning(unassisted) while you slept. Another motherly concern.
The woodstove info. Is great.The adoration of Burley to you is priceless. Think I enjoyed him more than what I learned about the workings of your woodstove.💞 … So cute.
snug cabin... i drilled a couple of holes in the floor (under a loose tile) to solve the door/vacuum problem ... i stapled a piece of screen under the holes...
I used to run regular stove pipe, had a lot of creosote no matter what type of wood I burned. I have since upgraded to Selkirk double wall insulated stainless pipe thru the wall. In addition I have also added a thermometer to the flue to monitor how hot I am burning. Same stove (airtight with brick lining) 1- the double wall pipe retains much more heat, pretty much turning it into a rocket stove. 2- I burn at 400-475°F, at this temperature I have zero smoke out of the chimney. I have zero problems with creosote and after 4yrs of running like this, haven't had to clean the chimney yet. Inspections are regular and the flue is still sparkling clean, only a bit of fine dust in the bottom of the tee.
I live in the Foothills of California, just North of Yosemite, and I put a few sticks of Manzanita into the stove every week or so. The Manzanita burns hotter and cleans the creosote out before it can build up. HOWEVER, for those who have NOT done this for some time, clean your stack first before you start this. Chimney fires are no joke....
I have a rather small house of about 1000 sq ft. It's 130 years old but I've insulated it quite well. It had a central fireplace. 40 years ago I put a single wall 6" stainless flue in the chimney and installed a steel wood stove. I poured vermiculite down the chimney all around the pipe. It took a lot of vermiculite to fill up the space around the pipe. This insulated the pipe tremendously. As a result of this I've never had to clean the pipe. I suspect that it has something to do with how well the flue is insulated. The walls of the pipe are kept hot and don't condense any of the flue gases. Who knew this would work? I always burn small hot fires with well cured hardwood. From this experience I always recommend people insulate their flue pipe as much as possible, especially any on the outside of the house. Might I suggest putting an insulated 6" pipe over top of the 4" pipe. It would increase draft and prevent or reduce creosote/carbon build up.
I have a 140 year old yankee frame of about 1000 sq ft. I insulated all I could. about R50 or more in ceiling. I heat entirely with wood in northern WV area near Pittsburg and I use about the same as she does or 1.5 to 2 cords per winter. I have a big stove, but I have to cut and split small pieces 8-10 inches long because regular size wood would be too much at one time and it's difficult to light and burn a single piece. I usually light two fires per day in colder weather, one in the morning and one in the evening. I usually can't maintain a fire continuously as it's far too much heat. I like single digit temps as I can keep a fire going all day. It's all about insulation.
I also live in a very small house and only heat it with a wood stove in the middle of the woods in southern Indiana but my house is not air tight so I use a lot more wood than you do but I love it most women don't like the mess in the house but that's ok I live alone now and I don't care about it just clean it up every day it is 18 out now and 72 inside good enough nice to see a woman who really enjoys her wood stove nice video
What is a cubic mini? I have a 200sqft cabin using an oil radiator currently, I was afraid a woodstove would be roasting during the day and cold at night, and would need feeding every 2-4 hrs. Her talk on constant cleaning now also has me worried, lol!
@@This1LifeWeLive it is a small wood stove made for use in tiny homes, RV’s and boats. We do have to feed it pretty often, but it does keep our little cabin quite cozy and warm. We are only using wood that we have here on our property, which is Doug fir. I’m sure hardwood would have a longer, slower burn.
In case if advice is welcome - you may try to save as much of potatoe shavings as possible - let them dry and throw into your stove. Check the chimney before and after - it may help a lot. My family uses this trick for years)
@@ekimpp well, when potato shavings burn, the smoke contains a lot of starch that reacts with fresh soot and grime. When done on the regular basis that prevents building of grime in the chimney really nice
That sounds very interesting! Could I just cut up a potato and burn it in my wood stove now and then or how often should I burn a potato to keep a long metal chimney clean?
@@TheButterflyGirl7 well, I do not have scientific calculations for that, but usually the unit of measure was a bucket of shavings that gathers in a week or so - for a brick woodstove located on the first floor of 2-floor building
I've noticed that when I'm out in the cold walking my dogs (my tortoise comes inside fir the winter because it's just too cold in wv even for her to burrow) or moving the snow when I come back inside at first its nice to be really warm but then as I settle I feel way too hot and it takes me a while to adjust to that temperature difference I'm also not fully used to winter though I'm from further south and it really didn't get anywhere near this cold and we only got very light snow maybe 2 times a year so we're learning lol I do plan on moving back south and trying to start a little homestead one day but for now I'm in mortuary school so I guess I'll figure out how to deal better with the cold as each winter comes and goes
Jotul F 602 is a great little cast iron wood stove for a small house. Small though it is, it may be a bit too much for the "tiny" house. We have the Jotul Oslo 500 which heats our three thousand square foot house just fine. Great channel.
These little stoves for tiny homes call for an air supply piped in from the outside. That saves you the hassle of having to open your door or window in the middle of a harsh winter. You also need properly seasoned wood. No matter how dry you think your wood is, if it has its original blonde color it is likely not dry enough. A cheap moisture meter will serve you well. Seasoned wood is most often grayish colored. Also, these little stoves like to be started up with smaller pieces than you have there. Once you have a nice bed of coals, the larger pieces will light up very quickly.
The reason you don't get the desired draught up the chimney is because your house is sealed too much. You must have ventilation and you have a vent on the skirting behind you, but that needs to be open and may be need to be bigger or to add another vent. You proved this in the opening part of the video when you have to open the door to get the fire going. You also need fresh air to breath. Sealing a house completely will be like putting a large plastic bag over your head. Houses also need a steady exchange of air to prevent mould building up and condensation and wood rot. Anyway you would be surprised at how much air a fire uses and as for the height of the chimney stack anything over 10 feet won't make much difference to the updraught, no need to worry about trees or mountains :) You will find the creosote won't build up either if you have a roaring fire from time to time :)
She has the window upstairs open and during the day has a downstairs window open a crack. The moisture problem was due to her propane furnace which she now very seldom uses.
Thank you explaining so much about the wood stove. Especially about the cap for the chimney. I do need to get a small wood stove and the conditions here can be quite windy. Thank you for sharing your experiences!
If there's anything near your flue pipe termination you need to extend your vent up and over that so the wind doesn't like blow over the tree or roof line and come down pushing on top of the vent
Love the wind cap. I’m getting a spot made to put a wood stove back into the lower part of the house. I believe the original owners had one down here. I wasn’t sure if they ditched it for a fire propane stove due to ease of selling, or if the wind was too much. So this is very timely, and Hi Burley!
I definitely think stoves should have a direct link from outside. Seems like It would be a good idea. I'm welding a tiny stove for my house. Maybe I'll post a video.
Love the update on the wood stove. Will you do an update on how things are going with the Nature's Head composting toilet now that there's two of you in the tiny house?
what a wonderful simple useful presentation... after watching all the grand experts with their advertizing tactics, I was left with more questions than truth!
Thank you for that wonderful video! I was thinking of putting a small wood burning stove in my trailer home but even a small wood stove is quite expensive. They want it over 5000 for the whole setup my wife had a hard time accepting that. And I must say you're A very beautiful woman!😊
Your raised beds look like mine! Tip: put some type of cement toppers on those blocks or you'll end up with lots of weeds. The thinner concrete blocks work well, as to the 4 x 2 x 8 inch pavers. That's what I use and they also act as somewhere where you can sit as you get older. I've been doing that for 20 years and the seat really helps my knees and back!
Love your tiny and the lifestyle of living tiny. Thank you very much for the wonderful videos. I'm saving to buy a tiny and a wood stove is definitely a must for me.
Wish we had had a small stove when we lived in the country. We had a fireplace for supplemental heat. No matter that Mom stoked it like a ship's boiler, it was never very efficient. Hot in the living room, cold in the back of the house.
When you gather up those ashes in those bits of paper... if you use wetted paper to collect the ashes... then you can use that to clean off the inside of the ceramic glass...polishes up a treat... then just throw the paper into the fire...
Ive just bought a dwarf stove with external air intake so no need to open doors as fire gets all its air from outside so does not starve your living environment of oxygen.
Those wind caps work great I put one on my ice shack, I drilled a 1 1/2 inch hole in the floor next to my stove burns better make up air, it cut down on drafts too
I have a big stove and clean it out every day. You put more wood in there, so it still needs cleaning out. Probably not every day, but I have an ash pan underneath and it stays in there until I empty it which is maybe once a week or so. Some nights I don't even start a fire at night. Just let it get cold in the house. Sometimes in January I get up in the middle of the night because it's well below zero outside. I like burning with wood. I have 5 acres and have just burned mostly dead wood on my property for the last 5 years or so. I've always thought the perfect wood stove for a small space would be tall with a top door so you could put a long log in it and have it slowly burn down. You'd have to load it when it was just coals left or it would smoke a lot.
I'd be concerned the wood pile would fall over near the stove and ignite when your sleeping. I also think it's too close if it was super super dry. Take care.
I like the concept of a tiny house. The Minnie wood stove would be a cheep way to heat. I think I would have a very hard adjustment living that style. My clothes alone would be problematic. I have work clothes, good clothes. Hunting clothes, summer clothes. Than I put up can goods from the garden. Looks interesting to living in the manner you are.
I am not subscribed to this channel, but once in a while youtube suggests me a video or two and i am always impressed by her knowledge and interest in what she is talking about, while she seems grounded or "down to earth". The wind cap is a super idea, i will try that for my own stove, THANKS! A good tip that i use for my woodstove window is taking a slightly wet tissue that i dip in grey ash from the previous fire and wipe it down, works quite well. I know that it is not a issue (anymore) about a damp house / apartment, but i myself has had huge issues in the past with moisture and tried all kinds of dehumidifiers, the one that worked really well is called 'emil' 10 liters from 'eeese air care', i now own 5 of them and just wanted to share that since it might save someone else the headacke of 'trial and error'.
Informative. I had forgotten how comfortable and comforting wood heat is. I installed a “dwarf” brand in my camp trailer and can bank it to have coals for maybe 6 hours.. your set up and tightly built home is impressive.
Can I get some advice my daughter bought me a Woodstove it's my first I'm so excited I can't wait. I need to know how far away from the wall to put it also I have a second floor can I go out the wall and up the roof? What can I put behind the wall to use as a heat shield I have drywall appreciate your help. I been freezing for years in n old single family home In so EXCITED
I just ordered a grizzly mini for my truck camper and also ordered the wind directional cap for the stack have the propane furnace in it but don’t want to use it because of the moister problems and will be running the stove a lot here in Alaska
I originally started out with a small Jotul Nordic woodstove and had a real issue with that flaky creosote buildup you mentioned. Once a week I would hammer on the side of the flue to get the crap to fall down into the elbow area going into the back of the stove, pop off the baffle and vacuum out the creosote flakes. Then I switched up to a much larger stove - the next to the largest one made by Jotul. The creosote problem became nonexistent. I suspect the reason was even if I burned a really "hot" fire in the smaller stove, it still was nowhere near as hot as a medium fire in the larger stove I purchased. Hotter fires mean less creosote. So a larger stove results in hotter fires which results in less creosote. That you have to dig out large amounts of creosote produced by that itsy-weenie stove of yours is no surprise.
Great vid... You can also try building an upside-down fire... stacking all the wood in tight with little or no air between... then, at the top, putting 1 row in the opposite direction , add your kindling and fire starter on the very top... it will burn much slower through the night... Great dog too...
17:20 that ain't smoke girl, that is water vapor, you can see it dissipate after a few moments as it exits the chimney. Clean combustion will result in only CO2 and H20, lots of it. When it's really cold the H20 in the exhaust stream will condense in the cold dry atmosphere till it is absorbed .
BTW, I love the way you can stop a sentence right in the middle, change the subject, and then step right back into your initial discussion without missing a beat.
I too run my wood stove from about the third week of October clear through and tapering off in May. I'm pretty sure my neighbors thought I was crazy burning that late in the year, but if its 50 out, my house won't warm up without at least a small morning fire. (I'm a tiny old lady so I'm always cold.)
Most people who don't live in cold climates don't realize that it takes a house sometimes quite a while to heat up! The body of the house absorbs the warmth like a heat sink.
Meh, don't concern yourself with what your neighbors might think.
In regards to watching the fire, I once heard a fireplace referred to as Amish television.
Or cabin TV. I could sit for hours and just watch the flames with the beautiful shapes and colors.
Lmao!!
I just installed a woodstove on the 17th at my house, and now I'm considering getting rid of my big screen. All my rescue dogs absolutely love laying out in front of it, and they sleep like I've never seen before.
then the Amish are WAY ahead of the game... rid yourself of the lying
sh t box.
Naturally fascinating and the infrared it gives off is good for us 😊
4:50 To avoid waking up at 2am because the stove went out and it is freezing cold you probably need thermal mass, so if you put a big pot with rocks in water on top, sometimes that will help radiate heat through the night. There are many other ways too.
Wow 🤩
Can't rocks explode?
Safer with fireproof bricks.. 👍
I have a big chunk of granite on mine. Takes about 3 hours to fully heat up and the same to cool down. Helps a bit I believe.
@@juditharsenault2131 river rocks are most likely to explode because of trapped moisture inside. Open air granite is your best bet because of how dense it is.
We burn almost 3 cords of wood every year here in Baltimore...and the pups LOVE IT
This fire pit is one of a few covered pits that is on the list ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxAU9pOCSV9Y5JprooHvfxTpOrt4hx8uRM of approved products for Disney Fort Wilderness. The product served its purpose well and provided excellent fires throughout the evening. We were able to open the door and do s'mores, but I had to be careful because the handle was a bit hot on occasions. Additionally, I wish they had replaced some of the standard nuts with lock nuts in some places. We lost the door handle after just a couple of days of usage. Not a deal breaker, just a recommendation. I still give it 5 stars.
I remember way back when you were wiping down the windows, maybe daily, to try to control the moisture and mildew. I was really happy for you when you got that wood stove installed. Thanks for the update!
Every gallon of propane burned in a fire with no external flue creates a gallon of water vapor which condenses out on every cold surface in the house.
LP is a lousy space heating fuel for it's cost or efficiency...but good for cooking.
NG is bad for the environment but goes well in furnaces...
If you have your own wood supply and cut it yourself...nothing beats wood....
👍🏻😍🌼🌻👍🙏
@@JohnSmith-yv6eq NG burns clean AF..
NG is a natural product of the earth
@@Abersabel78pppppplllppplpppplllpppp
We also sleep with a window open year round here in the California Sierras. We have a small fan because we love a cold breeze when sleeping. We have flannel sheets in winter and a down comforter, and we wear a bed cap too! Best sleep in winter is a cold bedroom and a cozy warm bed.
I'm with you on that one! My mother gifted each of her children with a beautiful down comforter and one year my dad got each of us a small one that was wrapped up with a strap for our cars in case we got stranded. We thought those were incredibly thoughtful 🎁 's!
@@damogranheart5521 silly question? But was the strap also useful in that gift? Such a great idea for cars to have the down blanket!
Sleeping with the windows open was a practice related old forms of heating houses which caused carbon monoxide deaths. Sleeping with the windows open is not any healthier per se than sleeping with them closed. Due to criminals, I would never sleep with any windows open, day or night, in town or in the countryside.
Yes but isn't it murder getting out of bed in the morning?
@@edwardgabriel5281 Not fun when the cold front is in your bedroom instead of outside where it belongs. 😊
To clean the glass on a airtight woodstove, just wet a paper towel, (not drippy) and dip it into the ashes inside. Then just scrub away the smoke marks on the glass with the ashes.
dry newspaper is even better
I have a smaller house 880 sq ft ranch and put a Vermont casting Aspen in, I love it and it keeps my house toasty warm in a very cold climate. Wood heat is the best.
Would like to see pictures of your installation. I bought an aspen c3 but haven't started the installation in my 880 Sq ft house yet.
When I married and had children, that was the end of sleeping with windows open, though that's what blankies are for! Ex-Hubby could not, for the life of him, "get" the concept. Invest in good blankets! I use Australian wool duvets. They were a tad costly but...they've been in use for 10 years and are in perfect condition. That's what duvet covers are for! 👍😎🌲🔥🇨🇦
I go to a sawmill. And buy there scraps edging. Its about 1 to 1and half thick . Oak hickory cherry . Burns great . 1 bundle is about 1/2 a cord . 10 bucks a bundle
Subscribed. Because of your knowledge about how burning pine vs deciduous trees really affects creosote production. Nice. Since my parents burned wood for heat when I was just a pup my body has been heated by wood, and at times overheated by wood, for many many years. Locally, burning pine is considered a no-no (ostensibly because of creosote buildup) and whenever I'd get in a discussion with someone anti-pine burning I'd ask what they thought people burn where there is no hardwood, the discussion would generally come to a stop.
Where the wind comes sweeping down the plain. I just cleaned my oversized fireplace that I wish had a heatalator. I’ll build that in when I create my own. Love putting big logs in and sitting close. Have had inserts and wood stoves and enjoyed their real heat. Always keep my galvanized bucket for ashes to go out and be real dead. Smokey the Bear has always been a personal icon.
I have learned more from you just watching this video than I have from any material I've seen on wood stoves--- thank you !!
I'm so homesick for Wyoming, and I love this tiny stove.
I suggest a log hoop to keep your stack secure. All it would take is a large vibration or noise to loosen up your neat stack, fall against the stove and cause a fire.
I love these videos. I love the cooking videos too. There's just something about the tiny House and the videos that all come together nicely.
My dr am to have a tiny home. On for me and one for my rescue kittys. I will connect the two tiny homes in between with an enclosed safe Catio they can come n go as they please to visit momma lol. I love my rescue kittys they rescued me . Adopt are rescue a kitty are doggie loyal n loving they never complained n happy to see there mom
I remember on our first holiday in the Alps. We also had a stove and my wife told me to put enough wood in there so it keeps us warm over night. It was really big, I put in a lot of wood and at around 3am, the thermometer said 35°C, or 95°F. It was -25°C (or -13°F) outside and we were in a sauna.
LOL!
Hahahahaha!
*we call that "candle melting" occurrence
To much draft. If you'd done it right, it would have worked. Your wife was right.
It just takes more experience with adjusting the draft and wood placement in the fireplace or stove box. I hope you get to try it again sometime.
Hi, if that heat shield behind the stove was chrome it would reflect heat into the room and behind it would be cold. It wouldn't look as nice though. Just for fun you could cover it with cooking foil and feel the difference, it's really quite amazing 🙂
Stainless steel stove pipe will last a lifetime and you won't have to worry about a pipe rusting through and starting a fire.I switched to SS pipe after about 7 years when the steel pipe started to rust through from the inside out.I painted the SS pipe flat black for heat radiation and it is still great after 21 years of daily Winter use.Good Luck!
I've had a stainless pipe for 40 years. Unaffected by corrosion. Came in 3ft screw together single wall pieces. I put it up through a lined chimney and poured vermiculite to fill. The insulation prevents any carbon build up. I've never had to sweep the chimney. I look down the pipe and there is never anything sticking to the walls.
@@geraldmoore6257 Thanks so much for the info..
Taking notes...so lined chimney??? Vermiculite goes where???
@@jointheir9594 Sure, the brick chimney was tile lined. I sealed up the fireplace with brick with cast openings, then poured vermiculite between the SS pipe and the lining. The pipe never develops any creosote; but I burn 5 year seasoned hardwood. So there's that.
@@geraldmoore6257 THANKS MUCH...
Glad you were able to solve the issue with the wind cap. We just moved our Woodstock Soapstone wood stove to our camp in PA since we had to move out of our 100yo house to a townhouse (thanks, Covid). We have an older Woodstock wood stove too for the bunkhouse. Highly recommend Woodstock Soapstone wood stoves in Vermont if anyone is in the market. We went through the first winter w/o one and paid $1200 for 3 months of forced air heat. Placed an order the following spring and installed it over the summer. Nothing beats woodstove heating!
That and the fact that they are so beautiful! Many years ago friends of our family saved up to install one in their new home. Very effective and so well built. A real statement piece!
I remember when I was a kid going to my grandparents house at Christmas time they would have a wood stove to heat the house. I loved going there at Christmas time.
I love how you give details even down to the size of wood. I have been watch your videos for quiet a will. I am amazed how you flow through your daily workday like it is a breeze . Thanks !!!
You're good. your observations are accurate. I've been off -grid since '72 and live in a earth-buffered envelope house I designed- not tiny, but all the same principles. We burn 2 1/2 cords of wood/yr. for a 1250 sq. ft house in NH.Thanks for this.
I found another company from another homesteader that bought one last year. VERMONT CASTINGS, Model C3 mini wood stove
"...I am way too lazy to do that... I've never gotten up in the night to stack my stove..." I object! LAZY is an adjective that could NEVER be accurately ascribed to this amazing woman!!! 😉👍💖 P.S. Thanks for all the great info, for all these years! 🙏
Well, can always check out pellet stoves. Some can look just like wood stoves but easier to refuel as you can do things like have a gravity fed container auto-refilling the stove, and it can even be controlled by a thermostat and timer for leave it and forget it like a modern furnace heater... They also sell versions for outdoor grilling/smoking... While, a larger home, you can opt for an exterior wood furnace that can feed the heat into the home, as well as act as boiler for hot water, and being much larger can run for many hours with just the occasional refueling...
Not a lazy bone in her body. I, on the other hand, have enough for both of us. Texas
Nice to see the stove update. I'm glad you're still enjoying it, and that it's still working well for you.
A Very Efficient Setup GOD Bless Yall
I think 'Chimney' is one of the coolest words in the world as I hear it , 'cos I'm speak Hebrew, I'm from Israel. Also from a cold place (Golan) but not even close in the low degrees to your place. And Ariel you are such a cool person . Thank you for this awesome videos, I'm watching you a few years now. Cheers .
I Use a metal kitty litter scoop to sift the coals from the ashes. That way I don't waste any woood/ coal
SUPER COZY.. thanks for sharing
Many Blessings to you
I've learned more from this video than any of the other wood stove videos on UA-cam. Thank you!
There's a lot of wrong info, so how you don't have your life or safety on it.
I once lived in a central chimney cape built in 1712.No insulation,single pane windows,and no central heat.All we had was a wood burning cookstove in the kitchen and a box stove in the living room.That was some cold in that house.
Bed warming pans are what they used. When my dad forgot to call the furnace oil company and we ran out I would heat up cookie sheets in the oven and place them in the beds to warm them up. A good old fashioned bed warmer would have been a great thing to have.
We heat with wood ….yes we use 4 to 5 cords ….1000 ft living space….our process though is the same at night…stack it full before bed and just let it burn as long as it does …there are always coals left in the morning and it doesn’t take much to bring it alive again… I actually like waking up to the cooler temps and savoring the toasty heat rising from it once it is rekindled each and every day … I love the miniature version 🙂
Interesting how the change in location effected the stove. There's always something to learn.
I have a cubic mini that I heat my 248 sq. foot tiny house. Its a very nice stove & heats well. I do also have propane heat for over night since the cubic doesn't keep heating through the wee hours of the night.
You have inspired me to build my own wood burning fireplace. Partly because I (a mother) worried about the safety of leaving that burning(unassisted) while you slept. Another motherly concern.
Great video and no music makes it one of the best videos to watch.
Nice solid little stove
The woodstove info. Is great.The adoration of Burley to you is priceless. Think I enjoyed him more than what I learned about the workings of your woodstove.💞 … So cute.
snug cabin... i drilled a couple of holes in the floor (under a loose tile) to solve the door/vacuum problem ... i stapled a piece of screen under the holes...
I have electric water buckets I bought from tractor supply. That way I don't have to chop ice for the dogs. Ty for the video arielle!
Thank you 👍👍
Takes special people to live in a house this size.
I used to run regular stove pipe, had a lot of creosote no matter what type of wood I burned.
I have since upgraded to Selkirk double wall insulated stainless pipe thru the wall. In addition I have also added a thermometer to the flue to monitor how hot I am burning.
Same stove (airtight with brick lining)
1- the double wall pipe retains much more heat, pretty much turning it into a rocket stove.
2- I burn at 400-475°F, at this temperature I have zero smoke out of the chimney. I have zero problems with creosote and after 4yrs of running like this, haven't had to clean the chimney yet.
Inspections are regular and the flue is still sparkling clean, only a bit of fine dust in the bottom of the tee.
I live in the Foothills of California, just North of Yosemite, and I put a few sticks of Manzanita into the stove every week or so. The Manzanita burns hotter and cleans the creosote out before it can build up. HOWEVER, for those who have NOT done this for some time, clean your stack first before you start this. Chimney fires are no joke....
I have a rather small house of about 1000 sq ft. It's 130 years old but I've insulated it quite well. It had a central fireplace. 40 years ago I put a single wall 6" stainless flue in the chimney and installed a steel wood stove. I poured vermiculite down the chimney all around the pipe. It took a lot of vermiculite to fill up the space around the pipe. This insulated the pipe tremendously. As a result of this I've never had to clean the pipe. I suspect that it has something to do with how well the flue is insulated. The walls of the pipe are kept hot and don't condense any of the flue gases. Who knew this would work? I always burn small hot fires with well cured hardwood. From this experience I always recommend people insulate their flue pipe as much as possible, especially any on the outside of the house. Might I suggest putting an insulated 6" pipe over top of the 4" pipe. It would increase draft and prevent or reduce creosote/carbon build up.
That's amazing that's all the wood you need to stay toasty, my parents had a log house in a similar climate and went thru 7 cord a year!!
How good is their insulation...and the chinking?
I have a 140 year old yankee frame of about 1000 sq ft. I insulated all I could. about R50 or more in ceiling. I heat entirely with wood in northern WV area near Pittsburg and I use about the same as she does or 1.5 to 2 cords per winter. I have a big stove, but I have to cut and split small pieces 8-10 inches long because regular size wood would be too much at one time and it's difficult to light and burn a single piece. I usually light two fires per day in colder weather, one in the morning and one in the evening. I usually can't maintain a fire continuously as it's far too much heat. I like single digit temps as I can keep a fire going all day. It's all about insulation.
All these years it has worked out great for you with the stove
I also live in a very small house and only heat it with a wood stove in the middle of the woods in southern Indiana but my house is not air tight so I use a lot more wood than you do but I love it most women don't like the mess in the house but that's ok I live alone now and I don't care about it just clean it up every day it is 18 out now and 72 inside good enough nice to see a woman who really enjoys her wood stove nice video
Quite a wealth of information. Never seen a wind thing like that on the outside chimney.
We just installed a cubic mini a few days ago in our little 250 sq foot cabin and we LOVE it so far!
What is a cubic mini? I have a 200sqft cabin using an oil radiator currently, I was afraid a woodstove would be roasting during the day and cold at night, and would need feeding every 2-4 hrs. Her talk on constant cleaning now also has me worried, lol!
@@This1LifeWeLive it is a small wood stove made for use in tiny homes, RV’s and boats. We do have to feed it pretty often, but it does keep our little cabin quite cozy and warm. We are only using wood that we have here on our property, which is Doug fir. I’m sure hardwood would have a longer, slower burn.
Saw ur video on Google.
Nice name yet ur home ..am 4th gen Welsh. 💯❤🇺🇸
I could watch and listen to you all day. You're very beautiful as well. Its very interesting to see how someone lives in a tiny house.
In case if advice is welcome - you may try to save as much of potatoe shavings as possible - let them dry and throw into your stove. Check the chimney before and after - it may help a lot. My family uses this trick for years)
What is beneficial for potato shavings ?
@@ekimpp well, when potato shavings burn, the smoke contains a lot of starch that reacts with fresh soot and grime. When done on the regular basis that prevents building of grime in the chimney really nice
That sounds very interesting! Could I just cut up a potato and burn it in my wood stove now and then or how often should I burn a potato to keep a long metal chimney clean?
@@TheButterflyGirl7 well, I do not have scientific calculations for that, but usually the unit of measure was a bucket of shavings that gathers in a week or so - for a brick woodstove located on the first floor of 2-floor building
Thanks for all the good tips. I am going to buy one for my house. Our electric heating went down, and we had no heat for 1 day and night.
I've noticed that when I'm out in the cold walking my dogs (my tortoise comes inside fir the winter because it's just too cold in wv even for her to burrow) or moving the snow when I come back inside at first its nice to be really warm but then as I settle I feel way too hot and it takes me a while to adjust to that temperature difference I'm also not fully used to winter though I'm from further south and it really didn't get anywhere near this cold and we only got very light snow maybe 2 times a year so we're learning lol I do plan on moving back south and trying to start a little homestead one day but for now I'm in mortuary school so I guess I'll figure out how to deal better with the cold as each winter comes and goes
Jotul F 602 is a great little cast iron wood stove for a small house. Small though it is, it may be a bit too much for the "tiny" house. We have the Jotul Oslo 500 which heats our three thousand square foot house just fine. Great channel.
These little stoves for tiny homes call for an air supply piped in from the outside. That saves you the hassle of having to open your door or window in the middle of a harsh winter. You also need properly seasoned wood. No matter how dry you think your wood is, if it has its original blonde color it is likely not dry enough. A cheap moisture meter will serve you well. Seasoned wood is most often grayish colored. Also, these little stoves like to be started up with smaller pieces than you have there. Once you have a nice bed of coals, the larger pieces will light up very quickly.
The reason you don't get the desired draught up the chimney is because your house is sealed too much. You must have ventilation and you have a vent on the skirting behind you, but that needs to be open and may be need to be bigger or to add another vent. You proved this in the opening part of the video when you have to open the door to get the fire going. You also need fresh air to breath. Sealing a house completely will be like putting a large plastic bag over your head. Houses also need a steady exchange of air to prevent mould building up and condensation and wood rot. Anyway you would be surprised at how much air a fire uses and as for the height of the chimney stack anything over 10 feet won't make much difference to the updraught, no need to worry about trees or mountains :) You will find the creosote won't build up either if you have a roaring fire from time to time :)
Good comment folks!
Listen to these points PLEASE. It could save your home...and or your life!
She has the window upstairs open and during the day has a downstairs window open a crack.
The moisture problem was due to her propane furnace which she now very seldom uses.
Put in a concentric vent
Thank you explaining so much about the wood stove. Especially about the cap for the chimney. I do need to get a small wood stove and the conditions here can be quite windy. Thank you for sharing your experiences!
If there's anything near your flue pipe termination you need to extend your vent up and over that so the wind doesn't like blow over the tree or roof line and come down pushing on top of the vent
Burley: “Mom must be talking to me. I better kiss her and wag my tail!”
Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to everyone. From Washington Court House, Ohio
Love the wind cap. I’m getting a spot made to put a wood stove back into the lower part of the house. I believe the original owners had one down here. I wasn’t sure if they ditched it for a fire propane stove due to ease of selling, or if the wind was too much. So this is very timely, and Hi Burley!
👍👍👍🙏😍
Part of the draft problem is from your house being so tight. perhaps an air intake from the outside to your stove would help
I definitely think stoves should have a direct link from outside. Seems like It would be a good idea. I'm welding a tiny stove for my house. Maybe I'll post a video.
Looks mighty warm!
Love the update on the wood stove. Will you do an update on how things are going with the Nature's Head composting toilet now that there's two of you in the tiny house?
Thanks for the update.
I like your starter, the sand dust and diesel fuel ideal. thanks
what a wonderful simple useful presentation... after watching all the grand experts with their advertizing tactics, I was left with more questions than truth!
Thank you for that wonderful video! I was thinking of putting a small wood burning stove in my trailer home but even a small wood stove is quite expensive. They want it over 5000 for the whole setup my wife had a hard time accepting that. And I must say you're A very beautiful woman!😊
looks cozy
Your raised beds look like mine! Tip: put some type of cement toppers on those blocks or you'll end up with lots of weeds. The thinner concrete blocks work well, as to the 4 x 2 x 8 inch pavers. That's what I use and they also act as somewhere where you can sit as you get older. I've been doing that for 20 years and the seat really helps my knees and back!
Love your tiny and the lifestyle of living tiny. Thank you very much for the wonderful videos. I'm saving to buy a tiny and a wood stove is definitely a must for me.
Good video, and thanks for posting. Nice to see how how it is done with your small wood stove. You have enthusiasm which is good.
Wish we had had a small stove when we lived in the country. We had a fireplace for supplemental heat. No matter that Mom stoked it like a ship's boiler, it was never very efficient. Hot in the living room, cold in the back of the house.
When you gather up those ashes in those bits of paper...
if you use wetted paper to collect the ashes...
then you can use that to clean off the inside of the ceramic glass...polishes up a treat...
then just throw the paper into the fire...
@08:28 - You could always use the ashes leftover from your fire with newspaper to get that glass on the door to sparkling new! 😉
Ive just bought a dwarf stove with external air intake so no need to open doors as fire gets all its air from outside so does not starve your living environment of oxygen.
enjoy your video/is your stove a EPA stove/thanks much
Those wind caps work great I put one on my ice shack, I drilled a 1 1/2 inch hole in the floor next to my stove burns better make up air, it cut down on drafts too
I have a big stove and clean it out every day. You put more wood in there, so it still needs cleaning out. Probably not every day, but I have an ash pan underneath and it stays in there until I empty it which is maybe once a week or so. Some nights I don't even start a fire at night. Just let it get cold in the house. Sometimes in January I get up in the middle of the night because it's well below zero outside. I like burning with wood. I have 5 acres and have just burned mostly dead wood on my property for the last 5 years or so. I've always thought the perfect wood stove for a small space would be tall with a top door so you could put a long log in it and have it slowly burn down. You'd have to load it when it was just coals left or it would smoke a lot.
Hi Ariel We've remembered many years ago you wiping down the windows.
I'd be concerned the wood pile would fall over near the stove and ignite when your sleeping. I also think it's too close if it was super super dry. Take care.
Those windcaps work great!
use corrugated tin shimmed from wall with white enamel insulators... works great, looks good
Thanks and take care.
I like the concept of a tiny house. The Minnie wood stove would be a cheep way to heat. I think I would have a very hard adjustment living that style. My clothes alone would be problematic. I have work clothes, good clothes. Hunting clothes, summer clothes. Than I put up can goods from the garden. Looks interesting to living in the manner you are.
Just a thought, but could you have a tin box made to elevate the stove to a more comfortable height, where the sealed tin box would radiat heat?
I would love a wood stove. *QUESTION* How long does that pile of wood you have beside the stove last?
I am not subscribed to this channel, but once in a while youtube suggests me a video or two and i am always impressed by her knowledge and interest in what she is talking about,
while she seems grounded or "down to earth".
The wind cap is a super idea, i will try that for my own stove, THANKS!
A good tip that i use for my woodstove window is taking a slightly wet tissue that i dip in grey ash from the previous fire
and wipe it down, works quite well.
I know that it is not a issue (anymore) about a damp house / apartment, but i myself has had huge issues in the past with moisture and tried all kinds of dehumidifiers,
the one that worked really well is called 'emil' 10 liters from 'eeese air care', i now own 5 of them and just wanted to share that since it might save someone else the headacke of 'trial and error'.
Informative. I had forgotten how comfortable and comforting wood heat is. I installed a “dwarf” brand in my camp trailer and can bank it to have coals for maybe 6 hours.. your set up and tightly built home is impressive.
This is really good information about wood stoves, especially that wind top thing..
Can I get some advice my daughter bought me a Woodstove it's my first I'm so excited I can't wait. I need to know how far away from the wall to put it also I have a second floor can I go out the wall and up the roof? What can I put behind the wall to use as a heat shield I have drywall appreciate your help. I been freezing for years in n old single family home In so EXCITED
I just ordered a grizzly mini for my truck camper and also ordered the wind directional cap for the stack have the propane furnace in it but don’t want to use it because of the moister problems and will be running the stove a lot here in Alaska
Wow totally love the wind cap idea!
I originally started out with a small Jotul Nordic woodstove and had a real issue with that flaky creosote buildup you mentioned. Once a week I would hammer on the side of the flue to get the crap to fall down into the elbow area going into the back of the stove, pop off the baffle and vacuum out the creosote flakes. Then I switched up to a much larger stove - the next to the largest one made by Jotul. The creosote problem became nonexistent. I suspect the reason was even if I burned a really "hot" fire in the smaller stove, it still was nowhere near as hot as a medium fire in the larger stove I purchased. Hotter fires mean less creosote. So a larger stove results in hotter fires which results in less creosote. That you have to dig out large amounts of creosote produced by that itsy-weenie stove of yours is no surprise.
Great vid... You can also try building an upside-down fire... stacking all the wood in tight with little or no air between... then, at the top, putting 1 row in the opposite direction , add your kindling and fire starter on the very top... it will burn much slower through the night... Great dog too...
17:20 that ain't smoke girl, that is water vapor, you can see it dissipate after a few moments as it exits the chimney. Clean combustion will result in only CO2 and H20, lots of it. When it's really cold the H20 in the exhaust stream will condense in the cold dry atmosphere till it is absorbed .