Find » Home Improvement » Making a Good Fire in Your Woodstov...

Making a Good Fire in Your Woodstove

By Lauren Staton, published Jun 29, 2007
Published Content: 65  Total Views: 33,400  Favorited By: 1 CPs
Embed:  
Rating: 3.0 of 5
Nothing can make you feel quite as warm and secure on a cold winter night as a good fire crackling in the woodstove. Building a good fire, however, can take some patience, good supplies, and some practice. There are probably hundreds of different ways to make and keep (the hardest part!) a roaring fire, and after eight years of having a fireplace, I have truly heard them all. However, I was able to pick and choose some good methods and came up with my own system.

The first step to any fire is starting it and keeping it going using kindling. Generally, though I hate to admit my crutch, fire starters found at grocery stores, hardware stores, etc are very helpful for this, particularly for a beginner. A fire log can burn for ten to fifteen minutes which allows the other kindling to get hot and ignite.

When it comes to picking out other kindling items, it's good to have a variety. Paper, such as newspaper or cardboard, ignites quickly and burns quickly as well but can be helpful to raise the temperature in the stove temporarily or ignite embers from a previous fire. Sticks and twigs, even the bark from firewood will burn longer and slightly hotter, and you'll want to have sticks of various thicknesses in your woodstove when you light your fire. That way, the smaller ones will burn first, which will hopefully ignite the larger ones.

Once you've gotten your kindling to burn well and you're reasonably confident that it won't go out when you add more wood, begin adding some smaller pieces of firewood. It's important that your firewood be seasoned well (generally, it should be cut and split a year before you plan to use it at least) and a hardwood like cedar, oak, hickory, etc and not pine. Pine releases sap and can often contribute to a build up in your chimney. The first few pieces that you add to any fire should be split so that fire can catch on the rough surface of the split. It's imperative that the first pieces be very well seasoned and reasonably small as well.

Making a Good Fire in Your Woodstove

A good fire can keep you warm on nearly any night, regardless of how cold

Credit: Stock Photo

Copyright: Stock Photo

Comments
Showing Comments 1 - 2 of 2
 
 
cedar isn't a hardwood- it is a softwood.

Posted on 09/29/2007 at 10:09:00 PM

 
I love the great tips that many of your articles provide. I benefit some how from each of your articles.

Posted on 06/30/2007 at 8:06:00 PM

Type in Your Comments Below - (1000 characters left)
Your name:

Submit your own content on this or any topic. Get started »
Showing Comments 1 - 2 of 2
 
Most Commented On