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February 8, 2010 by KerryAnn Foster.
The kids and I survived the big storm last weekend while Jeff was gone, without incident. We then had a storm that was mostly ice this weekend that took out our power for a few hours and the phone/internet for two days. We’re expecting another mild storm beginning Tuesday with sleet and snow. We just can’t catch a break with the weather and the whole Eastern Seaboard is in the same boat with some spots currently having 3 feet of snow. We still have not had an opportunity to clear the garden or re-do the chicken coop shavings thanks to this incredibly wet weather. Locally there have been rock slides and other such assorted nastiness from ground that is too wet. The river by our house is amazingly high but not flooding. Yet. This is the highest we’ve ever seen the river, and we still have more rain, sleet and snow coming this week.
This week we will use the last of the wood we had purchased to heat our home through the winter. This winter has been so difficult that many are saying they’re in the same situation. We’re having trouble finding anyone to deliver firewood since so many other people are also trying to purchase more. In a normal winter we’d go through approximately three-and-a-half full cords of wood (as opposed to a face cord) from September to April and this year we’ll likely go through about five cords by the time we can stop using the fireplace at night. The type of wood you purchase determines how long a cord will last you, as certain types burn longer and hotter than others. This chart tells you how much heat each type of wood puts out.
Considerations and Questions
Be sure you know the difference between a full cord (4′x4′x8′) and a face cord (4′ high x 8′ long x varying lengths of pieces) and the average price of different types of woods before you begin calling people who are advertising wood in the local paper or places like Craig’s List. Know the maximum length of the wood pieces your stove can accommodate- 18 inches is standard. Be sure to ask how long the wood has been seasoned- you don’t want wood that has been seasoned less than eight months to a year for the maximum heat output and minimal creosote production. Wood that isn’t seasoned can cause a fire risk due to creosote build-up in the chimney. Kiln drying can shorten the amount of seasoning time needed.
We prefer to avoid poplar as the bulk of the load because it produces more ash than other woods for less heat output. Ash output is a consideration to stretch the time between cleaning out the ashes to help us time our fires so we can clean out the box when it isn’t as cold of a day. Poplar is easier to light, so we do use some of it for starting a fire with fatlighter. Loads of mixed types of wood will be cheaper than all one type. Another thing to consider in the price is if they stack the wood on delivery and if they charge for delivery. Most delivery men just dump it in your driveway and will charge an additional fee to stack it for you. You can get a discount if you pick it up yourself but we have found that the price difference isn’t worth the hours of work, especially when you figure in the cost of the gasoline. Ask around to people you know about what the local prices are for different types of wood to have an idea of what is reasonable before agreeing on delivery.
Savings
We keep our house at 60 degrees with the thermostat and heat the living area with the wood heater. I desperately hate heat pumps for a variety of reasons (unless you live in Florida), but because we do not have the correct R value and installation of insulation in our walls we can not heat our house exclusively with wood. Our power bill runs about $65-100 a month during the winter (depending on how much I use the dryer) as I am extremely careful with our energy usage. During the month of December, we babysat my parent’s parrots and raised the thermostat to 65 degrees and kept the living room around 75 degrees using the fireplace. Our power bill went up about $130 for that colder than average month for the extra five degrees. Considering one cord of non-dense wood costs about $130 here, the use of firewood can be a significant cost savings if you are able to drop your thermostat while burning the wood.
During the December power outage, we were able to keep the living area 10-15 degrees warmer than the back of the house and over 20 degrees warmer than the basement thanks to to the wood heater by hanging a blanket in the hallway to trap the heat in the living room and using a three-blade ecofan my husband had purchased on clearance to push the rising heat into the room.
Finally, consider that depending of the type of wood heater you have, you might be able to heat water/leftovers or cook on top as an additional form of savings. You might be able to heat up a soup for lunch or if you have one that can accommodate a modified toaster box or a camp/stove top oven, even bake on top of your wood heater.
Posted in heat, frugality, Homesteading | Print | No Comments »
January 27, 2010 by KerryAnn Foster.

This morning, I was much less than thrilled to hear the local forecasters predicting a major storm. We often joke in this area that the local chain supermarket pays the weather man on the only Asheville TV station to forecast much more snow than we’ll wind up getting in a bid to sell extra milk, bread, eggs and bottled water. Historically, they predict worse weather than we wind up getting so many people cook French Toast in their warm homes the morning after the storm, but this year that has not been so.
This could potentially be our second major storm this winter, with the prediction that we might get large amounts of snow beginning on Thursday. We did see snow Monday and it’s been quite cold this week, so I won’t be surprised if we do wind up with another big storm. We went through an extended storm in December that dumped 15 inches of snow with 2-3 foot drifts with the power out for a few days and three downed trees on our house. Some people in the immediate area went without power for a week. Due to icy conditions on our roller-coaster road with no curb and sudden drops off the sides and multiple trees downed across the road, we were stuck in our house for a week. We have one ‘hill’ at the top of our road that if you drive over at any real speed, you get the sinking feeling in your gut that you’ve just gone over the edge, like cresting the big hill at the beginning of a roller coaster. We knew that getting out would be difficult at best since none of our vehicles have 4WD. You might notice in the picture above that we’re living on a 3:1 slope and there are steeper places in our neighborhood. The snow from that storm took over a month to melt on our little patch of the wooded mountain. These storms are quite unusual for our area, but we must be prepared for them in case it does get bad.
Here is a list of what I do to prepare for a Winter snow or ice storm that could involve an extended power outage. Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Bug-In, Natural Disasters, Chickens, Homesteading, Emergency Preparedness | Print | No Comments »
January 12, 2010 by KerryAnn Foster.
The week before Christmas, we had 15 inches of snow unceremoniously dumped on us. We had a half-white Christmas. It still hasn’t completely melted. And we’ve had more snow repeatedly fall since then, more times than I care to count or remember. The end result of the white blanket was a total collapse of my garden structure. Today, it started snowing again. We chose to live in North Carolina, in part, because while it does get cold here for a few weeks a year, it normally doesn’t dump snow like this. Where’s that global warming we were warned about? It’s not here, because this is the coldest winter they’ve had in Asheville since before I was born!
The end result of all of this white mess? Garden Fever.
Posted in Organization- outside, Gardening, Homesteading | Print | No Comments »