The only real difference between hardwood and softwood is the difference in how many times you have to bring wood inside and load the stove (because of BTU difference)Yes you can burn pine, just season it first. Just like anything else.
Pablo Escobar burned $2 million in cash to keep warm. Enough saidas in my area of the state there is still plenty of good hardwoods and mostly oaks to be had. the price has been rising the last decade like everything else does with demand..... log length(100") is going for 100.00 to 125.00 per cord. as for green/dry as to processed wood its all over the board. being a firewood vendor registered with the state for "fuel assistance" there has been a rise in orders for green and dry pines as the prices and readily accessibility to hardwood has slowed! more people are becoming accustomed to burning other species of wood that was not to their liking for unknown reasons which were usually false tales to burning down their homes. you know " wet/green wood and all the tales" ..... pine is fine, as dry is good in oak, maple or even aspen/poplar. it all burns , some hotter an longer as well as a fast hot and not as long! burn what you have to suit your needs and budget.
Thanks man, Interestingly, I can do deep base and falsetto best. I can do impressions of many singers and many accents. I've been told a number of times that I should do radio. I always wanted to do voice training and "find myself" in that department. I get people laughing when I say should do movie trailers..."This summer..."As a trained singer, I gotta say that guy must have a fantastic singing voice. I can hear some excellent resonance and timbre in his speaking voice.
But pine is fine. Green wood causes creosote- not type of wood.
half price for heat, 2/3 for outdoor burningPine would have to be about one half of the cost of oak to be worthwhile if purchasing.
It's an easy answer for me, and the answer is YES!!
Thanks man, Interestingly, I can do deep base and falsetto best. I can do impressions of many singers and many accents. I've been told a number of times that I should do radio. I always wanted to do voice training and "find myself" in that department. I get people laughing when I say should do movie trailers..."This summer..."
BTW, Daniel is my favourite book!
Yes that's yours truly in the video. I'm a city kid but in tune with the outdoors. A fisherman pretty much exclusively, loving the fact that we have infinite cottage country and fishable lakes both massive and small, secluded and remote. We have the most freshwater lakes, rivers and streams in Ontario and we have vast shoreline access to three Great Lakes. I'm in the country for both work and play. I love everything about my fishing trips..getting the boat ready, bringing bagged wood for fires, cooking, cottage rental, smallmouth bass fishing, I even like the boat smell. We have salmon and steelhead and brown trout in the Great Lakes that run up the rivers to spawn. I go half hour east to fish for them (20 minutes from city limits), if I want, there are five tributaries right in the city, one being two traffic lights away beside a major north/south highway. I go east because the numbers are much better.oh- that was you in the video. Cool.
I bet you upper chest voice would be pretty glorious as well. Your voice seems like that of Bryn Terfel.
Yes, Daniel is a good one. Lots of great stuff in there.
In some areas, we don’t have hardwood, (unless you call white birch hardwood!)Pine would have to be about one half of the cost of oak to be worthwhile if purchasing.
It's not the type of wood or weather it's green or not. It's how hot the fire is that makes or doesn't produce creosote.As a trained singer, I gotta say that guy must have a fantastic singing voice. I can hear some excellent resonance and timbre in his speaking voice.
But pine is fine. Green wood causes creosote- not type of wood.
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