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Firewood, Heating and Wood Burning Equipment
Burning Pine
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<blockquote data-quote="Jon E" data-source="post: 2013328" data-attributes="member: 29105"><p>I stack my pine right in with the other hardwoods in my woodshed, treat it just like everything else - split, seasoned and stored under roof. A chunk of that tossed onto a bed of hot coals catches fire instantly. If I forget to feed the OWB sometimes, and there's only a few small coals buried in the ashes, a few small pine limbs will get the fire going from not much more than a quarter-sized chunk of coals. Problem is the stuff burns way too fast, so I only mix with hardwoods in the winter, I have a separate stack of dry pine slabs I burn in warmer months to heat water.</p><p></p><p>It's better than basswood, anyway.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jon E, post: 2013328, member: 29105"] I stack my pine right in with the other hardwoods in my woodshed, treat it just like everything else - split, seasoned and stored under roof. A chunk of that tossed onto a bed of hot coals catches fire instantly. If I forget to feed the OWB sometimes, and there's only a few small coals buried in the ashes, a few small pine limbs will get the fire going from not much more than a quarter-sized chunk of coals. Problem is the stuff burns way too fast, so I only mix with hardwoods in the winter, I have a separate stack of dry pine slabs I burn in warmer months to heat water. It's better than basswood, anyway. [/QUOTE]
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