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Heating with cornįor all of these grievances, big and small, there is apparently no ready answer. To forget could mean wiping out the memory. If you own a computer, you must remind yourself to touch the anti-static pad before you put your hands on the keyboard. The dining room table wobbles dangerously. Some of your furniture shows signs of coming unglued. No amount of boiling water on top of the stove brings the humidity up to a healthy 30-40%. Less vital, yet still annoying, are the problems of dry air and static electricity. Far more unsettling is the fact that any friend or relative who has emphysema, allergies, or asthma does not feel totally comfortable visiting in your home for any length of time. Spiders build slovenly webs that capture this dust, giving certain corners in the living room an Addams Family look. For every bucket that is carried outside, a fine dust remains in the air and on surfaces inside the house.
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There is the interminable nuisance of cleaning out the ashes. A kerosene space heater that warms only its immediate area is not a consideration. Natural gas would be nice, but it is not piped in to where you live, and bottled gas is more expensive than wood. Electric heat is incredibly expensive, and oil is not far behind. After all, the other options do not stand up in comparison. With all your reservations, you have remained loyal to wood heat. You’ve only had that kind of creosote buildup once, but it gave you chills no fire can warm. And what about the worst scenario: that time when black ooze spilled down along the chimney, a warning of an impending fire. The farmer who delivered your wood swore that it had been drying at least two years. How long was it before you could get to that wood? Or the cold night in February when the green logs bubbled and steamed inside the firebox, giving off the meager warmth of a lighted match. There was that October two years ago when an early sleet storm froze the uncovered woodpile into one great ice cube. Or is it? Even you, who secretly believe your stove is the best woodburner of them all, have occasional misgivings. It seems a fair exchange for the fire that warms your home during the coldest, darkest months of winter. Any woodstove owner knows this routine well. In the absence of a woodlot, you consulted the newspaper or a wood-burning neighbor to find seasoned firewood for sale at the best price. Around that time, you might have walked the woodlot picking the right trees to drop for your next year’s winter wood supply, and then the song of the chain saw was heard in the land. Back in the spring, you had your chimney cleaned of creosote buildup (or if you have no fear of heights, you climbed up on the roof to do the job yourself). If you burn wood, you are probably well along with the annual chores of chopping, splitting, and stacking. As I write this, it is fall in New England.
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