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I got the fire started in the wood stove yesterday all by myself! TAKE THAT, Wood Stove. I even overcame the challenge of losing the long lighter. I had to use a short little lighter. I don’t like using the short little lighter. I’m afraid of it.

Me: “I’m scared of fire.”
52: “That’s handy.”
Ha. I did it. And I kept it going for about two hours.

Then it died.

I added logs. I added paper. It kept dying. I emailed 52. “The fire keeps dying! The fire keeps dying!”
52: “Use more kindling.”
Me: “But I’m out of kindling!”
52: “You have 40 acres of kindling.”

Oh.
What happened to kindling appearing magically on the porch? This picking it up thing sounds like a lot of work…..

I called my staff together.

They were as useful as usual.

What am I going to do with this stuff anyway?

It’s WET!!!

And I got DIRTY!!!

But I battled again with Wood Stove and her fickle fire. I found the most dry of the kindling. I used more paper. I added more wood. I got the fire going and kept it going.

In between times when it went out. I struggled with it all day.

If practice makes perfect, I’ve been practicing. And I have no time to waste on my way to perfect. Winter’s coming back and this time she’s not going to sneak in on tiptoes from the back.

This time she’s bringing a battering ram!! I need fire!

I want to hear ALL your homemade firestarter ideas!!! Please? I’m gonna need ‘em…..
It’s a Ball Blue Book Project day! Today’s Ball Blue Book is sponsored by RacerX Illustrated. Visit them here!
To win: Leave a comment on this post and let me know you want it. One winner will be drawn by random comment number to receive a Ball Blue Book. Eligible entry cut-off is midnight Eastern (U.S.) time tonight. This post will be updated with the winner no later than 9 AM Eastern (U.S.) time tomorrow. Return to this post to see if you won.
Find out more about the Ball Blue Book Project and become a sponsor.
P.S. Thank you to all the sponsors for the tremendous response to this project! The response has been so tremendous, in fact, that some weeks I will be holding more than one BBB Project day. Keep watching!
***Update 12/3–the WINNER is Jo, comment #68!
Posted by Suzanne McMinn on December 2, 2009
"It was a cold wintry day when I brought my children to live in rural West Virginia. The farmhouse was one hundred years old, there was already snow on the ground, and the heat was sparse-—as was the insulation. The floors weren’t even, either. My then-twelve-year-old son walked in the door and said, “You’ve brought us to this slanted little house to die." Keep reading our story....
Make friends, ask questions, have fun!
Take Clover with you in 2010!
Be a part of something big.
Your recipes! (Contributed by forum members.)
I'm a paperback writer.
by Pete on March 13, 2010
by rileysmom on March 13, 2010
by Pete on March 13, 2010
by Suzanne on March 13, 2010
by quietstorm on March 12, 2010
March 2010
"Lamb-y, then whammy! Get some tickets to Miami! Snow is easing, but we're still freezing. It may be spring by the astronomer, but not by the thermometer. Mighty fine, then leonine."
Saturday, Mar 13
Cloudy
Currently: 50˚F
Feels Like: 47˚ F
Hi: N/A˚, Lo: 39˚
Walton, WV
courtesy of weather.com
"Cookies are good." Read my barnyard stories....
Entire Contents © Copyright 2004-2010 SuzanneMcMinn.com.
Text and photographs may not be published, broadcast, redistributed or aggregated without express permission. Thank you.
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I would LOVE to win a canning book.
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Just voted
Sorry, don’t know much about starting fires. I guess that is one more thing I will be learning from your blog. Thanks!
3:24
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When I saw the combination of “Practising” and a milk can I thought maybe you had a chance to practice milking again . . . how is that lover-boy for darling Clover coming along? Will we be seeing baby goaties in the spring?
3:56
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Anywho, I want the book, please!
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I would LOVE to have the canning book. Please enter me in the contest.
As for your fire, I think you need a little hatchet to make your own kindling when everything else is wet. I keep a box by my fireplace of kindling so it’s always there, and dry
Good luck with your fire skills.
Renee
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I was a Girl Scout and did a lot of fires
6:01
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Have a great day!!
Hugs Trace’
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I’d like to be entered for the Ball Blue Book please.
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Off to vote!
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Hey I would like the canning book!!! Wondering what I can try next to cann. The whole cranberrys came out ok. I need the practice. lol.
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I WOULD LOVE THE BBB!
Voted! Facebooked!!! Rally, rally, rally!
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rip thin strips of news print
…melt wax/parifin,
make a hollow in tin foil – roll lint into logs mixed with the stirps of paper
pour melted wax over lint not alot just enough to hold the lint paper together remold
let dry
we would have the girls make these for fire places and open pit burns not sure how it work in a wood stove
but you can place the lint paper mix in a cleaned out tuna tin and then lite under the kindling thus the wax wont leach out all over they made these too
Sara
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Vaseline and Cotton Ball Fire starter
This fire starter is easy to make and cost next to nothing, it has the extra benefit of being nearly waterproof.
Simply place a small amount of Vaseline in a microwave safe dish and melt on medium heat only until it begins to run. Place 6-10 cotton balls in the melted Vaseline and saturate them completely. Allow the mixture to cool and place the cotton balls in a used film container.
When you need to use them, take several cotton balls out of the film container and pull them apart. Place the Vaseline cotton ball fire starter under your tinder and light. The cotton ball acts like a wick for the Vaseline and will burn intensely for several minutes.
http://www.huntingblades.com/firestarter.html
more:
dryer lint
used toilet paper roll
wax paper liner from cereal box
Loosely stuff dryer lint into TP roll. Place in the cereal liner, roll up, twist ends to close.
–Those cardboard egg cartons filled with paraffin wax do work great to us saw dust or wood shavings instead of dryer lint
Sara
7:31
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My husband is NOT a firestarter. For him I make fire starting aids. I collect bits of old candles, drier lint, pressed paper eggs cartons, wood chips etc, fill the cups, pour over melted old candle wax, let cool. Pull apart egg cups to start the fire – with kindling.
I sent you an email for the ball blue book giveaway just moments after you posted it and haven’t heard back with a reply. Did I miss something?
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cricket
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7:47
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I have no words of wisdom on fire starting. Good luck!
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Oh, and I would love the canning book!
Off to vote!
Thanks!
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8:12
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Paper egg cartons (I have my own chickens, so I don’t get them!)
Dryer lint (I hang my clothes on the line, so I don’t get that either! Although I think I will for winter)
Left over candle bits. Got those.
Stuff the dryer lint in the egg cartons, and poor melted candle wax over it. Let it dry. Rip the starters apart.
These work GREAT.
I have twenty four of them made and ready to go, if you want them, say the word (email me) and I’lls end them right out to you!
Gotta keep you warm so you can keep blogging!
8:19
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http://www.motherearthnews.com/Modern-Homesteading/Wood-Fire-Building-Tips.aspx
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I would also love the Blue Book.
And for a really radical idea for mastering the art of fire (and it truly is an art!), check out Mother Earth News online. There’s a great article on heating with wood/building and starting fires. Try the “top down” method. It sounds crazy, especially to someone like me who’s really good at fires, (I fire wood kilns), but it works like a dream. No, I don’t mean a nightmare!
P.S. You’ll find the best and driest kindling still on the trees, not on the ground. Look for the low, twiggy branches that have been shade-killed as the tree grew, but that haven’t fallen yet. This is especially true of pine trees. And it beats all that bending.
8:29
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You could put some kindling in the milk can by the fire. Also, once your fire gets nice and hot, spread out the coals on the bottom a bit before feeding it more. They tend to like that.
Christina
8:30
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I would love the canning/preserving book!
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As for fire starting tips, you have lots of good ones here. Good luck and don’t give up!
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Take my walk around the yard and thru the edges of of our woods…Pick up all those little twigs..redbud twigs I would just snap right off the trees..there are a gazillion of them…we had a lob lolly pine stand and picked up pine cones and pieces of that bark that is sometimes peeled off and fill my bags and take it back to the porch…I would have as many as ten stacked in the corner of the porch….when it was time to start the fire…I would grab a bag…place the bag with the twigs on the grate and lite it..as it burned add smaller pieces of kindling or little dry limbs…as they caught add on the bigger pieces…
and finally the mother load..big one…close the flue a little, close the under neath air flow a little too and it would last all day…Wood stoves are work..no doubt about it…but are cosy…
Old rotting forest wood is too wet for fire starters..or for cutting for the logs..My husband would lay down a few chosen trees usually oak and hickory..to season in the early spring..let lay in the woods to dry out by early fall..when the air cooled we would go to those trees and cut, split, haul and stack…keeping a on going stack dryer on the porch as it was used down..all the little side limbs the kids stacked in a separate area for the smaller kindling…then my twig paper stacks for starters…sometimes it takes a village to make a fire…LOL
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It doesn’t take much wax, just enough to hold the lint in the carton.
Good luck!
9:02
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-patty
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I still would like to have that Ball Blue Book of Canning. I can taste the fresh preserves and fresh canned veges as I type this.
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You may have gotten this suggestion before but here goes. We use the top down method to build a fire. We have a country brand wood stove. We add 2 logs to the floor of it put larger kindling on top between the two logs and smaller kindling on top of that. We use “Strike a fire” starters. They burn for a long time giving your wood a chance to take hold. Close the door and walk away for 2 hrs until you need more wood. I don’t have time to keep tending the fire so this is the easiest and hands off approach I have found. Keep practicing. Ps. we don’t use a grate….do you have to use that grate? You wouldn’t need it with the top down method and it would not let you have a nice bed of coals with which to add more wood to.
9:08
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Good luck, you will a hang of it! I am completely sure of it. Anything that you set your mind to…you get done! It is just part of who you are! That fire doesn’t stand a chance.
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To start a fire, light the wick and tuck it into your kindling.
9:17
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I would really like to get back into canning. I have done jams and jellies before. Please put my name in the drawing.
I live in East TN and we are watching that weather system too. I hope you stay warm.
9:18
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No firestarter tips here either ( I have a hard time getting the grill going – LOL!) We have a pellet stove and just need to press the “ON” button. I’m fire phobic too….
Please enter me in the BBB giveaway – I would love to start canning! Called the library yesterday to see if they could find me one on the interlibrary loan to get me started – would love to have a copy of my own!
Jen
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Also the way you arrange the logs and kindling is important.
9:31
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I’d like to win the book!!
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Ruthie
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Beth aka oneoldgoat
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And keep that Ball Canning Book tantalizing me…I need it!
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Would love to win your blue ball canning book too!
9:46
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I would love the canning book!
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I see you have received plenty of advice for starting and keeping a fire going so with my limited experience I’ll just say I will keep my fingers crossed for ya.
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I wish I knew more about wood stoves. If Mom were still around, I’d call her and ask her how to keep it going. We seemed to always have a woodstove when I was growing up even though we moved a few times. My Mom had one in her kitchen that heated the whole house. Sometimes it got so hot even when we got together for Christmas that we’d have to go stand on the carport to cool off! I do know she threw just about everything in it. They had very little trash to haul off in the winter time.
I hope you get some great ideas from everyone else today!
10:25
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1. Light some newspaper and warm the flue of the chimney before you light the fire – it helps the chimney draw.
2. Cracking a door or window near the wood burner helps it get started – I’m assuming because you need oxygen for fire – I sometimes do this when the fire is dying out to help restart it.
3. If your wood burner is near your kitchen don’t run your vent or hood or air purifier or other things that draw air out near the wood burner it kills the fire.
4. Dryer lint makes a great fire starter.
5. Keep my Dad on speed dial for when the house fills up with smoke because I don’t know enough about wood burners. Good Luck
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I don’t have any fire starting words of wisdom, we had one when I was a kid, but my Dad was in charge of it, and I never learned! Shame on me!
10:53
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If the wood you are burning is not completely wet and if your chimney is drawing well (and you really should check it every year) then I have to think you are just not paying close enough attention. It is so easy to get busy doing other things and forget that a fire in a wood stove is not like a furnace on the gas line.
Don’t let it die down enough to need restarting. As someone mentioned, add new wood while the fire is burning strong enough to get it going especially if that wood is a bit damp. Don’t worry that you will make the fire too big (well, unless you just go nuts stuffing wood in there all at once) because the new wood will have to heat before it really starts to burn and while that happens the old wood will be consumed.
A close look at your photographs also makes me wonder whether you are keeping the wood in the right shape to burn. It looks like (4th photo) the logs are spread apart (first thing Smoky the Bear recommends to put out your campfire, right?). There must be space for air to get between the burning logs but they need to be close enough together to maintain a high heat and to keep the air moving. Use your poker to pull back the logs that fall too far out of the main burn. If the logs settle too much together as they burn, use your poker to lift and stack the burning logs so air can get through. While you are at it turn the unburned part of a log toward the main fire so new fuel is exposed.
You should not need kindling except to start the fire in the first place. Once it is started it is a matter of TENDING rather than RESTARTING.
I’d just love to be able to sit beside that fire with you for a while. You’ve probably got lots more chicken stories!
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I can’t light a fire,
I use starter logs when I go on vacation and we stay in a cabin.
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Fire starting/maintenance tips:
Start with a huge, and I mean, HUGE box of DRY KINDLING kept in your basement. I had a very old 5′x 5′ and 3′ deep wooden shipping crate in my basement where I kept a winter’s supply of kindling. keep a smaller box near your stove and refill from the HUGE box when low. You will need lots of dry kindling if your fire goes out.
Build up a nice thick bed of hot coals and keep it in order to keep your fire going. when cleaning out your stove, leave about an inch of ashes and remove the rest, leaving, of course, any hot coals. this is important. stop down your damper once fire is going well in order to have a slow burn. fill the box with as much wood as you can get in there and control temp through damper. slow burn is important to save your wood and keep your fire going.
pay attention to how long you get between stove fills. this will help you to know about how long you have before your fire will go out. ideally you want to keep it going so you don’t have to be concerned with starting over each time. throw another log in there to keep it burning bright. if you aren’t going to be around for several hours, keep it rather full.
I hope this helps. Becoming familiar with woodstoves and fires is the best way to learn and that comes from practice which you are getting! Embrace your fear of it, let it go, and then enjoy that brightly burning fire you will have all day long.
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I would love the Ball Blue Book please
I’m an eager beginner at canning.
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Now I’m off to vote.
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We live on the Texas Gulf Coast. Temps are in the mid 40’s, so we’re freezing. And SNOW Friday.
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Do you heat your home entirely by wood stove? Also, I am wondering about the smell….every time we light our fireplace, it smells like a camp fire in here if it’s a moist day outside….
11:25
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For KEEPING your fire, you need to watch it close and learn when to move firewood around and when to add more. You’ll have to really get to know it. I haven’t read comments here, but I’m guessing there are lots of good ones! Hang in there Suzanne … one day soon you’ll look back and wonder why it used to be so challenging!
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A tip for your fire, it always works for me. Make layers. On the bottom, place a few tissues, then layer some paper or newspaper, then layer some torn up cardboard, then layer the small kindling, then the larger kindling, then place a few small pieces of dry firewood on top. Light the tissue on the bottom and it will catch up. Make sure you stove vent is wide open and that it is getting plenty of air. Once it catches up good, close your damper a little. My uncle uses kerosene on cardboard to start his fires. Also, another tip that you will like, take a small container, fill it with dry wood chips, pour melted candle wax over them to make a sort of tart. make sure some wood chips are sticking out of the way. Lay on top of your cardboard or kindling when you light the fire. The wax chips will burn slowly and help catch up the fire. You can add a little scent to the candle wax and it will even scent up the room. Don’t use more than two at a time or else you’ll wax up your stove.
just keep in mind, once your fire is going, just add good dry wood every once in awhile, and you’ll not have to worry about it going out. Remember where there’s hot coals, there’s fire. You can lay dry kindling on hot coals at it’ll catch up most of the time.
If you have to leave the house for a few hours, bank the stove. Fill it full of heavy wood, and shut off the damper to where it’d almost closed but still getting a little air. The wood will then burn slowly but you’ll still have fire when you get back home. A banked stove will last all night long too.
11:47
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Get old candle wax – any scents and scrap is fine
Melt it down, add wood shavings and pour into mini paper cups (non-waxed variety) or paper egg carton cup.
Light the edge of the cup and it will act as a candle and keep you fire lit.
OR… take newspaper, open it up and then at diagonal roll it up tightly, folding the length in half once fully rolled up. This will act as a wick to light your fire.
ALSO…sounds/looks like your wood may not be dry enough to stay lit. Has it completely dried?
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Sign me up for the drawing. I’ll be canning a lot next summer
12:06
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I don’t need the BBB-my mom is a professional canner from way back LOL
I just wanted you to know that I love your staff-every time you say you gathered your staff and then there is a picture of those chickens I just laugh out loud. Too funny
Live long and prosper and gather your staff often
12:08
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Anyway, as we are going into summer here, and bumper crops of everything after the masses of rain we’ve had,I would love to have a blue book to help me along.
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Rys
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I would love to win that Ball Blue Book!!! I plan on canning lots of things and this book would help me tremendously.
So throw my name in the BBB pot and I sure hope to win!
Deb
1:17
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I was going to post the link to the Mother Earth News fire starting article, but someone beat me to it. Instead, I’ll just wish you luck.
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I sure hope that with all of those wonderful tips you will be able to have a good roaring hot fire today! I have free gas
so keeping my fire lit is really easy! It’s been years since I have lived at a house with a real fire place. Seems like I’ve always heard that pine does burn faster but it also does something to your pipes. I figure 52 would know something about that.
Good Luck!
Angela
I voted and was number 25347
1:50
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Blessings!
BethAnn
1:54
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Here’s the link for the homemade fire starters…found it on Owlhaven’s blog
http://www.owlhaven.net/2009/11/18/project-frugal-firestarters/
Good luck!!
BethAnn
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I would love the canning book.
bellcarol
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I would love to win the Ball Blue book.
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I would *love* to be entered in the contest, btw.
Your staff, while larger than mine (I had some cherry picked by another ‘employer’–a coyote, to be sure), is about as helpful. Not only that, I’ve got some ‘middle management’ types (the geese) that are absolute petty overlords…
LOL Love your blog…
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My suggestion about your fire has nothing to do with starting it, although I agree with whoever said starting is no longer your problem, it’s keeping it going. I bet you get busy and forget about the thing, dontcha? Uh-huh.
My suggestion has to do with forgetting about lighters, big or little and getting you some wooden matches, either kitchen or fireplace. That way you can lay it right on a piece of paper in the stove and not worry about getting your fingers burnt. Don’t think it’ll do much for the fire, but it’s one less thing to be afraid of around a woodburner. Please take care to keep them dry and in a safe place, though. My husband insists that mice can chew on them and start a fire. Never happened at Mom’s house and she had them right out in a cute little wall holder. But what do I know!
Oh, I know I’d love to win the canning book.
P.S. If this message or something like it posted twice, I’m sorry. My cat sat on my keyboard and my first message disappeared.
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As for keeping a fire going, It’s been so long since i’ve lived in a house with a wood stove that I can’t remember. I’m jealous though!!
4:03
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I just have a great time stopping by here (and I don’t even have a wood burning stove, and my fireplace is gas)! I’ve sat around a lot of campfires, though, fighting to keep the wind from blowing out the flames before the fire could get going. And I’m thinking either buying or making an outdoor fire pit, so all these tips are great.
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Tammy
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I’m with the lint and cotton balls dipped in vasoline crowd. You can also get fat sticks at the hardware store.
5:19
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Voted today: 25526 votes.
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I love your web site and I’ve been voting every day for you to win the Sam-e job. I sure hope you win. I know it’s not just who gets the most votes, so if any of the judges are reading your posts and the replys then please please please pick Suzanne’s blog. It has everything to hold everyones interest, not just the young but us senior citizens also. Excellent photos and animals and farm critters and beautiful scenery and really yummy recipes.
To me your blog is a must read and it’s always a must read first thing in the morning with my coffee. Okay I’ve rattled on enough.
7:00
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Wad your paper up tighter. Use those leaves you’ve got all over the place. They make the best “paper” of all … as long as they’re dry. Set your kindling up like a tepee with the paper in the middle. When the kindling falls, gently lay a small log across it, preferably one with a lot of loose bark. Breathe on the damn thing. Get down on your knees and whisper the thing into life — long, slow breaths. Sit back, pray a bit, and blow on it some more, but gently, gently.
Make sure you add your next log before the last one has given up.
How old’s your fire wood?
And are you having any trouble getting the smoke to go up your chimney? If so, you need to start with a hotter fire to heat up your chimney right at the first.
If you give your fire too much air at first, you drown it, but if you give it too little, you suffociate it. This is the bit you’ll have to practice.
Good luck.
Just B
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t to good use next summer. No words of wisdom from me on fire building. We had one all the years I was growing up,but as I recall there was always a lot of smoke and dust involved. Probably that was because my Dad also used coal for fuel.
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I voted, would love to win the Blue Book. I have learned so much about starting fires on this post…wow! No new tips from me.
Kathleen H from Indiana
10:19
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Thanks,
Julia
10:40
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I’ll put it to you this way….you’ve come a long way, baby!
11:27
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You’ll be good at this in no time! Time to vote.
1:29
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We recently moved into a home that has fireplaces. I have never ever had a home with a fireplace, and we’ve moved more times than I can remember. I’m kinda scared of the fireplace. I haven’t made a fire yet, I’ve deemed that hubby’s chore. :p It was 10F today and I should have made a fire… I will hopefully have the courage tomorrow for our 15F weather!
I am cracking up at 52’s “You have 40 acres of kindling” remark. LOL
2:11
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I’d love to win the Ball Blue book. I need some canning inspiration.
Mel
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I want that Blue Ball book too!
7:06
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It is hard to collect enough kindling. We go through a lot of it. I have huge piles at the base of the old oaks, so I can find it in the snow. I just pile it all up there when I am out there.
There is a huge pile beside the shop, of the bigger stuff that I will cut on the saw as needed.
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Dog has since passed and I have a nice pile of unused wood to burn in an “Earth Oven” I am going to attempt to build come spring. I will be able to make and bake the bread outside in the oven. Can’t wait for Spring.
Kathy