UPDATE: I don't know what happened, maybe the planets aligned in the right way, maybe he touched a lucky horseshoe, maybe we need to go buy a lottery ticket now, but today HE GOT THE FIRE GOING! We did stop at the grocery store after church and bought these little Duraflame firestart logs, and he cleaned out the fireplace and all the stuff under the grate that we had previosuly tried (newspaper ask, small logs/branches), and somehow the fire started and took. We've had it going for 2 hours now, and are doing successful adding logs.
Anyway, I read your tips this morning before church (didn't have time to respond) and passed some on to him, so maybe he used some of them. I don't know, but now we have a fire. WOOT!
Chances are some of the wood is not cured. It came from a landscaping yard near our house, and while there are always large piles (cords) of wood that we can see from the road, who knows when it was cut. Anyway, to the person who suggested not keeping it in the garage for fear of critters, don't worry, we do plan on moving it out, likely next weekend, after the storm that is coming passes. We have it at the end of the garage, near the garage door. we put it inside to help keep it fry and to help get it dry. We have a pile that is chest high, so we plan on cutting that down to knee high and moving the rest outside. We don't plan on having fires every night. As I told the hubster when he brought the wood home yesterday "OMG this load is endless. We could sell some to the neighbors." LOL!
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We have a wood buring fireplace. Last week, hubster went rummaging around where they are clearing land for some new housing developments and got some wood to build a fire with (logs/tress/branches). The fire just would not start.
Today he decides to go to this landscaping yard near our house, and bought a ton of wood (like an entire truck bed full) for $60. It was really a huge amount. We almost bought a cord before Christmas for $120......
Anyway, he brings the wood home, we stack it inside our garage (only dry covered place at our house) and we bring in a few pieces to try to start a fire. Fire would not start. One piece of wood burned slightly (got charred), but the fire quickly fizzled out.
What is he doing wrong?
Tomorrow we plan on buying some long matches and a firestarter log (duraflame), but we have been using some of the smaller/kindling pieces of wood and newspaper to try and start the fire, but it just won't take. I say we, but I mean he.
Growing up, I had a wood buring fireplace, which my parents used until I was 8. Then they said it just sucked all of the warm air out of the house and quit using it. My husband grew up in a house with a wood buring fireplace and a family that embraced having a fire so he is stumped as to why he cannot get this going, as he did it growing up (although the last time he ever probably started a wood bring fire would have been 16/17 years ago).
Anyway, I read your tips this morning before church (didn't have time to respond) and passed some on to him, so maybe he used some of them. I don't know, but now we have a fire. WOOT!
Chances are some of the wood is not cured. It came from a landscaping yard near our house, and while there are always large piles (cords) of wood that we can see from the road, who knows when it was cut. Anyway, to the person who suggested not keeping it in the garage for fear of critters, don't worry, we do plan on moving it out, likely next weekend, after the storm that is coming passes. We have it at the end of the garage, near the garage door. we put it inside to help keep it fry and to help get it dry. We have a pile that is chest high, so we plan on cutting that down to knee high and moving the rest outside. We don't plan on having fires every night. As I told the hubster when he brought the wood home yesterday "OMG this load is endless. We could sell some to the neighbors." LOL!
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We have a wood buring fireplace. Last week, hubster went rummaging around where they are clearing land for some new housing developments and got some wood to build a fire with (logs/tress/branches). The fire just would not start.
Today he decides to go to this landscaping yard near our house, and bought a ton of wood (like an entire truck bed full) for $60. It was really a huge amount. We almost bought a cord before Christmas for $120......
Anyway, he brings the wood home, we stack it inside our garage (only dry covered place at our house) and we bring in a few pieces to try to start a fire. Fire would not start. One piece of wood burned slightly (got charred), but the fire quickly fizzled out.
What is he doing wrong?
Tomorrow we plan on buying some long matches and a firestarter log (duraflame), but we have been using some of the smaller/kindling pieces of wood and newspaper to try and start the fire, but it just won't take. I say we, but I mean he.
Growing up, I had a wood buring fireplace, which my parents used until I was 8. Then they said it just sucked all of the warm air out of the house and quit using it. My husband grew up in a house with a wood buring fireplace and a family that embraced having a fire so he is stumped as to why he cannot get this going, as he did it growing up (although the last time he ever probably started a wood bring fire would have been 16/17 years ago).
the fireplaces. carrying wood , not so much........ chopping it in under 30 degree weather,,even worse... ( which seems to be when we are doing it this year...


