Why We Heat with WOOD | Outdoor Wood Boiler | Wood Burning Fireplace

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  • čas přidán 18. 01. 2022
  • Installing and heating with our our wood boiler, plus 2 additional ways we can heat our home.
    Portage and Main Boiler website - www.portageandmainboilers.com/
    Our blog: www.theseasonalhomestead.com
    Shop my Favorites: www.theseasonalhomestead.com/...
    Music: www.epidemicsound.com/
    #woodheat #outdoorwoodboiler

Komentáře • 273

  • @stephenkeebler732
    @stephenkeebler732 Před 2 lety +55

    My friend outside of Orono Maine put his Wood Boiler inside of a metal shed, big enough to contain the Boiler, 10 cords of wood, his Riding Mower, and all of his Wood Cutting equipment and Garden Tools. It keeps the wood and stuff completely dry, warm enough to start right up, and the boiler has practically no rust on the outside or internal doors. The Vent Pipe goes right out the wall which is metal, no chance of fire...

  • @jjreno7843
    @jjreno7843 Před 2 lety +44

    We've been using an outdoor boiler for about 9 years, and love it . I haven't bought any wood so far, I've gotten all the wood I need from blowdowns. I want to warn you though be very, very careful when loading wood into your stove!! I read all of the warnings and cautions and was careful, however after about 6 years of using my stove I got complacent and almost cut off my middle finger on my right hand. Though I have a different brand stove then yours, the front door lip is exactly like mine and if you aren't careful it WILL hurt you!

  • @puckerave
    @puckerave Před 2 lety +17

    Hey great video I am a Portage & Main dealer and glad you like the boiler. They are great boilers and will give you many years of service. It was unfortunate you had a leak in your pex in your new home. I did notice you used Shark-Bites to connect your heating coil. I recommend you solder / sweat on permanent pex fittings. When you shut the system down with the cooler water temperature they can leak because of the expansion and contraction of the water it will stretch the fitting over time. Just don't want to see you have to cut into your drywall again .
    All the Best with your new boiler
    Sean

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +6

      Thank you for the tips Sean. I've had a few others talk to me about the sharkbites as well. I did crimp fit most of the fittings, but indeed there are a few that I did use sharkbites. I do plan to do a summer maintenance job on the boiler system and replace as many sharkbites as I can...
      Where are you located?

    • @santiro5671
      @santiro5671 Před rokem

      When loading full of wiod, for how long can this Portage Main boiler heat? How many hours without uploading with new wood? What price more or less?

  • @justme2059
    @justme2059 Před 2 lety +9

    I live in North Dakota. For the past 30 years my parents have used one of these. We would fill it in the morning and again at night. They are very nice.
    Many up here use them.

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +3

      Sounds like you enjoyed a nice warm house in the ND winters!! Not without some good old fashioned work :)

  • @randall-king
    @randall-king Před 2 lety +14

    This is fascinating. Lived in Texas my whole life and never heard of this. We hope to build our own place some day, and I’ll keep this in mind.

  • @akcorbel
    @akcorbel Před 2 lety +6

    It’s always so interesting to see American homes place their finances in the attic, as a Canadian 🇨🇦 it’s hard for me to get used to seeing haha but it works!

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +10

      Do you mean 'furnaces' in the attic? Honestly, it's never made sense why also. We tried to build our house on a crawl space to allow for the hvac to come from the floor, but it was too cost prohibitive, so the furnace ended up in the attic. Could be worse, I guess.

    • @akcorbel
      @akcorbel Před 2 lety +3

      @@TheSeasonalHomestead haha yes I did mean furnace, damn auto correct!

  • @kdgiv2604
    @kdgiv2604 Před 2 lety +2

    Awesome! We heat with a boiler as well and wouldn’t have it any other way. What a heart-breaker with the leaking line! I’m so glad that I installed it myself so that I can troubleshoot issues as they pop up. It’s not all work, we’re heating our hot tub with it as well! Happy heating.

  • @samuelwiltzius
    @samuelwiltzius Před rokem +1

    Been running a OWB in the snow belt of the Great Lakes. Fantastic solution for heating a house and separate workshop and the in floor heating we have is quite lovely in winter (especially my wood shop). First year was a learning curve - second year I built a covered woodshed and a separate awning in front of the stove and built a wood cart. What a dream to load dry wood in a blizzard. Now I cut ‘wife size’ wood per the advice of my elders 😂 - turns out it is also kid size! The OWB gets better and better as the years go by and the kiddos get bigger. Well done sir!

  • @CLB-kt6ux
    @CLB-kt6ux Před 2 lety +4

    Thank you for sharing this. We have always wanted an outdoor boiler as my husband is a woodsman so this offered another perspective to educate us on the benefits and process. Thank you!

  • @jacobschenkel1010
    @jacobschenkel1010 Před 2 lety +14

    Great to see you Cam! Canning and gardening brought me to the channel, but great to see the work both you and Becky are doing. Fantastic content! I imagine you fee a great sense of satisfaction to have the system up and running:) Always love to watch others trouble shooting (helps me to smile and be patient when inevitable problems arise on projects). Thanks for your hard work and willingness to share your work with us.

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +5

      Thank you Jacob! So glad you are enjoying the gardening stuff, and a bit of my handyman stuff as well :) -Cam

  • @sgrvtl7183
    @sgrvtl7183 Před 2 lety +1

    Your heating solutions are right on! 👌

  • @ameliaaaloves1d
    @ameliaaaloves1d Před 2 lety +18

    Love the video. Just an idea: stack the wood on the other side of the furnace so you don’t have to walk around the door every time?

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +14

      Yeah, I quickly realized myself that may have been a better setup. Maybe next year

  • @kevelthaus3197
    @kevelthaus3197 Před rokem +2

    We have been researching wood burning boilers for our new home in SW Virginia. Thanks so much for this - it helps in our decision making.

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před rokem

      Glad it was helpful! (This is Cam). When doing my own research, the information on the web was relatively limited, so I'm glad this has helped in your decision.

  • @ericwiese7479
    @ericwiese7479 Před 2 lety +5

    Just got a new efficient fireplace insert. Love it! Childhood memories cutting splitting wood with my Dad. And still cutting every fall together!

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +4

      Yes!!!! Can't match the real heat you get from a fireplace. Enjoy your warm home Eric!!

  • @kylanevins9456
    @kylanevins9456 Před 2 lety +2

    We heat exclusively with firewood....I absolutely love it! Plus it's instilling a work ethic in our kids...

  • @bluebirdhomestead
    @bluebirdhomestead Před rokem +1

    Great video and explanation. We just have a large wood stove in our house, but upgrading to a outdoor broiler and retrofitting to our central air may be something we do in the future. Thanks for sharing the video!

  • @joannak4640
    @joannak4640 Před 2 lety +2

    Good job, Cam 👏👍😁 I enjoy your videos and your family so much. Have a great day

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +2

      Thank you Joanna! Feels like you should move right next door so we can be neighbors :) - Cam

    • @joannak4640
      @joannak4640 Před 2 lety +1

      @@TheSeasonalHomestead that would be a dream 😂❤️

  • @bethanynelson3959
    @bethanynelson3959 Před 2 lety +12

    You guys really do your research for all your projects. Your home looks so warm and cozy. I could feel your frustration in having to tear down a new wall. We have had annoying problems like that too. So frustrating in a new house with new walls. I would love to be as self sufficient as you guys. Maybe one day. Thank you for taking us along on your journey.

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +5

      Thank you Bethany!! It is definitely a journey! Self-sufficiency is definitely thrown around like its just "sell your house, buy a cabin, and hook up solar panels!!!" It's definitely a lot more than that :) -Cam

  • @kristenhammond5153
    @kristenhammond5153 Před 2 lety +2

    I would love you to a house tour of your new home, it's absolutely stunning.

  • @eugenepearce5579
    @eugenepearce5579 Před 2 lety +1

    your videos are so inspiring. love you guys

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety

      Thanks so much Eugene! We hope we can continue to put out good content that is a good mix of entertainment, legitimate knowledge content, how to's, and inspiration. The more gardens we can help grow, the better off we will all be, for a myriad of reasons! -Cam

  • @ScotWalt858
    @ScotWalt858 Před 2 lety +2

    Nicely done!

  • @kvruschua4600
    @kvruschua4600 Před 2 lety +1

    It's an educational for me ......I'm learning new things......

  • @BringbackthefarmBlogspot
    @BringbackthefarmBlogspot Před 2 lety +1

    Very cool system. Thanks for sharing :)

  • @stevie_jean1953
    @stevie_jean1953 Před 2 lety +1

    Loved this video!

  • @KeithSilva2
    @KeithSilva2 Před 2 lety +7

    I feel your pain about the wall. Time will heal, or someone will throw a baseball through the wall there and it won't be such a big deal! I'm impressed you found the holes in the pipes. Good job.

  • @Picci25021973
    @Picci25021973 Před 2 lety +5

    I do the same. Well insulated homes can be heated by a single hi-tech fireplace. We plant two tree saplings for anyone we cut.

  • @EmeryShae
    @EmeryShae Před 2 lety +4

    We live in Canada and do the majority of our hearing with a Vermont Castings wood stove. We love it! It’s so cozy and such a nice heat. We do have a natural gas furnace that kicks in at night if the fire goes out. We also sometimes use the fur case fan to distribute the heat better throughout the house.

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +2

      I LOVE the look of those Vermont Casting stoves. We love the warm heat you get from a real fire. Nice to have backups too, sounds like you are fully covered at all hours of the night!! -Cam

    • @EmeryShae
      @EmeryShae Před 2 lety +2

      @@TheSeasonalHomestead my husband was super picky about how the stove had to look 😂. We live in a 90 year old home, so it fits the bill.

  • @ctbt1832
    @ctbt1832 Před rokem +1

    Great idea

  • @mattlechner8442
    @mattlechner8442 Před rokem +1

    no need to despair patching drywall - it generally patches good as new; great video !

  • @kinnish5267
    @kinnish5267 Před rokem +1

    very cool!!!

  • @Boomhauer333
    @Boomhauer333 Před rokem +1

    I love it 👍

  • @evapereira3093
    @evapereira3093 Před 2 lety +2

    How awesome!

  • @ioanagherman5952
    @ioanagherman5952 Před 2 lety +1

    As a little girl I have to go 3-4 times in the woods (weekly),with my grandparents from my mom side ( not in winter time),to bring wood in our backs,for cooking ( to cook on the stove the best food),also to warm up the rooms,wasn't much money to buy the wood, maybe some people will said poor girl, wasn't bad,just part of our life.

  • @codymoffatt1281
    @codymoffatt1281 Před 2 lety +2

    That was a really good video.

  • @lucapacchiani6606
    @lucapacchiani6606 Před rokem +1

    I have a boiler that heat water for cast iron radiators and for the shower. I installed that in the garage because i don' t want to go out to fill the fournace.
    I burn wood 4 feet long and I made many iron frames to move them with the tractor and the transpallet in to the garage.
    The stove doesn'have any fan, he has a pump that push the water in to a reservoir of 400 gallons.

  • @evileye8814
    @evileye8814 Před 2 lety +3

    Hello I'm your new subscriber,and I'm from Philippines 😊

  • @ThatBritishHomestead
    @ThatBritishHomestead Před rokem +1

    I love a wood burner

  • @securityvlogger6825
    @securityvlogger6825 Před rokem +1

    Good Man.

  • @fricknjeep
    @fricknjeep Před 2 lety +1

    hi there nice show john

  • @sharonselner8871
    @sharonselner8871 Před 2 lety +7

    Beautiful property! Where are you located? We live in northern Indiana and have used an outside wood burner to heat our home for 15 years. The savings are considerable if you have access to wood. Congratulations on your beautiful home.

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +4

      We are in Arkansas. Glad to hear yours is still ticking after 15 years 👍 I hope to enjoy those considerable savings in the near future as well :)

  • @bigboresledder
    @bigboresledder Před 2 lety +3

    I am on my 7th season with that same boiler and am happy with it. When I hooked up all the plumbing I used Shark bites because the seamed easy to use. I only have 4 of them left in the system because they leaked when heating up and cooling off. It is all crimp rings now.

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +2

      Awesome!!! Interesting about the sharkbites. I hear very mixed reviews about sharkbite fittings. My setup is 50% sharkbite, 50% crimp rings. Wil probably convert to crimp rings as well as time goes on.

    • @bigboresledder
      @bigboresledder Před 2 lety +2

      @@TheSeasonalHomestead I have 2 styles of crimpers for the 1 inch rings. The big pliers type and the bolt together style which is very simple and I think makes a better crimp.

    • @bigboresledder
      @bigboresledder Před 2 lety +2

      @@TheSeasonalHomestead And one more thing I have learned the hard way. The tin ash pan can push ashes into the blower vent at the back of ash pan and block it. My stove was having trouble getting up to temp until I figured out the fan pipe was blocked with ashes. Now I use a turkey roasting pan under the ash pan door and only pull the ashes foreword.

  • @lendevonuk5479
    @lendevonuk5479 Před 2 lety +2

    Good presentation. I see so many channels about wood boilers and almost all split wood down so small, and I don’t know why? Sensibly, you use larger pieces that take longer to burn. Hope to see more! Len (Devon 🇬🇧)

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you for noticing that. Definitely get a more efficient and longer burn with the bigger logs.

    • @ExpeditionPowerWagon
      @ExpeditionPowerWagon Před 2 lety +1

      I believe the down side to large pieces is the time it take for them to dry. If you can cut a year or two in advance it works fine though

  • @pro-2ndamendmentcitizen560

    I would love one of those for a snowmelt system for my driveway and sidewalk.

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +1

      That would be pretty awesome!

    • @pro-2ndamendmentcitizen560
      @pro-2ndamendmentcitizen560 Před 2 lety

      @@TheSeasonalHomestead I am a plumber in New Jersey. We use a standard boiler that runs on natural gas for snow melt. Even if you do a high efficiency model your bill will double running a snow melt system. Parts of Jersey there is no room for a outdoor boiler. I live near nyc very crowded and small property lots. But south ,west Jersey it’s possible. Also amount of snowfall makes a difference. In your area it would definitely pay off fast.

  • @sholland280
    @sholland280 Před rokem +1

    My brother has an outdoor wood stove. I’d actually classify it as an incinerator. It’s tremendous. We live in upstate NY and he heats his 5000 square foot house and garage. He also has a concrete driveway that’s heated by it so it’s the one place he doesn’t have to plow😂… additionally it’s connected to his central air and water heater. Runs his entire house! He happens be a contractor so he did everything himself and has an endless supply of wood…but I envy his almost non existent electric bill! It’s awesome if you can do it that’s for sure.

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před rokem

      Sounds like your brother has a pretty awesome setup!! When you decide to get one, you'll for sure get the family and friends discount, right?!? :) We love our outdoor stove!

    • @sholland280
      @sholland280 Před rokem

      Lol…yes he sure does! It’s so efficient for him maintenance wise and very minimal cost to run. He works such long hours it’s a blessing for him to have something that does most of the work for him now. He also only loads his twice a day in the winter. Once a day during the warmer months. It’s definitely something we plan to do in the future. We have an indoor one that is our main heat source for now with a furnace as back up, but for the most part we are wood only. Grateful considering the price of fuel. Kerosene is $7.99 a gallon here right now. Ridiculous. We have to use it because fuel oil, even with additives still gels. Winters are brutal here. The last few years we keep getting slammed with back to back nor’easters dumping almost 2 foot of snow on us at a time. We had snow banks at least 20’ + high . Absolutely crazy. You’re Dad is right…nothing like heat from a wood stove. I’m probably not getting the luxurious heated driveway though…I’ll just keep making him plow it😅. Love watching you’re videos. You have a beautiful family!

  • @Artisan.HVACR1
    @Artisan.HVACR1 Před 2 lety +1

    I'm a licensed HVAC/R service contractor. That is a nice residential application boiler system. I like the versatility of the design, in that it is used to heat air and potable water. I'm assuming there are automatic safeties and manual safeties built into the boiler, such as high pressure safety switches on the water vessel portion as well as low water level and high water level safety switches and high temperature safety switches for the water vessel and for the combustion chamber. That is how gas-fired boilers are designed Some safeties require a manual reset to get the boiler back online; other safeties automatically reset themselves once the alarm conditions no longer exists. However, for gas-fired boiler ignition systems and for gas-fired furnace ignition systems, typically, three attempts to ignite the gas will be allowed. If no combustion is obtained by the third attempt, the ignition system goes into a "hard lockout" which requires a technician to come out and do a manual reset. This feature forces a technician to have to come to the scene to troubleshoot what led to the failure to ignite within three attempts. Again, that's a nice system you have and the redundancy tbuilt in to back it up is well thought out.

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před rokem

      Thank you Tyrone!! I appreciate your approval as a licensed HVAC/R contractor. I did a lot of research and talked with a lot of local experts before determining the setup I wanted for our house. There are high temp safety limits built in to the boiler, but since this isn't a high pressure system, I did not need any pressure sensors and such.

  • @meme7591
    @meme7591 Před 2 lety +1

    Yeah I'm about 3 hours from portage you should put their link down in your description or in the comments area. I'm telling you right now northern Maine people are the most kindest people ever. We help each other no matter what

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety

      I've heard this about Mainers, too! We have some cousins that live up there and absolutely love it there!! -Cam

  • @jag5798
    @jag5798 Před rokem

    I seen something like that in Lithuania - old farm homes. People built them.

  • @oliviahein7772
    @oliviahein7772 Před 2 lety +21

    This was very interesting to watch; I've never heard of an outside boiler before. Quick question - since you use felled trees for the boiler, do you intentionally plant new trees on your property to rotate the trees and ensure you will have trees in 15-20 years? Thank you for these videos, btw. I've been quite inspired!

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +46

      Thank you Olivia! From various books I've read on this, and testing it out myself, typically 1 acre of land sustainably provides one cord of wood per year. Where we live we will burn through 5 cords of wood every winter. With 25 acres of dense wooded forest, we have a decent supply. Also, forests have a way of managing themselves fairly well. Naturally some trees die and fall over, and that empty spot of sunshine in the forest is quickly replaced with tree(s) that start to grow themselves. When humans like myself intervene to cut down the dead trees, I just call that "weeding the forest" :) Thanks for watching!!! -Cam

    • @JD-ee8wp
      @JD-ee8wp Před 2 lety +1

      @@TheSeasonalHomestead Cam is it still legal to have a wood boiler? I've seen some articles saying that it's now illegal as of Jan 2020. Just looking for some clarification because I'd really love to get one. Thanks, love the channel

    • @happycamper4329
      @happycamper4329 Před 2 lety

      @@TheSeasonalHomestead really impressed with what you and Becky have accomplished in a relatively short space of time. So glad you clarified that they're dead trees you're felling. If you can set aside 1 acre for sustainable quick-growing pine it will help keep and add to the biodiversity in the old growth area. Also, in times of drought, those fallen logs will help to retain some shade and moisture for the floor.

  • @alanstrong55
    @alanstrong55 Před rokem +1

    My grandparents liked using wood in their furnace during the depression. Coal was too pricey. Wood gave a moister heat than coal. The trees on their farm were bountiful in those days. Corn cobs were burned in their stove for cooking.

  • @martinschulz9381
    @martinschulz9381 Před 2 lety +2

    Some people in my area who built houses with floor heating put those outdoor wood burners in after they started getting their heating/gas bills.

  • @egalegal1666
    @egalegal1666 Před 2 lety +2

    In Germany you can buy water-bearing fireplaces for example from the company Brunner
    A mix of a fireplace with a lot of mass (to store heat) and your wood boiler in one
    The heat exchanger is built directly into the fireplace and with it you can also operate radiators or floor heating and also certainly your hot water for the shower etc.

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety

      Those Brunner units look awesome!! Thanks for sharing!

    • @egalegal1666
      @egalegal1666 Před 2 lety

      ​@@TheSeasonalHomestead yeah but quite expensive... Easy up to 10 000€

  • @squirrelcovers6340
    @squirrelcovers6340 Před 2 lety +1

    I'll stick with my woodstove. It heats a 1200sq' cabin really well

  • @notforposers
    @notforposers Před rokem +2

    This is pretty cool. For myself, I wonder if I can keep that kind of labor up when I’m in my golden years? Hauling, cutting, and splitting wood would become difficult for someone when they get older (maybe I’m looking too much into it). But I still think it’s neat, especially your two other back up heat sources.

    • @rebornsmith7542
      @rebornsmith7542 Před rokem

      get a Tesla bot to do it

    • @feliciamurphy7753
      @feliciamurphy7753 Před rokem

      Yes, I have a friend that suffers because she doesn’t have wood and is a single parent. Good idea, but It’s a no for me

  • @drewditzler2818
    @drewditzler2818 Před 6 měsíci

    Get yourself a pulp wood hook grippo made in Canada great tool if you cut a lot of wood and for loading stove run a central boiler for 13 years now for my new house

  • @barelyfree9427
    @barelyfree9427 Před rokem +1

    We've been getting hosed by the local propane company and are now looking into a similar setup. We have plenty of our own wood too.

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před rokem +1

      Definitely worth checking into. Propane is our backup source, and nothing ever points to energy prices going... down. Not ever...

  • @BearMeat4Dinner
    @BearMeat4Dinner Před 2 lety +1

    I'm thinking bout one if it helps heat up a private runway!!! great video and Im gonna be getting one as soon as I move to my new place in a couple weeks. Upstate NY..

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety

      Yes yes yes!!! This would work awesome for a heated driveway!! Good luck, and enjoy moving to your new place!

  • @bullofthewoods9374
    @bullofthewoods9374 Před rokem

    check out heatmor boilers. im on my 18th winter with mine. clean out is an auger and very easy to go into a bucket to cool. no shovel or slide bin to worry with

  • @CrustyAbsconder
    @CrustyAbsconder Před rokem

    Can you figure out some way to use the hot ashes to heat an outdoor bathtub ?

  • @rtoguidver3651
    @rtoguidver3651 Před rokem +1

    My wood stove is in the basement w/ an awning over the sliding glass door where I back my trailer up and a woodshed along side my house.. I stay dry getting wood all winter..
    Mine burns wood or coal, wood burns at 500F, coal 1500F, when I add air the Temp. doubles..
    I could forge metal in my woodstove, but I never need it that hot... I can't use coal till the Temp. drops below 20F or I have to open windows to let out the heat - It happened twice.

  • @plips71755
    @plips71755 Před 2 lety +1

    They have been around for a long time. Way back at least 1970s.

  • @kylewhite219
    @kylewhite219 Před 2 lety +2

    Awesome video Cam, I could listen to the dulcet sounds of your voice talk about cutting and burning wood all day long. 😂
    Can you burn unseasoned wood in your boiler? I had issues burning unseasoned wood my first winter in our fireplace and got a good amount of creosote build up. I’m trying to plan better by splitting my wood a year in advance to make sure it’s seasoned well.

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +1

      You're awesome Kyle!! I'll make sure Becky gives me more speaking parts in thee videos, lol! The boiler "can" take unseasoned wood, but I'm trying hard to use fully seasoned wood. No matter what, you'll get some creosote when burning wood. Burning wet wood simply accelerates that buildup. You're the best!

  • @LEEANFARM
    @LEEANFARM Před 2 lety +1

    👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

  • @joeyhardin1288
    @joeyhardin1288 Před 2 lety +2

    Thanks, would love to heat with wood but my wife is allergic to wood smoke. Our 1971 house, on our half acre, is all electric; so propane is my next choice. God Bless and stay safe.

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +5

      Maybe a wood boiler is your solution then!! Put a tall chimney on this, and the smoke will never reach ground level!! And, if far enough away from the house, you'd hardly see it anyway!! Thanks for tuning in!

  • @nelsonpun
    @nelsonpun Před 6 měsíci

    How much wood does it take in a season? Seems like a cool off grid thing to have. But i imagine you'll need more than a couple trees to get through a winter.

  • @geckoserrar
    @geckoserrar Před rokem

    wow very interesting to hear your reasons for choosing a wood boiler! I'd never heard of such a device, but after hearing your logic, I agree that it's the best option especially because of your free fuel. I don't know how big your land/forest is, but I'm curious to know the growth rate versus your burn rate. Thank you for all the information you share with us!

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před rokem +1

      That's definitely a good question, and something I'll have to encounter 20 or so years from now. For now this works great. By the time I need to consider other/easier alternatives, the system will have already paid for itself so that either repairing it or replacing it altogether are two equal options in my book.

  • @GoodmanMIke59
    @GoodmanMIke59 Před 2 lety +3

    I've been heating with a water stove for 11 years, Hicks Water Stove, Mount Airy North Carolina. Highly recommend. In addition to the 99000 btu coil in my air handler, there's 125000 BTU hot water heater. Four packs coming and going from stove to house.
    When you fixed that leak did you scab in a section of PEX or did you wrap in epoxy, rubber gasket material?

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +2

      Scabbed in a section of Pex for the repair. Hopefully I'll never have to tear that wall open again (fingers crossed). I've never heard of Hicks, I'll definitely look those up. -Cam

  • @bear9923
    @bear9923 Před 2 lety +1

    HAVE HAD A PORTAGE AND MAIN WOOD BOILER FOR SEVERAL YEARS. WE'VE HAD OTHERS BUT THE PORTAGE AND MAIN USES LESS WOOD THAN THE OTHERS WE'VE HAD. GOOD DESIGN I GUESS. ARTER 30 YEARS OF USING OWB. I STILL DON'T LIKE GOING OUTSIDE FOR THE LAST FILL OF THE NIGHT WHEN IT'S BLOWING SNOW AND 20-30 BELOW ZERO F. NICE VIEO

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +2

      This makes me happy to hear you like the Portage and Main boiler you have. I did TONS of research before landing on this one. So far, super happy with it, but only 1 season in. I hope to still be raving about this one ten years from now :)

  • @kevink4914
    @kevink4914 Před rokem

    We have had a central boiler sense summer of 2006 saves thousands of $$$$ each year. Only thing I seen I would of did differently is run the underground through the foundation. Less heat loss that way.

  • @anonymostoxicmale3241
    @anonymostoxicmale3241 Před 2 lety +1

    when splitting wood with an axe try put the wood in 2 or 3 old car tires. that way you split the logs and dont have to pick em up again for the next split.

  • @Adam-Adamson
    @Adam-Adamson Před 2 lety +4

    Looks great, i'd hate carrying the wood around the door, personally id keep the wood on the other side

    • @maddierosemusic
      @maddierosemusic Před rokem

      Shoulda poured the pad so the stove was to the left . Every load of wood is at least 4 more steps around that door. I would tire of that in one day, and pour another pad or somehow get the wood on the other side of that open door.

  • @nunyabizness3890
    @nunyabizness3890 Před 2 lety +4

    At the beginning, you are sharpening your chainsaw. Can you please do a video on how to maintain a chainsaw? Thanks!

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +1

      I am passionate about sharp tools...and keeping them sharp. I'll consider doing that sometime in the future.

  • @ihaveaquestion4153
    @ihaveaquestion4153 Před 2 lety +2

    How often do you load the wood?

  • @jeanneamato8278
    @jeanneamato8278 Před 2 lety +3

    Don’t forget a forth time: when you stack it.

  • @gedhuffadine1873
    @gedhuffadine1873 Před 2 lety +2

    What do you use for domestic hot water in summer months? You are so blessed great set up

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you Ged! During the summer months, we bite the bullet and revert back to our propane supply for hot water -Cam

  • @petewootton7473
    @petewootton7473 Před 2 lety +2

    Very informative. Thank you for your time. We are looking to hear a commercial premises in the U.K. but the industry of wood burning is small here. What brand and model is the unit please? Will see if I can get anything shipped here.
    Thanks in advance 😊

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you Pete! Our model is made by Portage and Main out of Winnipeg, Canada. Shipping overseas may be a challenge. I have heard of people building wood boilers themselves, depending on how resourceful you are... -Cam

    • @petewootton7473
      @petewootton7473 Před 2 lety +1

      @@TheSeasonalHomestead Thank you, I've emailed them this morning. Was this the BL 24 34 or the BL 28 40? How much was the unit also. Thanks again

  • @jgood005
    @jgood005 Před 2 lety +4

    The wood boiler is cool. I like that it doubles as a water heater. I don't get how hot water is made in the other seasons though. Conventional water heater? Propane/Electric?

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +7

      Great question! So, in the summer when the boiler is not going, it reverts back to propane for heating our hot water. Some people run their boiler year round for hot water heating, but where we live, that doesn't seem economical. We will just bite the bullet in the summer and heat with propane, then enjoy cheaper heating in the wintertime :) - Cam

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +1

      That's not a bad idea. Especially since 90% of our hot water needs are during the daytime anyway, I'm sure that helps. I will definitely look into it!

  • @mycolorfulcottage
    @mycolorfulcottage Před 2 lety +1

    We have one of these :)

  • @carnivoreblues1331
    @carnivoreblues1331 Před 2 lety +1

    Portgage and Main! that's a famous intersection in Winnipeg, Manitoba! (Winterpeg). I used to live there. anyway, carry on.

  • @ViewNic
    @ViewNic Před 2 lety +2

    Interesting. Never heard of this - it sounds very efficient. I wondered if you considered green options for energy, especially since you were building from scratch? PVs or geothermal heating for example?

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +6

      We priced geothermal heating, and quickly realized we'd need to nearly win the lottery to afford a complete system for our home. We do plan to slowly add solar panels with the goal to eventually be 95% off grid.

    • @ViewNic
      @ViewNic Před 2 lety +3

      @@TheSeasonalHomestead Oh gosh. Budget is everything! You've done loads already. I wish you much luck in your future endeavours - I'm sure you'll get there!

  • @Wordsalad69420
    @Wordsalad69420 Před rokem +1

    I was going to get an outdoor wood boiler, but my state has some ridiculous requirements for getting one. I have a neighbor who is within 200 feet of me, therefore i can't install one of these. But I have a wood stove and that's totally fine apparently. Go figure.

  • @SuperKevinhunter
    @SuperKevinhunter Před rokem +1

    You have probably figuren that yourself, bit i were you I would have buildt a shed or something around that boiler. Could work as heat source for a greenhouse or likewise

  • @meme7591
    @meme7591 Před 2 lety +17

    As a daughter of a lumberjack you need to wear ear protection, face screen, and you need to wear chaps that will protect you from the blade and steel toe boots. Because I'm going to tell you this right now your family needs you and you need your body. Please be more protective because my father was cutting down a tree and it kick back and it cut him. And this is back in the late '70s. Everyone I know up in northern Maine where is protection so please wear protection

    • @richardoakley8800
      @richardoakley8800 Před rokem +1

      Chain saws are perfectly safe..right up to point it finds something in that log it doesn't like and will do a very good job at removing body parts

  • @jeanvaljohn3921
    @jeanvaljohn3921 Před rokem +1

    I totally understand boilers , north of St.Louis.
    For people in their teens through their early forties.
    But Iam in my mid sixties.
    And this running out twice a day in below freezing temps to stoke wood is for the birds
    Do yourself a favor and install a Geo Thermal system now!
    While it's cheap.
    The price ain't going to go down .
    It will pay for itself in 12-15 years.

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před rokem

      This wood boiler will pay for itself in 8-10 years. I had Geothermal quoted for me by a few different companies and it averaged around $80,000 for a 5 ton system. I'd LOVE to put in geothermal, but it will likely be 10 years down the road, unless I figure out how to do it myself.

  • @saidtheblueknight
    @saidtheblueknight Před rokem

    Curious as to why you had the insulated pex pipe come out of the ground outside the house and then in through a wall? Wouldn't it be more efficient if it went under the slab and up through it directly into the house? That way the pipe is within the envelope of the conditioned house and not exposed directly to outside air even if it's only for a few feet.

    • @bullofthewoods9374
      @bullofthewoods9374 Před rokem

      yep i did mine through foundation wall and then up through floor. im in nc so not to cold here. im a plumber hvac by trade so i did all the connections and duct work. saved me thousands

  • @jamiesmith4892
    @jamiesmith4892 Před 2 lety +3

    I see them all the time up here in Canada. How long are they rated to last?

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +3

      From talking with the company, and reading lots of online forums regarding wood boilers, they should last between 15-20 years if maintained properly, before any major maintenance is required...

  • @procrastinator41
    @procrastinator41 Před rokem

    Does the boiler have a catalytic converter ?

  • @james5360
    @james5360 Před 2 lety +1

    Contact your local Dpw tree department and ask if they could deliver downed trees they clear off the roads as they take up a lot of room in the town dump and they usually are overjoyed at a local resident who wants and heats with wood.

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety

      Great idea! I will start asking around. Anything to bring the logs to ME would be a big bonus!!

  • @jake_of_the_jungle9840
    @jake_of_the_jungle9840 Před rokem +1

    Where did you get the plenum piece for you furnace to make to boiler water go through it?

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před rokem

      I ordered my heat coils from:
      altheatsupply.com/heat-exchangers/water-to-air-heat-exchangers.html

  • @nebraskawoodstr
    @nebraskawoodstr Před 2 lety +3

    Great vids. Just found you and subbed. I have a video coming out on Wednesday that probably every boiler user should see. Been burning since 2014 and first time I started my adjacent wood pile on fire. Be interested in your comments on why. Thanks. Nebraska WoodSTR

  • @gloriathomas7453
    @gloriathomas7453 Před 2 lety +3

    How long doe's those three logs last,before you have to refers the boiler?

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +1

      I typically restock the boiler twice a day- once in the morning and once again before bed 👍

  • @anonymous_friend
    @anonymous_friend Před 2 lety +1

    I may have missed it, but does the wood boiler also heat your water for showers and sinks? Thanks

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +2

      Yes, it is used to heat our domestic water as well, via a sidearm heat exchanger.

  • @lavidaspeligrosa
    @lavidaspeligrosa Před 2 lety +2

    Looking good boss. But don't forget to install cameras and buy yourself a nice shotgun for protection👍

  • @sugoiharris1348
    @sugoiharris1348 Před 2 lety +1

    I knew it was possible in the way that one knows far off places they’ve never been to exist, but I’ve never seen how a chain saw is sharpened. At least that’s what I assume was happening at the beginning. Maybe I’m wrong.

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +1

      You'd be surprised how many people I teach the proper way to sharpen. They cut with such dull chains sometimes.. Like trying to cut a ripe tomato with a butter knife. -Cam

  • @mykola121
    @mykola121 Před rokem +1

    Hi, Cam,
    You say that wood comes free. Do you own some part of the forest there, or how?
    Would it be cost-effective if you were to by that would?
    And do I get it right that there is no need for the logs to get dry?
    Nice set-up anyway
    Glad for you

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před rokem +1

      We have 25 acres of forest on our property. Plenty of deadwood that is already seasoned. I haven't run the cost if I were to buy that wood, but if mine ever runs out, I have plenty of neighbors that would love to have me start cleaning up their deadwood as well. Weeding the forest, I call it.

    • @mykola121
      @mykola121 Před rokem

      @@TheSeasonalHomestead Thahks for your feedback. Good Luck and stay Warm!

  • @dlm7
    @dlm7 Před rokem +2

    Outside wood stoves are stupid. You have to go out when it's freezing to add wood. I use to heat with wood coal and oil, 4 years ago I got geothermal total cost $15000. All I have to do now is just change air filter. I no longer have to carry coal, and then the ashes, not more cutting wood, no more oil. Cost about $50 a month to heat my house in the winter and I live in western NY. Best investment I ever made.

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před rokem

      I would LOVE to do geothermal here. $80,000 was the quote given for a 5-ton system to support our place. Can I pay you to come install a geothermal system down here for perhaps closer to your $15,000 price? I'll even fly you down here :) 🙌

    • @dlm7
      @dlm7 Před rokem

      @@TheSeasonalHomestead Total bill was $35,000 , got a rebate of $10k from NY State and $12k from feds. $80K is a lot

  • @Brian-lh4fi
    @Brian-lh4fi Před rokem

    New to the channel. Why don't you have any insulation in your stud bay?

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před rokem

      I pulled it out to fix the pipe, then put it back in before patching the sheet rock

  • @markouellette788
    @markouellette788 Před rokem

    What happens if you get hurt or are unable to cut your own wood? This looks like a young persons job. Did you consider geothermal and heat pumps as other sources to heat and cool?

  • @madcat2092
    @madcat2092 Před 2 lety +1

    Just a tip. Don't leave the ash pan in the boiler. Just open the door and push it in. It's like a shovel.

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před 2 lety +2

      Tony! This may be the best tip ever!!! It totally makes sense. And here I am trying to carry this burning hot ash pan to my dump pile, seconds away from a major/minor emergency! lol! You don't know how happy I am now 🙌🥇🔥

  • @chipbeattymusic564
    @chipbeattymusic564 Před rokem +1

    How do you heat your water in the summer (out of season)?

    • @TheSeasonalHomestead
      @TheSeasonalHomestead  Před rokem

      In the summer our propane tank becomes the primary heat source for domestic hot water.

  • @cynthiahudson7528
    @cynthiahudson7528 Před rokem

    Are you cutting trees for fuel or are you using just trees that have fallen.? Do you track your costs for all expenditures and actually know what you expenses are?