Outdoor Wood Burner. Is it WORTH IT? (4 Years later)

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  • čas přidán 15. 11. 2019
  • We've been using our Outdoor Wood Burner for 4 years now and in today's video we decide if it was worth the investment or not. If you are considering an outdoor woodburner, watch this video! We discuss the pros and cons of our Central Boiler and outdoor wood burners in general.
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  • Jak na to + styl

Komentáře • 2,7K

  • @Homesteadhow
    @Homesteadhow  Před 4 lety +29

    FOLLOWUP VIDEO (Why I WONT Replant Trees I Harvest from my Homestead) To this one just went live- czcams.com/video/-EeEr82kRRs/video.html

    • @glen1arthur
      @glen1arthur Před 4 lety +7

      hi have you ever considered collaring or girdling tree. So it drys standing up without worrying about it rotting. Most people also believe it is faster.

    • @ml7049
      @ml7049 Před 4 lety

      HomeSteadHow where are you guys? We live outside of Philadelphia and have definitely considered moving much further out and living life much more simply

    • @vasopel
      @vasopel Před 4 lety +4

      @@ml7049 "living life much more simply" did you watch the video or not? :-)

    • @timbucktoo6633
      @timbucktoo6633 Před 4 lety +8

      Just wondering why your not stoking the heater with 4 foot logs instead of all those small pieces? Most folks in my area use full logs.

    • @believeryshua6509
      @believeryshua6509 Před 4 lety +3

      HomeSteadHow I know people who have the outside wood burner there are ways to get free wood.
      Go to your municipal for wood
      Call all farmers
      Ask landscapers
      The larger units or more efficient because you can use half the trunk to burn for almost the whole entire day and you don’t have to cut

  • @swampcrawlerls1267
    @swampcrawlerls1267 Před 4 lety +590

    Living with that many women I would probably want to spend large amounts of time cutting and gathering wood too.
    Just kidding, enjoy your big happy family. Cheers.

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 4 lety +73

      my favorite comment "this... this is why I drink" :)

    • @joeestes8114
      @joeestes8114 Před 4 lety +10

      I thought the same thing but iam glad you said it!:)

    • @stevem7571
      @stevem7571 Před 4 lety +31

      That is why a lot of men worked a shit load of overtime, one to pay for everything, two don't want to go home

    • @jacalli
      @jacalli Před 4 lety +26

      I'm a single woman who has an outdoor furnace!

    • @darthvader5300
      @darthvader5300 Před 4 lety +1

      Are you a Mormon who is allowed to have many wives? If so then you are the KING AND I STAR IN YOUR COUNTY (YUL BRYNNER)! Many cheers and advance Merry Christmanss and a Happy New Year! JUST JOKING! LOL!

  • @richfarfugnuven6308
    @richfarfugnuven6308 Před 4 lety +443

    As a kid I split 5-10 cords a year for my parents house, and then would go lift weights after swinging that maul in the afternoon. Best shape I was ever in. As soon as I left at 18, my parents put in a propane furnace. Go figure.

    • @CptStankFanger
      @CptStankFanger Před 4 lety +89

      Their free labor left home..

    • @relentlessmadman
      @relentlessmadman Před 4 lety +53

      At least you know they missed you!

    • @nickloch7483
      @nickloch7483 Před 4 lety +3

      That's it

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 4 lety +14

      Nice , it's great excercise

    • @TonyD-dz8pt
      @TonyD-dz8pt Před 4 lety +5

      i use to do that but for the last 25 years i have had a wood splitter, i can go for 8 hours non stop and get all my wood split and the only thing why i would want to stop is i get sick of slitting wood

  • @Up_north_with_Mike
    @Up_north_with_Mike Před 4 lety +95

    You got my thumbs up just for the Argo move and the camera grab and go

  • @calrichey9285
    @calrichey9285 Před 4 lety +8

    I built my house, 8" thick walls, staggered 2x4 construction, 6" bats of insulation on both sides. All windows on the south side so passive solar. I just burnt wood in northwester Wisconsin. I used only 3 to 3 1/2 cords of wood per winter. Maybe that's your problem, your house is obsolete. Now you can take a 2x4 construction house and add new walls in the inside, adding another 4" of insulation. My brother used to sell Central boilers, he suggested using green wood. I used a 50 gal. water heater core to preheat my water before going into the hot water heater. It sat near my woodstove.

  • @scooptractornorthorchard2397

    I agree. I’m on my 13th winter with my Central boiler. And have no regrets. As a firefighter I will add the benefit of keeping the fire out of your house as one more pro. Thanks

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 4 lety +18

      That is true- no fire in the house PLUS the mess of having a fire is all outside as well.

    • @basedbear1605
      @basedbear1605 Před 4 lety +7

      @@Homesteadhow People that have never had an indoor wood stove underestimate the disaster that it will make the inside of your house. Burning wood is a filthy mess, best to keep it outside. Great video, thanks!

    • @sgtbudz8948
      @sgtbudz8948 Před 4 lety +2

      Based Bear to be fair if your patient and take your time bringing wood inside along with cleaning your stove area after every use you really don’t notice any mess. I don’t use nearly as much wood as you do though, awesome set up and nice vid! Was fun to watch

    • @wnburroughs4082
      @wnburroughs4082 Před 4 lety

      @Jake Sangria It's not that big of a deal. We did 5 and lived in a little rambler.

    • @mikeanderson6042
      @mikeanderson6042 Před 4 lety +1

      @Jake Sangria used to do 16. 4 weekends. Dropping skidding blocking splitting and stacked. Did it all growing up, probably just got used to it. Switched to coal 2 years ago when my mom got diagnosed with cancer.

  • @augiemattheiss
    @augiemattheiss Před 4 lety +17

    Fun to see.... I heated with a wood stove years ago when I was young... I still miss it, I remember opening the windows in the bitter cold because it was too hot in the family room! ;-) This was in Maryland where neighbors had heatpumps, we called them cold pumps!... of course, I'd do it on purpose when people were over just to show off.... nothing comes close to the comfort of sitting near a really hot heavy steel black box... if you are slightly tired, you know, from handling all that wood.... you'll be out like a light in a few minutes! ;-) thanks for posting.....

  • @samhigdon2808
    @samhigdon2808 Před 2 lety +5

    We too have a Central Boiler unit. The 5036. This is it’s 10th year. We have loved the unit. We still tell everyone that it was our “best investment”. Our heating demand is not as diverse as the one in this video so our wood consumption is much less. I’m now 75 and still look forward to my wood gathering and heating season. Bottom line. We love it still.

  • @tb9579
    @tb9579 Před 2 lety +4

    We bought a place in the NC mountains last summer that has a very unique set up for hot water and heating the house - an indoor water stove. The unit is quite large - about 5’ tall x 7’ long x 4’ deep. Three large solar panels on the roof with a circulating pump serve as the primary source to heat the water. If we have a period of cloudy days where the solar panels can’t keep the water adequately heated, the stove has a built-in home heating oil furnace to heat the water. In the unlikely event both the solar panels and furnace go belly up, no worries - the stove also has a firebox for burning wood. It was made by Blue Ridge Water Stoves and installed when the house was built in 1991. Has kept the house toasty warm throughout the winter with plenty of hot water for showers. Love it!

  • @lidlnutz
    @lidlnutz Před 4 lety +82

    Most people: What I have is the greatest thing you could have. it's the best by far, and I am the best.
    This guy: Here is what I have, I like it but here is the list of cons..
    In conclusion, I like real dudes, and this is the kind of guy who should be your friend. Thumbs up to the video, and props to his sense of reality! Much respect! The world needs more of these guys!

    • @ArthursHD
      @ArthursHD Před 4 lety

      Could pick up used Seek Thermal Compact or Flir for your phone to do energy and electrical audit, to make sure you are not loosing that energy, after you are done with it put it back on the market so you don't lose out.
      Personally I would go for other more automated heating method. Like Solar collectors, heat-pump, wood-chip boiler (By doing so also not wasting quality timber) , bio-gas digestor + generator, distributed data center for heating (just like a Dutch company did), Passive solar, Solar PV. Every property is different, there is no single best option.
      Outdoor heater effect indoor air quality far less than a stove would, fire hazard is much lower.

    • @basedbear1605
      @basedbear1605 Před 4 lety +1

      Excellent post among a slew of moronic ones. Well done.

    • @basedbear1605
      @basedbear1605 Před 4 lety +1

      @@ArthursHD I bet you don't even own a house or have any kids.

  • @jackmehoff2363
    @jackmehoff2363 Před 4 lety +17

    I can tell by the way he hooked the Argo up to the trailer, that this guy likes to work but has fun on the job.

    • @WagonLoads
      @WagonLoads Před 3 lety +1

      I would love to have a place like this with storybook cottages all around, along with a miniature train to haul the wood

    • @bradleymiller6805
      @bradleymiller6805 Před 3 lety

      The way he slings those cons I thought the exact opposite.

    • @bradleymiller6805
      @bradleymiller6805 Před 3 lety

      The way he slings those cons I thought the exact opposite.

  • @koltonkinlicheene2297
    @koltonkinlicheene2297 Před 4 lety +201

    "You gotta cut the wood, you gotta STACK the wood"
    This guy: points at unstacked pile of firewood 😂

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 4 lety +24

      point taken :) Ive been stacking wood lately like a madman though. At one time we had so much wood in the shed there wasn't room for more. I planned to feed the first pile into the wood burner- but it rained, snowed and froze. I procrastinated!

    • @davemarr7743
      @davemarr7743 Před 3 lety +16

      Firewood heats you twice, once when you cut & split it. Twice when you burn it. Lol

    • @ProfMannion
      @ProfMannion Před 3 lety

      You got wood gumbo, wood and rice...

    • @8.21productions9
      @8.21productions9 Před 3 lety +6

      @@Homesteadhow my neighbor stacks his wood. but he stacks it on pallets probably 5-5.5’ high. then just moves them as needed with his tractor.

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 3 lety +1

      @@8.21productions9 I like this idea!

  • @gregwoycik1755
    @gregwoycik1755 Před 4 lety +26

    Great video! I installed a Central Boiler stove 18 years ago when my twin girls were just a tad younger than yours. They are off to college and I handle the all the wood prep myself now. But something for you to look forward to....IF and WHEN you allow your girls to be courted by young gentleman, those guys will haul and stack ALOT of wood to try and impress the girls/or their dad!! The fall wood season is a great test of the young bucks interest/commitment. It always embarrassed my girls, but that was my rule. If you want to date my daughter you had to spend a weekend or three on the wood pile with me! Kinda wish I had more daughters now that they are out of the house..... CHEERS!

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 4 lety +6

      Hey Greg, I love your way of thinking. I am way behind you, our triplets will be 13 and I am still in denial of them dating lol. Kerry and I met and started dating at 14, almost 26 years ago. I will tell Kerry this awesome idea! Love it

    • @jeffallbright4449
      @jeffallbright4449 Před 3 lety +5

      Teaching teenagers to be men. I salute you sir! You have years invested in your daughters, why would you throw that away and allow them to date, potentially marry some worthless schlepp? If these fellas are really interested in your daughters they won’t mind a little labor for the blessing of dating them. Working hand in hand with older men I was able to “catch” a lot of wisdom from them I might not have otherwise obtained.

  • @TruckTaxiMoveIt
    @TruckTaxiMoveIt Před 4 lety +22

    Here are a few things to onsider:
    1) attach to a greenhouse grow fruits and vegetables throughout the year even citrus trees
    2) convert 1 wall to function as a oven
    3) use the ash as fertilizer
    4) create an automated feeder that drops the wood onto a sliding portion of the roof

    • @GlorifiedGremlin
      @GlorifiedGremlin Před 2 lety +1

      I'm thinking about building a small one to keep a greenhouse warm. I gotta see if digging the greenhouse in the ground is enough on its own first lol

  • @wfemp_4730
    @wfemp_4730 Před 2 lety +10

    Good information!
    Having an outdoor burner would be a bit too much for me, but I do love my wood stove in the den. Cutting, splitting and moving/stacking (multiple times before it gets into the stove) is enough for me. It does keep me somewhat active outside during the cold months when I'd otherwise be watching TV or whatever.

  • @formerevolutionist
    @formerevolutionist Před 3 lety +3

    I remember having a wood-burning stove growing up. You're right. It is a literal ton of work. We would often spend one or two months gathering firewood, cutting it, carrying it, stacking it, etc. Then, during the winter it was a lot of work to tend to the fire.

  • @melikesleepy
    @melikesleepy Před 3 lety +6

    I grew up in a house with an outdoor wood furnace. My parents heated with it for 29 years. However, as my parents got older and eventually my father died, it's just too much work the older you get. Not to mention as a kid and all the way up until I moved out of the house I spent every damn weekend/or after school in the fall and winter cutting, splitting with a maul, and transporting wood. It's an amazingly hot heat source but there are several cons. Another con is that if you go away for the holidays or are just out of town for a day or two, you've got to ask a neighbor to fill it for you. So all in all, after 29 years, my mom got propane and kept the wood furnace hooked up as a back up heat source. The best of both worlds I guess.

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 3 lety +1

      That's understandable and true. We have propane still so we can use either. Weve left for 10 days in winter and we just put the propane on like 50f and kept the house from freezing and the water in the pipes stayed warm

  • @midamultitool1387
    @midamultitool1387 Před 4 lety +16

    My parents have one and they love it. They have heated floors, so the stove heats the water and the floors

  • @nathanrobinson7042
    @nathanrobinson7042 Před 4 lety +11

    I like this guy. His entire perspective,,,, brilliant.
    -Nathan

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 4 lety

      Thanks from "this guy" I appreciate your kind comment. Thanks for watching

  • @donbush9091
    @donbush9091 Před 4 lety +3

    Hard work
    Nice job
    Great family time
    God bless Us all
    Thank you for sharing

  • @magdarivas578
    @magdarivas578 Před 3 lety

    Your family is blessed to have you. What a great way to grow and love ea other!

  • @gnusndn6089
    @gnusndn6089 Před 4 lety +6

    Good for you Dad. Your girls are learning a lot of good things about life. It looks like a lot of work but it is worth it as long as you're young and you can do it. God bless you

  • @famousseamus3
    @famousseamus3 Před 4 lety +5

    Loved the honesty "i'd probably just be watching TV", same here!

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 4 lety +1

      right- or i'd be watching CZcams! Thanks for watching

  • @kapperoutdoors
    @kapperoutdoors Před 4 lety +2

    Good video I've had a wood burner and part of me misses the fun of cutting wood, and the other part of me doesn't miss all of the headaches! Thanks man and good luck

  • @The1mrmiller
    @The1mrmiller Před 4 lety +7

    The Self Sufficiency aspect is invaluable. That alone is worth all of the effort. The biggest "con" from my perspective is the additional tools, tool maintenance, and fuel that it would cost to process it all. Good video, it was easy to understand what you were saying and you went over the costs very well. thanks.

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 4 lety +1

      Agreed- everything we do on our homestead is to become more self sufficient! Thanks

  • @rekaloknight6275
    @rekaloknight6275 Před 4 lety +105

    Gave a thumbs up for that drift. Nice one.

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 4 lety +16

      thanks for that. I sometimes dread winter BUT drifting the argo on the snow/ice like a figure skater never gets old. Im pretty graceful with that thing if I do say so myself :)

    • @prestonberg9604
      @prestonberg9604 Před 4 lety

      @@Homesteadhow not that it's any of my business what do those argo rigs start at and about how fast does it go

    • @peteharder6325
      @peteharder6325 Před 4 lety +1

      @@prestonberg9604 cost I'm not sure. But what you saw speed wise, is what you get.

  • @salmonslayer49
    @salmonslayer49 Před 4 lety +3

    We have been using an OWB for 11 years on our farm and I have to say you really nailed it. We heat a 1600 sq ft old farm house and a green house and only burn about 4 cords in our milder climate but the one year we didnt use it due to medical issues our heating bill was four fold. The only issue for my wife and I is that we are getting older and wonder what will happen when we are more physically unable to feed the wood monster.

  • @richardbutler5893
    @richardbutler5893 Před 4 lety +37

    I have a lot of experience heating with wood and I can confidently tell you that you will cut your wood usage by at least 30% if you can properly dry your firewood. Another thing it’s important to know is there is approximately the same amount of available BTUs per pound of dry wood regardless of what the species is. For anyone interested, there is plenty of supporting data available on the internet to confirm this information.

    • @BigBirdy100
      @BigBirdy100 Před 2 lety +1

      Overly seasoned wood burns too fast and too hot. Get more mileage out of it when it doesn't burn up so fast. A slower burn is better.

    • @GreatBigBoat
      @GreatBigBoat Před 2 lety +10

      the same amount of available BTUs per pound of dry wood regardless of what the species is......bull

    • @_________________404
      @_________________404 Před 2 lety

      Wood heating is not bad if you have access to cheap wood. In Europe it’s very common to use wood for heating, except it’s almost always an indoor wood burner located in a basement of the building, usually with a place to store your wood too. Only downside is the work associated with it, though still there are things which can help you a bit with it.

    • @samuelandmarikaadams9837
      @samuelandmarikaadams9837 Před rokem

      Different woods have different densities. This density is directly proportional to the thermal heat you get out. I live in Finland and the 3 primary burning woods are Birch, Scots Pine and Spruce. It's well documented by University and government tests that the Higher the density of the wood the more heat you get out.

    • @samuelandmarikaadams9837
      @samuelandmarikaadams9837 Před rokem

      @@BigBirdy100 depends on the stove. I have a 2000kg soapstone stove. You want to burn hot and fast with that then shut the damper. Heat is then slowly released over 24hrs.

  • @idontevenknow232
    @idontevenknow232 Před rokem +1

    I'm a remote worker and having something like this would force me to go outside and get away from the screen as therapy. Love this setup!

  • @GPOutdoors
    @GPOutdoors Před 4 lety +3

    Good morning! Thanks for the overview. My neighbour has almost an identical unit and has used it for many years now. All the best - keep warm!

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 4 lety +2

      Thanks for watching! We live in a rural area and since we got ours I have seen so many around the area. Its a great unit.

  • @davescott8859
    @davescott8859 Před 4 lety +7

    Great video, I’ve purchased one cord of wood in the last 12 years, there is always free wood for the pick up all year. Then you can have a choice of wood at the local landfill, my landfill has it piled up in an area free for the taking, can’t go wrong with free heat. Plus cutting and splitting wood keeps me built like a lumberjack, which comes in handy when my six dogs want to wrestle for my dinner plate.

    • @KevinKimmich44024
      @KevinKimmich44024 Před 3 lety

      my neighbor heats his home by harvesting wood nobody wants... there is an endless amount of free wood. We live adjacent to a forest, but we heat with natural gas... the combined heat and hot water is making me consider this more seriously now. combine that with heating outbuildings and it starts to make even more sense.

  • @livewire2474
    @livewire2474 Před 2 lety +1

    Its definitely a great feeling to reap the rewards of you're hard work while relaxing in you're warm home, garage, or whatever you are heating!! God bless.. wood burner myself over 40 yrs

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 2 lety

      Agreed and we keep it much warmer vs using propane!

  • @johnnyklingborg8960
    @johnnyklingborg8960 Před 4 lety +3

    The rewarding feeling you speak of i have never felt during the 20years (im 27) i have processed firewood... But now when i got my own place i at least can appreciate the 0$ heating bill every month.

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 4 lety

      The zero heating bill is great- Bonus for us is much lower electric bill (because we also heat our water) and the other big bonus is the warmth-- with wood we keep the heat cranked nice and cozy-- with propane we are usually much more conservative/cheap/cold! thanks for watching!

  • @chiefcitypropertymaintenan6759

    Nice to see someone addressing the power problem with a outdoor wood boiler! that has always been my worry. In short term grid down no big deal but we lost power 3 years ago for 16 days in early January in central Illinois. Thanks for the awesome videos!

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 4 lety +2

      And thanks for your nice comment! The solar trailer is doing really well. I worried in winter the sun wouldn't keep up.. but after some heavy use on our dog kennel its still at 13.9 volts this am!

    • @chiefcitypropertymaintenan6759
      @chiefcitypropertymaintenan6759 Před 4 lety

      @@Homesteadhow that's awesome! We are running a blazeking wood stove in our smaller 800 square ft cabin right now. Have thought about a boiler for the house and garages but just still on the fence.

  • @ericlovett9870
    @ericlovett9870 Před 4 lety +8

    I’ve used my outdoor furnace (it’s a shaver) for 13 years heating about 5000 sq ft. Love it! I live in East Tennessee with relatively mild winters and the biggest problem I have is some times it produces too much heat. I only use it when lows are in the 30s or the highs don’t leave the 40s. When it’s warmer then that the heat pump on the house is efficient to keep the house comfortable. I keep my water jacket at 120 degrees F. In your video you said you kept yours at 180. Wow that’s high. Lowering the water jacket temperature reduces (drastically) the amount of wood you have to burn and allows your furnace to work more efficiently. I can’t imagine an environment outside of the arctic circle where a 150 degree temp would work just fine.

    • @jakejake7162
      @jakejake7162 Před rokem

      How many chords of wood does it take to heat your house for a year? I know you don’t use it in the summer time but I’m just curious about log consumption

  • @GabrielSBarbaraS
    @GabrielSBarbaraS Před 2 lety +1

    Your Argo is my compact tractor with a lift bucket, I found out over the years that anytime you don't have to lift up the wood , much work is saved. Also , we used an indoor wood boiler in the basement and ran hydronic piping in the home to distribute heat. Also heated water with a unit called a super store, ( tank within a tank) . Also had a backup propane boiler for those many days where the outside air temp was above 40 degrees F. spent 20+ years doing this, to us the work equated to health for the mind and body. Thanks for posting HomeSteadHow ....

  • @cccalifornia7206
    @cccalifornia7206 Před 3 lety +1

    Be grateful you are adding years to your life through the exercize!! Hard work cutting wood and free wood heat is a great gift!! 👏👍😃

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 3 lety +1

      Agreed, plus there is not much to do here in winter, keeps me busy and outdoors!

  • @dougdodson7498
    @dougdodson7498 Před 4 lety +20

    I have a Central Boiler also. I have found out over the years that if you put a piece of green wood in for every 3 or 4 seasoned pieces the burn time lasts longer between fill ups

    • @Wc4rav
      @Wc4rav Před 4 lety

      Green wood for burn slower and depending on the type it could burn hotter once the box is hot

  • @calrichey9285
    @calrichey9285 Před 4 lety +20

    Having the whole family out there teaches good work ethic.

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 4 lety +1

      Very true, good quality time in nature too

    • @timlehnen3226
      @timlehnen3226 Před 4 lety +2

      Ya, but when kids grow up and move out, you better. Have. A. Helper, because you know. Most knives - wivesdont help. The. Husband,..facts are real,.

    • @LeroyBraun
      @LeroyBraun Před 4 lety

      Many hands make the work easy. Except, when it's hard.

    • @richardthetroll6758
      @richardthetroll6758 Před 4 lety

      I can't even get my kid's outside....

    • @calrichey9285
      @calrichey9285 Před 4 lety +1

      @@richardthetroll6758 That is sad. They must be too old for obedience training. So, try incentive training. Turn off the electronics, too.

  • @pinemeadowshobbyfarmafruga8319

    I let your adds play through to the end because I know the value of adds to a homsteader on CZcams such as myself. Got some vacation time so I get to check out those channels i have been subbed to for quite some time, yours is one. I love your content and videography. I have been looking into one of these wood burners for my homestead and this info your providing is great. Thank you.

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 4 lety +1

      I really appreciate that comment! The video and editing work is a hobby for me- I love doing it- but it is a lot of work and it means a lot when someone appreciates it. Not to toot my own horn- but if you haven't seen our Green House Video-- consider checking it out. I think that was our best work /video/editing by far.. We also spent a ton of time on our latest video, A Day in the Life of a Homesteader. Thanks for your kind support!

  • @curtdkrueger
    @curtdkrueger Před 2 lety +2

    I have a central boiler 5036, 14th year in Southern Minnesota. It is a lot of work! Regarding this video if this helps; Move the wagons/trailers closer to the wood. I have an ATV and I go within 2 or 3 feet of the wood where possible. Saves walking/trips/time (after 10 years, the walking gets old.. lol). Also I let the chain saw do the work of the splitter (I sharpen my own chain every time I do a major cutting, I'm guessing you do too). I cut the pieces smaller with the chain saw instead of splitting (also saves your back if the trunk/branches are larger). In the case of tree trunks of 2.5 feet or larger, I slice them with the chain saw to 6-8 inch and use a maul/axe (one side maul, one side axe) to split them. Usually can split into multiple pieces with one blow. Regarding the sheds, I don't have any. I tarp the wood up (use the wood pieces at key locations to keep them from blowing away) and it works very well keeping it dry and the snow off. I do 50/50 with LP and wood, and the combination is pretty good. I heat the house basically from Oct - March on ~$800 of LP (at ~2.00 a gallon). Thanks for the video.. Lots to learn at the beginning so you don't kill yourself one way or the other (chain saw accident and/or felling trees)!

  • @rodneytatman449
    @rodneytatman449 Před 4 lety +5

    We've had our Central Boiler for over 16 years. We use dry wood, wet wood, split wood, whatever is handy. If it'll fit through the door I'll burn it, 20" around and 4' long it goes in and burns all night.
    BTW as a tip to make topping off your water tank a bit easier install a hose between the drain on your water heater and a valve on your return line of your heat exchanger. Then all you gotta do is open both valves and time the flow. The side benefit for us is it's soft water.
    BTW I've never drained my boiler, just test the water and add rust inhibitor as needed. In the off season cover the chimney, clean it out and keep the firebox as dry as possible.

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 4 lety +2

      Rodney glad to hear another CB user with long term usage! NICE tip on topping it off. That is a great one. The last time I topped it off it was a big chore had I done it your way- I would have saved a bunch of time.

    • @24woodchuck
      @24woodchuck Před 4 lety +1

      I top mine off in a similar way. My geothermal dealer that also sells Central Boiler and he said don't fill from the bottom of the hot water tank because your putting sediment into your boiler.

    • @rodneytatman449
      @rodneytatman449 Před 4 lety +1

      24woodchuck
      I can see that being an issue but my water is filtered coming into the house so I don't have the rust that is present in my outdoor hydrants.

  • @DJ-lm3lw
    @DJ-lm3lw Před 4 lety +6

    I've had a 5648 classic for fifteen years and love it. Now that I'm older its a lot harder. I have ran out of wood and just keep the furnace pump going and my propane fired furnace keeps the boiler water from freezing. That's not very efficient but I had some health problems and couldn't cut wood for a time. One hint I found is to split the wood where you cut it, load it on a pallet I have built sides on, and haul it to the furnace and dump it there. Or if you have multiple pallets, leave it on the pallet and fill your spares.This saves from unloading and stacking. But you need a tractor with pallet forks.

  • @TheEwponkala
    @TheEwponkala Před 4 lety

    Have had mine for almost 20 years now - no regrets. I have cut wood all my life and as for finding the time if it's worth doing you find the time. There is a certain amount of pride I get when I'm done prepping my wood for the year and look over the pile. I only go thru about 6 cords a year but I only burn hardwood so that makes a big difference too.

  • @lsnyr1
    @lsnyr1 Před 4 lety +1

    Great Video ... I have the same unit central boiler CL 6048. I have had mine about 12 years now and have loved it. You were spot on with all your pros and cons.

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 4 lety

      nice! Have you had any problems with your 6048?

  • @grom7826
    @grom7826 Před 3 lety +5

    My plumber built his home with a pizza oven centrally located in the home, it keeps his home warm, Smith River Northern Calif, a milder climate on the ocean.

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 3 lety +1

      That sounds wonderful! We love pizza here

  • @y5mvbc
    @y5mvbc Před 4 lety +3

    To help with heating your long ranch style house, I want to share with you what I did. Above or near the stove, I put 2-- 14"x14" returns.from each independant return, I ran an 8" insulated duct flex pipe to each back bedroom on either end of my house. Anywhere in that 8" insulated duct pipe, I placed 2 separate 600cfm vent fans, not the cheap low cfm duct booster types. But an inline duct exhaust type.. I ran a 14-2 wire from a electric thermostat for each bedroom on either side of the house to the fan and tapped into a 15amp line along the way. I set each one to around 70 degrees and when each bedroom drops below 70 the fan kicks on. They aren't very loud and I kept the fans closer to the stove room anyway. Not even thinking about it but after the fans sucked the hot air over to the other end of the house, the stove room returns ended up pulling the heat down the hallways, through the kitchen and livingroom, dining room back to the stove room where returns were. Voila, my whole house in the 70's and the stove room is no longer in the high 80's. I dont have that much land and live on the north shore of long island on 1.5 acres. I do my own log splitting with a 33 ton and give local tree removal guys a nice big area to drop loads of oak, locust and maple mostly for free. In a 2700 square foot house total, I run about 5 cords a winter. Haven't got the hot water deal going yet but you gave me the inspiration.

  • @mikew151Manhattan
    @mikew151Manhattan Před 2 lety +1

    i love hearing stories like this, back to basics living and not relying on the system for essentials of survival. thanks for the vid! take care

  • @raulescobar4699
    @raulescobar4699 Před rokem

    Thank you for taking the time to share this useful information!

  • @wkw4095
    @wkw4095 Před 4 lety +3

    I have the Vermont Castings Defiant wood stove for 25 years now. It heats the entire 2700 square foot home (raised ranch) to 80+ degrees with 3-6 cords depending on how cold the NY winter is, quality wood and if I'm sure to use the catalytic converter for efficiency. I used to cut, scrounge and horde wood...now I buy it due all the NY storms, wood is cheap ;)

  • @robertrobinson6785
    @robertrobinson6785 Před 4 lety +5

    Great video. I can see that it will take some time to recover the cost. But I do like the family togetherness and the health. Keep up the good work.

  • @giann3021
    @giann3021 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks for the effort to film this. It was beautiful to watch.

  • @jaysmith5105
    @jaysmith5105 Před 3 lety +2

    the boiler is a hungry beast, fun when Im younger now, wood pellet stove for less messing with eventually. Next up will be spray foam to keep heat in and in floor hydronic heating from the boiler, no more scorched air heat.
    firewood processing machines are a blessing

  • @stevedawson4781
    @stevedawson4781 Před 4 lety +9

    If you could make yourself some "cordwood trailers" like a wood rack on wheels, you could haul them out and stack them full then park until wood dries then move next to the furnace

  • @rgthomson100
    @rgthomson100 Před 4 lety +10

    Hitch up a kiln drier to it, we do this in Scotland and it takes about 5 days to dry about 20 tonne so you would only need 2 times in the kiln and wood comes out at 15% and burns great

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 4 lety +2

      I've never heard of this- but plan to research more.. thanks for the insightful tip!

  • @garyreinoehl804
    @garyreinoehl804 Před 2 lety +1

    I am 70 years old and have been burning wood for the last 9 years with my classic boiler, and before that with a wood stove inside my house, and I will never do that again bugs ,dirt ,and chimney fire, I check it twice a day at temperatures below freezing . And my wife and I love it.

  • @yahuahismysalvation144
    @yahuahismysalvation144 Před 2 lety +1

    I'm seriously addicted to this channel. I've been watching all day and I don't even plan on HOMESTEADING Hahahaha Maybe someday, but seriously brother you are blessed!! Best regards to you and your beautiful family!

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 2 lety

      Awesome, thanks! CZcams is hard work. We've done hundreds of videos. Really apreciate nice comments like this! Please share our videos with your friends! Thx!!!

  • @duncandmcgrath6290
    @duncandmcgrath6290 Před 4 lety +5

    I’m 3 seasons in on my Portage & Main boiler , I heat 3 buildings + domestic hot water and one hot tub .... I love it .
    20 cords a year for sure but, I burn junk hardwood and I dont split anything under 16 inch .
    I gotta admit the exercise is great for me 👍

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 4 lety +1

      Good for you. Is the hot tub heat exchanged similar to an indoor water heater, heat exchanger?

  • @ScottyLo
    @ScottyLo Před 4 lety +8

    I’ve been heating our house with a duel fuel central boiler for at least 10 years now. I used to have 20’ logs delivered and I did all the work. Thanks to my wife suggesting we have it delivered cut and split for a couple more bucks. I now have free time and my back has never felt better and I only burn hardwood and try not to burn black walnut. 🔥

    • @v3124
      @v3124 Před 4 lety +5

      Why don't you burn black walnut? Honest question, not being a smarty pants.

    • @ScottyLo
      @ScottyLo Před 4 lety +1

      v3124 I don’t burn black walnut because of the acid. It’s bad for your firebox even with ashtrol. I also don’t burn pine. It burns too fast and doesn’t leave many embers. It turns to ash so if you don’t add more wood in time you end up having to restart your fire. That’s my experience at least.

    • @v3124
      @v3124 Před 4 lety

      Interesting! I'd never heard that about walnut.

    • @johngnipper1454
      @johngnipper1454 Před 4 lety

      That snow covered wood brings back memories

  • @CelticRootsFarm
    @CelticRootsFarm Před 3 lety +2

    We’ve been thinking about purchasing one of these for our homestead. Good information. Thanks! 👍

  • @ScottieBMan
    @ScottieBMan Před 6 měsíci

    Thanks for sharing this, that set up will keep you in shape and on your feet!

  • @andymotl
    @andymotl Před 4 lety +14

    Some of the hardest cutting trees are the oaks that were standing dead but are now on the ground. Petrified shit throws sparks from the chain.

    • @chairintheair4322
      @chairintheair4322 Před 3 lety +1

      Cutting your oak shouldn’t be a problem ....
      Use a “Tungsten Carbide” chain !! You’ll find that’s much more suitable that the one you have and there’ll be no sparks.
      Find out who sells these in your area beforehand, and make sure they have the sharpening equipment for Tungsten Chain Saw blades.
      Best...

  • @oldman6172
    @oldman6172 Před 4 lety +4

    As a teen (50+ years ago) I split wood for a neighbor who heated a 3 story 5 bedroom house from a pot belly stove on bottom floor with less than 1 cord of wood a year.

  • @KevinKimmich44024
    @KevinKimmich44024 Před 3 lety

    i have a greenhouse I've been heating with propane for two seasons... we live on a similarly sized property that's mostly forest, too. The propane is a constantly nagging concern and a minor chore every now and then. The idea of heating the house the greenhouse and our outbuilding, plus hot water makes it more appealing and potentially more economical. thanks for the video and the insights.

  • @cosmicallyderived
    @cosmicallyderived Před 3 lety

    Right on brother, I had to check out this video because I had no idea what that box was on your property and never heard of one before. Cool stuff.

  • @legacyfarmsllc8511
    @legacyfarmsllc8511 Před 4 lety +12

    Great video! I've had a Central Boiler classic (5036) since 2006. We burn it year round as it heats our hot water as well. I definitely agree with everything you said. They are definitely not for everyone. I sell about 300 cords of wood a year so for me it was a no brainier. I sell the nice stuff and burn the rest myself. Not having a heating bill is nice if you're willing to put in a little effort. We too burn about 10-11 cords a year heating an old farmhouse keeping the 5 ladies in the house warm and keeping the showers hot! I'd buy another in a heartbeat

    • @Canadian_Eh_I
      @Canadian_Eh_I Před 2 lety

      Is it possible to also get electricity from one if these?

  • @lizziesangi1602
    @lizziesangi1602 Před 4 lety +7

    My dad loved wood burning stoves. He had a pot belly wood burning stove in our cellar.

  • @t3rmj3rzyslime68
    @t3rmj3rzyslime68 Před 4 lety +1

    I just got the same setup as you and it’s definitely been worth the work

  • @Awesomestuff247
    @Awesomestuff247 Před 4 lety +1

    that drift in the snow + the camera grab was badass

  • @alexmartin1430
    @alexmartin1430 Před 4 lety +6

    You have a lot of cool toys. I'm jealous man lol. I burned wood for a few years in my last house. You don't realize how much time you waste until you don't have to do it anymore. Wood heat is the best heat but it requires much more work. It's a trade off

  • @MrBostreem
    @MrBostreem Před 3 lety +10

    I like You’re concept. I see that u have no insulation on your pipes or if u do now but if u do it will save money/wood I have done it on my pipes and it Really works.

  • @rastapete100
    @rastapete100 Před 4 lety +1

    That was very well explained.I also heat with wood and agree that it is a lot of work but it is a nice heat and you don't have to worry about going to a gym. It makes you strong and you spend a lot of time outside in winter. Sometimes I curse it but mostly I love it for all the reasons you pointed out.

  • @dieseltrucksfirewood2540

    Good for you for being self sufficient. We heat with wood too and it is absolutely the best heat.

  • @kevinnhelen
    @kevinnhelen Před 4 lety +4

    "Chop your own wood and it will warm you twice " said Henry Ford .
    Quite a few years ago my family owned business was heated by a central boiler . 6000 sq ft for about 7-8 months of the year . Auto repair shop so the large doors were opened and closed a lot. The worst year we had as far as heating goes ( we have cold damp winters on the east coast of Canada) we went through 88 cord of wood and I cut, blocked and stacked every one of those cords. It was a full time job literally for 1 person just to keep the heat on ( I was in the best shape of my life) But an average year would use roughly 40-45 cord.and that trend continues to this day, however I have retired from the business to go on to other ventures . Oddly enough I really do miss the effort put into heating that place.

  • @xmozzazx
    @xmozzazx Před 4 lety +7

    Nice video man. I am glad to hear your perspective on this. I admit though, 10 cord a year for heat is nothing, especially for the square footage and water your heating. Up here (Northern Ontario) people would use 2-3 times that much, but hardwood is much more available and probably less expensive. I can buy a transport load of hardwood logs for around 2000 dollars and get around 40 cord. Al those other variables are similar, chainsaw, splitter, etc. Having the wood on your own property makes that cost much less, just costs the time! And wood heat is a trade off for time.

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 4 lety

      Interesting, thanks for sharing your perspective.

  • @nailedit.
    @nailedit. Před 4 lety

    Thank you so very much for the wood burner overview.

  • @CopperKettleFarms
    @CopperKettleFarms Před 3 lety +2

    Thanks for this. We pondered looking into an exterior unit, but I think after this video we're going to stick to our indoor unit and then figure out how to make it more efficient for our two-story cape cod.

  • @canamrider7195
    @canamrider7195 Před 4 lety +4

    I have a neighbor who had one installed about 4 years ago also. He has grown to HATE the thing. 10 cords is nothing for him to burn Oct thru April. He has gone thru 20 cords when the winter is especially bad. On the good side, he has become quite the sawyer, winch operator and log splitter. His wife on the other hand gives him constant grief over the possible one accident in cutting wood and it is then Game Over.

    • @jray4131
      @jray4131 Před 2 lety

      Sounds like your neighbor needs to remind his wife about the one possible grease fire in the kitchen!

  • @simpleman806
    @simpleman806 Před 4 lety +14

    If you remember how high oil(along with natural gas) was back around 2004, it was pretty outrageous. My wife and I just got married and starting out, I couldn't afford to run the heater during winter. My grandpa had a wood burning stove he let me have for the house. It was a small Sears & Roebuck one. I was cutting up about 10 cords a year for my wife and I, my in-laws house and my parents house. I went through a lot of chains for my chainsaw. Bodark will make quick work dulling the chains. I definitely got in shape from it. Don't have the body to do that anymore. Also, congrats on staying sane with 5 females in the house. I don't think I could do it

  • @kevinrico1194
    @kevinrico1194 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the video. Very in depth and gives a full picture.

  • @louispanarella2123
    @louispanarella2123 Před 2 lety

    I know nothing about this subject and just stumbled across this video. However, I found your presentation to be succinct and extremely informative. Great job.

  • @JenkinsB
    @JenkinsB Před 4 lety +16

    Outdoor wood boiler for family of 5 = keeps only dude in house sane by allowing time to decompress!

  • @adamUDavies
    @adamUDavies Před 3 lety +8

    Owning one of those is like being a small dairy farmer. You have to tend to it morning and evening 🤷🏻‍♂️
    I'm getting to old to be working that hard.

  • @scooterpie696
    @scooterpie696 Před 4 lety

    I'm on winter #4 with an Eazyboiler out of Hersey Michigan. I believe most makes are probably pretty good. I'm very pleased with mine.
    The time in the woods and work involved are a plus in my opinion. I love it. Of course I have a tractor with a grapple.
    Nice video.

  • @philandhannahslittlefarm1464

    Thanks for the video. We are hoping install one of these in the next couple of years to heat our house and garage/shop as they both have hydronic slabs. Your video really helped answer some questions for us.

  • @uiscebeatha9476
    @uiscebeatha9476 Před 4 lety +3

    Great job! You have also reduced your Fire risk massively!

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 4 lety +2

      very true -keep the fire out, the fire danger out and the MESS out!

  • @brianwilson8119
    @brianwilson8119 Před 4 lety +3

    I have a BlazeKing woodstove inside the house. Its a catalyst stove and is extremely efficient. Yeah I have to bring wood inside the house and it doesn't heat the water or anything like that, but it goes 24/7 from the first of November until about the first two weeks of April and the most I've used was 4 cords in one season. I usually go through about 3 - 3 1/2 cords. It wasn't our intent to make it our primary means of heat, but it does so well heating the house, it actually overrides the gas furnace. In my experience, I think these outdoor burners are more work than they are worth.

  • @SmithsAngusFarm
    @SmithsAngusFarm Před 4 lety +2

    We have been heating with an outdoor wood burner since 1992. At our first house we had a Taylor. When we moved we purchased a Central Boiler 6048. In WV, we feed it once a day but I picked up a splitter that will do up to 36" lengths. We cut ours 30". We avoid soft woods such as pine, poplar, aspen, buckeye, etc. I will sometimes use poplar though. Our house is a 2300 sq ft , two story house. After deer season I heat our 36x54 garage that has floor heat. For the first couple of days, you almost can't keep wood in the stove but once the garage gets up to temp, it doesn't take much to keep it up. We burn about 12 cords/year. The first year we lived where we do, we had a fairly cold winter and used over $2500 in propane, so we save that much on the house and heat the garage for free.

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 4 lety +2

      Nice , so you have the same unit as me! Have you had any issues /problems at all with it? For us, its a great solution and we are really enjoying the super warm heat this thing puts out

  • @rastapete100
    @rastapete100 Před 4 lety

    HomeSteadHow I didn't see a peavey or cant hook around your place but these old school tools are incredible labour savers. I had been heating with wood for many years without them and when i finally bought them I could not believe how much easier it makes the work. If I was to do it again I would buy these two tools before anything else! I feel like going out and kissing mine now! LOL

  • @ramsaymcewan3916
    @ramsaymcewan3916 Před 4 lety +3

    Kidding,,, enjoy them while there there.

  • @mikerobertson6663
    @mikerobertson6663 Před 4 lety +14

    Consider building a shed/shop to enclose your heater..... warm work shop along with dry wood. When you leave the house to fire the stove, you’ll be headed to a warm place to refuel.

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 4 lety +3

      That would be wonderful...on my wishlist

    • @Superduty_59
      @Superduty_59 Před 4 lety +3

      Around my area there are a lot of them but basically they are a roof that extends way out and only 3 walls and an open front. All the wood is stacked inside. If it rains or snows loading the wood is better under a roof.

  • @CobraRunescape
    @CobraRunescape Před 4 lety

    Hey neighbor! My wife and I moved into a homestead similar to yours just last year. We're natives of Almond! Nice to see a fellow Wisconsonite on here.

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 4 lety

      Hey there! Best decision we ever made as a family is to get out of the city and move out here. Best of luck to you and your wife, stay warm!

  • @AmjadKhagga
    @AmjadKhagga Před 2 lety +1

    There is a useful advice from my side on efficiently burning the wood in boiler is, use of forced air method i.e. narrowing the mouth of your chimney and using a fan or blower to push air into the combustion chamber to increase the pressure of air above the atmospheric pressure, this way you would get more heat by burning less wood and even wet wood will also burn in minutes.

  • @SF-ku2hp
    @SF-ku2hp Před 4 lety +7

    We used to get charged for under usage from our propane supplier because of burning wood lol, hard to beat wood when it’s -20 out and the house is 75

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 4 lety

      Very true=in fact that is my situation now! The heat is cranked-- not quite -20 but getting close

  • @stanblanton7798
    @stanblanton7798 Před 4 lety +10

    Good vid man. Used to heat my house with wood burning stove, but it was inside. Been wondering about these Boilers work. Thanks for the vid.

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 4 lety +1

      Thanks for watching Stan!

    • @yevhenrekhtin6591
      @yevhenrekhtin6591 Před 4 lety +3

      @@Homesteadhow @HomeSteadHow Please read carefully and try to work with this one. It's about your plans to buy two more indoor boilers. Do not do the same mistake... According to your first unit you don't clearly understand what you are dealing with. Boilers like you have could burn wood very well. But they have very low level of efficiency. I'm talking as a boilermaker with some experience of production and installation of those. The best idea for you will be use some tank of water to collect more of heat from this ...bad... type of boiler you already have. That helps you stop heating the chimney and start heating your building more efficient 📉 You could save a lot of your money and some of your time believe me. Also you can put this heat accumulator closer to unheated part of your building and it already will start partially heat it. Best regards. IronProjects 😉

    • @yevhenrekhtin6591
      @yevhenrekhtin6591 Před 3 lety

      @@rondavis2791 I know about that boiler, it doesn't exist))

    • @yevhenrekhtin6591
      @yevhenrekhtin6591 Před 3 lety

      @@rondavis2791 it's not easy to design... But it's possible if to know how to reach the goal with max efficiency 😉

  • @djsgravely
    @djsgravely Před 3 lety +1

    I just learned more about outdoor wood stoves in the past 10 minutes than in in my whole life up to now. Thank you. That was really well done. My big takeaway in 5 words: They’re a lot of work. I burn 2+ cords per year in my wood stove, and that’s plenty of work. 10 cords is a LOT of wood. I’m envious of your lifestyle.

    • @Homesteadhow
      @Homesteadhow  Před 3 lety +2

      Thank you, weve been running our indoor stove only for 2 weeks now and we love it. So warm and cozy...It's just not enough for when we get really cold here.

    • @djsgravely
      @djsgravely Před 3 lety

      @@Homesteadhow Southeastern PA here. Just been starting to burn regularly. I have a Jotül stove. Love it. Nothing like real wood heat. Burn on, brother!

  • @anestholiver
    @anestholiver Před 2 lety

    Very good tip and content. I have been contemplating on the wood stove but needed to drive around and collect neighbors unused woods

  • @shanechostetler9997
    @shanechostetler9997 Před 3 lety +15

    A backhoe with a thumb in the digging end makes handling wood much easier.

    • @wfemp_4730
      @wfemp_4730 Před 2 lety

      It sure would, but that's one of the cons of having this setup: the cost/maintenance/etc of other equipment used to process wood before it's burned. Yes, I'd love to have some of that equipment, though.

  • @jayuppercase3398
    @jayuppercase3398 Před 4 lety +89

    Ring your trees, they will die and dry while standing, you will be able to burn them.as soon as you cut them

    • @KamranHaider
      @KamranHaider Před 4 lety

      JayUppercase why cut the poor trees

    • @strongside4565
      @strongside4565 Před 4 lety +3

      As long as you're selective. You're gonna want some solid wood too. Oak and beech and hold the heat and make the fire last.

    • @michmvp
      @michmvp Před 4 lety +50

      @@KamranHaider Because you can't burn snow.

    • @KamranHaider
      @KamranHaider Před 4 lety

      michmvp You are right, man 👍🙏

    • @NeedsMoreToys
      @NeedsMoreToys Před 4 lety +12

      Cutting down dead standing trees is much more dangerous. Called widow makers for a reason.

  • @SeanDoranirishman
    @SeanDoranirishman Před 2 lety

    Thank you! We live in a very rural area, much like you, and we've been trying to determine if a outdoor wood boiler makes sense.