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Seasoning Firewood

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The importance of Seasoning Firewood

Now that the burning season for most of has finished, we have to start thinking about seasoning firewood for the seasons to come.  Hopefully you already have your firewood split and stacked for the coming burning season.  In a perfect world you would already have 2 years of firewood stacked.  This is because some wood can take around 3 years to be ready to burn.

Dangers of not seasoning firewood

Many dangers can result in burning wet wood.  This will create more creosote in your chimney.  That is a fact, wet wood equals a dirty chimney.  A dirty chimney puts you at a high risk of a chimney fire.  Having unseasoned firewood means you have too much water in the wood.  This also means you will not get as hot of a burn as you would like to in your wood stove, causing o to waste more wood than you would have to to heat your home.  The glass on your stove also gets lots of creosote build up, taking away from the ascetics of a real fire.

One sign that your wood is too wet is that when it burns it is smokey.  The best way to know if your wood is dry enough is to buy a moisture meter.  Moisture content should be 20% or less.  If it is much higher than that, your firewood needs to be dried.  It is necessary to burn dry wood in any type of appliance.

So basically if you haven’t already started collecting your wood for this coming winter do it now.  Seasoning firewood may take around 3 years for some wood, so start early and save yourself from the risk of a chimney fire.

Check out this video on showing you an interesting way how to stack firewood and start seasoning firewood:








    *Note: If you have a terra cotta clay chimney
    flue lining, be sure to measure the true length and width of the
    inside of your chimney flue space.

    *If there is a terra cotta clay flue liner, does it protrude out of
    the top of the chimney at least 2 inches? If there are at least 2
    inches and the terra cotta clay is in good condition, you will use
    our stainless steel, terra cotta top plate that has a 1 1⁄2inch edge
    that goes all the way around (like a shoebox lid).

    *If your terra cotta clay flue is in bad shape at the top, you may
    need to just take a hammer and tap all around that terra cotta,
    taking it away to make the surface flat at the top of your chimney.
    In that case, you will simply use the flat top plate that comes with
    our liner kit.



    *Note: If you have a terra cotta clay chimney
    flue lining, be sure to measure the true length and width of the
    inside of your chimney flue space.

    *If it is on the back of the stove, is it parallel with the back of the stove or is it at an angle, like 45 degrees?

    *If it is at an angle you will use an insert stove adaptor (an insert liner kit) rather than a two-part tee with cleanout cap.


    Usually pellet stoves have an exhaust hole id of 3 inches. However, if you are going up more than 15 feet to the top of your chimney you need to use a pipe and/or flex liner that is 4 inches diameter.





    If you are only venting a hot water heater then the exhaust hole diameter is probably 3 inch diameter. If it is 3 inch diameter and you are going up more than 15 feet to the top of your chimney, you must use a 4 inch diameter flexible liner or ridged pipe for proper draft. We also suggest to go ahead and use a 4 inch diameter flexible liner or ridged pipe even if the total length is 15 feet or less.


    Not the depth or any other dimension inside your fireplace.

    Most gas log fireplaces require an 8 inch liner kit or rigid kit. But do not assume that is the case for the gas log fireplace kit you are installing. Obey the requirements for that specific unit that are in your installation/instruction manual.

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