ENER Consumers flock to firewood to cut winter heating costs

Martin

Deceased
Consumers flock to firewood to cut winter heating costs

By Emily Bazar, USA TODAY
Americans are stoking their fires, shifting to wood-generated heat to save money.
"People are going back to the older days of living," says Mel Barley of Fired Up Firewood in Lubbock and Amarillo, Texas. Sales of piñon, mesquite and oak firewood in October were double the same month a year ago, owner Randy Hair says.

"They're trying to … save all the money they can," Barley says. "The more they save on fuel, the more money they have to buy other things."

Fuel costs initially drove some consumers to firewood, but now home heating costs are down. In August, the Energy Department's Energy Information Administration predicted it would cost an average of $1,059 to heat a home this winter using natural gas and $2,644 using heating oil. Now, the EIA predicts that households will pay less: an average of $889 for natural has and $1,694 for heating oil.

Still, demand for wood stoves is high despite lower fuel prices, says Guy Hanson, owner of Axmen, which sells heating equipment in Missoula, Mont. People are spooked by the volatile economy, he says. "Even if they're safer now, they don't trust the fact that they'll be safer in the future," he says.

Shipments of wood stoves and fireplace inserts, which can be installed in fireplaces to burn wood more efficiently, were up 54% in the first six months of this year compared with the same period last year, says Leslie Wheeler, spokeswoman for the Hearth, Patio & Barbecue Association. Final figures aren't available, but the group's analysis of recent sales show that demand remains high, she says.

Blaze King Industries, which makes wood stoves and fireplace inserts, had five times as many wood stoves on back order at the end of October as it had the previous year, vice president Chris Neufeld says.

"Every citizen is now looking at their overall household costs and trying to figure out a way to save a little here or there," Wheeler says.

Half of Michael Mainka's customers tell him they'll be using their fireplaces more. Mainka, owner of Firewood Farm in Pewaukee, Wis., says he expects to sell out of his oak, ash, cherry and other hardwood before Christmas. "This year, the demand is definitely up a lot more," he says.

Dave Hall, 45, is contributing to the demand. Hall, who owns a five-bedroom, ranch-style home in Colorado Springs, paid about $300 a month last winter for natural-gas heat.

This year, the customer service representative for Comcast says he plans to burn as much wood as he can get his hands on and will leave his thermostat at 66 degrees. He will search Craigslist.com for deals on wood and use scrap wood such as pallets.

He hopes to save up to $150 a month. "You go to the grocery store and everything costs more," he says. "It's definitely a way to save and have some money for extras."


By Emily Bazar, USA TODAY
Americans are stoking their fires, shifting to wood-generated heat to save money.
"People are going back to the older days of living," says Mel Barley of Fired Up Firewood in Lubbock and Amarillo, Texas. Sales of piñon, mesquite and oak firewood in October were double the same month a year ago, owner Randy Hair says.

"They're trying to … save all the money they can," Barley says. "The more they save on fuel, the more money they have to buy other things."

Fuel costs initially drove some consumers to firewood, but now home heating costs are down. In August, the Energy Department's Energy Information Administration predicted it would cost an average of $1,059 to heat a home this winter using natural gas and $2,644 using heating oil. Now, the EIA predicts that households will pay less: an average of $889 for natural has and $1,694 for heating oil.

Still, demand for wood stoves is high despite lower fuel prices, says Guy Hanson, owner of Axmen, which sells heating equipment in Missoula, Mont. People are spooked by the volatile economy, he says. "Even if they're safer now, they don't trust the fact that they'll be safer in the future," he says.

Shipments of wood stoves and fireplace inserts, which can be installed in fireplaces to burn wood more efficiently, were up 54% in the first six months of this year compared with the same period last year, says Leslie Wheeler, spokeswoman for the Hearth, Patio & Barbecue Association. Final figures aren't available, but the group's analysis of recent sales show that demand remains high, she says.

Blaze King Industries, which makes wood stoves and fireplace inserts, had five times as many wood stoves on back order at the end of October as it had the previous year, vice president Chris Neufeld says.

"Every citizen is now looking at their overall household costs and trying to figure out a way to save a little here or there," Wheeler says.

Half of Michael Mainka's customers tell him they'll be using their fireplaces more. Mainka, owner of Firewood Farm in Pewaukee, Wis., says he expects to sell out of his oak, ash, cherry and other hardwood before Christmas. "This year, the demand is definitely up a lot more," he says.

Dave Hall, 45, is contributing to the demand. Hall, who owns a five-bedroom, ranch-style home in Colorado Springs, paid about $300 a month last winter for natural-gas heat.

This year, the customer service representative for Comcast says he plans to burn as much wood as he can get his hands on and will leave his thermostat at 66 degrees. He will search Craigslist.com for deals on wood and use scrap wood such as pallets.

He hopes to save up to $150 a month. "You go to the grocery store and everything costs more," he says. "It's definitely a way to save and have some money for extras."


Find this article at:
http://www.usatoday.com/money/industries/energy/2008-12-01-firewood_N.htm
 

Publius

On TB every waking moment
I can say wood stoves are not for every one, many just think they can do it but once they start cutting and cutting and cutting, Its too much like work and I have seen people get a new wood stove and cut two loads of fire wood using a mini van and think they have a lot of fire wood:lkick: To see the look on their face when I tell them, that pile of wood will only last two weeks, then they admit this fire wood thing is killing them:lol: . Then we have the people that equate the time spent cutting into dollars per-hour and say its not worth it and that its cheeper to buy fuel oil. :shr: I love my wood stove and don't mind cutting the wood, yes its work but its good work.
 

Deena in GA

Administrator
_______________
We've been heating with wood for over 25 years now and love it. Our oldest son has just bought his first home and will be moving into it soon. It has a fireplace in it, but not a real wood heater. He's still thinking he can heat most of the house with it, but I think he'lll learn otherwise. He also told me last night that he's thinking they might just use candles for now in the evening for lights. We're practically in hysterics about this because he has always been the one to have every light in the house on and we go around turning them off.

Yes, wood heat is a lot of work and trouble, but there's nothing else that warms you as well as wood.
 
We're having our insert put in this month - woohoo! I'm going to buy a couple of cords so we have something to burn while we remodel our basement, but after that my 17yos is going to get a workout splitting and stacking wood, haha.
 

someone

Inactive
in september i paid 150.00 for a 3/4 cord.

Tonight i be getting a cord and half for 200.00

in sep. 1.5 cords was almost 350.00


that tells me demand is low.

btw, keep your eyes on craigslist for firewood, it is a great site for things like that.
 

Rastech

Veteran Member
I did the numbers on wood as fuel 25 years ago (I had a woodburner at the time).

Even though I never had to pay for wood, it turned out it was cheaper (felling, cutting, hauling and maintaining and running the chainsaw adds up to be a lot more than you might think), and I got better heat, with coal (very often with cheap South African petrocoke, which has stunning heat output - it'll quickly and easily burn through cast iron grates if you aren't careful with it, and it burns very clean with not much ash. When broke I would use the even cheaper, what we call 'pele mond' which is anthracite dust mixed with clay, and that worked ok too).

I do still burn wood now and again, but I have a multifuel stove now, and it's primarily coal that gets burned in it.

I thought you had massive amounts of coal over there in the USA? Why don't you use it?
 

onmyown30

Veteran Member
I thought you had massive amounts of coal over there in the USA? Why don't you use it?

growing up we lived in one house (about 10yrs) and it had a coal stove/heater downstairs that was the house only heat.......I dont remember too much about it now, but dont ever remember being cold!! That was in New york!!


A few months ago I posted about my HUGE tree in the backyard that came down (there are pics in those posts)...I was worried since that the guy who cut it down was only going to cut it down, I was worried my back yard was gonna be a mess for long time, since I had to find someone to come clean up and take all the wood away. I actually had quite a few people beg for the wood.... I had no problem getting the yard cleaned up!
 

Para36

Contributing Member
Cutting your own firewood is a lot of work even with good equipment ( a loader, log forks, trailers, spitter and chainsaws). We do ours by getting many hands and splitting up the tasks. And every season we wind up with one or two minor injuries... log falling on a foot, sore back etc.
Because of the work involved under even ideal conditions we keep at least two seasons of splt seasoned firewood ahead. There may come a time when we do not have many hands or a myriad of other things could go wrong. We have natural gas as backup and I would use that before shortchanging ourselves on our firewood reserve.
Para.
 

TerriHaute

Hoosier Gardener
We have an outdoor woodburning furnace. It is the type that circulates hot water to the heat exchanger in the regular furnace, which then blows heat throughout the house. I cannot count the number of people who have stopped by to ask us about the furnace since we moved here a year ago. There have been a LOT more since the weather started turning cool this fall. I think if we had a franchise on them, we could make a lot of money. There is definiely an uptick in the number of people turning to wood heat.

So far we have not paid anything for wood this year, other than the cost of fuel for the chainsaw and woodsplitter. There have been several classified ads for "free wood if you cut the tree down" and one or two "free firewood, you haul it away" ads that we jumped on. We have several cords of cut and split wood under tarps, enough to last this winter and maybe next. It helps that BIL owns a sawmill and cuts wood for us when business is slow.
 
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