by Commanding_Heights » Wed 11 Apr 2007, 12:56:53
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Gideon', 'I')f you need 8-10 cords of wood for a winter, it will be difficult to stack that in your city lot backyard or basement.
If you need 8-10 cords of wood a winter, then you live in a cardboard house.
I recognize that Stupubia is not set up like it should be to heat with wood, but if it was . . .
A nice, cozy, 1,500 sf house, insulated properly, could be heated to a balmy 70 degrees F, in the Northeast (i.e. NY, CT, NJ, Mass . . . ) for about 3 cords of hardwood with a nice 40,000 BTU airtight EPA cert stove.
With regard to "fast growing" hardwood, if it's "fast growing", it's typically crap firewood.
But if what you need is 3 cords a winter for heat, then you could probably harvest that off 10 acres of land (1/3 cord per acre per year growth).
Add another cord for cooking, and you'd need about 15 acres of good forest to support a typical house.
Now we look at Stupurbia and we see 1/4 acre lot sizes.
Good planning.
Coppicing of hardwoods is actually the way to go when you need biomass for cooking/heating.
For those that don't know what coppice is, it is when hardwoods are cut down to stumps in the dormant winter stage. From there the offshoots in the spring and summer grow at a much faster rate due to the fact they are new growth. A properly managed coppice woodland can be harvested every couple years due to the explosive growth.
So it is possible to get high btu hardwoods at a much faster rate than if you were to let the grove grow to full height.
5 to 7 acres through proper substainable woodland management can support a family of four with heating and cooking.
As far as wood burning stove effeciency goes there are some pretty impressive ones on the market today that hook up to a thermostat. When the optimal temp is met they close the flue allowing for the wood to smolder and when heat is needed they open up and let the oxygen in. From there they heat piping which usually has some sort of antifreeze running though it and uses heat exchange to heat your house, swimming pool, hot water etc etc...
By using thermostat and air control you can actually get by on much less wood.
One last thing, some of these stoves can burn not only wood but wood pellets, corn and other carbon materials.
If you're buying wood make sure you buy it by the cord weight and not by size. This is how many wood suppliers will rip people off. For example a cord of black cherry weighs 2880 lbs per cord and only provives 19.9 million btu's per cord where white oak weighs 4012 lbs per cord and puts out 25.7 million btu's per cord.
Here is a link to the different cord weights and btu's if interested
http://www.chimneysweeponline.com/howood.htm