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campchic Posted - Oct 16 2008 : 7:35:15 PM
It's that time of year again! And I have tried & tried to make a fire in our fireplace. All I create is a flame for awhile and then smoke. What am I doing wrong. Please teach me to make an awesome roaring fire.

Erin

Farmgirl #190
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sweetproserpina Posted - Dec 10 2008 : 08:43:34 AM
This may sound crazy but I read this tip somewhere and it works a treat. I always found that often my newspaper would burn up too quickly and I wouldn't get the fire to light really well because of it.

Roll your sheet of newspaper diagonally and tie it into a knot, light the end and place your kindling over top (I'm lucky I found some really dry lathe from my aunt's old house that we're using right now). The twisted knot burns slower and allows the kindling to catch. I've never had to restart the fire since I've been doing this, cool eh?

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Mother Hen Posted - Dec 10 2008 : 12:31:39 AM
Erin, You'll have to ask the others if it's different in a fireplace, I have a wood stove. In my wood stove, I've made the mistake of cleaning out ALL of the ashes, then I always have trouble getting a fire started, but if I leave some ashes in the middle when I clean it out, I don't have any problem at all. I put my wadded up newspaper on the ashes then my kindling and I bank some smaller logs on the sides of that, then when the fire starts to get going I put a center piece of wood on the 2 I banked on the sides.
I don't know if you are heating with wood, but once I begin a fire in the fall, I usually don't let the stove go out until spring when we are warm enough.


I will bless the Lord at all times: his praise shall continually be in my mouth. Psalms 34:1
Lanna Posted - Dec 09 2008 : 4:55:32 PM
Do you happen to know what kind of wood you're using to start your fire? If I remember right, we use white fir for our kindling and red fir for our bigger logs (the white burns hot and fast, the red slow and steady). Hubby's work deals with BTU's of all the different kinds of wood and so on, so I just nod my head at him and smile. :)

We also do the exact same firestarters as Celeste described. I was in girl scouts for years, and taught my hubby that firestarter trick that he thought was just amazing but that I knew as just regular knowledge. So now he's taken charge of that particular project, and has also used very dry pinecones dipped in wax (I just buy the blocks of ParoWax from the store). That and random newspaper and small pieces of kindling get things going pretty well in our upstairs stove.

One other thing that may be causing your smoke is if you're starting from a cold fireplace/chimney. It takes a while to heat up those pipes so they start drafting well. And well, fireplaces just won't work as efficiently as some of today's woodstoves. There's lots of info about that kind of thing on the Hearth boards where my hubby hangs out.

Lanna, mama to three little monkeys
5 acre Farmgirl Posted - Nov 25 2008 : 10:40:41 AM
Is your wood damp?, or perhaps, green wood?

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clux64 Posted - Oct 28 2008 : 10:56:50 AM
Try making the fire starters that we all made in girl scouts. Take cardboard egg cartons and fill the egg cups up with dryer lint (or bits of the carton lid if lint isn't available). Then poor melted parafin wax (or old candles melted) in to the egg cups. When the wax is hard, just break off one or two egg cups from the carton and put it under your loosely stacked wood in the FP, and light them. This ALWAYS starts a fire...even if the wood has snow all over it! I found a couple links that describes how to make these firestarters...
http://guidezone.e-guiding.com/jbfirest.htm
www.motherearthnews.com/Happy-Homesteaders/Funky-Fire-Starters.aspx?blogid=1510
http://easycrafts4fun.com/category/girl-scouts/



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Sage Posted - Oct 28 2008 : 09:23:55 AM
I agree with the other ladies that a teepee formation works great. I have found that some flues need to be heated to help get the air drawing up through the chimney.
To warm up the flue try this method. Build your fire with crumpled paper and very thin wood splinters on the bottom making sure to leave air spaces for the fire to draw air up through your stack of wood. Add small sticks or kindling in a teepee shape and include three or four medium size pieces. Then put several pieces of crumpled paper on top and light the fire on the bottom followed by setting the top pieces of paper on fire. The burning paper on top will warm the chimney and get the air drawing upwards.

I save dryer lint to add to the kindling and add small bits of old candles. You can even pour melted wax over lint filled cardboard egg cartons to make firestarters.

Good luck. Sage :)


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carycamille Posted - Oct 17 2008 : 5:21:42 PM
OK, I had to make a fire the other night because we were cooking fajitas, and I am the worst fire maker there is!!! But this is what I did, it was easy and worked like a charm. I took two toilet paper rolls and stuffed them with dryer lint then on the outside of the rolls I put a thin layer of vasoline jelly. They lit right up because of the vasoline and because of the dryer lint stuffed inside they burned nice and slow and caught my rained on wood on fire with ease. (Oh, I did stack my kindling in the teepee formation and when it was burning good I started adding the bigger pieces of wood.)

Camille
campchic Posted - Oct 17 2008 : 06:42:40 AM
The flue is open, We just had a chimmney sweep here to check things out.(We moved here last year, the house sat empty for 20 years) Everything thing checked out fine. I'll try opening a door next time. Teresa-- How do you place your bigger piece of wood? When do you know when to add more pieces?

Erin

Farmgirl #190
Contrary Wife Posted - Oct 17 2008 : 06:23:30 AM
That's the first thing I thought of Alee, is your flue open.
I tightly crumple two pieces of newspaper and stack my kindling around it tepee style. You have to watch it carefully to know when to add the larger pieces of kindling at this point. Once you get the larger kindling goes well, add a bigger piece of wood until you have a regular piece of firewood in your fire. We heat our house with two woodstoves, so I build a lot of fires.
Just remember, keep your fire small and hot, that way you won't have excessive kreasote buildup in your chimney.

Teresa Sue
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Alee Posted - Oct 17 2008 : 06:13:25 AM
Erin- also check to make sure your flue is open, and your chimney is clean.

Alee
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campchic Posted - Oct 17 2008 : 05:18:46 AM
Thanks for the suggestions. The wood is dry. I'll try your tips!

Erin

Farmgirl #190
Suzan Posted - Oct 17 2008 : 05:18:18 AM
I'm not too good at this either (always said it is a good thing I don't have to make my living being an arsonist) but cracking a nearby window really helps! I can usually get it going doing this, otherwise the house fills up with smoke...
willowtreecreek Posted - Oct 16 2008 : 8:51:30 PM
Is your wood wet? A lot of smoke is usually caused by we or green wood. I usually build a base of small sticks and a little dryer lint. I then make a teepee of larger logs over the base and then I light the base by putting the flame to the dryer lint. Keep some small kindling close by and keep feeding the base until the larger logs catch. I can usually start a fire on the first try with this method.

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doglady Posted - Oct 16 2008 : 7:42:32 PM
Hi Erin,
I place the wood in our woodburner kind of like how you stack logs in a log cabin style. You need to be able for air to get underneath the wood - not just piled on top of each other. My chimney cleaner also told me to crack open the nearby door which creates a draft when you first try to start the fire. It works every time. Make sure that you're working with dry wood too - if it sizzles as it burns - then it's wet wood. Good Luck.
Tina

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