Saturday, October 3, 2009

Cleaning a wood cookstove 101

Today was the day to clean the wood cook stove pipe and the stove itself.
Many of you may not know that, not only the ashes need to be removed
from the firebox but the ash travels around the oven box, when the
damper is pulled out on the back of the stove. This circulates the heat as
well as the ash and soot around the oven box, before exiting at the
bottom of the oven, into the chimney.


This is the clean out port under the oven. There is a special scraping
tool that clean and pulls the ash and soot out this port. Yes, it is messy
and yes it is dusty, but NEEDs to be done to get the oven to heat
correctly. If to much ash is built up under or on top of the oven, it
causes uneven heating of the oven.

Here you can see the port, under the oven door
This is the view from on top the stove through one of the two

removable lids( this one is directly above the firebox) You can see

The ash buildup on top of the oven box. This ash will be pushed over to

the port clean out door and some will be pulled into the firebox.

This stove was cleaned the end of Dec. 08 and our last fire was in

March 09, the ash/ soot build up is approx. 2" thick.

The top of the oven box all cleaned off
Ash and soot mounded, from being pushed from the top of the oven

box. This is a view from the port below the oven door.

After the ash/ soot is cleaned out.
This is a before of the bottom oven port. The farthest wall back is the

chimney exit for the smoke when the damper is pulled out and oven is

in use. Take note of the soot buildup on the underside of the oven

box.

All cleaned, notice the soot is removed from the underside of the oven

box.

This is the chimney pipe hookup, it's oval, which is a challenge to get a

good fit with the pipe. See the handle to the left, this is the damper,

when pulled out diverts the smoke and heat around the oven box and

out the bottom chimney exit.

All scraped and cleaned out awaiting the stove pipe to fit back into

place and the first fire of the season to be built.

Our temps are supposed to drop into the low 50's F. for daytime highs

evening lows into the low 30's and high 20's F. This storm is due in by

mid-day tomorrow. It was also fore casted that 2-4 inches of snow will

fall on the plains( that's us) 5-8 inches in the foothills and 2-4 ft in the

mountains.

Mike spent the day cutting and hauling home approx. 1-3/4 to 2 cords

of firewood, to be stacked in the wood lean to by my Dad tomorrow

morning before the storm sets in.

Cortney and I got cabbage pulled and in the root cellar, apples

cleaned up off the ground, and our mangle beets( for the cows and

pigs) pulled and in the root cellar. Cortney sorted through the bushel

baskets of tomatoes and came up with enough ripened maters for

yet another batch of sauce or maybe even stewed tomatoes.

We still have a bushel basket of apples to peel, core and slice, then

can as apple pie filling. We also have 5 medium heads of cabbage

to be run across the slaw cutter and made into freezer slaw. It

sounds as if we'll have opportunity to work on these items for the

next week, due to cold fronts moving through. I actually look forward

to the wood cookstove warming the kitchen, a pot of stew

on the back of the stove and baking powder biscuits baking in the

oven, while working on canning maters, apple pie filling and

preparing freezer slaw.

May your Sunday be restful and full of blessings.


6 comments:

small farm girl said...

Wow Kelle, I will never complain about our 50 degree nights again. Keep all of that snow up there. lol.

I didn't know that you cooked on a wood stove. Once again, WOW!!!

sfg

Anonymous said...

Oh my Kelly, cleaning the stove seems like a major project! At least it's done and ready for the big storm! It may just skip fall and go directly into winter! lol (sure hope not) You and Courtney have been so busy. I cleaned up the back porch today. Threw out all my dead flowers and flower pots. Got most of the porch furniture put away. Washed the big run and threw it over the railing to dry so I can roll it up and store it in the basment. I hope it doesn't get too cold on you - take Care and stay WARM!...debbie

Aunt Jenny said...

I totally need to clean the ash out of my wood cookstove too. I wish there were room in my kitchen for mine. There IS a chimeny in there..but not enough room for both an electic and a wood cookstove so mine is in the family room. I love using it for both heat and cooking in winter time. No fire has been in it since about the end of April and it needs cleaning now too. Steve has been bringing in firewood and I am dealing with tomatoes, plums, and apples too....parellel lives or what??? Have a nice relaxing Sunday.

Michaela Dunn Leeper said...

We're looking for a woodstove. I hope we can find one that we can afford! Thanks for the pictures!

Linda said...

My wood cookstove doesn't have one of those! Guess I'm lucky?

Kelle at The Never Done Farm said...

SFG,
Ha! Ha! see you don't know everything about me, YET!.LOL

Oh 50's is like summer for us, in the dead of winter lots of mornings we wake up to a house that is 50-55F, that is until we fire up the wood cookstove. When it is bitter cold(sub zeros and windchill) Mike and I take turns stoking the stove( every 3-4 hours) It isn't an air tight stove so doesn't burn as efficiently as new woodstoves( for heating only)

Debbie,
Glad to see you lady! I know you've been busy too. Yes, Cortney and I have been running like mad women and it's nice to actually have to stay indoors and get some of the produce taken care of. Today we picked 3-1/2 bushels of apples, for fear it will freeze hard and ruin them. We already have 1-1/2 bushels in the mudroom, that we picked up off the ground, several days ago.
You are so organized, you need to come help us out, we don't typically get flowerbeds or pots cleaned out until Spring, not that we're lazy just the lack of time before snow flys.

Aunt Jenny,
This is going to sound weird, but I wondered if you were married or widowed* grimmice* I know what your mean about leading paralle lives. It seems that Mike and I have done this most of the summer. I'm looking forward to more time spent together and doing family related things, instead running in opposite directions.

MDL,
Once you have a woodstove( cookstove or otherwise) you'll never want to go back to natural gas or electric heat. Wood heat warms you to the bone.

Linda,
How do you clean the ash that circulates around the oven box out? Soot builds up too as the fire cools, thus creating a fire hazard. We clean our pipe and stove( because we use it exclusively for heat and cooking when weather is cool enough) every month. I fear a chimney fire and loosing our whole house and maybe our lives. It only takes 30 minutes and then you are sure.

Do you have a manual for your stove, is it a "King"? I think I'd look just to be sure, even the old antique stoves have clean outs for cleaning ash and soot from the oven box and side walls of the stove.

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