-8f now oak slabs .. We had low of -24.7f last night . Ya heading to -30f Sunday morning. Sent from my LGL722DL using Tapatalk
It's 5° now. Snowing too, but it apparently feels like-13° with the wind. It stayed in the low single digits all night with the snow coming in at the wee hours. Tonight it will get even colder after this front moves through. I'll be burning apple, locust, Shagbark hickory, some sugar Maple, and probably some ash tonight. Some mixture of those, at least, whatever fits in the stove best after I put a couple bigger splits in the stove first. Next week it's going to warm up nicely. Heck, it's supposed to get over freezing on the 22nd. Haven't had that in weeks.
Thank you very much for the offer. We really appreciate it. We do have 2 cords of ash we could use but have elected not to burn it this year. But thank you for the offer once again.
Uh oh! that doesn't look good at all. Snow & cold, bring it, I can deal with it fine. Ice, no thank you. Be careful out there.
Currently 28. No conplaints. Suppose to get some "wintry mix" anytime now. BL log and hackberry chunk keeping it warm.
We are currently at about -16, going to get down to -25 tonight. But our wind chills will be pushing us down into the -30's and -40's.
35 degrees and rain, burning Post Oak and Mockernut Hickory tonight. No frozen stuff in my part of the world.
26° and getting ready for some wintery mix, as they call it. Hope they salt the roads. Ice is never nice.
Got a southern winter storm coming the next few days. Gonna be below freezing for a few days straight and some single digit lows. We ain’t prepared for weather like this! I’ll just keep feeding the fire I guess!
4F & falling, cleared up just after sundown so it'll be cold. Double stack of Oak, Elm & Ash in the boiler. No wind, so the heaters aren't working real hard. Felt better out tonight when I loaded than this morning at 20 with the east wind.
27/73 with Ash getting it done. Not too often I have a stove load of just one species. Before I turn in for the night I’ll mix in some red oak and locust on top for the long haul.