Mrs3RRL
Bronze Member
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2006
- Messages
- 63
It's also easier and cheaper to heat with wood than to cool with electricity. Then again, our set back thermostat is 63 during the day and 55 at night. But with the firebox going, it's 75 in the basement.
We've found that out also. Our little wood stove keeps us nice and toasty. This morning when I got up at 6:30 am, it was 30 degrees outside (Rob said it was 28 degrees when he got up), and it was 63 inside the house. Now, 63 isn't exactly 'warm', but it's certainly doable, with a robe and slippers, or a long sleeved shirt.
I layer, with a tank top first, then a long-sleeve shirt, and often find myself down to my tank top during the day, working at my computer.
The way our house is built, the living room (where the wood stove is) has a vaulted ceiling, with a 'loft' that connects the 2 upstairs bedrooms. The other day, it was 82 degrees upstairs, and 67 downstairs! We discovered that if we put the loft ceiling fan on high, and the living room ceiling fan on medium or high, it keeps the temps within a few degrees of each other.
But last summer, when it was 115..... well, we really used a lot of electricity to keep things bearably 'cool'. We're hoping that our wood blinds help things out next year. Who would have thought we'd run our generator more during the summer than during the winter??






















