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Coffee Shop
For Skyhightree
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<blockquote data-quote="regolith" data-source="post: 1126463" data-attributes="member: 9267"><p>We never knew how lucky we were.</p><p>Had a similar set-up through the eighties/nineties in the UK - my Dad did treework, the wood he didn't want to dump got hauled home the big stuff warmed our house and made hot water, the small stuff got stacked and burned, once a week or so.</p><p>No-one's business and not doing any harm, at that time.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Now 'they' are trying to make it illegal to burn just about anything on-farm - we're just round the corner from legislation that won't allow plastics or treated timber (broken fenceposts or gates) to be burned.</p><p>I've never started a fire with liquid fuel, though I probably don't do as much of it as some of you guys. The light stuff usually generates enough heat to get a thorough burn of the bigger logs.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="regolith, post: 1126463, member: 9267"] We never knew how lucky we were. Had a similar set-up through the eighties/nineties in the UK - my Dad did treework, the wood he didn't want to dump got hauled home the big stuff warmed our house and made hot water, the small stuff got stacked and burned, once a week or so. No-one's business and not doing any harm, at that time. Now 'they' are trying to make it illegal to burn just about anything on-farm - we're just round the corner from legislation that won't allow plastics or treated timber (broken fenceposts or gates) to be burned. I've never started a fire with liquid fuel, though I probably don't do as much of it as some of you guys. The light stuff usually generates enough heat to get a thorough burn of the bigger logs. [/QUOTE]
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