burning bark

/ burning bark #1  

randy41

Veteran Member
Joined
Jul 2, 2005
Messages
1,803
Location
Linden VA
i had this discussion with my neighbor at the farmers market. we were talking about standing dead locust and how nice it is to find a convenient one to quickly replenish the firewood supply. You can tell i don't get my firewood ahead of time. you know how you can pretty much tear off the bark in long pieces? he said he burns that bark. i've been using wood for heat for a long time and i always leave the bark on the ground in the woods. is it worth gathering to burn? i would think it would burn pretty quick. anyone gather and burn it?
 
/ burning bark #2  
Never tried burning bark. I guess I should at least try; but around my wood pile/splitting areas the ground is covered with the bark that comes off. Also, I tend to toss it in my road/path to and from the front door to the wood pile. I am referring to the slabs of bark that comes off of wood, especially hickory, after it has been cut, stacked, and dried......

Makes for great ground cover and traction where I drive the RTV in the wood distribution/burning route...........God bless.......Dennis
 
/ burning bark #3  
Sure it will burn. But it isnt as dense and usually wetter.

It wont produce as much heat, burns faster, and will create more ash, but it will burn. Its also good for starting the fire too, because it takes quicker that the wood itself.

We dont burn just bark, but we dont burn just wood either. In other words, if the bark stays with the wood through out all the handling/splitting all the way to the stove, it gets burnt. IF it happens to fall off somewhere along the way, we dont pick it back up.
 
/ burning bark #4  
Randy, Speaking only of locust bark: it will match light & is great kindling. I know of no other bark that burns as well. When loose is does tend to harbor bugs so strip loose bark outside, preferably after a good freeze. Miked74T
 
/ burning bark #5  
Randy, Speaking only of locust bark: it will match light & is great kindling. I know of no other bark that burns as well. When loose is does tend to harbor bugs so strip loose bark outside, preferably after a good freeze. Miked74T

Agree, i love when i can get locust bark. It match lights and burns hot so it makes the best fire starter you can get.
 
/ burning bark
  • Thread Starter
#6  
now i'm looking forward to trying it tomorrow morning when i start the stove.
 
/ burning bark #7  
Locust bark is some of the best kindling there is in my opinion :thumbsup::confused2::D
 
/ burning bark #8  
I have used Douglas fir Bark and it works great to establish a bed of coals in the fire. I just build the fire on top of a piece of bark and it works well. I too have wondered if I should collect the bark, I have big piles of bark that I am throwing in the burn pile but I may stack some in the shed and see what happens next winter. :)
 
/ burning bark #9  
MikeD74T said:
Randy, Speaking only of locust bark: it will match light & is great kindling. I know of no other bark that burns as well. When loose is does tend to harbor bugs so strip loose bark outside, preferably after a good freeze. Miked74T

Birch bark also makes great fire starter/kindling. An easy way to collect birch bark is to score the logs length-wise before bucking. The bark peels off as the wood dries.
 
/ burning bark #10  
Randy, Speaking only of locust bark: it will match light & is great kindling. I know of no other bark that burns as well. When loose is does tend to harbor bugs so strip loose bark outside, preferably after a good freeze. Miked74T
Cedar bark. Pulls off nicely in strips, lights and burns quickly.
 
/ burning bark #11  
I hate waste so I pick up good chunks of bark from the splitter and then use it in the heater, or if its a bit rotted I chunk it it in a compost pile or chicken pen for carbon stock. I have a friend that bags it and puts it in the trash. Another friend has been making Hugelculture beds from it.
 
/ burning bark #12  
When splitting our locust wood I gather the bark, break it into 1-2 inch strips and put it in a plastic 55 gallon barrel that has lots of holes in it for ventillation. I keep it in our wood locker for kindling throughout the winter.

In the morning I scrape the coals to the center of the stove, lay two logs on each side of the coals so there's about a 3-5 inch gap, crumble up one sheet of newspaper on top of the coals and put a couple pieces of locust bark on the paper. Then I load the rest of the stove with wood. The paper usually smolders for a couple minutes then bursts into flames, the bark ignites and off the fire goes. I do the same thing with a cold stove, only I'll use a few more sheets of newspaper and a couple more pieces of bark.

Another good kindling wood is sassafras twigs. You can light that with a match, too. But it doesn't burn as long as locust bark.
 
/ burning bark #13  
I have burned bark, and it does make alot of light ashes fast. What I do is since I HATE plastic grocery bags- I used reusable bags, but sometimes cashiers feels that HAVE to put meat or ice cream in a plastic bag, but I tell them to use paper instead. Same goes when I forget the reusable bags, I use paper. This way I haveee a supply of paper bags and put my collection of bark, wood chips in and roll them up tight till use. I can just throw the whole thing in stovee anytime I want to start the fire. With a balled up newspaper in the bag, lit up, I got a fire started in a hurry and no mess.
 
/ burning bark
  • Thread Starter
#14  
i started the stove this morning with bark and while i couldn't match light it and had to use newspaper to get it going it did heat up the stove pretty quickly. I don't think its worth gathering up when in the woods cutting but using what falls off while i'm splitting by the wood pile makes sense.
 
/ burning bark #15  
My mom burns sawmill blocks; white oak in small 6 x 6 x 10 chunks up to 6 x 8 x 14 or so.

They have no bark and she swears that she has next to no ashes because she doesn't burk bark. She says that when she burns cord wood (bark on) she ends up with lots more ashes.
 
/ burning bark #16  
I don't go out a "just" look for bark, but why wouldn't I burn it? Last I new it burned it's not a tire or metal. I also agree if the bark falls off in the woods it makes for a good ground cover an in the long term good compost.
 
/ burning bark #17  
No problem burning bark except that it does make more ash. Bark is nothing more than wood fiber and all wood has the same heat value pound for pound. I will sometimes burn bark for quick fires. It's not really a feasible method of heating in cold weather unless you like to feed the fire often. :)

Harry K
 
/ burning bark #18  
I burn it if its still on when I throw it in the heater. I split where I cut usually and most of the bark stays there but some makes it home its btu's is the way I look at it.

I even use it as fire starter I have a 5 gal bucket with 1/2 used engine oil and 1/2 diesel that I soak slivers of wood and I put pieces of bark laying around in there to it works good.
 
/ burning bark #19  
We have mostly fir, wifey bags the bart, I start the fire with it. Bark has lots of oil in it so I let plenty of air into the stove, it burns with a long hot flame.
 
/ burning bark #20  
+1 on birch bark making great firestarter -- easy to get as well
 

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