one-day course

heating with wood


venue: Windmill Hill City Farm, Bristol

This course is useful for anyone thinking of installing a wood stove and using wood as a beautiful, cosy and renewable source of space heating and / or water heating.

The course is run by Andy Reynolds of IBS Woodland Training, a professional chainsaw instructor, forester and smallholder. The information and advice he provides covers wood stoves and the cycle of procurement, processing and burning of wood for home heating systems. Lots of practical advice and discussion, including:

  • how to obtain firewood
  • methods of cutting
  • basic dos and don'ts of chainsaws
  • processing and drying
  • moisture content
  • how wood burns
  • stove design and home made stoves
  • flue requirements and design
  • hot water and central heating general design

Course participants receive a copy of our book: Heating with Wood.

more on wood heating


how to book:
 

if you can't open the booking form, you need Acrobat Reader - it's free

arrive:
 
around 9.30 for a 10am prompt start
depart:
 
after the course finishes at 5pm
directions:
 
click here for a map and directions to Windmill Hill City Farm
what to bring:
 
work clothes; pen and notebook; packed lunch (if you're not using the cafe)
let us know:
 
if you have any special needs
price:
 
£60
Refundable up to two weeks prior to course (minus £30 admin fee)
No refunds for cancellations within two weeks of course
lunch:
 
bring a packed lunch or you can get lunch at the cafe
discounts:
 
car sharing:
 
visit our car sharing forum to offer or request a lift
 

 


 



a timber stack - of cordwood, i.e. logs that need to be chainsawed to lengths that can be split

 

 

 


a basic wood stove sitting on a slate base, with a flue at the rear, passing through a metal plate to the chimney

 

 

 


splitting logs with a splitting axe; even if the log can fit into your stove, it's probably better to split it to allow it to dry better. If you've never done it before you might find aiming difficult, but you'll soon get the hang of it, and it's excellent exercise