We're looking at chimneas rather than having a patio heater and wondered what other people have got. I've looked at some but can't decide if we need one with a door or not.....
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Chimneas - do you need one with a door?
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we have one without a door and it's great. Never cooked on it we just have it to keep warm on chilly summer nights. last year we put a load of old wood from a ceiling my partner took down and it burnt so well we had flames coming out of the top!
definitely better than a patio heater- we had them at work a few years back and when the wind was strong they just blew over and ended up with the umbrella bit all dented.
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Just be sure to spare a thought for your neighbour. In our old house the dude next door would burn almost anythin in his and it was right near the back of our house. The smell would last days!
I like them, but our gardens are too enclosed to have one without it affecting our neighbours.A simple dude trying to grow veg. http://haywayne.blogspot.com/
BLOG UPDATED! http://haywayne.blogspot.com/2012/01...ar-demand.html 30/01/2012
Practise makes us a little better, it doesn't make us perfect.
What would Vedder do?
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Originally posted by tootles View PostCall me a thickie - what is a chimnea??!
Buy the Tampico style Cast iron Chiminea online from the largest range of Cast iron Chimineas in the UK.
i have one like this and its great, it burns anything, well recommended and far more environmentally friendly than a patio heater
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A chiminea is maybe more environmentally friendly, I don't know but I don't see how.
What ever you are burning has an effect on the atmosphere & as HW (or maybe BD as we should perhaps call him now) has said burning wood, coal or what ever has an associated smell. Fine if you have big open gardens but most modern houses are cramped together with tiny gardens. What smells fine to you may not be what the neighbours particularly wanted to smell.
I'm a bloke and I want one because there nothing better than putting things onto a fire.
However it wouldn't work terribly well under the gazebo, whereas the gas heater is fine. I can turn it on when I need it and turn it off when I am finished, I don't have to think half an hour in advance to get it lit and stoked up and I don't have to damp it down when I'm done.
I sleep with my windows open and some neighbours chimineas are still burning down hours later, fine if I wanted to be a kipper.I am certain that the day my boat comes in, I'll be at the airport.
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Originally posted by Stacey SteveA chiminea is maybe more environmentally friendly, I don't know but I don't see how.
Here's one that Tesco have on sale, looks a good price?
Cast Iron Chimenea - Tesco.DirectTo see a world in a grain of sand
And a heaven in a wild flower
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Originally posted by Stacey Steve View PostI sleep with my windows open and some neighbours chimineas are still burning down hours later, fine if I wanted to be a kipper.
So do i, i think a barbie is sometimes more inconsiderate especially when your clothes are on the line!!
Perhaps move to Bedfordshire, the neighbours here are more considerate lol !
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Sorry, I was always under the impression that the gas was largely a by product of the petrol production process and prior to it's use as a bottled product was burnt off. Now of course there are gas fields that are "farmed" or some will say exploited.
Quite where the wood comes from to burn in a chiminea is another point entirely.
My point was that when you burn things there are immissions and this is true for both gas and wood, I am not a biochemist so am not trying to say one has more "nasties" than the other.
I am no more going to have a personal field of cows to collect their waste for environmentally friendly gas than I am going to have my own sustainable forest.I am certain that the day my boat comes in, I'll be at the airport.
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