
Home Showcase: Add wood stove to ways to save on energy
costs
Wood warms home for Nottingham couple
Sunday, November 06, 2005
By Lynda Guydon Taylor, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Experts predict heating fuel will be costlier this winter
thanks to hurricanes Katrina's and Rita's disruption of oil
and natural gas production, oil refining, natural gas processing
and pipeline systems.
If there is any doubt about whether back-to-back hurricanes
will have an effect on fuel costs, look no further than the
federal government. The predictions are chilling.
The Energy Information Administration Web site, maintained
by the U.S. government, predicts, on average, a household
primarily using heating oil will spend about $378, or 32 percent
more this winter. Those heating primarily with natural gas
can expect to spend about $350, or 48 percent more. Those
heating primarily with propane can expect to spend on average
$325, or 30 percent more. Households heating with electricity
are predicted to fare far better, spending on average of $38,
or 5 percent more.
According to the Web site, www.eia.doe.gov, about 55 percent
of households rely on natural gas for heating, 29 percent
on electricity, 7 percent on heating oil and 4 percent on
propane.
Not to worry, however. There are ways to make your home more
energy efficient and reduce heating costs. Pennsylvania has
even designed a new Web site called www.StayWarmPA.com. There's
also www.energysavers.gov, a joint effort of the U.S. Department
of Energy, Department of Housing and Urban Development and
the Environmental Protection Agency.
If energy efficiency is the name of the game, then conservation
is the rule of play and is the most important thing households
can do, according to Ana Gomez, spokeswoman for the state
Department of Environmental Protection. People do not realize
how important it is to conserve energy in order to save money,
Ms. Gomez said.
Many tips are common sense in nature. If leaving a room for
an hour or more, turn off lights and appliances for two reasons:
it saves energy -- about $40 a year -- and reduces pollution.
Forty dollars may not seem like much but when tacked onto
other money-saving measures, it can add up to a lot. Following
are more tips for making a home more energy efficient.
Seal leaks around windows and doors to prevent warm air from
escaping through cracks.
Keep the thermostat between 66 and 68 in the winter and 76
and 78 in the summer. By lowering the winter temperature,
one can save about $29 a year.
If you live in a three-bedroom house, close vents in the room
or rooms not being used. By doing so, as much as $100 a year
can be saved.
If renovating a home and you can afford to, invest in good
insulation in the basement and attic. A poorly insulated home
loses heat in the winter and cool air in the summer. By insulating
the attic, one can save about $300 a year and in the basement
about $160 a year.
Investing in a programmable thermostat can add up to a $100
a year savings. Lowering the winter temperature to 55 degrees
while one is at work or away from home helps save energy.
By replacing 20 percent of incandescent light bulbs with slightly
more expensive fluorescent ones, a resident can save about
50 percent. Fluorescent bulbs last longer and don't use as
much energy.
Using insulated curtains, can result in a savings of about
$28 a year.
Cleaning the dryer filter after each use can save about $66
a year.
Taking showers instead of baths can save approximately $28
a year.
For those still feeling the pinch of high utility bills, contact
the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program at www.dpw.state.pa.us
and type LIHEAP in the subject search box, or call the state
Department of Public Welfare at 800-692-7462.
While the government offers tips for shaving dollars off energy
bills, Glenn and Gloria Choate, of Nottingham for years have
turned to a sure-fire way to warm up their house while keeping
costs at bay: a wood burning stove.
"When the furnace kicks on, I see dollar signs,"
Mrs. Choate said recently.
To keep the furnace from kicking on so frequently, the Choates
turned to a wood stove about 25 years ago when the price of
heating oil started to skyrocket. Although they originally
used oil, the couple switched to kerosene when the weather
got so cold one day that the oil congealed in their outdoor
tank.
Showing a bill dated Dec. 27, 2004, Mrs. Choate said it reflected
a cost of $1.97 a gallon or a total of $391 to fill their
tank. In 2003, the price was $1.28 a gallon or $239.43 to
fill the tank. The current price is $2.58 a gallon or a total
of $513 this winter.
Since they bought the wood-burning stove, located in the basement,
the Choates have decreased the number of times they filled
their tank from four or five times a season to 11/2 times.
The only downside to the wood stove is that the stove and
the chimney must be cleaned yearly.
To better circulate warm air throughout their home, Mr. Choate
connected to duct work two small fans above the wood stove.
One day last week, the Choates awoke to 66 degrees. After
throwing a log or two onto the fire, by 11:45 a.m. the temperature
had risen to a comfortable 70 degrees. A couple of well-seasoned
oak logs will burn four to six hours, Mrs. Choate said.
Besides warming their 2,770- square-foot house, the Choates'
wood-burning stove also can be used for cooking. That came
in handy one January morning when they awoke to a downed power
line. Mrs. Choate cooked breakfast on the stove instead.
Extolling the virtues of wood over oil, Mrs. Choate said oil
heat is spread by using forced air while wood burning is radiant
heat.
The only issue is finding wood to feed the fire. It appears
not to be a problem for Mr. Choate, however, who often is
getting a call about trees that need to be cut.
Last week, the couple's yard was well-stocked with six cords
of wood stacked in neat rows near the house. More wood was
being seasoned in a shed.
Wood should be seasoned at least a year, Mr. Choate said.
People don't realize they lose 50 percent of the burning capacity
when using green wood. He's well-prepared for this winter
with 11/2 to two years of seasoned wood ready for the burning.