Another entertaining and educational video! Jerry you have no idea how much your videos mean to me. In the past year my health has gone south in a big way, I’m not really able to get out of the house and do the things I used to do. I watch your videos and remember the simpler times on my grandparents farm, the evenings were spent reading the Bible and talking listening to their stories. Listening to you takes me back to those days and I will forever be grateful to you for that. I look forward to seeing the next one. God bless you my dear friend.
If you look at all the old houses (pre 1850ish) in New England, they all have center chimney stacks. The larger houses would have 3-6 flue massive center chimney stacks, while the smaller 1.5 story cape style houses had 2 flue stacks. The mentality of this was to have a fireplace in every large room in order to concentrate heat in the center of the home where even if all the fires burned out the massive brick chimney would trap and slowly radiate the heat out over several hours. It was perhaps the most efficient way to heat a home with fireplaces.
Where I was raised in Eastern Ct there were houses with the fireplaces in the center of the home. The ones I had been in most of the openings were covered over with brick.. Putting an chimney on an outside wall in a cold climate is bad because a cold chimney gets dirty fast. I have wood stoves with fresh air intakes.
I think a lot of that came down to home design. As Homes got bigger and ceilings became more and more vaulted it was harder to keep warm. A lot of old cabins and cottages have very low callings, you could try and jump up and end up bashing your head into it. Even if your look at the famous US president George Washington's homes that he has owned, you'll notice this. If you didn't pay attention to where you were you could easily smack your head off some sort of rafter. [/edit] The cabin here is rather nice cabin but for a single individual that's an awfully large space. As a hunting lodge however for more than one person it's probably a lot easier to keep warm as the more people there are the warmer it will be. People produce heat themselves and in spaces with multiple bodies it's going to be warmer.
In Finland this is what they had. The oven was done in a way that the flames/smoke would go around in channels inside the fireplace before going out the chimney. Before that they just had the fireplace without chimney (smoke huts). People simply couldn't waste the heat. In summer they would cook outside as the roof material was prone to catching fire.
Yeah. I’m in Sacramento (which doesn’t get particularly cold) but I insisted on a fireplace when house shopping. Nothing beats the warmth, crackle and ambiance of a crackling fire.
The ambience of an open hearth fireplace cannot be beat. I totally agree. Reminds me of colonial era homes where the big ole open hearth with hanging kettles and pots was the center of the home and used for heat, cooking, warming bread to rise, boiling water for baths ...just awesome!!
Hello Jerry , I must say that the fireplace has its place in a home. My old house had a fireplace with a whole rock wall on the wall of the fireplace. Once that wall got warmed up the house heater never kicked on during the day , at night was different although it would only turn on for a short time. One year we had an ice storm and lost our electricity for 4 days and that fireplace saved us. We cooked with it and at night I'd sleep in the living room in my recliner to keep the fire going all night. I'd have to get up 3 or 4 times during the night but that beat freezing. The kids seemed to have enjoyed the experience of not having electricity. We heard reports later on that many families had to leave their homes to stay in hotels or with friends , while we were able to stay at home because the fireplace saved us. I've heard that this winter will be a real bad one and I wish our house we're in now had a fireplace.
Your cabin is the one of my dreams. What an amazing place, amazing life. Thank you for sharing it all with us. My grandparents lived this way and I miss it.
The ambience of an open fireplace can't be beat. Sure a wood stove is going to heat better, but I still am in love with listening and watching the flames.
Another thing some pioneers used was a bed warmer. A metal pot with a lid connected to a stick. It was filled with hot coals and you stick it under your sheets and rub it back and forth to warm your bed. We had one in our cabin and it worked great !!
We had one of those in our home in New England when I was a kid. Also had hurricane lamps w shiny metal behind them and they were used many times after blizzards or coastal storms knocked out our electric. My grandmother had 2 irons. 1 was a 20th century plug in electric and another one that was cast iron. She also had a bed warmer to put coals in and run it under the covers when she was little she said. God bless her I learned so much from her especially cooking, canning and my favorite sewing! She had an old Singer that you used your feet to move. Mom bought me an electric one when I was 11 bc I was sewing everything by then.
Omgosh I loved your little nightcap!! Great experiment! We live in an 1833 farmhouse, so cool temperatures are everyday real life living for us, we try to never turn the gas furnace on, just using our pellet stove insert in our fireplace for our main heat source.
I stayed in an old cabin in the Colorado mountains during a snow storm. This thing was a huge one room cabin with no insulation. The fireplace was rather large. We had to open the door because it got so hot inside.
From what I remember about the Rumford fireplace the process was to burn a hot fire quickly and once it was out, shut the damper. The retained heat from the heated stones (thermal mass) was to leach heat out through the night.
I heat with a fireplace and I LOVE it ❤. I’ve also caulked the daylights out of my cabin to help retain that warmth. I don’t use a spark guard - the brick hearth extends 4’ beyond the fireplace…and I’m comfortable with that distance. I have a low-ish ceiling and no loft, so that’s a big difference right there. I think I need to get a dog though…I hear they have wonderful bed insulating properties. 😊 And maybe a night cap. 😆
Jerry, Another great video. I remember growing up and having a wood stove in the kitchen, before bed dad would stoke the fire and make sure and put an uncut chunk of oak on the top of the fire, it would burn all night long, by 5am dad was already in the kitchen putting more wood in. Thank you for taking time to film, edit and post this video.
Great job!!! I really would like to test myself and my skills at building a cabin and possibly a fireplace for it. Thanks for sharing this video with us!🤗😁
Howdy brother- great experiment with your fireplace. When I built our house a fireplace is the one thing I absolutely had to have. We have cooked in it when the power was out and actually got a lot of heat from it. It’s enjoyable to cook in it on a cold, dreary kind of day. A fireplace is very comforting to sit in front of. Take care and God’s blessings to you
The more you use the fireplace the hotter the stones you used to build it with will "warm up", similar to wrapping a hot rock in a blanket idea you had; that rock has to heat up at least a couple of times before it works. The rocks you built your fireplace/chimney with will get used to the heat should you provide the right conditions (using the fireplace).
I believe the hardest thing for me would be sleeping without my dog. I wonder wouldn’t a barrel stove be a good second floor room warmer. I love a loft but I don’t like ladders at night half asleep (pee breaks). I love the amazing job you’ve done watched from beginning. I just would make a stair case.
I’ve always wondered, if you were to add a wood stove on the opposite side, to balance. That way you can enjoy the ambiance of the fireplace majority of the time and let the wood stove take over that midnight to morning shift or just a balance of the heat
I love the experiment. I spent all my holidays with my grandfather at my aunt's 1890 colonial small 2 bedroom house in the Berkshire mountains back in 1979 when it was all the rage " Colonial Homes " living etc. I was in High School and my family was living overseas but I will never forget my aunt's hard work to recreate a colonial farmhouse. The living room fireplace sent a lot of smoke throughout the house as my Cambridge educated uncle could not figure out the fireplace flu. All my clothes smelled like smoke. But it was fun spending Thanksgiving , Christmas and Easter as my aunt made everything authentic colonial and sewed the curtains and bedspreads. Get up and drink water and have the log waiting to toss in. Kitty needs a cat stair ! I give you permission to source a chain-mail fire curtain. I got one for free that someone left on their front lawn for free to take away ! It came with sturdy brass frame stand. Believe me your ancestors would get what they needed if it was available. At Mount Vernon there is a huge Doll House Model of George Washington's home in Northern ,VA They had Water Closets for Fire Prevention ! In each room that had a fireplace filled with thick handmade leather water pails that were always maintained filled to be prepared in the event of a a fire spilling out of the fire place- cause a house fire. So maybe you should have water buckets on hand for safety reasons at night. In Germany and Austria to this day they sleep under very warm and toasty down comforters and they can keep you very warm . Be sure kitty has fresh water and food on the loft as they love to eat whenever they feel like it. Make yourself comfortable at home. Reading the Bible at night puts anyone to sleep quickly. Very interesting with Time and Temperature.
I know everyone has seen the chairs with the wings on them, those wings served a purpose other than just looking cool , when you face the chair towards the fireplace and as the fireplace is pulling the draft through the house the wings on the chair diverts the cool air away from the person sitting in the chair, old people didn't have a lot of technical knowledge but they sure had a lot of common sense
@guyvanbrussel9772 not true!! I’ve been a chimney sweep all of my life. You can’t have a 20” square going out and a 4” round coming in and believe that’s going to solve all your draft issues.
@@logcabinlifestylecan chimney sweeps read? Look it up and you will learn that they were put on chairs to help divert air away from the person sitting in the chair ,i didn't say it woud solve the draft issues, so please just look up the reason for the wings on old chairs, i saw it first on the history Channel and i have also looked it up and it said that was the reason for the wings , i know crow is a tough meat so take small bites and chew slowly
I just discovered your channel tonight by searching cabins. Love this! We're in the process of building a small hunting cabin on our 5 acres, just a basic one-room cabin with no loft or anything, and no fireplace. I do love your fireplace...even though it's not practical for us to add one, we will have a wood stove at least. We have a fire pit outside - gotta have that!! LOL
78yr old countyboy. Unsplit wood burns slower. Save a ash bucket of ash to bed over your fire to hold the fire through the night. In the morning open the fire and add fresh kindling to get your fire back up. Save a fresh bucket of ash for your coming night fire.
You have a really nice house and have done such a nice job. I would like to have something similar. I like the old timey feeling your house has, you have done well making it a reality.
You are so so lucky to be able to live this way. Dad used to chop fire wood all summer long so we could live the same way you are now. We had a small house though not a cabbin. Keep on doing it brother. Thanks for the memories 👍👍
Very nice fireplace! I thought stone had some heat retention but to keep the cabin near 60 all night, that is great! I'm ready to fire up my wood stove for the winter. I have one with a glass door, as you mentioned, it is so nice to see the fire.
Most cabins back in the day with families, everyone took turns on fire detail during cold nights. Us kids used to takes turns filling the Ben Franklin when we all lived in a one room cabin.
Found your channel within the last week and spent a couple of days watching most of your video's. I love everything about it. I hope to catch one of your party's one day because I'd love to see it first hand. Also found you on facebook and sent you a friends request thank you for accepting. I am enjoying your video's and find your lifestyle not just intriguing but wholesome. The way our society functions today we've lost that sense of how to be self sufficient and self reliant. As well as our sense of innocents and purity. In my humble opinion I don't think the "progress" we have made over the years has really helped us a society in whole. I say that knowing I've never had to live your lifestyle so what do I know. Looking forward to your next video.
This was an absolutely great way to relax. I didn’t sleep well last night so I’m relaxed enough to try a nap thank you for a great video. I liked, commented and subscribed. Maybe I’ll try to catch a video on an evening.
Sometime of the old building built all the way around a central masornary stack to increase the heating abilty. Neat exsperiment. Curtains do help to con serve heat longer in small areas.
Couldn't agree with you more about the ambience of an open fire! I live in a totally modern home, but when I was looking to buy a home, a WOOD BURNING fireplace was at the top of my 'must have' list of ammenities...in fact, I told the real estate agent to not even bother to show me a house without a wood burning fireplace. My extended family never misses an opportunity to point out the inefficiencies of an open fire place, (all that ash, soot, and inevitable smoke smell) but they all seem to gravitate toward it on Christmas when there is a nice fire burning! I also utilize my fire place to dabble in a bit of wood fire cooking, so I thoroughly enjoy it.
I appreciate your stories with the history interwoven. In particular the mentioning of using a rock heated by the fire. It triggered a memory of my grandfather bringing in a hot rock from the earlier campsite fire in a wool sock at some point in the night. He didn't wake me up and give me the sock to hold it my chest. He put it outside the sleeping bag in my lower back area. His theory was the kidneys have the blood filter through them continuously doing there thing. Warm the area, warm the body. It worked. I heat my place with a wood stove. I grew up in NJ currently in N. CA. Keto may cat and myself also enjoy a cooler sleeping climate. Cold to me is 2 degrees F for the high. Thanks for making these videos
Just as the wool blanket boar hides were used in Europe to prevent stray embers and sparks from burning the house down. You can easily do the same with domestic pig hides if boar populations aren't high enough in your area. Plus: boar hides are bristly and tough; they are easy to clean and last forever. Downside; wool is infinitely more cosy and soft
One of the big turning points in the transition from the medieval period to the early modern age was the invention of the chimney. Before that, a home's fire would simply be on the dirt floor and it would have made the house really smokey and the fires were very small. The smoke would go out through openings at the end of each gable and filter through the thatched roofs. It was messy and stinky from so much smoke but that's how houses in Europe were for thousands of years before the invention of the chimney. The earliest example of a fireplace with a chimney in England dates to the late 12th century, but they didn't become common until the 16th century. It's a hallmark of the beginning of the early modern era.
First time seeing your videos, I'd like to congratulate you on a fantastic job of building the fireplace. Im next door but on Lake Erie. So you know how cold it gets. My 1859 farm house had originally been built with a fireplace that had a bread oven in the kitchen with the hearth on the opposite side in the living room. I removed the "updates" and restored it to original. I was shocked to see how well it heated the house with the stone exposed again. They also added fireproof insulation over the steel on cement board. Then 2x2's drywalled over them. Literally robbed 80% of the radiant heat it produced. I moved a few years ago and now I'm using Parlor stoves mainly for heating. Two in a two story home is fine even if dips into the teens for a while. Adding insulation really improved things. Still looking for the cook stove. But until then the Parlor stoves have a good cook surface and it is rather nice to put a pot of coffee on upstairs. I just need to work on lowering device so when I get up it's just about ready. There's nothing wrong with utilizing what we have, look at like an automatic timer we're so accustomed to now. Simple living has many terms. Thanks for the video it was very well done.
2 sets of Grandparents relied solely on fire place heat well into the 90s. A few differences though, they used coal in combination with wood. Coal is essential in my opinion.
Get a fireback for that fireplace. It's a cast iron piece that will hold the heat a bit longer and help to direct a lot of it into the house instead of up the chimney. Also. The reason so many old homes had fireplaces on the outside was because of chimney fires. It was significantly easier to pull a burning chimney down when it was an external addon instead of built into the home itself.
Enjoyed the video. I thought for sure your dog would be laying in front of the fire all night. Mine always did. I’ve seen her wake up in the morning steaming and immediately start panting. 😅
I recently found your videos and I dream of a place just like this some day. To live alone and lead a simple life. Thank you for sharing and inspiring me to follow my dream!
He also belived as you do , that a fire place belongs in the middle of the house ( or theirs about ) as he would put it . I really wish I would have tried this on an inside fire , because I don't have access to a fireplace now , and I haven't thought about it a very long time . Your video made me remember this encounter with a really interesting old man , who loved a good fire ! He obviously knew what he was talking about , it works outside . Thank you so much! Oh and you got a new subscriber .
Rumsford,, a contemporary of Ben Franklin, designed a fairly efficient configuration of a fireplace, firebox, throat, smoke shelf. A proper Rumsford fireplace is about 20% efficient. You are absolutely correct,, fireplaces should be inside the insulated structure. A proper saltbox or colonial home, the fireplaces were in the center of the home. Multiple hearths and flues all within a single large masonry core,,, again, you are correct,, once the masonry core is warm the house tends to stay warm. Worked on the old houses,, built modern equals, lived in them. One a large home, 3,000 plus square feet, one fireplace, one wood stove (separate flues, common chimney) ,,, the convention gas fired furnace died one winter,, it required 3 months to get the parts for repair. The fireplace worked fine for those three months in Michigan
Russian / German Mass thermal stoves are the most efficient house heaters before the introduction of Gas. Thermal mas gives off a steady slow release of heat.
.... Years ago, I had a woodburning Fireplace at a home I rented, it was in a step down den area of the house and I actually moved my bed to that area, ( it was a decent sized room ) for the fall and winter , so I could have the fire on all night. It was sooool warm, and I slept great, I don't sleep well when I'm cold, lol. I had gas ( central heating) but I only used it in the winter , if it was under 48 at night, along with the Fireplace. It cycled very little, because the house was kept quite warm with the Fireplace.
Surprised how your house stayed around 60degf. That's what I keep my house in the winter, and for me that's perfect sleeping temp because I like a big pile of blankets including an old down comforter. Beautiful. I would definitely get a nice big screen however. That's just me..
I have a hunting cabin on our farm. It has no electricity, or water. We had a cast iron stove which worked well, but had to be read fed in the early hours. We replaced it with a rocket mass heater. It burns a fifth of the wood and provides steady heat all night.
Mentally I would have to get used to the idea that there is a fire still going when I tried to go to sleep. I might have a few sleepless nights. Do you have a fire alarm and CO detector in the cabin? Great experiment!
A fireplace like that will freeze you to death unless you lay next to it whereas a woodstove will heat the entire cabin. When my parents built the homeplace when I was a kid , the fireplace was designed with a heat chamber connected to the duct work . The thermostat could be set on fan mode and distribute heat all throughout the house as if the Central unit was on.
I agree, the fireplace has its place. Yours is stunning! Many of the houses in New Hampshire have Count Rumpford fireplaces in varied sizes. At one point they were deemed illegal, I believe because of the small slit flu design, but they are extremely efficient. My neighbor some years ago built a fireplace similar to yours with a bee hive oven in his kitchen. He had a central chimney. There was a large soap stone stove in the dining toom, a small Rumpford fireplace in the living room and a kitchen wood stove at the far end of the kitchen. He copied his Cape Cod house from a colonial design. All the rooms opened into each other. There were two bedrooms upstairs. We blew off an anvil when he had the house raising in the late 1970s. You are well on your way to producing a piece of living history.
You could and it would produce way more heat but could come more dangerous because as the structure heats up, there’s potential of catching the structure of the house on fire. i’ve seen this to be the case more often than chimney fires itself.
Just wondering, have you seen or installed a heat exchanger on heat a lator (not sure of the correct name) in stone fireplace? Wonder if that would give a little more heat. You've done an awesome job on everything. I'm about to build a cabin similar to yours and can't imagine it without a stone fireplace.
Yes, I do know what they are and have installed them. Yes they would give off a little more heat but in the end it’s more about heat loss. The heat that gets sucked up the chimney. I do have the pot belly and a wood furnace in the basement. Both heat better than the fireplace. The stone fireplace just makes the cabin and this channel
@@logcabinlifestyle thanks alot. I have 3 woodstoves on standby to choose from. One is a Queen Bengal cook stove. After seeing yours I think that's a must
If you need consistent warm temps safely then you need a woodburner using your existing chimney. It's not like it would require much. Open fires don't make sense indoors.
My house in the UK is not old 110 years the fireplace is on the inside and the 2 rooms up stairs that are above the main fireplace also have a fireplace in each roomconnected to the same chimney.
Another entertaining and educational video! Jerry you have no idea how much your videos mean to me. In the past year my health has gone south in a big way, I’m not really able to get out of the house and do the things I used to do. I watch your videos and remember the simpler times on my grandparents farm, the evenings were spent reading the Bible and talking listening to their stories. Listening to you takes me back to those days and I will forever be grateful to you for that. I look forward to seeing the next one. God bless you my dear friend.
Thank you my friend! Hopefully many of many to come!
Mumford style fireplaces throw heat into a room.
If you look at all the old houses (pre 1850ish) in New England, they all have center chimney stacks. The larger houses would have 3-6 flue massive center chimney stacks, while the smaller 1.5 story cape style houses had 2 flue stacks. The mentality of this was to have a fireplace in every large room in order to concentrate heat in the center of the home where even if all the fires burned out the massive brick chimney would trap and slowly radiate the heat out over several hours. It was perhaps the most efficient way to heat a home with fireplaces.
Where I was raised in Eastern Ct there were houses with the fireplaces in the center of the home. The ones I had been in most of the openings were covered over with brick.. Putting an chimney on an outside wall in a cold climate is bad because a cold chimney gets dirty fast. I have wood stoves with fresh air intakes.
I think a lot of that came down to home design. As Homes got bigger and ceilings became more and more vaulted it was harder to keep warm. A lot of old cabins and cottages have very low callings, you could try and jump up and end up bashing your head into it. Even if your look at the famous US president George Washington's homes that he has owned, you'll notice this. If you didn't pay attention to where you were you could easily smack your head off some sort of rafter. [/edit] The cabin here is rather nice cabin but for a single individual that's an awfully large space. As a hunting lodge however for more than one person it's probably a lot easier to keep warm as the more people there are the warmer it will be. People produce heat themselves and in spaces with multiple bodies it's going to be warmer.
In Finland this is what they had. The oven was done in a way that the flames/smoke would go around in channels inside the fireplace before going out the chimney. Before that they just had the fireplace without chimney (smoke huts). People simply couldn't waste the heat. In summer they would cook outside as the roof material was prone to catching fire.
I saw a video of a stone fireplace and it had beds next to the fireplace. I think it was Russia or China.
This design kept the chimney warmer and created more draft.
Nothing beats the time spent in front of a fireplace.
I agree
Yeah. I’m in Sacramento (which doesn’t get particularly cold) but I insisted on a fireplace when house shopping. Nothing beats the warmth, crackle and ambiance of a crackling fire.
The ambience of an open hearth fireplace cannot be beat. I totally agree. Reminds me of colonial era homes where the big ole open hearth with hanging kettles and pots was the center of the home and used for heat, cooking, warming bread to rise, boiling water for baths ...just awesome!!
Just think we as a species traded all that & gave it up for cell phones & transvestites .. not a good trade if you ask me
@@adamsnelson4689 definitely not!
@@adamsnelson4689 I’m still not convinced the creatures who created all that are the same species as the rest of us ;)
Yep that's how I would like to live, Amish style.☺️
Hello Jerry , I must say that the fireplace has its place in a home. My old house had a fireplace with a whole rock wall on the wall of the fireplace. Once that wall got warmed up the house heater never kicked on during the day , at night was different although it would only turn on for a short time. One year we had an ice storm and lost our electricity for 4 days and that fireplace saved us. We cooked with it and at night I'd sleep in the living room in my recliner to keep the fire going all night. I'd have to get up 3 or 4 times during the night but that beat freezing. The kids seemed to have enjoyed the experience of not having electricity. We heard reports later on that many families had to leave their homes to stay in hotels or with friends , while we were able to stay at home because the fireplace saved us. I've heard that this winter will be a real bad one and I wish our house we're in now had a fireplace.
I wish ours had one too. We used to but not anymore. A wood stove would be amazing as well to have.
Your cabin is the one of my dreams. What an amazing place, amazing life. Thank you for sharing it all with us. My grandparents lived this way and I miss it.
I just have to admire how nice of a job you did building that fireplace. It looks very well done, and very period correct.
The ambience of an open fireplace can't be beat. Sure a wood stove is going to heat better, but I still am in love with listening and watching the flames.
Another thing some pioneers used was a bed warmer. A metal pot with a lid connected to a stick. It was filled with hot coals and you stick it under your sheets and rub it back and forth to warm your bed. We had one in our cabin and it worked great !!
I haven't started watching yet, but my grandma used to put hot rocks and hot potatoes in their beds to keep warm.
That does come into play in the video😀
We had one of those in our home in New England when I was a kid. Also had hurricane lamps w shiny metal behind them and they were used many times after blizzards or coastal storms knocked out our electric. My grandmother had 2 irons. 1 was a 20th century plug in electric and another one that was cast iron. She also had a bed warmer to put coals in and run it under the covers when she was little she said. God bless her I learned so much from her especially cooking, canning and my favorite sewing! She had an old Singer that you used your feet to move. Mom bought me an electric one when I was 11 bc I was sewing everything by then.
10:30 awwwweee! Cute cat! 🐈🪜
Archie is a star.❤️
Omgosh I loved your little nightcap!! Great experiment! We live in an 1833 farmhouse, so cool temperatures are everyday real life living for us, we try to never turn the gas furnace on, just using our pellet stove insert in our fireplace for our main heat source.
Thank you so much. That’s the way we are. I don’t like to pay for heat at all.
Yeah, fireplace friendship, I like that.
I stayed in an old cabin in the Colorado mountains during a snow storm. This thing was a huge one room cabin with no insulation. The fireplace was rather large. We had to open the door because it got so hot inside.
From what I remember about the Rumford fireplace the process was to burn a hot fire quickly and once it was out, shut the damper. The retained heat from the heated stones (thermal mass) was to leach heat out through the night.
I heat with a fireplace and I LOVE it ❤. I’ve also caulked the daylights out of my cabin to help retain that warmth. I don’t use a spark guard - the brick hearth extends 4’ beyond the fireplace…and I’m comfortable with that distance. I have a low-ish ceiling and no loft, so that’s a big difference right there. I think I need to get a dog though…I hear they have wonderful bed insulating properties. 😊 And maybe a night cap. 😆
Jerry,
Another great video. I remember growing up and having a wood stove in the kitchen, before bed dad would stoke the fire and make sure and put an uncut chunk of oak on the top of the fire, it would burn all night long, by 5am dad was already in the kitchen putting more wood in. Thank you for taking time to film, edit and post this video.
Your welcome and thanks for the story
I absolutely 💯 Love everything about your Cabin. It is so beautiful, cozy and it looks so comfortable. God bless you and your pets.
Always a informative and interesting video coming from you. Nice to see that you are making videos more frequently. Thanks for sharing, stay warm!
Totally agree. If I can build my own log cabin that fireplace will be my first choice. Thanks and God bless.
Thank you my friend
Great job!!! I really would like to test myself and my skills at building a cabin and possibly a fireplace for it. Thanks for sharing this video with us!🤗😁
Howdy brother- great experiment with your fireplace. When I built our house a fireplace is the one thing I absolutely had to have. We have cooked in it when the power was out and actually got a lot of heat from it. It’s enjoyable to cook in it on a cold, dreary kind of day. A fireplace is very comforting to sit in front of. Take care and God’s blessings to you
I absolutely love your home !!!!@ thank you for sharing!!!!! You are so amazing !!!!!
Thank you
The more you use the fireplace the hotter the stones you used to build it with will "warm up", similar to wrapping a hot rock in a blanket idea you had; that rock has to heat up at least a couple of times before it works. The rocks you built your fireplace/chimney with will get used to the heat should you provide the right conditions (using the fireplace).
You have got a really cozy place there and the open fireplace is the heart of it all!
Thank you!
I believe the hardest thing for me would be sleeping without my dog. I wonder wouldn’t a barrel stove be a good second floor room warmer.
I love a loft but I don’t like ladders at night half asleep (pee breaks). I love the amazing job you’ve done watched from beginning. I just would make a stair case.
I’ve always wondered, if you were to add a wood stove on the opposite side, to balance. That way you can enjoy the ambiance of the fireplace majority of the time and let the wood stove take over that midnight to morning shift or just a balance of the heat
Yes, if I burned both and I do often the cabin stays much warmer
It went down to 9 degrees I sleep like a baby with multiple layers of clothing and about 3 blankets...no tent or any other shelter... just love 🥰
I've been dying to see someone do this! Thanks so much
I love the experiment. I spent all my holidays with my grandfather at my aunt's 1890 colonial small 2 bedroom house in the Berkshire mountains back in 1979 when it was all the rage " Colonial Homes " living etc. I was in High School and my family was living overseas but I will never forget my aunt's hard work to recreate a colonial farmhouse. The living room fireplace sent a lot of smoke throughout the house as my Cambridge educated uncle could not figure out the fireplace flu. All my clothes smelled like smoke. But it was fun spending Thanksgiving , Christmas and Easter as my aunt made everything authentic colonial and sewed the curtains and bedspreads. Get up and drink water and have the log waiting to toss in. Kitty needs a cat stair ! I give you permission to source a chain-mail fire curtain. I got one for free that someone left on their front lawn for free to take away ! It came with sturdy brass frame stand. Believe me your ancestors would get what they needed if it was available. At Mount Vernon there is a huge Doll House Model of George Washington's home in Northern ,VA They had Water Closets for Fire Prevention ! In each room that had a fireplace filled with
thick handmade leather water pails that were always maintained filled to be prepared in the event of a
a fire spilling out of the fire place- cause a house fire. So maybe you should have water buckets on hand for safety reasons at night. In Germany and Austria to this day they sleep under very warm and toasty down comforters and they can keep you very warm . Be sure kitty has fresh water and food on the loft as they love to eat whenever they feel like it. Make yourself comfortable at home. Reading the Bible at night puts anyone to sleep quickly. Very interesting with Time and Temperature.
I know everyone has seen the chairs with the wings on them, those wings served a purpose other than just looking cool , when you face the chair towards the fireplace and as the fireplace is pulling the draft through the house the wings on the chair diverts the cool air away from the person sitting in the chair, old people didn't have a lot of technical knowledge but they sure had a lot of common sense
@guyvanbrussel9772 not true!! I’ve been a chimney sweep all of my life. You can’t have a 20” square going out and a 4” round coming in and believe that’s going to solve all your draft issues.
@@logcabinlifestylecan chimney sweeps read? Look it up and you will learn that they were put on chairs to help divert air away from the person sitting in the chair ,i didn't say it woud solve the draft issues, so please just look up the reason for the wings on old chairs, i saw it first on the history Channel and i have also looked it up and it said that was the reason for the wings , i know crow is a tough meat so take small bites and chew slowly
I just discovered your channel tonight by searching cabins. Love this! We're in the process of building a small hunting cabin on our 5 acres, just a basic one-room cabin with no loft or anything, and no fireplace. I do love your fireplace...even though it's not practical for us to add one, we will have a wood stove at least. We have a fire pit outside - gotta have that!! LOL
78yr old countyboy. Unsplit wood burns slower. Save a ash bucket of ash to bed over your fire to hold the fire through the night. In the morning open the fire and add fresh kindling to get your fire back up. Save a fresh bucket of ash for your coming night fire.
This place is so awesome and your stories makes it all come alive.
Thank you!
Dude, I am so jealous of you for the beautiful cabin you have built! Great job!😊
You have a great week as well and a safe and happy holiday with good food and fellowship!!
I so enjoyed this video Jerry! Thank you for thinking with so much creativity.
You have a really nice house and have done such a nice job. I would like to have something similar. I like the old timey feeling your house has, you have done well making it a reality.
You are so so lucky to be able to live this way. Dad used to chop fire wood all summer long so we could live the same way you are now. We had a small house though not a cabbin. Keep on doing it brother. Thanks for the memories 👍👍
Very nice fireplace! I thought stone had some heat retention but to keep the cabin near 60 all night, that is great!
I'm ready to fire up my wood stove for the winter. I have one with a glass door, as you mentioned, it is so nice to see the fire.
What amazing life style.
Love from Scotland 🏴
Welcome Scotland!
Love the fireplace just so perfect rustic and yes it heats very well thank you for the video Glenn from Massachusetts
The fire looks so nice and warm thank you for sharing
Your welcome
Most cabins back in the day with families, everyone took turns on fire detail during cold nights. Us kids used to takes turns filling the Ben Franklin when we all lived in a one room cabin.
Found your channel within the last week and spent a couple of days watching most of your video's. I love everything about it. I hope to catch one of your party's one day because I'd love to see it first hand. Also found you on facebook and sent you a friends request thank you for accepting. I am enjoying your video's and find your lifestyle not just intriguing but wholesome. The way our society functions today we've lost that sense of how to be self sufficient and self reliant. As well as our sense of innocents and purity. In my humble opinion I don't think the "progress" we have made over the years has really helped us a society in whole. I say that knowing I've never had to live your lifestyle so what do I know. Looking forward to your next video.
This was an absolutely great way to relax. I didn’t sleep well last night so I’m relaxed enough to try a nap thank you for a great video. I liked, commented and subscribed. Maybe I’ll try to catch a video on an evening.
Thank you great vid and I never get tired of looking at your beautiful cabin
Loved your video and your log cabin. Thank you for sharing.
Sometime of the old building built all the way around a central masornary stack to increase the heating abilty. Neat exsperiment. Curtains do help to con serve heat longer in small areas.
Couldn't agree with you more about the ambience of an open fire! I live in a totally modern home, but when I was looking to buy a home, a WOOD BURNING fireplace was at the top of my 'must have' list of ammenities...in fact, I told the real estate agent to not even bother to show me a house without a wood burning fireplace. My extended family never misses an opportunity to point out the inefficiencies of an open fire place, (all that ash, soot, and inevitable smoke smell) but they all seem to gravitate toward it on Christmas when there is a nice fire burning! I also utilize my fire place to dabble in a bit of wood fire cooking, so I thoroughly enjoy it.
!"all that ash, soot, and inevitable smoke smell" has literally put me off haha
I appreciate your stories with the history interwoven. In particular the mentioning of using a rock heated by the fire. It triggered a memory of my grandfather bringing in a hot rock from the earlier campsite fire in a wool sock at some point in the night. He didn't wake me up and give me the sock to hold it my chest. He put it outside the sleeping bag in my lower back area. His theory was the kidneys have the blood filter through them continuously doing there thing. Warm the area, warm the body. It worked.
I heat my place with a wood stove. I grew up in NJ currently in N. CA. Keto may cat and myself also enjoy a cooler sleeping climate. Cold to me is 2 degrees F for the high. Thanks for making these videos
Great memories!!
Just as the wool blanket boar hides were used in Europe to prevent stray embers and sparks from burning the house down. You can easily do the same with domestic pig hides if boar populations aren't high enough in your area.
Plus: boar hides are bristly and tough; they are easy to clean and last forever.
Downside; wool is infinitely more cosy and soft
Perfect video for a sick day!
One of the big turning points in the transition from the medieval period to the early modern age was the invention of the chimney. Before that, a home's fire would simply be on the dirt floor and it would have made the house really smokey and the fires were very small. The smoke would go out through openings at the end of each gable and filter through the thatched roofs. It was messy and stinky from so much smoke but that's how houses in Europe were for thousands of years before the invention of the chimney. The earliest example of a fireplace with a chimney in England dates to the late 12th century, but they didn't become common until the 16th century. It's a hallmark of the beginning of the early modern era.
I love the cabin and the fireplace beautiful
First time seeing your videos, I'd like to congratulate you on a fantastic job of building the fireplace. Im next door but on Lake Erie. So you know how cold it gets. My 1859 farm house had originally been built with a fireplace that had a bread oven in the kitchen with the hearth on the opposite side in the living room. I removed the "updates" and restored it to original. I was shocked to see how well it heated the house with the stone exposed again. They also added fireproof insulation over the steel on cement board. Then 2x2's drywalled over them. Literally robbed 80% of the radiant heat it produced. I moved a few years ago and now I'm using Parlor stoves mainly for heating. Two in a two story home is fine even if dips into the teens for a while. Adding insulation really improved things. Still looking for the cook stove.
But until then the Parlor stoves have a good cook surface and it is rather nice to put a pot of coffee on upstairs. I just need to work on lowering device so when I get up it's just about ready. There's nothing wrong with utilizing what we have, look at like an automatic timer we're so accustomed to now. Simple living has many terms. Thanks for the video it was very well done.
Thank you my friend. I enjoyed reading your story
As a small boy I would grab a pillow and a blanket and curl up in front of the fireplace.. it was better than the bed..
So very homey.. the warmth the ambien feels so good! I wish I was as talented as you.. thank you
Thank you
2 sets of Grandparents relied solely on fire place heat well into the 90s. A few differences though, they used coal in combination with wood. Coal is essential in my opinion.
Get a fireback for that fireplace.
It's a cast iron piece that will hold the heat a bit longer and help to direct a lot of it into the house instead of up the chimney.
Also.
The reason so many old homes had fireplaces on the outside was because of chimney fires.
It was significantly easier to pull a burning chimney down when it was an external addon instead of built into the home itself.
a burning chimney ? as in burning all the way up ?
Enjoyed the video. I thought for sure your dog would be laying in front of the fire all night. Mine always did. I’ve seen her wake up in the morning steaming and immediately start panting. 😅
We had a cast iron stove and she would lay close
vraiment une belle place ^^
I recently found your videos and I dream of a place just like this some day. To live alone and lead a simple life. Thank you for sharing and inspiring me to follow my dream!
Your very welcome. It is so very rewarding
He also belived as you do , that a fire place belongs in the middle of the house ( or theirs about ) as he would put it . I really wish I would have tried this on an inside fire , because I don't have access to a fireplace now , and I haven't thought about it a very long time . Your video made me remember this encounter with a really interesting old man , who loved a good fire ! He obviously knew what he was talking about , it works outside . Thank you so much! Oh and you got a new subscriber .
Just found this channel. Very interesting and informative. Thank you for sharing. Hope you enjoy your Sunday dinner with your family. Be well and warm
That draft is nice actually. Like fresh hot tea over ice and that first drink is a mix of hot and cold. Or the first cold breeze going outside.
Rumsford,, a contemporary of Ben Franklin, designed a fairly efficient configuration of a fireplace, firebox, throat, smoke shelf. A proper Rumsford fireplace is about 20% efficient. You are absolutely correct,, fireplaces should be inside the insulated structure. A proper saltbox or colonial home, the fireplaces were in the center of the home. Multiple hearths and flues all within a single large masonry core,,, again, you are correct,, once the masonry core is warm the house tends to stay warm. Worked on the old houses,, built modern equals, lived in them. One a large home, 3,000 plus square feet, one fireplace, one wood stove (separate flues, common chimney) ,,, the convention gas fired furnace died one winter,, it required 3 months to get the parts for repair. The fireplace worked fine for those three months in Michigan
Another awesome video, thanks for the cozy feeling your video brings.
Your welcome
Rumsford fireplaces are actually about 30% efficient. They throw a lot of radiant heat due to the angled designs.
Your pajamas are adorable!
Aww, thanks!
It’s a beautiful fireplace and I agree it belongs inside. Nothing like cozying up by a open fire..
Poor Mans TV! Love a fire !
Russian / German Mass thermal stoves are the most efficient house heaters before the introduction of Gas. Thermal mas gives off a steady slow release of heat.
.... Years ago, I had a woodburning Fireplace at a home I rented, it was in a step down den area of the house and I actually moved my bed to that area, ( it was a decent sized room ) for the fall and winter , so I could have the fire on all night. It was sooool warm, and I slept great, I don't sleep well when I'm cold, lol. I had gas ( central heating) but I only used it in the winter , if it was under 48 at night, along with the Fireplace. It cycled very little, because the house was kept quite warm with the Fireplace.
This cabin is perfect. I like the age and the look so comfy.
I’ve been trying to find a cabin builder for 4.5 yrs, it’s hard. I’ve got land galore just wish I was out of the city! I love your channel. 😊
Thank you❤️
Surprised how your house stayed around 60degf. That's what I keep my house in the winter, and for me that's perfect sleeping temp because I like a big pile of blankets including an old down comforter. Beautiful.
I would definitely get a nice big screen however. That's just me..
I have a hunting cabin on our farm. It has no electricity, or water. We had a cast iron stove which worked well, but had to be read fed in the early hours. We replaced it with a rocket mass heater. It burns a fifth of the wood and provides steady heat all night.
Mentally I would have to get used to the idea that there is a fire still going when I tried to go to sleep. I might have a few sleepless nights. Do you have a fire alarm and CO detector in the cabin? Great experiment!
Nice video man - loving the cabin!
Thanks!!
awesome prefect cabin, love the past time setting and accessories and setup
perfect sleeping temp
Such a beautiful cabin, very cozy
Overstuffed rocking chair in front of a fireplace. Best seat in the house! I can’t live without one and I live in Louisiana!
Great to find this channel. I live in Lisbon Ohio too and yes it’s getting cold!
Aww, welcome welcoming!
Love this. I bet their homemade pajamas and clothes were a lot thicker and warmer also.
I bet your right
This content is gold! Thank you for sharing this! What cameras do you have set up? The ones that shot the porch and different points around the cabin?
Thank you! I used a panasonic hc-x1500 4k pro for the good shots and GoPro for the rest
@@logcabinlifestyle great B roll!
Thank you! I had to google “what is B roll?” Well now I know. Thank you
What a great channel, subscribed.
Thank you!
A fireplace like that will freeze you to death unless you lay next to it whereas a woodstove will heat the entire cabin. When my parents built the homeplace when I was a kid , the fireplace was designed with a heat chamber connected to the duct work . The thermostat could be set on fan mode and distribute heat all throughout the house as if the Central unit was on.
They work great if you don't mind getting up around 2am and loading it up again!
GREAT VIDEO!!!!!!!!!!
Thank you
I agree, the fireplace has its place. Yours is stunning! Many of the houses in New Hampshire have Count Rumpford fireplaces in varied sizes. At one point they were deemed illegal, I believe because of the small slit flu design, but they are extremely efficient. My neighbor some years ago built a fireplace similar to yours with a bee hive oven in his kitchen. He had a central chimney. There was a large soap stone stove in the dining toom, a small Rumpford fireplace in the living room and a kitchen wood stove at the far end of the kitchen. He copied his Cape Cod house from a colonial design. All the rooms opened into each other. There were two bedrooms upstairs. We blew off an anvil when he had the house raising in the late 1970s. You are well on your way to producing a piece of living history.
This fireplace produce enough heat for some small medieval castle :)))
Could you add some sort of glass cover over the front which allows external air supply when you're sleeping and not enjoying full access to the fire
You could and it would produce way more heat but could come more dangerous because as the structure heats up, there’s potential of catching the structure of the house on fire. i’ve seen this to be the case more often than chimney fires itself.
This is exactly how I imagine my cosy house would look like ❤ perfect I could sit and watch that fire all day long 😁 nice pyjamas by the way 😉
Just wondering, have you seen or installed a heat exchanger on heat a lator (not sure of the correct name) in stone fireplace? Wonder if that would give a little more heat. You've done an awesome job on everything. I'm about to build a cabin similar to yours and can't imagine it without a stone fireplace.
Yes, I do know what they are and have installed them. Yes they would give off a little more heat but in the end it’s more about heat loss. The heat that gets sucked up the chimney. I do have the pot belly and a wood furnace in the basement. Both heat better than the fireplace. The stone fireplace just makes the cabin and this channel
@@logcabinlifestyle thanks alot. I have 3 woodstoves on standby to choose from. One is a Queen Bengal cook stove. After seeing yours I think that's a must
Good idea. I love the wood fired cook stoves
Sweet dreams😊 that is what I'd tell my children when they were little.
If you need consistent warm temps safely then you need a woodburner using your existing chimney. It's not like it would require much. Open fires don't make sense indoors.
Yes, me too!
It would be great to see a a vid using the cook stove as heat over night
My house in the UK is not old 110 years the fireplace is on the inside and the 2 rooms up stairs that are above the main fireplace also have a fireplace in each roomconnected to the same chimney.
And this my friend is how most chimneys were built until we started heating with other means. Then they pushed them outside to save room inside.