
Wood & Pellet Safety Tips
Wood Burning - Fire Prevention Tips
Being good to the environment also means making sure your fireplace habits are safe
and will not pose a danger to your home or your neighbourhood.
Remember:
- Clear the area around the fireplace and chimney. Debris too close to the
fireplace could cause a fire. Check the flue for obstructions like birds' nests,
and trim any overhanging branches or large trees near the chimney.
- Always use a fireplace screen.
- Never overload the fireplace with too many logs. Don't use the fireplace as
an incinerator, and never burn garbage, Christmas trees, or piles of paper.
- Keep a fire extinguisher on hand and place smoke detectors throughout the house.
Test the smoke detectors and batteries regularly. See that the extinguisher is in
good working order and that all family members know how to operate it.
- When building a fire, place logs at the rear of the fireplace, preferably on a grate.
- Never leave fire unattended. Be sure the fire is extinguished before you go to bed.
- Keep wood stacked, covered, and out-of-doors, away from the house and off
the ground. Bring in only as much as you need for one evening to prevent insects
that may be in the wood from entering your home. Manufactured Fire logs, which
are packaged to eliminate insects and mess, can also prevent this problem.
- Have your fireplace inspected annually and cleaned when necessary by a chimney
sweep certified by the Chimney Safety Institute of America. A dirty fireplace can
cause chimney fires and inhibit proper venting of smoke up the flue.
Think Clean
- Have your fireplace inspected and cleaned annually by a National Chimney Sweep
Guild Certified chimney sweep. A dirty fireplace can cause chimney fires or
contribute to air pollution. Your local NCSG-certified chimney sweep will diagnose
your fireplace and recommend what it needs in order to burn cleanly and safely.
- Choose the right fuel. In general, hardwood firewood (oak, madrone, hickory,
ash, etc.) burns cleaner than softwood firewood (fir, pine, cedar, etc.).
Independent tests (conducted by Shelton Research Labs, Santa Fe, NM) have
proven that manufactured fire logs burn much cleaner than firewood.
- Use seasoned wood, wood with a moisture content of less than 20 percent, burns
much cleaner than green (high moisture content) wood. Check with your cordwood
supplier to make sure that the wood you purchase is seasoned.
- Burn smartly. Good fireplace habits can decrease fuel consumption in the home
while maintaining the same level of warmth. Make sure the fire gets enough air to
burn properly. Close the damper when the fire is out to keep warm room air inside.
- Minimize creosote build-up which causes chimney fires. Creosote is the black
tarry or flaky substance formed in chimneys during the wood burning process.
While firewood leaves flammable creosote and carbon deposits on chimney wells,
tests show fire logs leave significantly less creosote accumulation than wood.
- Make a fire that fits your fireplace. A fire that's too large or too hot not only
wastes fuel, it can crack your chimney.
- Keep your fireplace in good working condition. If you notice any cracks in the
chimney, and any loose mortar or brick, have your chimney repaired. Have the
chimney liner inspected for cracking or deterioration.
- Read and follow the label when using fire logs. Use one fire log at a time, starting
it with a fireplace at room temperature. Don't poke or break manufactured logs.
This will cause them to crack apart, releasing their energy at a high rate and
resulting in a shorter burn time. Fire logs perform best when burned on a
supporting fireplace grate with a maximum of three to four inches of space
between support bars.
- If your fireplace is equipped with glass doors, leave them open while burning a
fire log to allow proper draught and cleaner burning. Once you're sure the fire
is extinguished, close the damper and glass doors to retain warm air inside
the house.
Hearth, Patio & Barbecue Association of Canada · PO Box 5422 · Huntsville · Ontario · Canada · P1H 2K8
Tel 1-800-792-5284 (Canada only) · 705-788-2221 · Fax 705-788-0255 ·
hpbac@bellnet.ca