For all your Montana Masonry Heater parts (also known as) Rocket Mass heater parts.
Visit me at
dragontechrmh.com
Creating sustainable life, beauty & food (with lots of kids and fun)
Annette Henry wrote:I'm down in Missouri and honestly I was hoping for a tree/s to do multiple things. Locusts are a bee forage plant and my daughter is starting a bee business beginning with getting plants to support her future hives. I figured a few trees, along with coppicing, would also provide wood for our RMH.
Thanks for the advice! I'm not a huge fan of thorns, but I plan on cutting the saplings in the 1 to 2 inch sizes for the RMH. I don't plan on letting the trees get too big at all. If I did, well that would be far too much work for a couple of older people and a half gimpy daughter.
My daughter broke her leg in a scooter accident, ( the old couple didn't bother to look and pulled into a parking spot as she was coming down the lane, GRH!) and it was in a bad place so it didn't really heal. It will always give her trouble. I'm doing my best to make good decisions about making things easier for all of us as we get older. With coppicing, I'll only have to use a branch cutter to harvest our fire wood.
o.
Annette Henry wrote:BRAINS!! BRAINS!!! AHAH HA HA HA HA!
Others call them Osage Oranges. As I was told by you wonderful people, I found them on the side of the road, or rather, in the hedge that separates my old community garden from the road! I now have enough 'apples' that I can probably get at least 100 trees for free! *happy dance* Free is always better, and the fact that these trees/bushes are top notch firewood trees has me cackling with glee. Thanks so much!
Every noble work is at first impossible. - Thomas Carlyle / tiny ad
the permaculture bootcamp in winter (plus half-assed holidays)
https://permies.com/t/149839/permaculture-projects/permaculture-bootcamp-winter-assed-holidays
|