Even though my brother tells me that free advice is usually worth what you pay for it, here goes my 2 cents, OK?
We've been heating with wood, and even a little coal, for around 40 years. Have used a great variety of stoves, some good, some bad, some dangerous...
The main, number 1, all-important rule, IMHO, is: Burn seasoned wood.
We put up a woodshed years ago. The next Spring, the
local carpenter I'd hired to help build the thing had one too.. He said, "I thought about you a lot last winter." Me: (Shocked) You DID? Carpenter: Yeah, every time I moved the woodpile tarp, and the snowmelt water ran into my
boot. Me: (Whew)...
The farther you can get ahead on your wood supply, the better off you'll be. It's like money in the bank... I was in an industrial accident some years back, broke my leg. Late October found me with no wood. The neighbors all pitched in, came around, cut wood and piled it. Was OK, but not high quality, nor to the right length... Taught me a lesson, get ahead at least a year It'll take time, it's a LOT of work, but it's worth it. When it's sleeting and snowing, and the cold wind is blowing, you can not, in my opinion, beat the ambiance of a woodshed that is stacked to the gills with dry firewood. We never know when misfortune may strike, sickness or accident. Once you get a nice, year or two supply, you will know that, as long as you can get wood to the stove in the winter, you'll stay warm.
Oh, and wood doesn't cure until it's split. Not much anyway.
Learn proper felling techniques, and always, always chain the tree just above the cut area to prevent splitting while felling.
Good luck!