Troubadour Wood Stove Manual «Web»

So go now. Split your wood. Check your draft. Strike the match.

Warning: Do not burn trash, treated lumber, or driftwood. These are dissonant chords that release toxins. The Troubadour sings only the honest song of the forest. Troubadour Wood Stove Manual

Why a wood stove in the age of electricity? Because the Troubadour offers something a heat pump cannot: process. You will get cold carrying wood. You will get dirty cleaning ash. You will wake at 3 AM to reload the belly. But in exchange, you will witness the alchemy of log into light. You will hear the crackle of lignin burning—the oldest music on earth. So go now

You would not ask a troubadour to play a heavy metal riff on a lute. Likewise, do not feed this stove green pine or wet oak. —oak, hickory, or maple—split and dried for at least one summer. The moisture content must be below 20%. Wet wood produces not heat, but creosote: the tar of a poorly sung ballad. It will coat your flue, dampen your spirits, and invite chimney fires. Strike the match

May your fire be hot, your flue be clean, and your home sing with the warmth of a thousand forgotten suns.

The mica window will darken. This is the fire’s way of telling you it is grieving—grieving from wet wood or a closed damper. To clear the glass and the conscience, open the Lute fully for twenty minutes. Let the heat scour the soot. A clear window means a clean conscience and a clean flue.