Yes driftwood will burn if it's dry. Will produce pretty colours because of the chemicals added by the sea. However the salt content (in conjunction with heat) can cause problems with metal. It's safest to burn your driftwood on the beach - if allowed. Not a good idea to use lots of it in your metal wood burner or if you have a metal parts to your chimney. Caution! Dioxin is produced when salt water driftwood is burned. It's the byproduct of burning wood and sodium chloride (salt). Dioxin is a persistent toxin, doesn't biodegrade, rather it accumulates in the tissue of any animal that digests it.
Well.. By A Stove?
No it is not safe to burn it.
A saucepan has to have a metal body so that it can withstand the heat of the stove and not burn up, and the wooden handle allows you to pick it up without burning your hand (wood conducts heat much more poorly than metal does).
Don't sit on it.
Not at all you would burn your self and your grave would say u listened to the computer
I can't
Driftwood
no, everyone burns fuel by turning on the stove you burn fuel
The bricks are fire bricks that isolate the flame from the surrounding metal of the stove. Missing bricks will cause hot spots in the firebox. Over time the excessive heat will start to break down the metal and may eventually lead to a burn through. This will render your wood stove unusable as combustion air will be drawn in through the hole. This will lead to no control over the flame as there is now by using the control damper.
If you put your face on a hot stove, it WILL burn. It will also burn if you keep it over hot steam/smoke or a fire for a few minutes. Moral of the story question: Don't try to put your face on or directly above a stove.
Same reason you don`t stick metal into a toaster