no. It is very harsh. fire.
AnswerThough willow is considered a hardwood, it doesn't burn as well as some other hardwoods that burn well in fireplaces, such as apple, beech, eucalyptus, hickory, maple, oak, and more.Additional response -It depends upon what you mean by good. Seasoned (dried) Willow will burn just fine in your fireplace. It has about half of the energy per volume that a harder wood like Oak, Beech, and Hickory have. So you will have to burn almost twice as much Willow to provide the same heat as the harder woods. But if it is properly seasoned, it will burn nicely, not smoke, and not risk excess creosote buildup.There will also be more ash to clean up, but, at the end of the day, if you have seasoned Willow available to burn, burn it.
Almost as amenable as ash
quite good to burn indeed!
they are $80.95 for a good sized tree! :O
of course dum head
Not as good as maple, but, yes, I suppose
Yes, if you have a fireplace designed for a mobile home, and it is in good condition.
pine is not good ans it is a softwood and will burn too fast and coat the flue with creosote.
pine is not good ans it is a softwood and will burn too fast and coat the flue with creosote.
No, it is not very good firewood. It's actually a softwood, like spruce, as opposed to a hardwood, like oak or maple - so it doesn't burn very cleanly. Not only will you probably see more smoke with willow (and more creosote build-up), but the amount of heat it produces is significantly low. Hope that helps!
No, it's very poisonous.
Yes, you can burn apple wood in a fireplace. It generates very little smoke and hotter than normal firewood. It is a good heat output with a small visible flame and ideal for wood-fire. It is a safely and efficiently burned in fireplace.