Wood or electric, be safe with your heating systems
OSBURN –– Don’t want to see your holidays go up in smoke? Neither do fire responders in Shoshone County.
According to Shoshone County Fire District No. 1 Chief John Miller, his agency is dispatched numerous times each year during the holidays due to someone not following simple safety rules or properly maintaining their wood heating systems.
During the winter months, many calls that come for electrical fires are due to people improperly running space heaters.
“We see about the same rate of causes between wood fires and electrical heating devices,” Miller said. “Electrical can be mostly attributed to folks using extension cords or power strips for their space heaters. These devices need to be plugged directly into the wall outlet and space kept clear around the heater.”
Maintaining wood stoves and fireplaces can be trickier, but according to Miller the best place to start is the chimney.
He said the most common cause of chimney fires is creosote buildup from burning wood in a wood stove or fireplace. Creosote is a flammable, tar-like residue that forms when smoke from a wood fire condenses on the inside of a chimney.
“As creosote builds up it can block the flue and catch fire from a floating ember or the heat from a fire,” Miller said. “Chimney fires can burn through the chimney liner and spread to other parts of the home.”
During the holidays, it may seem like a good idea to put your used wrapping paper in the wood stove, but this is not a good idea. The ink on wrapping paper may give off dangerous toxins when ignited and the burning paper creates embers that could potentially ignite creosote in the chimney.
Chimneys should be cleaned annually, but if you can’t get a professional, the local fire departments have supplies to assist you.
“Locally, both departments have multiple shapes and sizes of chimney brushes available free to loan to our public,” Miller said. “We won’t clean your chimney for you, but we do offer the equipment needed for cleaning.”
If a fire does occur, even if you believe you put it out yourself, call 911 so professionals can confirm it’s out.
“Both departments have thermal imaging cameras to look for hot spots in attics and places hard to reach or see,” Miller said.