As a bit of an experiment I have just cooked my first batch of charcoal for use in my forge.
We are not talking large amounts here...
I had a lot of small wood left over after trimming my hedges this autumn.
The good sized wood goes for firewood in our livingroom Inglenook fire, small wood of decent stull such as ash goes for kindling - but I still had a pile of stuff the size of the Matterhorn made up of finger size and smaller mainly Hawthorn, Willow and Sycamore. Not bad for a small garden!
Now - I am a hoarder and have a large collection of biscuit and Sweety tins and after he saw my sweety tin fire stand Dr Jones (Roly) had the idea of such a tin being used to make charcoal...so I had a go last night!
I simply punched a hole in the lid of the tin with a 4" nail and then filled the tin with wood cut to size.
The full tin was placed on the livingroom fire while we watched QI and QI XL and when we went to bed the tin was removed from the embers of the fire, a nail stuck in the hole and the tin left to its own devices overnight.
This morning I opened the tin (a difficult task as it had welded itself shut with woodtar!) and there was my charcoal!
A perfect 100% black charcoal - no brown at all - ready to go
Now all I have to do is make about 10 more loads and I will have enough to fill my forge (made from a Wok!) for a mornings forgeing.
OK it is not ecconomical in time and effort cuting the wood - but I have more free time than loose cash and the satisfaction of not wasting the wood in a "rubbish burn" to spread the ashes on the garden (there will still be loads for this from the smallest twigs that I left behind), combined with saving money on fuel for the forge (which due to injury will be unused for some time yet - god bless all physiotherapists! - so I have time to build up my charcoal pile...) and the fun of it all makes it all very worth while!
In the past I have made Willow charcoal for glue making in the same way but in my charcloth oven - a syrup tin - and was not sure if the larger tin would work out.
I am pleased to say that it is excellent and I will keep on doing this in the future!
We are not talking large amounts here...
I had a lot of small wood left over after trimming my hedges this autumn.
The good sized wood goes for firewood in our livingroom Inglenook fire, small wood of decent stull such as ash goes for kindling - but I still had a pile of stuff the size of the Matterhorn made up of finger size and smaller mainly Hawthorn, Willow and Sycamore. Not bad for a small garden!
Now - I am a hoarder and have a large collection of biscuit and Sweety tins and after he saw my sweety tin fire stand Dr Jones (Roly) had the idea of such a tin being used to make charcoal...so I had a go last night!
I simply punched a hole in the lid of the tin with a 4" nail and then filled the tin with wood cut to size.
The full tin was placed on the livingroom fire while we watched QI and QI XL and when we went to bed the tin was removed from the embers of the fire, a nail stuck in the hole and the tin left to its own devices overnight.
This morning I opened the tin (a difficult task as it had welded itself shut with woodtar!) and there was my charcoal!
A perfect 100% black charcoal - no brown at all - ready to go
Now all I have to do is make about 10 more loads and I will have enough to fill my forge (made from a Wok!) for a mornings forgeing.
OK it is not ecconomical in time and effort cuting the wood - but I have more free time than loose cash and the satisfaction of not wasting the wood in a "rubbish burn" to spread the ashes on the garden (there will still be loads for this from the smallest twigs that I left behind), combined with saving money on fuel for the forge (which due to injury will be unused for some time yet - god bless all physiotherapists! - so I have time to build up my charcoal pile...) and the fun of it all makes it all very worth while!
In the past I have made Willow charcoal for glue making in the same way but in my charcloth oven - a syrup tin - and was not sure if the larger tin would work out.
I am pleased to say that it is excellent and I will keep on doing this in the future!
