Wood-based heating products company in the UK? Lekto Woodfuels Ltd is a family company founded with an aim to simplify the existing wood fuel market for customers. We focus on making the wood fuel purchase process less overwhelming, easier, faster, and more pleasant. We are devoted to providing our customers with the finest wood fuels available. This is accomplished by employing our knowledge of the wood fuel industry, and carefully following wood fuel industry developments, not only on a national level, but also with the rest of Europe. See extra info on www.lektowoodfuels.co.uk.
As recently as early February, we believed that wood fuel prices could be maintained at their current levels. We foresaw a further spike in demand as more and more Britons rediscovered wood heat after Ofgem raised the energy price cap, but that was something we were more than capable of handling as a market leader. What we didn’t expect was that one dictator’s ambitions would trigger the worst war in Europe since World War II. If you ever bought cheap firewood or briquettes at your local supermarket, chances are you could thank logs from either Russia, Belarus, or Ukraine for keeping you warm.
Log Moisture Meter Readings: What Is Normal? Moisture meter readings of between 12% and 18% indicate dry, safe to burn firewood. Readings below 12% indicate superlative quality firewood. Readings over 20%-25% indicate firewood that is not safe to burn. There is a wide selection of log moisture meters on the market. Consumer solutions range in price between £15 and £60, whereas commercial options used by professionals can cost hundreds of pounds. In general, we recommend you avoid wood meters at the very low end of the market as they rarely provide accurate readings. You can expect to pay between £30 and £50 for a high-quality consumer-grade moisture meter from an established brand like Bosch.
Gathering around your town’s biggest bonfire on Guy Fawkes Night as a child. Cooking up a lovely campfire breakfast as a teenager. Or sitting in front of the chiminea at a garden party with your closest friends as an adult. If you’re like most people in Britain, chances are these are some of your fondest memories. Let’s just face it. The UK is a nation of pyromaniacs. And with the days getting warmer, chances are you will be building an outdoor fire soon. And to make sure you don’t run afoul of the law as you do so, we wrote this article.
How to Tell Hardwood From Softwood Firewood? Hardwood trees are slow-growing trees that have a seasonal life cycle and typically have broad and flat leaves, which they lose during the autumn. Softwoods, on the other hand, are usually fast-growing, evergreen trees that don’t produce flowers, have needle-like leaves, and have their seeds enclosed in cones.