Hi, all,
Are you guys interested in pursuing a major new market for your grains?
I used to sell corn-fired heating stoves that would heat a fair sized house on slightly over a bushel of corn per day. Cheaply, in most years.
We used to say that we could beat the price of any heating system but gas - or wood that you cut yourself (southwestern Ontario). There are quite a large number of wood-burning heaters around here. But with gas, you hook up to the end of the pipe and pay your bill at the end of the month. Lazy person's dream.
A corn stove, similarly to a wood-fired one, must have corn hauled into the house to feed it. One has to pry a clinker out of the small firebox oftener than once a day, not a difficult task, but someone has to do it. So it must be an alternative heating system for any but dairy farmers, who must be at home twice daily.
A friend, who sold the first corn stoves in this area 12 years ago, is a sharp cookie and built his own stove, the only one to carry several patents and is certified - to burn wheat and rye as well as corn. It's been in operation for 8 years, with very few glitches and minimal demands for maintenance.
Those stoves should have been well received on the prairies where there are few hardwood trees to cut for fuel and natural gas is seldom available in rural areas. His budget didn't allow for major marketing programs.
With the increased price for gas and fears that it will go higher, we ask people why they would buy a heating unit where you must buy fuel from a member of an international cartel, when they can buy one that allows them to buy fuel from any of a hundred thousand farmers - and the operations of the international grain cartel will ensure that the cost of their fuel remains low.
Any comments?
Ed Baker eddbaker@yahoo.com
P.S. Try www.grainstovesinc.com, tell them Ed Baker sent you. EB
Are you guys interested in pursuing a major new market for your grains?
I used to sell corn-fired heating stoves that would heat a fair sized house on slightly over a bushel of corn per day. Cheaply, in most years.
We used to say that we could beat the price of any heating system but gas - or wood that you cut yourself (southwestern Ontario). There are quite a large number of wood-burning heaters around here. But with gas, you hook up to the end of the pipe and pay your bill at the end of the month. Lazy person's dream.
A corn stove, similarly to a wood-fired one, must have corn hauled into the house to feed it. One has to pry a clinker out of the small firebox oftener than once a day, not a difficult task, but someone has to do it. So it must be an alternative heating system for any but dairy farmers, who must be at home twice daily.
A friend, who sold the first corn stoves in this area 12 years ago, is a sharp cookie and built his own stove, the only one to carry several patents and is certified - to burn wheat and rye as well as corn. It's been in operation for 8 years, with very few glitches and minimal demands for maintenance.
Those stoves should have been well received on the prairies where there are few hardwood trees to cut for fuel and natural gas is seldom available in rural areas. His budget didn't allow for major marketing programs.
With the increased price for gas and fears that it will go higher, we ask people why they would buy a heating unit where you must buy fuel from a member of an international cartel, when they can buy one that allows them to buy fuel from any of a hundred thousand farmers - and the operations of the international grain cartel will ensure that the cost of their fuel remains low.
Any comments?
Ed Baker eddbaker@yahoo.com
P.S. Try www.grainstovesinc.com, tell them Ed Baker sent you. EB
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