As fuel prices rise, wood banks anticipate more demand this winter.

  • Volunteers participate in Wood for Warmth at the Hopkinton-Webster Transfer Station in Hopkinton on Saturday, Nov. 18, 2017. BELOW: A log splitter is used to make firewood. Monitor file photos

  • A log splitter is used to make firewood at the Hopkinton-Webster Transfer Station in Hopkinton on Saturday, Nov. 18, 2017. Elizabeth Frantz

  • Redhawks football player Jonathan McMahon (center), 14, of Hillsboro and Roger Brown of St. Augustine, Fla., stack wood during the Wood for Warmth work day at the Hopkinton-Webster Transfer Station in Hopkinton on Saturday, Nov. 18, 2017. (ELIZABETH FRANTZ / Monitor staff) Elizabeth Frantz

  • Redhawks football player Jonathan McMahon (center), 14, of Hillsboro and Roger Brown of St. Augustine, Fla., stack wood during the Wood for Warmth work day at the Hopkinton-Webster Transfer Station in Hopkinton on Saturday, Nov. 18, 2017. (ELIZABETH FRANTZ / Monitor staff) Elizabeth Frantz

  • In this photo taken Wednesday Jan. 8, 2014, stacks of wood are seen at the town transfer station in Hopkinton, N.H. Like a food bank, several communities in northern New England run by church groups, social services agencies and towns, have set up wood piles for needy residents to get wood through the cold winters. (AP Photo/Jim Cole) Jim Cole

  • Roger Biron of Bow uses a chainsaw during the Wood for Warmth work day at the Hopkinton-Webster Transfer Station in Hopkinton on Saturday, Nov. 18, 2017. (ELIZABETH FRANTZ / Monitor staff) Elizabeth Frantz

Monitor staff
Published: 10/15/2022 4:33:58 PM

As temperatures dip below freezing this time of year, wood banks throughout the state are calling for volunteers to help them stock firewood for the winter months.

Each year, the state’s wood banks aim to secure enough wood to help community members stay warm. But, there is one difference this year – with the growing price of fuel, the demand for firewood is expected to soar.

To help keep up with the demand, the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Forest Service has awarded $712,000 to the Alliance for Green Heat, a nonprofit organization that pushes for cleaner and more efficient use of wood heat. The organization will provide grants between $5,000 and $15,000 to support firewood banks this winter.

Applications for the grants will open on Oct. 17.

“We want to make sure that wood banks have enough money to buy chaps, the special pants you wear when cutting firewood, and enough equipment so that you can process more of the wood,” said Alliance for Green Heat Founder and President John Ackerly.

Mary Congoran, the organizer of the Wood for Warmth program and the Sean Powers Wood Bank in Hopkinton, said it was a wonderful surprise when she heard about the generous grants that will be offered to wood banks. She hopes the grants will help secure firewood as a heating source to more communities.

Wood banks, such as the one Congoran operates, rely heavily on volunteer labor and donations to cut, split, season, and deliver firewood to local households that can’t afford to buy more.

One of the volunteers is Joyce Rose, the secretary of the Contoocook Carry Community Fund. Rose and her husband work as loggers. Each year, they lend their trucks and men to deliver wood to homes. She noted that orders for firewood have increased this year.

“I believe that because of the increased cost of fuel, a lot of people will rely on wood more than they have in previous years,” Rose said.

Melissa Gallagher, executive director of The Grapevine, a community center that operates a wood bank in Hillsborough County said the grants could help them expand their capacity to accept different types of wood.

“We don’t have our own wood splitter,” said Gallagher. “But if we had the funds to buy a wood splitter, we could potentially be receiving larger logs that could then be cut here on site.”

Wood banks will be able to ramp up their efforts to provide firewood this winter with the funding, but Ackerly wants to ensure safety is not overlooked.

“We are going to make sure each group has a moisture meter to test the moisture of wood and determine whether it’s properly seasoned,” said Ackerly.

The ideal moisture content for firewood is less than 20%. Burning wood with higher moisture content is a safety hazard because it produces more smoke and creosote, which can cause a chimney fire.

Wood Banks in the State

■Sean Powers Wood Bank, Hopkinton, 603-568-2783

■The Grapevine Community Wood Bank, Antrim,603-588-7154

■Wood Ministry at Kearsarge Presbyterian Church, 603-526-4800

■Peterborough Community Wood Bank, Peterborough, 603-924-6800

■Warner Community Wood Bank, Warner, 603-456-3303


Sruthi Gopalakrishnan

Sruthi Gopalakrishnan covers environmental and energy stories in Bow, Hopkinton, Dunbarton and Warner for the Concord Monitor. In 2022, she graduated from Northwestern University with a master's degree in journalism, specializing in investigative reporting. She also has a bachelor's degree in Computer Science and Engineering and is always looking for new ways to incorporate data and visual elements into her stories. Her work has appeared in Energy News Network, Prism Reports and Crain's Chicago Business.

Stay informed with our free email updates
Concord Monitor Daily Headlines
Concord Monitor Breaking News
Concord Monitor Dining & Entertainment
Concord Monitor Report For America Education
Concord Monitor Report For America Health
Concord Monitor Real Estate
Concord Monitor Sports
Concord Monitor Suncook Valley
Concord Monitor Contests & Promotions
Concord Monitor Weekly Most Popular
Concord Monitor Granite Geek
Concord Monitor Monitor Marquee
Concord Monitor Hopkinton
Concord Monitor Politics
Concord Monitor MY CONCORD
Concord Monitor Franklin
 


Concord Monitor Office

1 Monitor Drive
Concord,NH 03301
603-224-5301

 

© 2021 Concord Monitor
Terms & Conditions - Privacy Policy

Customer Service


Social Media

News

View All Sections

Part of the Newspapers of New England Family