Given the current economic state of affairs we are all looking for ways to conserve energy. One very frequently overlooked place of wasted heat is up the chimney.

As light winds move across the top of the chimney a negative pressure is created on the chimney causing it to literally suck heat out of the house. If you open a window or door, or increase the wind speed, the flow is dramatically increased. When the damper is completely missing, as it was in the fireplace pictured above, the waste of heat is continual-----you are literally heating the whole outdoors. This picture is looking up inside the fire box to where the damper is supposed to be.
Even with proper dampers in place, this can still be a place where much heat is lost from the home.
Having glass door enclosures installed can help a lot, but remember----many of these have air intakes at the bottom that provide combustion air to the fireplace. If they are left open when the fireplace is not in use they can still allow heat to be drawn up the chimney.
If you "really" want to waste a lot of energy (unless it is your only means of heating the home) actually use the fireplace. Fireplaces, during use, without proper glass enclosures, suck tremendous volumes of air from the home. This is why rooms away from the fireplace become so much colder than the room the fireplace is in. While some fireplace designs provide less waste than others, they are no match for more modern methods of heating.
As long as we are going to stick with the notion of "central heating" as opposed to "specific location" heating (hot stones and water bottles under the blanket), we are sort of stuck with central heating.
When the kids and I used to go camping at the beach it was always fun to build a fire on the beach and then take one of the hot rocks back to the tent and put it in the end of our sleeping bags. Did you ever notice how when you are camping and you are nice and warm in your sleeping bag and then when you wake up in the morning the inside of the tent is dripping with the condensation created from breathing during the night? The same principle happens in your home when the whole home isn't heated evenly.
I would go so far as to say that maintaining uniform temperatures in homes is essential to maintaining a healthy indoor environment. Due to what can happen from adverse moisture conditions in today's energy efficient and "tight" homes, wildly fluctuating temperatures within the home will lead to mold growth inside the home---- and is therefore considered bad juju by most authorities.
Is your fireplace damper opened or closed right now?
Charles Buell
PS, for those of you that are new to my blog (or for some other "unexplained" reason have never noticed)
all pictures and smiley-face inserts (emoticons) (when I use them) have messages that show up when you point at them with your cursor.
MEMBERS OF ACTIVE RAIN CAN EASILY SUBSCRIBE
TO MY BLOG BY CLICKING ON THE NUMBER PLATE!


You got me curious the title of your blog. This is very good info to remember when paying extra for that fireplace that with use will cost you even more.
I like sleeping in a sleeping bag in my tent. Never thought to do the hot rocks trick though...
kk