3 Ways Amish HEAT Their Homes

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Amish America

Amish America

Жыл бұрын

A look at how Amish heat their homes. I also explain the "Amish miracle heater". Get exclusive videos including the "Ben & Erik Show" here: / amishamerica
My name is Erik Wesner and I'm not Amish. Back in 2004, I met the Amish while selling books. Since then, I've visited 5,000+ Amish homes & dozens of Amish communities. My book on Amish business, Success Made Simple: An Inside Look at Why Amish Businesses Thrive, was published in 2010. I run the Amish America website: amishamerica.com/
Image credits: Don Burke (www.flickr.com/photos/ozarkin..., S.I., Karen Johnson-Weiner, amishfarmstay.com, Jerry in PA
Sources:
"Amish Space Heater: Is That an Oxymoron?" by Steven Kurutz, New York Times, Feb. 11, 2009
www.nytimes.com/2009/02/12/ga...
"We had to ask: What’s up with the Amish space heaters?" by Alana Semuels, Los Angeles Times, Feb. 3, 2009
"How Miraculous is the Amish Fireplace?" by David Wood, Consumer Affairs, Feb. 4, 2009
www.heatsurge.com/
Further info:
Living Without Electricity: Lessons from the Amish
by Stephen Scott & Kenneth Pellman
books.google.com/books/about/...

Пікірлер: 428
@teresaames972
@teresaames972 Жыл бұрын
I had a miracle heater. It was called a wood stove. Wood can heat you up 3 times. 1: when you cut and split it. 2: when you carry it in. 3: when you burn it. 🤣🤣🤣🔥🤭
@sandasturner9529
@sandasturner9529 Жыл бұрын
Don't forget #4 when you cook with it, and : #5 when you eat a nice, hot meal, cooked with/by the wood burning stove.
@ssgwright7419
@ssgwright7419 8 ай бұрын
🤣🤣🗣FACTS!!🤣🤣
@edwardgabriel5281
@edwardgabriel5281 8 ай бұрын
You forgot stacking it.
@savannahsmiles1797
@savannahsmiles1797 8 ай бұрын
@@sandasturner9529 and when you compost the ashes
@sandasturner9529
@sandasturner9529 8 ай бұрын
@@savannahsmiles1797 lol?
@jeaniemcdonald1301
@jeaniemcdonald1301 7 ай бұрын
After the freeze in Texas, we invested in a small wood stove. Our two storied home has a fireplace, but it never really heated our home. The new wood stove is awesome. It is vented out the back, through the fireplace. That little wood stove heats the entire first floor in no time, and I can cook on it. A total win, win.
@charlottewalker6490
@charlottewalker6490 6 ай бұрын
So you can use propane to light and heat your home??? Did I hear that right?
@meowmeow5052
@meowmeow5052 6 ай бұрын
I’m curious, have you tried bowing up and farting into your wood stove and slamming it shut?
@genespell4340
@genespell4340 6 ай бұрын
​@@charlottewalker6490not from the person who's post or comment you commented on. They didn't mention anything about propane or natural gas.
@genespell4340
@genespell4340 6 ай бұрын
​@@meowmeow5052very funny, grasshopper.
@cl-7832
@cl-7832 5 ай бұрын
@@charlottewalker6490 yes. Look at the big buddy heater and buy a carbon monoxide alarm for safety. I bought a big buddy heater, the hose adapter where I can hook it up to a 20 pound tank
@brucestorey917
@brucestorey917 Жыл бұрын
When one of my Amish friends rebuilt the house he lives in now, he had under-floor radiant heat installed throughout the entire house. The heat is generated with a propane boiler. This is one of the most comfortably warm houses I have ever been in.
@AmishAmerica
@AmishAmerica Жыл бұрын
That does sound really cozy!
@janchampine1899
@janchampine1899 Жыл бұрын
I did that in my old house. I will definitely do it again if I build a new one. It's amazing. I would love to be able to hook it up to solar and/or wood.
@benscoles5085
@benscoles5085 Жыл бұрын
@@janchampine1899 you can, I believe they make a 12 v water heater element, drill a hole in the tank, insert element, and hook up your panel. or charge battery with solar, use inverter to make 110, use conventional water heater element.
@thomasschwarting5108
@thomasschwarting5108 Жыл бұрын
One of the VERY best heating systems in my opinion!! As far as their fireplaces, if they'd just add a glass front to it, they'd have the same effect as a wood stove but have the added bonus of some light.
@peetsnort
@peetsnort Жыл бұрын
To think the roman in UK 2000 years ago used hypercaust underfloor heating
@shootingsportstransparency7461
@shootingsportstransparency7461 Жыл бұрын
I am not religious at all but am starting to appreciate the Amish way of life more and more
@kaasmeester5903
@kaasmeester5903 Жыл бұрын
I see them in the same corner as boy scouts or certain kinds of preppers, as bad as that might sound. But there is a lot to be said for self-reliance, as an individual or as a small community. And not relying on complex tech goes a long way towards that. I love technology... but my dad taught me to know how to go without.
@Tappedline
@Tappedline Жыл бұрын
I am very religious, but i agree they have good ideas on family, and a slower way of life. The amish and I would disagree on many things in the bible but not on the way they live. I like my cowboy hats with a little curve in them... lol
@suttonbogedain5874
@suttonbogedain5874 6 ай бұрын
Their home architecture also helps with heat dispersal. The large central room, wide doorways, even the stair placement helps heat move about the house. Our friends also have an airlock entryway front and back to knock down outside air and heat loss. The back door one also has an open bathroom/mudroom design that allows the hot water to humidify the house and disperse the water heat. Pretty ingenious actually.
@blackberry5447
@blackberry5447 Жыл бұрын
This home is so simple and beautiful !! I once saw a stove that ran on dry corn in an Amish store. It was awesome. America for the most part has forsaken the old ways.
@genespell4340
@genespell4340 6 ай бұрын
Burning corn for heat is ridiculous in my book but some genius made a way to do it.
@edwardgabriel5281
@edwardgabriel5281 5 ай бұрын
There are over 300 million people in this country. Wood stoves are fine for country folk, but the masses have to do with fuel other than wood and corn. In my day, coal was the fuel we used in the city. At 95, I have a wood stove that I love dearly. Also a fuel oil furnace, used when I'm not able to carry in the wood.
@patty109109
@patty109109 5 ай бұрын
There is a reason most of us of a band, and these approaches to heating. In my home I press a button to set my temperature and I never think about it or spend any effort on it. You can keep your corn stove.
@blackberry5447
@blackberry5447 5 ай бұрын
@@patty109109 I have a button too but what happens when the button doesn't work that night or the next or the next ? Then the cell phone doesn't work. Buttons are great as long as you are ready for the day they're not. Nothing is a sure thing in this world now. Just be safe and sure you and your family will be ok. God Speed and safety to you and yours.
@donadams8831
@donadams8831 7 ай бұрын
I grew up in a 1910 Farm Victorian home. The home has no exterior decoration. The heat was base board hot water but only on the first floor. The 2nd floor was heated by the stairway and vents in the floor that let the hot air rise from the 1st floor. The bedrooms stayed comfortable during the cold Northern Missouri winters.
@steveo6034
@steveo6034 6 ай бұрын
The Chinese diesel heaters are really nice, along with the Big Buddy heater but nothing beats a wood stove!
@shawncooper9999
@shawncooper9999 Жыл бұрын
As a Mennonite we use wood stove and electric heater and coal to heat up our homes. In the winter time my dad would use the wood stove to cook breakfast and lunch and dinner and hot up to tea pot for his coffee in the morning.
@adamcoe
@adamcoe 6 ай бұрын
As a Mennonite how do you explain getting to use electricity? Or come to think of it...KZbin?
@jimmcfall7769
@jimmcfall7769 6 ай бұрын
​@adamcoe do a Google search on the difference between Amish and Mennonite. They have some similarities but are different in ways as well. Google is your friend 👍
@werpu12
@werpu12 5 ай бұрын
@@adamcoe Actually yes, I was puzzled by the battery lights there in the picture. I thought they were not supposed to use electricity. But maybe they warm up to electricty, using PV to generate electricity is definitely way more environmental friendly than burning gas, while I do not know the mennonite religion very well (I hope I can change that, my aunt in Pennsylvania has mennonite neighbours and I want to fly over and visit her in sujmmer), I guess PVs would be right along their angle especially for things like light which combined with batteries would make sense!
@TheYTSucks
@TheYTSucks 6 ай бұрын
I had a DS Machines Heatorola 1600 coal stove built by the Amish. Thing was a beast, weighed 600 pounds empty, held 120 pounds of nut anthracite coal in the fire box and another 60 pounds in the hopper. It was gravity fed. I had it in an old drafty house that was built in 1948. The house was so drafty that you could feel the wind through it. There were sections of walls that you could see daylight through. That stove would keep the house anywhere between 70° and 75° all winter. I miss that stove. I burned coal from 2010 until 2015.
@1fly2fly24
@1fly2fly24 Жыл бұрын
The company That I work for had a contract to make cabinet parts for the "Amish heater". When we had seen the ad for the heater, it was the biggest laugh of the day!!!
@RBCHOKE
@RBCHOKE Жыл бұрын
I lived in the free state of Bavaria as a child, near Switzerland. The common space like the living room, with the bathroom being in a close proximity, was heated by a wood stove, we also wore pajamas and warm slippers or socks . Our bedrooms had no heat, and the windows were actually left slightly open!
@grlpeterson
@grlpeterson Жыл бұрын
Oh but those big, heavy comforters for slipping under at night! The best!
@jameslong1644
@jameslong1644 6 ай бұрын
Open to help pull in heat?
@Jonathan_Doe_
@Jonathan_Doe_ 6 ай бұрын
@@jameslong1644No, to allow fresh air in. If you sleep with your bedroom door and window fully closed, by the morning the air will be stale and have a high c02 level, making you wake up feeling groggy. Try sleeping with your window cracked open a bit, you genuinely wake up fresher.
@KC9UDX
@KC9UDX 5 ай бұрын
I live in a similar climate and I've always slept with the window open in winter. Usually it's better but frankly sometimes the air outside is not so good either. In summer I need air conditioning to sleep (60°F) most nights. And other nights the pollen or smoke gets too much (specially in recent years).
@werpu12
@werpu12 5 ай бұрын
Yes that was the old central european rural way of surviving the winter, there was one central stove in the living room and also one in the kitchen for cooking or sometimes kitchen alone which was close to the living room, the heat distribution was that it went basically from the living room upwards and usually the bedrooms were not heated. This was enough to get through the winter while minimizing the need for firewood. We do not have that system anymore of course and have abandoned it for a long time, but really old houses sometimes still have it. Btw. better houses had heating vents just like displayed in the video to distribute the heat, city homes in the 19th centuries had several smaller stoves distributed over the house!
@RetreatfarmFarmvilleVirginia
@RetreatfarmFarmvilleVirginia Жыл бұрын
In my " Dawdy Haus" i have a fireplace woodstove insert that is mounted on a freestanding stone and cement block pedestal and the exhaust fan mounted underneath blows the heated air from the double walled stove down thru the floor into the ductwork to distribute heated air to all of the rooms, I Heat, cook meals and heat water and dry clothes with the stove. And i have a heat pump that runs off of solar panels that heats mostly down to 40 degrees. My lights are either solar powered string lights or wall mounted crane type oil lanterns. (8) and natural window light in daytime.
@Melissa0774
@Melissa0774 Жыл бұрын
How did you get your stove situated that way? I'd like to have something like that in my house. I have a wood stove in my basement, but it isn't attached to any ductwork or anything. My house is heated by a traditional gas furnace. When we burn wood in the basement stove, it makes the basement nice and toasty and it does help to heat the rest of the house, and it warms the water coming from the bathroom sink because it's right under the pipe, but that's it. We also have a second larger stove upstairs, but we only use it on particularly cold nights.
@RetreatfarmFarmvilleVirginia
@RetreatfarmFarmvilleVirginia Жыл бұрын
@@Melissa0774 Where i placed the stove in the middle of the big room just happened to sit over the main ductwork under the floor and i just bought sheet metal duct angle pieces to direct the heat from the front of the stove down into the main duct and the blower forces it thru the lines to the rooms. You can connect any ductwork to a stove or wood furnace with a blower setup like a fireplace insert. The woodstove has a double steel liner inside.
@RetreatfarmFarmvilleVirginia
@RetreatfarmFarmvilleVirginia Жыл бұрын
@@Melissa0774 Where i placed the stove in the middle of the big room just happened to sit over the main ductwork under the floor and i just bought sheet metal duct angle pieces to direct the heat from the front of the stove down into the main duct and the blower forces it thru the lines to the rooms. You can connect any ductwork to a stove or wood furnace with a blower setup like a fireplace insert. The woodstove has a double steel liner inside.
@franzk.3215
@franzk.3215 Жыл бұрын
Wie bischt ?
@sabbathwasset-upatcreation9749
@sabbathwasset-upatcreation9749 Жыл бұрын
My Mom bought me one of those Amish heaters when they first came out. It broke fairly quickly and since it was under warranty, we got another one for free. But the new one also broke after a year or two of use. The woodwork was nice, but the heating element was a piece of junk, imo.
@droolbunnyxo9565
@droolbunnyxo9565 Жыл бұрын
Not certain but the internal heating mechanism might've been infrared technology. And you had to frequently check the venting areas for dust build-up & wipe them clean, otherwise the heater quickly burned out. Many customers learned this too late, unfortunately.
@defauluse5524
@defauluse5524 Жыл бұрын
The Armish are junk. Bunch a drunk crooks
@ronniewilloughby2035
@ronniewilloughby2035 7 ай бұрын
Junk heater , burn wood
@bjharrison4460
@bjharrison4460 6 ай бұрын
I got one, too, back in the day. Total waste of money. Didn't do anything it was said to do.
@genespell4340
@genespell4340 6 ай бұрын
You would have saved yourselves a lot of money by buying a 20 dollar electric heater. The secret to making electric heaters last a long time is to never ever run them on high. A low or medium heat setting is better for the heater and for your wallet.
@Subgunman
@Subgunman 8 ай бұрын
We heat our home with a fireplace equipped with a boiler. A low power circulation pump circulates water throughout the lower level of the home to radiators. The upper two levels use in floor radiant heat. In order to control water temperature to the upper levels there are several heat exchangers that isolate the 90°C water used in the radiators from the 40°C max temperature needed for the radiant heat. This fireplace / boiler is made in Italy and does have an electronic brain to regulate air flow into the closed burn chamber. This system draws cold dense outside air into the burn chamber instead of pulling heated air out of the home. To heat a 200sq meter home it can use up to 10 metric tons of wood in a very cold damp winter. The system also heats water for the home as well but the water heater also is solar powered, on sunny winter days it provides enough hot water for evening showers and doing dishes. It’s an equivalent size to your homes 40 gallon water heater.
@mikezisk5009
@mikezisk5009 5 ай бұрын
How does it run when u lose power
@Subgunman
@Subgunman 5 ай бұрын
@@mikezisk5009 we utilize a line interactive UPS from EATON Industries as backup power. With the 9 amp hour battery that comes with it we get about 110minutes of backup. However I use instead two 12 volt 100 amp hour batteries in it that gives me at least six hours time. This is enough to fire up the generator and charge the batteries by supplying line voltage back to the UPS. The only thing the UPS runs is a circulation pomp that draws about 110 watts as well as the logic controller on the fireplace that draws only a few amps in standby and around 6amps max when it operates the air damper to the supply air.
@whyzup6593
@whyzup6593 Жыл бұрын
Our seperate summer cook kitchen has the old heat stove as it was converted into a guest room. The family is long gone now. Ive spent many years in a trailer on Blue Mountain in Pennsylvania with no water, heat or electric in the winter. On the coldest nights...I would just sleep in my car. I'm not paying 500.00 plus dollars a month to heat this old farmhouse with the new HVAC system It's been a good winter outside of the Christmas freeze. It's 42° on the porch tonight Just the way I like it Johnny in Coopersburg PA
@tommuscatello5999
@tommuscatello5999 Жыл бұрын
Always a pleasure to be educated by your videos. Grateful.
@mattd2080
@mattd2080 Жыл бұрын
That coal stove you showed a picture of at the 28 second mark looks like a DS Anthra-Max which is made in Lancaster County by Amish. They have a reputation as being the best brand coal stove company in the industry.
@jeanholley5820
@jeanholley5820 Жыл бұрын
As always you continue to build my knowledge and understanding of the Amish and I appreciate it!
@AmishAmerica
@AmishAmerica Жыл бұрын
My pleasure!
@mrs.g.9816
@mrs.g.9816 Жыл бұрын
While I was looking for a house a few years ago, I lived in an unelectrified cabin from April to August. Outside of candles, battery-operated lanterns, flashlights and headlamp, there were three propane-fed ceiling lamps. I hardly ever used them after May because they did give off a lot of heat! But the oil-drum wood-burning stove was perfect for when the weather was still cold. Because I worry about fires, I have no hearths, wood stoves, space heaters or candles in the house I finally found and bought.
@genespell4340
@genespell4340 6 ай бұрын
Central heat and air conditioners can cause house fires too.
@teebob21
@teebob21 5 ай бұрын
Most house fires happen at the kitchen stove or in the electrical within the walls. Your fear of flame is not keeping you any safer.
@TheLizardKing1967
@TheLizardKing1967 Жыл бұрын
Excellent video Erik.. When i was a kid, i used to haul split wood in the basement and feed the wood stove. I would wash my clothes and hang them up in the basement, and they would dry very fast. An old Amish trick i learned as a kid. Brings back a lot of memories. Keep the cool video coming!
@AmishAmerica
@AmishAmerica Жыл бұрын
Thanks! "Wood heats twice" right
@SeattlePioneer
@SeattlePioneer Жыл бұрын
Here in Seattle, I let clothing hang on the clothesline until it dries. Sometimes that can take 2-3 days, and I may wait longer than that to find a suitable period of days where it doesn't rain and where such a technique will work. Hanging clothing indoors as you describe will indeed allow them to dry, but you are consuming firewood to accomplish that. Still, what works in Seattle may not work in the severer climate of Amish country. But since it can work in Seattle, I try to use that method to dry my clothes. I prefer that to using the gas dryer I have, which maybe gets used once a year, and has been used zero times so far this winter! Managing to dry clothing outdoors in the winter makes life just a bit of an adventure, and I also call it a hobby. Any moron can dry clothes in a gas dryer. It takes a small measure of skill and planning to dry your clothes outdoors during the winter time. (No insult intended to my friends who are morons...)
@hillbillybeerdranker6678
@hillbillybeerdranker6678 5 ай бұрын
@@SeattlePioneer I agree and also have a clothes dryer, but if the Amish get caught drying clothes with a clothes dryer, they'll be whipped by the bearded elders wearing funny hats. They take that sht serious. I used to date a girl whose Mom was Amish. They caught her sneaking off the farm to watch a movie, and she was banished from her family for life. She had to pack up and leave the cult the next day, and never saw her family again. They're a bunch of hypocrites. On one hand they say driving a car is a sin, but they're allowed to drive tractors. The cult says no phones in their homes, but many of them used to have a pay phone booth installed just outside their fence. This was back around 30 years ago when they still had pay phones.
@SeattlePioneer
@SeattlePioneer 5 ай бұрын
@wordawakeningny
@wordawakeningny Жыл бұрын
Another great video Mr. Wesner. Thanks for sharing!
@tsmith3286
@tsmith3286 8 ай бұрын
All electric heaters are maxed at 1500 watts. Basically all the same. I’ve been in quite a few Amish homes and they are some of the most beautiful homes I’ve seen.
@GoldberryIsland
@GoldberryIsland 7 ай бұрын
I used to have a forced air buck wood stove. That thing was really amazing, of course it had fans so it did require some electricity, but it was the most effective heat source I've used.
@ronroberts110
@ronroberts110 Жыл бұрын
The electric "Amish Heater" was based on a particular law. The electric heater would have to pass UL regulatory inspection if it was sold in the USA. But...if you bought the wooden cabinet, and the company threw in a free electric heater, they didn't have to pass inspection
@geod3589
@geod3589 7 ай бұрын
They also advertised the heater used the moisture in the air to spread the heat (?). I asked what happens if the humidity in the house was low and just got blank stares.
@hillbillybeerdranker6678
@hillbillybeerdranker6678 5 ай бұрын
It's ironic that the Amish were making electric heaters, because they think electricity is a sin. If they catch anyone in their cult flicking a light switch, it's banishment for life. If they're caught with a phone, its probably a good caning with 50 lashes by the bearded elders wearing funny hats.
@amberenyeart4833
@amberenyeart4833 Жыл бұрын
We went to an Amish Christmas party one year and they were using their cookstove as a heater and omg it really worked well! That whole house was HOT! I learned fast that if you visit the Amish in winter dress light lol.
@AmishAmerica
@AmishAmerica Жыл бұрын
😅
@carolsmith282
@carolsmith282 Жыл бұрын
I got two of the Amish heaters many years ago they still look good and they work perfect
@catherine59226
@catherine59226 Жыл бұрын
My mother-in-law purchased three of those fireplaces. She loved them.
@johncronin5311
@johncronin5311 Жыл бұрын
Yea , eletric bill go crazy best wishez
@stantonmagid4126
@stantonmagid4126 Жыл бұрын
Always entertaining, informative and interesting thank you Eric
@AmishAmerica
@AmishAmerica Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@Ravenspell3
@Ravenspell3 Жыл бұрын
I was gifted a Amish heater and I like it very much. got me through the bombastic Winter blast.
@susanschuck8124
@susanschuck8124 Жыл бұрын
Great video once again. How wonderful you get to stay with Amish friends. You certainly are dear to them. I am thankful there are not many (hope not) house fires with all these different types of heating sources. Maybe that isn’t even something of a worry but I don’t truly know. Can’t wait for your next video.
@AmishAmerica
@AmishAmerica Жыл бұрын
It's a good point you raise. I don't have statistics on Amish house (& building) fires, but they seem to happen often enough. I wouldn't be surprised if it was at a higher rate than non-Amish ones. And yes I am very grateful for my friendships with them!
@presspound7358
@presspound7358 Жыл бұрын
The question of house fires is the very first thing that crossed my mind when the topic of gas lights was mentioned. It would be interesting to compare the incidence of house fires involving Amish homes as compared to State and National averages. There has to be a safer alternative. Some homes must be virtually “uninsurable” .
@SerenitynPeace
@SerenitynPeace Жыл бұрын
When your born & raised with these, all your life you learn about them, take them seriously. Have respect. I think here, not Amish, are not smart enough. Sorry, I mean not careful enough. How your brought up is what makes the difference. Like guns. Guns aren't dangerous, people are. Teach your children all about guns. They are not toys.
@stankygeorge
@stankygeorge Жыл бұрын
My grandparents used cast iron, pot belly heaters, my Grand Mother cooked on a wood fired stove/oven!
@__GALLANT__
@__GALLANT__ 7 ай бұрын
01:03 You might want to check the specs on this propane heater before using it indoors. I'm pretty sure that's an outdoors only model.
@ThePanda5001
@ThePanda5001 Жыл бұрын
That's fascinating, thank you for sharing
@tammylapointe3429
@tammylapointe3429 8 ай бұрын
I actually have 2 of those Amish fireplace heaters. I have one on right now. We like our bedrooms cool but our dining/livingroom open floor area stays nice and warm. When temperatures are in the 30's at night this heater keeps all 5 rooms warm.
@fb510m
@fb510m 6 ай бұрын
Great topic and well done. Thank you.
@TheMtggrl
@TheMtggrl Жыл бұрын
I remember the Amish heaters, we never had one though I remember my sister wanting one for our house, we had a fireplace but never used it as a heat source, in fact we almost never used it, LOL. When I lived back East we had an oil heater, it worked fine for our smaller home, but of course we had to keep up with oil deliveries and now on the West coast we have gas heat, it works great in our little home, but it's expensive. I don't know what the best way to heat is, but I'd think that for the Amish they wouldn't try to fix something that for them isn't broken and has served them well for a very long time. Thanks for more great information Erik.
@AmishAmerica
@AmishAmerica Жыл бұрын
Right, good point, and unlike us they are accounting for not only cost and effectiveness and availability, but also tradition and church rules. Glad you liked the vid!
@burungberkicau4131
@burungberkicau4131 Жыл бұрын
Very good information
@kennybolt8329
@kennybolt8329 Жыл бұрын
Those miracle heaters are in a lot of R.V. s as fireplaces. Guess who builds most of the R.V. s in Elkhart Indiana ?
@peteantos-ketcham3493
@peteantos-ketcham3493 Жыл бұрын
Great video Erik. If you get a chance to be in the Gordonville PA area you should check out DS stoves and talk with those folks. Amish made wood and coal stoves. In this video you showed several shots of DS stoves in homes.
@AmishAmerica
@AmishAmerica Жыл бұрын
Thanks Pete - yes I think that would be an interesting visit. You must know them well to be able to recognize them
@benscoles5085
@benscoles5085 Жыл бұрын
I looked at a Amish made wood stove, and did not buy it cause they could not or did not care to try to get a UL listing, my house insurance is void if some thing happened because of a non ul listed appliance.
@lumity238
@lumity238 5 ай бұрын
Back in the 60s , I remember having a wood stove in our living room, kitchen area and i use to sit in front of the Wood Stove after i came home from sledding. The Upstairs of our house we used are winter coats to cover the bedroom windows ,i slepted in the hallway by the stairs and i could feel the heat coming from downstairs,I miss being a kid back then, we were poor,but felt Safe and loved my parents.
@Vandrock
@Vandrock Жыл бұрын
With fire and fire and the last one yes it is fire...
@mariebooze956
@mariebooze956 Жыл бұрын
the man in the ad for the amish heaters is actually amish..he is from holmes county ohio. he and his wife worked at a popular hotel in berlin ohio. i have known him for 25+ years, very sweet man..thx marie from 🇨🇦
@AmishAmerica
@AmishAmerica Жыл бұрын
That's great, yea I remember hearing that at least someone in those ads was actually Amish. The two women in the photos are wearing what looks like accurate Amish clothing as well for that area
@aaronwilliams6989
@aaronwilliams6989 Жыл бұрын
Pretty beautiful homes.
@BlueJeansandJellyBeans
@BlueJeansandJellyBeans 8 ай бұрын
Wow....yes, I remember the Amish miracle heater rave!
@Richard-pt4vf
@Richard-pt4vf 5 ай бұрын
Ive never seen a winter like this, 65 yrs age, these heating ideas help
@keithbevins2989
@keithbevins2989 7 ай бұрын
A fireplace will actually create a slight vacuum inside your house causing cold air to be pulled through every nook and cranny of every window and wall.
@mfbfreak
@mfbfreak 5 ай бұрын
This goes for all heating systems that use the room's air for their combustion. You can avoid it by using a furnace/boiler/heater that uses not just a flue for the exhaust, but also an air channel for the air inlet. This has the additional benefit of being much safer, because no toxic gases can escape into the house as long as the inlet and exhaust channels are air tight. In the Netherlands, this has been the standard for about 2 decades. Hardly any central heating system that uses the air in the room for combustion are still in existence.
@mfbfreak
@mfbfreak 5 ай бұрын
A compromise if you can't afford to get a modern, efficient system that uses the outside air, is to neatly seal up the boiler room, and feed air from outside straight into the boiler room via ducts. Ask a proper hvac engineer for the correct size and number. Too small and you choke the furnace, creating carbon monoxide! This is also the reason why you can't use "open" fuel burning devices in an air tight house.
@user-kc5xb4pi3x
@user-kc5xb4pi3x 5 ай бұрын
I grew up in the rural midwest and our home had radiant ceiling heat (which was completely useless) but we also had two stoves. My dad would get them so hot at night that they would glow a deep orange/red. By morning all that was left was warm coals. I remember sitting on the small stove while I ate my cereal in the morning. It was the perfect temperature by then! And while our rooms could get chilly since they didn't have direct access to the radiant heat of the fire places...the house was toasty.
@timothyschanuth3197
@timothyschanuth3197 Ай бұрын
That lil fan that spins when placed on a firebox is actually electric , it uses a thermocouple called a pleiter effect plate that generates electricity when it has heat applied to 1 side and a heat sink to another .
@markhaynes9442
@markhaynes9442 Жыл бұрын
Those little fans have become a lot more available. We bought one years ago at Lehman's and have twice replaced the little heat-activated motor. We love it on our wood-burning stove. Cool video as always, Erik! Keep 'em comin'!
@AmishAmerica
@AmishAmerica Жыл бұрын
Thanks Mark, glad you liked it!
@benscoles5085
@benscoles5085 Жыл бұрын
I have made a couple of payments on Lehman's Hardware, but they will not send me a key. I absolutely love that store, met Mr Lehman and his son Galen , never met Glenda yet, she always seems to be some where else. what really sold them to me was how they treat the customers, and back what they sell.
@kaasmeester5903
@kaasmeester5903 Жыл бұрын
Does it run on a Sterling engine? That's quite neat. Those small fans do a lot to distribute the heat better. These days many people fit them to their radiators here, but those are of course electrical, activated by a mechanical thermostat switch.
@mfbfreak
@mfbfreak 5 ай бұрын
Most are electric, using a Peltier -type thermo electric generator. They can also be made with a Stirling motor but those are much rarer.
@johnjaco5544
@johnjaco5544 6 ай бұрын
I have been heating my house with a wood stove for over 40 years it works just fine but it is a lot of work.
@marksavage1744
@marksavage1744 5 ай бұрын
It is work, but so gratifying! Cooking on a woodstove and drying clothes and wet boots and gloves is a bonus. No better way to heat! That heat just "soaks" into everything.
@johnjaco5544
@johnjaco5544 5 ай бұрын
That's why I still do it,boots and clothes drying by the fire now.@@marksavage1744
@badapple65
@badapple65 Жыл бұрын
I bought a similar electric fireplace 12 years ago for our sunroom we made into a temporary bedroom for an adult child that briefly needed a place. Ran the heater 8-10 hours every evening. Our first month electric bill once using it was $175 above our normal bill. Never use it any longer.
@splash4891
@splash4891 8 ай бұрын
yup that's about right...a big money suck...just running the regular central heat, costs way too much as well, really, all electric heaters, no matter what the source, are designed to be a money pit just like most things we "own" (cars, appliances, etc.) whether it's from usage, repairs, or some kind of insurance that is required to allegedly own it, it's really more like they OWN US
@rosarogers7128
@rosarogers7128 8 ай бұрын
We bought one of the heaters 10 years ago it’s still working.
@twolfe4295
@twolfe4295 5 ай бұрын
I'm not Amish but I have used all of these methods to heat my home, garage, or shop. I had a chimney built on to my house when I bought it and put in a wood stove. Later I installed a heat pump and duct work for AC and heat as the house was all electric baseboard. Propane infrared heaters are a good source for emergency or spot heating. Don't believe the marketing hype on all the electric heaters although a small heater can be used to spot heat for short times when it gets very cold. Premium heat is radiant hydronic any way you can get it.
@jimmybrad156
@jimmybrad156 7 ай бұрын
Check out mason stoves / heaters. Long internal exhausts burn the smoke; preventing smoke (once up to temp), keeping the heat inside and yielding more work from the wood. (A bit less ash too if I remember correctly.)
@cindynielson4231
@cindynielson4231 Жыл бұрын
I feel like this company took advantage of the Amish in their advertising. My Dad and brothers would build fireplace inserts, it became quite a side hustle. Thanks for another great video Erik. 👍
@AmishAmerica
@AmishAmerica Жыл бұрын
That was sort of my response way back then when this came out. At the same time Amish did cooperate with them in the manufacturing, which makes it more gray area in my view. Either way it was interesting to revisit this topic. Glad you liked the vid!
@AhJodie
@AhJodie 8 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@consueloperez7578
@consueloperez7578 Жыл бұрын
So happy to hear you say: Fire places are NOT the most efficient ways to heat a home (THANK YOU) they are not! the heat stoves are the best option so far however, there is the concern on "fumes" such as Carbon Monoxide so careful with theat
@livestock9722
@livestock9722 5 ай бұрын
A very plain Amish friend of mine has a wood fired boiler in the basement and hot water is piped to radiators around the house. Circulates by itself!
@josephhebert7740
@josephhebert7740 Жыл бұрын
I still have two Amish heaters. The first original large one. Which I need a lightbulb for. And the smaller version. We use them every winter. Cuts our bill by half compared to our neighbors. And with the new increased energy cost right now in 2023. Our bill is less than their bill by more than half right now. So when you say so-called Amish heater. I don’t care who made them they work and they’re saving us a ton of money right now.
@denisestewart8247
@denisestewart8247 6 ай бұрын
I'm using the heat surge in my bathroom now, I had one in my living room that I used for years until it died.
@joenewman6494
@joenewman6494 8 ай бұрын
I still have one of those Amish heaters my dad bought two at a discount and gave me one still works but I really don’t use it built a cabinet around it more lime a furniture piece than heater.
@Rob-hh5sd
@Rob-hh5sd 6 ай бұрын
Butte Montana in a mobile home, wood stove cooking and heat first one up in morning gets the fire going. Door handle would be frozen solid, icicles on the inside of the wall from condensation. Fun stuff.
@nkrfishingandoutdoors2007
@nkrfishingandoutdoors2007 Жыл бұрын
Hi Erik! Hope all is well! I have a question, is the Halifax County, VA Amish Community any good? Me and my aunt were thinking about going to some stores up there such as The Windmill Bakery, and the Winns Creek General Store Bulk Food Market. And also I was wondering are they camera friendly there because I know some amish don’t like the camera which I understand! Thanks- Noah
@beckycaughel7557
@beckycaughel7557 Жыл бұрын
My Aunt & uncle have 2 of those “Amish” heaters they like them
@caraburke6657
@caraburke6657 6 ай бұрын
Those are the cleanest floors I've ever seen !
@davekauffman8727
@davekauffman8727 5 ай бұрын
I've learned a little about the Amish tendency to avoid electricity, it stems from their German ancestors struggle with government shutting electricity off to undesired people, or something like that. It did puzzle me why the Amish would build an electricity powered appliance, thanks for the information about them having only woodwork contributions.
@stevefromminecraftshorts919
@stevefromminecraftshorts919 Жыл бұрын
Awesome video buddy! I plan on going to an Mennonite community in Floyd Virginia This Weekend! I’m very excited I’m not sure what type of Mennonites they are but I know they are Mennonite! I’m gonna visit a store called “Bread Basket” it’s a bulk foods store and I’ve heard its great
@AmishAmerica
@AmishAmerica Жыл бұрын
Awesome have a great visit, sounds like it might be a plain group
@marianelson1272
@marianelson1272 Жыл бұрын
My husband put a wood stove in the basement and makes the vents in the floor 3 vents and the fan this work good we not using oils this winter happy have A ranch house
@lawrencefox563
@lawrencefox563 Жыл бұрын
Like Christmas story regular steam heat boiler , radiators etc but coal or wood fired boiler just as hundred years ago just no oil or gas.
@suetipping4841
@suetipping4841 8 ай бұрын
I am not Amish but I did not have a bedroom with heat until I was 25, living in Northern Ohio.
@kibblenbits
@kibblenbits 7 ай бұрын
I live in Northern Michigan, and grew up in a home that only had a space heater, too. Now in my 70's, I shut off the bedroom heat vent, because I still can't sleep well in a warm room.
@suetipping4841
@suetipping4841 7 ай бұрын
@@kibblenbits I''m with you. I like a cool bedroom. In the summer, as a kid, I would sleep on our front porch in the cool. Small town, no crime to speak of. Miss it.
@mcrockett2001
@mcrockett2001 Жыл бұрын
A bit off topic but have you done an episode on bird feeders? It appears the Amish have the most glorious bird feeders.
@AmishAmerica
@AmishAmerica Жыл бұрын
No vid but I have done a couple of articles/posts, including one with an interview of an Amish bird feeder maker in Indiana: amishamerica.com/amish-bird-houses-feeders-indiana/
@w8lvradio
@w8lvradio 3 ай бұрын
I live in Ohio. I thought that the Amish Miracle Heater was powered by Deuterium, and I was so disappointed to find out otherwise.
@gordie4059
@gordie4059 Жыл бұрын
Nothing like making your own system of laws to live by and then finding all the loopholes. Batteries are stored electricity ⚡️. Genius.
@lookarabbit2888
@lookarabbit2888 Жыл бұрын
U gotta respect some of the genius behind how they do things.
@trackman515
@trackman515 6 ай бұрын
I used kerosene in the past but it is around 38.00a gallon now for kero you can use safely indoors.
@Patriot_Eke
@Patriot_Eke 5 ай бұрын
1:13 That's a six gallon brewing bottle with some overflow in the value. I bet that wine tastes delicious!
@mikekemper9566
@mikekemper9566 8 ай бұрын
1930s warm morning coal stove burning wood oaks, cherry maples... great heat... ash used in gaden....
@brownfeather865
@brownfeather865 Жыл бұрын
People don't understand how to heat their homes with a wood fireplace. You need fans to circulate the heat around your home... Plus, Add a little moisture and or crack open some windows.... We did it back in the days!
@marksavage1744
@marksavage1744 5 ай бұрын
I always just had a small pot with water in it on top of the stove to keep things from getting too dry. Made things cozy!
@denniscoz6228
@denniscoz6228 Жыл бұрын
In gauge county Ohio, some Amish have natural or propane furnaces. I don't know how it works, without electricity.
@MelissaThompson432
@MelissaThompson432 6 ай бұрын
Fireplaces are inefficient because the draft that keeps the fire burning pulls the heat up the chimney. It will be warm near the fire, and near the chimney, but the heat won't spread as far into the room as it does with a freestanding heater or stove. I live in the South. Heat downstairs will usually heat the upstairs to some extent, because hot air rises. I have Amish neighbors who keep their woodburning ranges lit all winter, but cook outside on a porch in hot weather. I never visited them at night (or, to be fair, in the winter, except to the woodlot where they sell bark slabs for home heating,) so idk if they use propane or other fuels to augment their heating. I do know they use old-timey kerosene/oil lamps, but I don't see why they wouldn't use LEDs. I don't think they're a vanity; I would think it would depend on whatever saves the most money and is the most practical. I'm an "English," so there's a lot idk. And our neighbors are Swartzentruber, so they may do things differently than other orders.
@Tappedline
@Tappedline Жыл бұрын
i am buying an Amish made home, Not sure why they have battery lights but I am going to have to deal with no A/C power for a little while. It is going to be a great time I am sure. Gas stove, Gas frig, and wood stove sound fun to me.
@SeattlePioneer
@SeattlePioneer Жыл бұрын
What about insulation in floors, walls and ceilings? These are very effective ways to reduce heating needs. Thermopane windows too, but they are far less economical since they are much less effective at reducing heat losses, and far more expensive per square inch.
@kibblenbits
@kibblenbits 7 ай бұрын
If you've ever looked at an Amish built home, they all have very small windows for that reason.
@larrysepicmovies5044
@larrysepicmovies5044 Жыл бұрын
Propane direct fire indoors id deadly.
@danielem0007
@danielem0007 5 ай бұрын
I still have the Amish Miracle heater :)
@dennydewaal137
@dennydewaal137 3 ай бұрын
Chinese diesel heater from Amazon .. it’s a wonderful thing
@marilynfisher1712
@marilynfisher1712 Жыл бұрын
Do any of the homes you encountered still use the heat generated from the body heat of their milk cows? Heat rising by convection from a barn located below or down slope from the house.
@Lost_AtSea_
@Lost_AtSea_ Жыл бұрын
I want to know how they cool their homes in the summer heat and humidity
@lukassvitek1432
@lukassvitek1432 Жыл бұрын
Hey Erik! I would love to see a video about Amish handwriting. I read somewhere that Amish are taught old style kurrent handwriting, and am curious what you have seen or heard!
@AmishAmerica
@AmishAmerica Жыл бұрын
They do still learn cursive in school! And use it when they write. Not sure if that's the case anymore in general
@schlirf
@schlirf 6 ай бұрын
Nur für den Fall, dass der Winter etwas zu kalt wird; Schauen Sie sich eine thermische Sandbatterie an. Gruss aus Connecticut, bzw West New Jersey. 😎
@soal3415
@soal3415 6 ай бұрын
I used to have a wood stove. It didnt seem to heat very good. I love the spicy smell of fruit wood. My dad used to burn black cherry and that wood screamed. I had a hard time with that when i was little. I got divorced from my abusive hubby and had to abandon the wood stove. I was the one who split, carried, stacked and fed the stove ...that ole orge that was never satisfied. the wood husband cut. I do miss it. There is nothing like the work out of cutting wood and with a different wood stove....no better and satisfying heat as the wood stove. Id love to go back to one but im 63.. disabled and have no man. Been my choice but i miss the wood heat!
@tessjones5987
@tessjones5987 Жыл бұрын
Hot water bottles create radiant heat and work well.
@grahamdougherty226
@grahamdougherty226 5 ай бұрын
We use a wood stove in 2024. Love it will never turn away from it. I don't depend on anyone for heat and local saw mill gives me wood by the ton pre cut.
@normlor
@normlor 5 ай бұрын
IF ANY GROUP ON EARTH WE CAN TAKE ADVICE FROM FOR PREPPING IT'S THESE GREAT SELF-MADE PEOPLE. THEY HAVE NEVER BEEN ON THE GRID AND DO EXACTLY WHAT EVERY PREPPER URGES THE REST OF US TO BEFORE THOSE SHTF TIMES!!!
@georgeohwell7988
@georgeohwell7988 8 ай бұрын
"I really do envy the Amish lifestyle ,away from all the degeneracy ...greetings from Ulster
@LOWCUHH.AS.FAUGHK
@LOWCUHH.AS.FAUGHK 6 ай бұрын
How long will a propane tank last. How many how many propane tanks do you go through in winter
@jerriscollins-ruth9019
@jerriscollins-ruth9019 Жыл бұрын
I love my wood stove for heat and cooking
@SeattlePioneer
@SeattlePioneer Жыл бұрын
I heat water on my wood stove, and do some limited cooking. Stews, salad croutons and such cook well on my wood stove. But what do you cook, and how? A dedicated wood/coal cookstove would, of course, allow you to cook most anything I suppose, But that I do not have. Most of my cooking is on a gas range.
@jerriscollins-ruth9019
@jerriscollins-ruth9019 Жыл бұрын
@@SeattlePioneer I cook everything on my stove. I bake as well. I do not use my electric stove when I have the wood stove going. I purchased good cast iron pans at thrift stoves. Cleaned them and seasoned them well. That's all I use all winter. I am in Pa.
@SeattlePioneer
@SeattlePioneer Жыл бұрын
@@jerriscollins-ruth9019 > Is your wood stove designed as a heating appliance or is it designed as a cook stove? I do baking in a Dutch Oven over a camp fire when coals are available, but I'm not usually stoking my wood stove up enough to do significant baking. ---- such as bread. When baking over a campfire, I use a camp Dutch Oven that has a flange around the edge of the lid that will hold coals and provide heat to the top of what is being baked. I don't find that kind of thing practical on my wood fired heating stove. But please educate me on how you can manage to do that.
@jerriscollins-ruth9019
@jerriscollins-ruth9019 Жыл бұрын
@@SeattlePioneer my stove is a 2 level Alaska Stove. It is designed for heat but being 2 level you can cook on it. I stock about 21 cords of wood for now and later. I also have a blower in the pipe to blow more heat out. The plate or main level allows me to cook everything on it. You'll just have to experiment with the heat. It cooks very quickly. I turn my pans around a bit to get even heating. Baking is the same. Turn or rotate the pans and make sure you have a pan turned upside down under any thing you're baking. I also put a roasting pan over the to to distribute the heat as well.
@SeattlePioneer
@SeattlePioneer Жыл бұрын
@@jerriscollins-ruth9019
@markrush5013
@markrush5013 6 ай бұрын
fireplaces are nice but much of the heat goes straight up and out. wood stoves are the way to go. anytime you burn a fuel it's important to have CO detectors present.
@Sheryl5804
@Sheryl5804 Жыл бұрын
My parents have one of those heaters.
@Melissa0774
@Melissa0774 Жыл бұрын
What are those heat activated fans called and where can I buy one online? I have two wood stoves in my house and I'd like to have one of those, but I'm not planning on driving out to Amish country any time soon. I do live in central NJ, though. I always wondered if something like that existed because of a science experiment I did in school, in seventh grade. We had to figure out how to build a working thermostat. We had a rod made out of a certain type of metal that bends when it reaches a certain temperature, a heat lamp, some aluminum foil, and a special fan with a switch that can be turned on and off by touching it. You make a thermostat by placing the metal rod under the heat lamp with the fan pointing toward it. The fan switch should be under the rod. When the rod heats up from the lamp, it bends and hits the switch for the fan, which then blows on the rod, cooling it down to the point where it straightens out again, until the heat lamp heats it up again, repeating the process. I forget what the type of metal is called, but it's a special type of metal that bends when it gets hot. I don't know what the purpose of the foil was. I think the teacher just gave it to us, to throw us off, as part of the challenge. I can see how a contraption like this could be good for heating a room if the fan is not pointed toward the heat source. But the heat only turns the fan on and off, though. What actually powers it?
@AmishAmerica
@AmishAmerica Жыл бұрын
They sell them on Amazon - search sth like "heat stove fan", it should pop up. I was not much of a science student but in the description of one they reference a "thermoelectric module" that converts the heat to electricity to power the fan
@Melissa0774
@Melissa0774 Жыл бұрын
@@AmishAmerica Thanks. I wasn't sure if heat could actually power something. With the experiment I did in school, I think the fan was just plugged into the wall and the metal thing only tripped it on and off. But it's possible that maybe the heat also powered it somehow, and I just don't remember because it was so many years ago.
@dragondancer1814
@dragondancer1814 Жыл бұрын
You can find them on the Lehman’s website; it’s a store in Ohio that sells all sorts of items that don’t require electricity and caters to the Amish and Mennonite communities in the surrounding area as well as Englischers who enjoy simpler living. My parents (make that Dad; Mom passed away last week and I’m still not used to saying that) have one on top of the wood stove in the living room and it works GREAT!
@markhaynes9442
@markhaynes9442 Жыл бұрын
I got mine from Lehman's. Great customer service and extremely helpful!
@The_Smith
@The_Smith Жыл бұрын
Eco Fan is the brand I have, any good hardware store should have them, or beable to get one in, I'm in Canada, and have seen them in Canadian Tire, Home Hardware, and Peavy Mart, all in the small city near me.
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