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"Wiley, you and I think a lot alike....Now that you mention it, I have revisited my purpose in building the oven already and haven't permanently laid the floor ...
....I'm 62 and retired for 13 years already....Need to keep busy to see my grand children as adults"
Lee, Alot closer than one might expect...I'll be 62 in a few weeks, and I also retired at 49 1/2; it'll be 13 years on Halloween (the aniversary of my retiring). I have 5 grandkids stretching from a granddaughter who's 23 and the youngest grandson is 7 years.
And I built my oven because I like self-sufficiency. I found Forno Bravo because I have a friend who was going to build an Alan Scott oven and I stumbled onto FB in a online search of wood fired ovens. He never did build himself a WFO.
Well, I bought a tower clock from Ireland on eBay. As night follows day, If you have a tower clock, you're going to need a tower...
David, you are certainly more handy than the normal person....Do you consult for the Red Green show on PBS?
I like your vision in that addition. Must have been a work of love. Well done. I don't think many bona fide architects could have put more things in that one space
Lee B.
DFW area, Texas, USA
If you are thinking about building a brick oven, my advice is Here.
I try to learn from my mistakes, and from yours when you give me a heads up.
Last winter it filled with ice melt run-off, refroze and broke. If you use an unused piece of flue tile to hold your tools, use your angle grinder to cut big notches in the bottom, at least in the back.
Great thoughts, comments, and advice, but I would like to steer this thread back toward its original direction because:
IMO Wiley's entrance is one of the great ones and one of the most creative in terms of using alternative materials (as is his oven!). This kind of inspiration is what keeps me coming back to this forum.
Great thoughts, comments, and advice, but I would like to steer this thread back toward its original direction because:
IMO Wiley's entrance is one of the great ones and one of the most creative in terms of using alternative materials (as is his oven!). This kind of inspiration is what keeps me coming back to this forum.
Genius takes many forms. Sometimes it hides. I see a lot of it on this forum and keep coming back for that reason too. I feel like I'm swimming upstream with the tweaks I want to try....I want to push the edges, without making a mistake I'll regret. So, I'm trying to listen more.
I've been told an oven entrance by ThermoJax has the characteristics I'm interested in -I can't find it- can anyone help me locate a picture of it?
Lee B.
DFW area, Texas, USA
If you are thinking about building a brick oven, my advice is Here.
I try to learn from my mistakes, and from yours when you give me a heads up.
I built my oven for many of the reasons that were mentioned above. I enjoy cooking, but curiosity was also a huge driving force. I enjoyed baking bread in the past and had found the Alan Scott ovens on line but when I found plans for a more flexible WFO and a community of builders I was lured in by the possibilities. When I finished high school I worked in construction for a few years, it appealed to my enjoyment of problem solving, creating and discovery. Masonry wasn’t anything that I had any skills in so when I tore down the wood deck I had an opportunity to clean up the drainage and put in a workable patio with a WFO and learn a few new things.
The WFO is just fun.. I keep tweaking the entry for convenience and aesthetics and the door for heat efficiency.
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