If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
I was driving down an old road to check out a bridge being built when I drove by this. The house associated with it is long gone. These things seem to pop up in the least expected places.
Great find Les!
It seems a pity to see something as well made just abandoned like this.
Don't you just wish you could pick it up and take it home?
The dome is very well made, probably an experienced mason.
With the bushes and roots (well they look like roots) through the dome, looks like it hasn't been used for quite some many years. Even all the carbon has vanished from the inside.
How is it vented (Chimney/flued) Les?
Neill
Prevention is better than cure, - do it right the first time!
The more I learn, the more I realise how little I know
Great find Les!
...
With the bushes and roots (well they look like roots) through the dome, looks like it hasn't been used for quite some many years. ...
Neill
I think they are cobwebs. I don't see any plants that could account for roots there or anyway for a plant to take root on top.
But I agree it hasn't seen use in quite some time - notice the crumbling brick in back.
So, Les, have you found out who owns the property yet?
"He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain what he cannot lose." - Jim Elliot
"Success isn't permanent and failure isn't fatal." -Mike Ditka
It measures around 57 inches at the floor. After the 9th course, it really flattens out. I don't know what kind of brick they used - looks like standard reds to me. There is no insulation. They went with the dome and then added another layer of brick on that, then a 2 inch mortar cladding. Also - no vent , it all came out the front. There is a local historian on the news here, I may ping him about the properties history.
Hey Les,
your time and effort on this oven is appreciated, so when/if you can find and get information from the historian, can you determine whether or not the bricks are fire bricks (which for it's age I doubt whether the technology was that far advanced then) or common solid reds?
The inside of the oven looks to be in incredible condition with no apparent spalling or cracking.
This oven might put to bed once and for all that a good oven does not necessarily need to be built out of (what are expensive or unobtainable in some areas) fire bricks.
Neill
Prevention is better than cure, - do it right the first time!
The more I learn, the more I realise how little I know
I'm waiting for Les to clean that puppy out, throw in some wood, and give it a whirl
Might want to take a whole truckload of wood with you...looks like an all day fire
This oven might put to bed once and for all that a good oven does not necessarily need to be built out of (what are expensive or unobtainable in some areas) fire bricks.
There are lots of ovens made out of other materials but the firebrick is great for longevity. Clay bricks and various mixtures of clay bricks work. The 200 year old Sagunto oven was thin red clay bricks done on their side...note post.
That was also one big oven with a low dome! You can see the bricks in the pics
Comment