Re: Clay Ovens
My thinking on it not being worth the expense of time and dollars/materials in rendering and insulating a cob or mud WFO isn't just doing it the first time but the second and third time. Having two neighbors with cob ovens (one of which is quite a devotee of cob) I have a little first hand experience.
Cob WFOs are in my opinion fragile, at least for a klutz like myself. Damage to the entrance is easily done with peel or rake and the hasty and over zealous pitch of a piece of wood that happens to strike an interior wall can cause significant damage. No big deal for when the damage gets bad enough, one simply breaks and crushes up the whole oven and starts over. A couple days work and some curing and they have a new oven. So they wear out fom the inside as well as the outside. Insulating and rendering the outside only protects half the WFO. I suspect that any plus from ease of rebuild would rapidly disappear if one had to separate out the wire and stucco and ceramic insulation, especially if one planned on using the insulation over. True one could pitch the stuff and start over using new materials, but two things on that idea: One) cob is a specific mix of materials not the typical back yard earth; clean organic free sand and clay are required for good construction. So unless one is lucky to have such deposits at hand one will have to travel and or pay to get them. And 2) people who build in cob aren't of the mindset to simply cart the reject stuff off to the landfill. They're more into organics and caring for the earth and environment, not wasting resources etc. etc.
I'm not into cob but I'm not against anyone who thinks it's the medium for them. It's obviously worked for centuries world over. But relative to our brick WFOs, cob ovens are more ephemeral, it's part and parcel to what they are. If one chooose to build in cob at some point one has to expect to have to rebuild it.
Wiley
My thinking on it not being worth the expense of time and dollars/materials in rendering and insulating a cob or mud WFO isn't just doing it the first time but the second and third time. Having two neighbors with cob ovens (one of which is quite a devotee of cob) I have a little first hand experience.
Cob WFOs are in my opinion fragile, at least for a klutz like myself. Damage to the entrance is easily done with peel or rake and the hasty and over zealous pitch of a piece of wood that happens to strike an interior wall can cause significant damage. No big deal for when the damage gets bad enough, one simply breaks and crushes up the whole oven and starts over. A couple days work and some curing and they have a new oven. So they wear out fom the inside as well as the outside. Insulating and rendering the outside only protects half the WFO. I suspect that any plus from ease of rebuild would rapidly disappear if one had to separate out the wire and stucco and ceramic insulation, especially if one planned on using the insulation over. True one could pitch the stuff and start over using new materials, but two things on that idea: One) cob is a specific mix of materials not the typical back yard earth; clean organic free sand and clay are required for good construction. So unless one is lucky to have such deposits at hand one will have to travel and or pay to get them. And 2) people who build in cob aren't of the mindset to simply cart the reject stuff off to the landfill. They're more into organics and caring for the earth and environment, not wasting resources etc. etc.
I'm not into cob but I'm not against anyone who thinks it's the medium for them. It's obviously worked for centuries world over. But relative to our brick WFOs, cob ovens are more ephemeral, it's part and parcel to what they are. If one chooose to build in cob at some point one has to expect to have to rebuild it.
Wiley
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