Re: Neighbor is complaining about soot damage
Here's a suggestion that perhaps might be of value to you: build a small permanent stand near the fence line with the bothersome neighbor and facing your WFO. Before each firing tape a sheet of new clean paper (standard 8 1/2 by 11 printer paper) to the stand. Date the sheet and photograph it before firing. Then after firing again photo the sheet and spray the surface of the sheet with artists fixative. Punch holes in the sheet and start a binder of the sheets.
This is what we did when we fought PG&E over their pollution from their cleaning the chimneys at their Moss Landing, Ca. power plant. The short story is they were forced by the Gov't to burn crude oil in furnaces with chinmeys designed to burn natural gas. As a consequence they had to clean or "vent" the chinmeys often to keep them free of soot. The recorded pollution data was quite valuable in getting compensation from PG&E (although it has been years since I lived on my boat at the marina there). Obviously in this case you are endeavouring to prove the lack of pollution from your WFO.
I would also suggest civility in dealings with this neighbor. A cool head and polite manner might help defuse a situation which unfortunately might come before a magistrate. And should the situation come before a judge let the neighbor appear to be the hot-headed crazy one. Beware unintended consequences, as a contrary judgment might be hard to undo, and expensive.
Note also: this could backfire as here is a photograph of the awning I recently took down from my patio area. These are not burns but rather soot. And this represents quite a few firings and, I suspect, at a much closer distance than your neighbors yard. But it does show our (or at least my WFO) is not particulate pollution free.
I am sure glad I live in a rural area, with neighbors a goodly distance away who also have WFOs and like me, heat their homes with wood.
Hope this helps,
Wiley
Here's a suggestion that perhaps might be of value to you: build a small permanent stand near the fence line with the bothersome neighbor and facing your WFO. Before each firing tape a sheet of new clean paper (standard 8 1/2 by 11 printer paper) to the stand. Date the sheet and photograph it before firing. Then after firing again photo the sheet and spray the surface of the sheet with artists fixative. Punch holes in the sheet and start a binder of the sheets.
This is what we did when we fought PG&E over their pollution from their cleaning the chimneys at their Moss Landing, Ca. power plant. The short story is they were forced by the Gov't to burn crude oil in furnaces with chinmeys designed to burn natural gas. As a consequence they had to clean or "vent" the chinmeys often to keep them free of soot. The recorded pollution data was quite valuable in getting compensation from PG&E (although it has been years since I lived on my boat at the marina there). Obviously in this case you are endeavouring to prove the lack of pollution from your WFO.
I would also suggest civility in dealings with this neighbor. A cool head and polite manner might help defuse a situation which unfortunately might come before a magistrate. And should the situation come before a judge let the neighbor appear to be the hot-headed crazy one. Beware unintended consequences, as a contrary judgment might be hard to undo, and expensive.
Note also: this could backfire as here is a photograph of the awning I recently took down from my patio area. These are not burns but rather soot. And this represents quite a few firings and, I suspect, at a much closer distance than your neighbors yard. But it does show our (or at least my WFO) is not particulate pollution free.
I am sure glad I live in a rural area, with neighbors a goodly distance away who also have WFOs and like me, heat their homes with wood.
Hope this helps,
Wiley
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