Total $$$$ to heat heat your home all winter?????

Unknown
edited July 2011 in The Clubhouse
Any idea as to what it cost you total $ to heat your home this winter?

Me?
Cost me $140 so far through the entire winter.
I have a total electric home except for heat.
I use wood for heat, and live 1 mile from a 300,000 acre wildlife management area, surrounded by 800,00 acres of National Forrest.

They sell wood cutting permits here for $20.
You get "supposedly" 8 "truckloads" for this $20.
I must admit, in the past, I may have exceeded that limit by a stick or two.
Two sticks at the most.:biggrin:
I bought the permit, and cut some wood this year, and ended up buying 3 ricks of wood @ $40/ea. only because my laziness has no bounds!:biggrin:
Post edited by Unknown User on
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Comments

  • ben62670
    ben62670 Posts: 15,969
    edited February 2011
    Whats a rick of wood?
    Please. Please contact me a ben62670 @ yahoo.com. Make sure to include who you are, and you are from Polk so I don't delete your email. Also I am now physically unable to work on any projects. If you need help let these guys know. There are many people who will help if you let them know where you are.
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  • danger boy
    danger boy Posts: 15,722
    edited February 2011
    depends on where you live.. since i live in the frozen tundra of the Pacific Northwest... not in Seattle.. i think so far. iv'e spent around $800 + with still a good 4 to 6 weeks of winter left. It can easily snow here till May. so winter is far from over here.. most of the US winter will have been over for many month's before ours is.
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  • TNRabbit
    TNRabbit Posts: 2,168
    edited February 2011
    I spent $850 in DECEMBER ALONE for propane.

    4600 sq ft in a month of below freezing will do that to ya.
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  • Knucklehead
    Knucklehead Posts: 3,602
    edited March 2011
    I would say $350 just for heating, no higher than 70 on the thermo.
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  • maximillian
    maximillian Posts: 2,144
    edited March 2011
    Oil for a 2400 sq. ft. home. It takes about 2.5 tanks (275 gal) of oil to heat all winter long. So last year it cost me about $1200. This year it will cost me about $1800. Also have to add about $200 annual maintenance for the furnace and flue cleaning.
  • bobman1235
    bobman1235 Posts: 10,822
    edited March 2011
    Oil for a 2400 sq. ft. home. It takes about 2.5 tanks (275 gal) of oil to heat all winter long. So last year it cost me about $1200. This year it will cost me about $1800. Also have to add about $200 annual maintenance for the furnace and flue cleaning.

    About the same (though I have less sq footage). That 2.5 tanks is more like a full year since my boiler also does hot water.

    I keep my thermostats at 67 all winter.
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  • mrbiron
    mrbiron Posts: 5,711
    edited March 2011
    Holy cow Max, your McMansion :biggrin: doesn't seem to energy efficient. So far, this winter in my tiny 2000SF home, we just scratched the $1000 mark with the last bill so hopefully we can walk away not hurtin that bad....especially with the "warm" 40 degree days we've been having.

    Like you bob.....67 degrees or bust. I break fingers when the thermostat is changed.
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  • Willow
    Willow Posts: 11,007
    edited March 2011
    from Nov to end of March we are looking at about 300$ to heat a 2100 sqft home. We keep it set at 71.6 when we are at home and 64.4 when we are at work and sleeping (not sleeping at work:wink:). This is Natural Gas.
  • VR3
    VR3 Posts: 28,611
    edited March 2011
    Spent $220.00

    Heating bill was $100.00 lower than last year and it was far colder this year!

    We added 24" of insulation to the attic
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  • bobman1235
    bobman1235 Posts: 10,822
    edited March 2011
    Willow wrote: »
    We keep it set at 71.6 when we are at home and 64.4 when we are at work

    I put mine at like 58 when i'm at work, and I think I just chose that because it's as low as the thermostat goes. I refuse to heat a house I'm not in.
    If you will it, dude, it is no dream.
  • nguyendot
    nguyendot Posts: 3,594
    edited March 2011
    $90 a month in gas. That's water and heat.
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  • Willow
    Willow Posts: 11,007
    edited March 2011
    bobman1235 wrote: »
    I put mine at like 58 when i'm at work, and I think I just chose that because it's as low as the thermostat goes. I refuse to heat a house I'm not in.

    I don't want the pipes to freeze, the dogs to get too cold, plus when the heat does kick in, it's going to take more gas to heat it up and longer as well. We are south facing and the back of our house is mostly windows, it is usually 2 degrees warmer on the thermostate then what we have it set at. the sun heats up our house so much (which is a bad thing as the upstairs and finished basement get get the right heat until we close the curtains)
  • muncybob
    muncybob Posts: 3,039
    edited March 2011
    ben62670 wrote: »
    Whats a rick of wood?

    A rick of wood is whatever length the wood is cut to depending on what the wood burner will accept.....and these sticks are stacked 4' tall and 8' long.

    For me, I would cut my wood to 20" long, but many people cut them shorter due to size of the stove, etc. So, there is no actual consistent size to a rick...now a cord of wood is 128 sq. ft. of wood, normally seen as a stack 4X4X8 feet.

    We will spend around $60(for saw gas and oil, etc) for heat and hot water since we use a wood burning boiler and the wood is right out our back door.

    I read that in some places heating oil(which is waht we used up until a few years ago) is near $4.00 gallon...that's $1100 to fill up one 275 gallon tank....YIKES!
    It's these savings for us that will allow me to finally upgrade our system sometime this year :)
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  • thuffman03
    thuffman03 Posts: 1,325
    edited March 2011
    I would say my gas bill was $400ish since October till last month. I have a small house and keep the temp at 62 for most of the day.
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  • DollarDave
    DollarDave Posts: 2,575
    edited March 2011
    With a 2980 sq feet @ 76 to 77 all day and night. $939 for October, November, December, and January. That's heating and cooling with electricity (DFW, Texas). The house has spray foam insulation and the attic storage areas are only about 8 to 10 degree different than the house year round.

    No one can seem to prove why turning it down saves you money...the rate of heat loss is essentially the same within a 30 degree tempurature range and you have to heat it back up anyway.
  • bobman1235
    bobman1235 Posts: 10,822
    edited March 2011
    DaveMuell wrote: »
    No one can seem to prove why turning it down saves you money...the rate of heat loss is essentially the same within a 30 degree tempurature range and you have to heat it back up anyway.

    I don't care if anyone can prove why, I just know that it works based on my fuel bill.

    I used to live in an apt with natural gas (which was easier to track since it was just a monthly bill, rather than "fill up the oil tank twice a year when i need to"). I used to keep it at 68 or 70 all winter; I'd occasionally remember to turn it down as I left for work, but almost NEVER actually did so.

    After one year, I bought a programmable thermostat, and had it at 68 while I was home and 58 while I wasn't or while I was asleep. My gas bill almost HALVED.


    Also, keeping your heat at 78 degrees is f***ing insane.
    If you will it, dude, it is no dream.
  • jimsvm
    jimsvm Posts: 307
    edited March 2011
    To DaveMuell, as temperature difference between inside and outside increases the heatloss increases.I installed a 18 seer heat pump and it cut my gas bill by 1/3. I push it dowm to -20C.
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  • shack
    shack Posts: 11,154
    edited March 2011
    I heat around 2,650 sq. ft. with an all electric heat pump. Highest this winter was $350 which includes all power...not just heat. For that bill, outside temps for the entire month averaged 11-13 degrees. My average monthly power bill is around $230 for a typical winter of 4-5 months.
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  • muncybob
    muncybob Posts: 3,039
    edited March 2011
    Lasareath wrote: »
    Very Nice! I'd love to put in a couple of wood/coal? Burning stoves this year.

    Ours is wood/oil. Nice to be flexible. Oil is a last resort of course...like when gone for a few days. Initial investment a few years ago seemed large but with the ever increasing cost of fossil fuel the system cost has paid for itself.
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  • maximillian
    maximillian Posts: 2,144
    edited March 2011
    bobman1235 wrote: »
    I don't care if anyone can prove why, I just know that it works based on my fuel bill.

    From my Physics classes... heat loss is directly proportional to the temperature difference. So turning the furnace down is the smart thing to do. I too keep my furnace at 68 during the day and use a programmable thermostat (definitely worth getting) to turn down the heat to 62 at night.

    My house is not a Mcmansion. It's a typical 3 bed, 2.5 bath colonial in this area. It is only 15 years old but may have been built cheaply. Comparing heat costs is often not easy since it depends on how cold your winter is. Someone's heat bill is going to be different in VA compared to ME. Even within a state it may vary depending on how much snow you get.
  • jflail2
    jflail2 Posts: 2,868
    edited March 2011
    My monthly power bill has gone down rather significantly since moving into a condo from a house that was probably 80 years old, and hadn't been updated/re-insulated that entire time...

    My average power bill for this winter so far has been in the $80 range, with a high of $100 in January.

    I'm pretty pleased with that considering that's heat and all other appliances as well.

    I usually keep my thermostat on 65 degrees day and night. I've gotten used to it being a pinch chilly, and don't mind it at all considering how much I've saved!

    My old house saw electric bills in the $200/month area during the winter, with an additional $100 or so a month spent on gas to heat the house. So glad to be out of that energy hog...
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  • Theheadsn
    Theheadsn Posts: 413
    edited March 2011
    So far Ive spent... Id say... $0? Lucky me in California ha at night it really only drops to around 50, so a thick blanket will do. Now I cant go jumping in my pool, so thats kind of a bummer, but other then that Im lucky that Im not stuck having to heat my house all winter long.

    Open invite to anyone that wants to come out and experience some decent weather, and hey you guys can even see that thing we call the "sun." Good luck guys :) lol
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  • shack
    shack Posts: 11,154
    edited March 2011
    Theheadsn wrote:
    and hey you guys can even see that thing we call the "sun." Good luck guys :) lol

    Filtered through the smog of course....
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  • bobman1235
    bobman1235 Posts: 10,822
    edited March 2011
    shack wrote: »
    Filtered through the smog of course....

    What smog? There's no such thing as pollution.
    If you will it, dude, it is no dream.
  • Theheadsn
    Theheadsn Posts: 413
    edited March 2011
    ofcourse lol gives it that lovely shade of orange
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  • pdxfj
    pdxfj Posts: 376
    edited March 2011
    I usually run $150-$175/mo for gas heat and water. Although that doubled for around Christmas when my sister and her family came and stayed with me over the holidays.

    Living in a 2000sq/ft+ house built in 1946 with no insulation in the walls and the original single pane wood framed windows. I did fill half the attic with R30, but haven't been able to do the other half because I have cut into the walls for access (finished attic). I plan on buying the house in the next few months and will replace all the windows, insulate, etc before next winter.
  • sda2mike
    sda2mike Posts: 3,131
    edited March 2011
    you don't want to know:tongue: i ran the heat for maybe a week...on other hand, let's talk about cooling your palace...a/c season for me runs full time from mid april till maybe nov into dec...in the months we're not in a/c, we run the things once in a while...now is the best time of the year...i can go weeks without turning it on...my power bill this month was $99..height of summer: $325 plus

    mike
  • muncybob
    muncybob Posts: 3,039
    edited March 2011
    a/c...what a/c...we don't need no stinkin' a/c

    Actually there are days we wish we had it, but shade trees along with an almost constant breeze is good enough for us elec= $60/mo in the summer.

    As expected, seeing some high heating costs...what's to become of those that actually need gov't entitlement programs to keep warm if $$ is to be cut like they are talking?
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  • gimpod
    gimpod Posts: 1,793
    edited March 2011
    Don't want to know and don't really care, but it runs about $150-$175 a month in the winter and around $90 in the summer. But I also keep the thermostat at around 78-82 when I'm awake and off when asleep.
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  • inspiredsports
    inspiredsports Posts: 5,501
    edited March 2011
    pepster wrote: »
    Any idea as to what it cost you total $ to heat your home this winter?

    Yes, we are pathetically spoiled . . . $Zero.

    There's an oil well on our property and we contractually get 300,000 cubic feet of natural gas free each year (plus unused cubic feet carry over, so after 20 years here we have a bunch in the "bank").

    Plus we get 5% of the net profits and in addition to gas sold, they take a couple tankers of oil out of here each year. That more than pays for the 220 VAC the motor use to spin the giant squirrel cage blower in the furnace/AC unit.

    We keep the themostat at whatever temp we're in the mood for, and and don't worry much about window and door efficiency.

    Heat, A/C, hot water, stove, dryer and hot tub net cost = free. I'm currently researching natural gas powered generators.
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