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rapid van cleef
5th January 2011, 18:39
hey

im fixing up my garden in my new house and the previous owners had put in raised beds with lots and lots of pogna around it. it now looks very ugly.

is it any good for burning in a log burner indoors during the winter?

thanks guys

Hitcher
5th January 2011, 18:41
No. Sell it for landscaping purposes.

JimO
5th January 2011, 18:44
if it burns its good for firewood

gatch
5th January 2011, 23:11
No, its shit house. You will get more heat from burning your pube trimmings.

HQfiend
6th January 2011, 00:03
No, its shit house. You will get more heat from burning your pube trimmings.

Don't want to be downwind of your place in winter then do we!

scumdog
6th January 2011, 00:07
hey

im fixing up my garden in my new house and the previous owners had put in raised beds with lots and lots of pogna around it. it now looks very ugly.

is it any good for burning in a log burner indoors during the winter?

thanks guys

Yup, a shit-load of waste-oil added and you're away..

SMOKEU
6th January 2011, 00:21
Throw some petrol in there if you want a decent fire!

Berries
6th January 2011, 03:46
It smells real bad when burning.

fliplid
6th January 2011, 07:32
It smells real bad when burning.

The ponga, pubes, waste oil, or petrol?

While we're at it, thought of starting it burning with diesel and polystyrene? :innocent:

To get it into "useable" sized pieces for your fireplace will be a real pain, it's a bit like chopping fibreglass with a hand saw. It will dull chainsaw teeth in seconds if it's been used for landscaping.

ellipsis
6th January 2011, 07:47
...burns like a wet roll of toilet paper..

Banditbandit
6th January 2011, 10:10
Let it dry first - it will take about 12 months to realy dry out ponga ...

Then it still burns like wet toilet paper ...

Not worth the hassle of cutting it up ..

Berries
6th January 2011, 14:25
The ponga, pubes, waste oil, or petrol?
Ponga pongs, pubes sizzle.

piston broke
6th January 2011, 16:17
The ponga, pubes, waste oil, or petrol?

While we're at it, thought of starting it burning with diesel and polystyrene? :innocent:

To get it into "useable" sized pieces for your fireplace will be a real pain, it's a bit like chopping fibreglass with a hand saw. It will dull chainsaw teeth in seconds if it's been used for landscaping.

some old tyres should help it to keep burning