Heating the hunting lodge

Every winter I spend two weeks up at the old family cabin.

I do a lot of hunting, but not for sport. No one should ever kill anything just to kill it. I follow all the rules and regulations, and usually come back with enough meat to feed my family for a good six months. If I get lucky, I can bring back enough delicious meat to keep us well fed until the following winter! As an indiginous tribal native, I have special permissions to hunt these lands while very few others do. When I was a kid the old cabin had no furnace, just a very old fireplace with a very cracked flue. Having heating at night also meant nearly choking to death on smoke. The old fireplace is still there, but there is also a wood burning furnace in the kitchen (that doubles as a stove). Of course there is also a very nice, very powerful space heater, for whenever I feel like running the generator. The genny gives this cabin all the light and heating it needs, but it also makes noise and tends to scare away the animals. Whenever possible I leave the genny off and rely on the wood burning furnace for heat, and a portable light for reading my books. I like having the space heater in case of emergencies, or for when people need to stay in the cabin during the off season. I always leave the door unlocked, and a note telling weary travelers how to use the genny and the heater.
Air conditioning repair