Post
by Paul B » Sun Feb 01, 2009 5:18 pm
Gotta be careful with some wood shavings. If you're sensitised to coco or other species (or not), and you burn the shavings, you might not have a great health outcome if you breath in the smoke - especially if you're cooking food over them and then eating it. My advice is to not burn any wood shavings from exotic species where there are health issues associated with just being exposed to the wood dust (sensitisers) - the smoke from burning them is bound to be far worse for you than just being exposed to the wood dust itself. It might really f**k you up if you smoke food with them and then eat it. Better to just bin them, or put them on the garden.
There are however, some quite enjoyable outcomes when exposed to the smoke produced from burning some other exotic species of plants... Obviously, our Kim is quite familiar with these species.
Heard somewhere that you can't use walnut shavings as bedding for horses, 'cause the horses pee in it, there is some kind of chemical reaction between the horse pee and the shavings, that produces a toxin that is then absorbed through the horses hooves, and it kills them. Horses are very heavy and difficult to move when they're dead. - just so you know.