Thursday, June 17, 2010


Product Description

Amazon.com Product Description

Keep you and your guests feeling nice and toasty during those chilly evenings entertaining on your porch, deck, or veranda. The Uni Flame Slate & Marble Fire pit is decorated with copper accents to give it a classy, attractive look certain to match your outdoor décor. Wood loads, tends, and burns easily and effectively in the 22-inch-diameter black porcelain firebowl. The easy-lifting spark arrestor and steel grate help provide safety, and the Fire pit rests squarely on the included wrought iron stand. It measures 34 inches in diameter and weighs 58 pounds. A 1-year limited warranty is included.

Product Description

34" Slate & Marble Surround Fire pit with copper Accents

Product Details

  • Product Dimensions: 34 x 34 x 21.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 56 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Shipping: This item is also available for shipping to select countries outside the U.S.
  • Shipping Advisory: This item must be shipped separately from other items in your order. Additional shipping charges will not apply.
Review
Beautiful pit, excellent customer service from Uniflame,
August 9, 2008
By Craig Vandergoot
This review is from: UniFlame WAD820SP 34-Inch Slate & Marble Firepit with Copper Accents (Lawn & Patio)
The pit looks great - just like in the picture. Sturdy construction and nice attention to detail. It's probably the best pit you can get for the money. However, the main reason why I'm writing this review is not because of the product, but what happened when I ordered. Yeah, I know this is supposed to be a product review, but bear with me.

FedEx had delivered the box in a sorry state. The deliveryman basically gave me a tattered ruin of a box and said sorry. When I opened it all up, the table was missing a leg and the mesh grille top was dented and mangled. Who do I call about this? FedEx? Amazon? Uniflame, or the distributor in Illinois? I decided to call Uniflame first - and I'm happy I did. Within three minutes I had ordered new parts for free, and was told to expect them within a few days. The customer service reps were extremely friendly and understanding - and trusting of their customers. What a company should be. Thanks!

Read more

Sunday, May 30, 2010

Outdoor Fire Pits and Safety

According to the American Society of Landscape Architects, fire pits, or outdoor fireplaces, are the No. 1 requested design feature today. Why not? They add ambiance to a cool evening, and it's nice to just sit and stare at a burning fire. Plus, you can have one for a lot less than you might think.

The simplest fire pit of all is little more than a metal bowl, which may or may not come equipped with a grill top — just in case you want to do a little outdoor cooking — and a protective screen cover. They're great for small patios and courtyards.

This fire bowl is the perfect size for a patio. The top prevents rain from getting into the fire pan, and its open sides allow you to add wood easily. Plus, you can get a stick close to the fire for roasting marshmallows. During the summer, these fire pits make great planters.

Chimineas arrived on the scene back in the 1980s, and they remain as popular as ever. They don't give off much heat, but the smell of burning wood adds a certain something to outdoor living.

Good firewood includes pinion wood, alder, cedar, oak, hickory, mesquite, pecan and even fruit woods, such as apple and cherry. Don't burn pressure-treated wood in a chiminea or any other fire pit or fireplace because it may contain harmful toxins.

This pit is nothing more than a ring made from mortared limestone. Although you can't see it, there's a drain in the center that's connected to a pipe running underground and out into the lawn so that rainwater doesn't collect in the pit.

This fire pit also has a drain. It's designed so that the fire actually sits below the level of the stone patio, and the sight of flames shooting up from below is very cool. During the summer, the pit is a great place for a large potted plant.

Fire pits can be very simple and inexpensive to install. This one, from start to finish, took two people just a couple of hours to complete, and the cost of materials was less than $100.

Fancier fire pits like this will cost you more, but do-it-yourselfers can easily handle the installation.

Fireplaces are a different matter. They can get rather pricey, especially for custom models, but modular kits are available as well for less than a third of the cost. And there's no getting around the fact that they add a special touch to outdoor living, with or without a fire burning in them.


Fire safety

When it comes time to actually start a fire, there are a few things to keep in mind, the most important of which is to keep your fire small. There's no need for a blazing bonfire, and the bigger the fire, the greater the potential for disaster.

First things first, your fire pit should be at least 10 feet away from any structure or combustible surface. Before lighting an outdoor fire, check the weather forecast. Avoid windy conditions that can blow embers. Also stay up to date on any burn bans or burn ordinances that might be in effect at different times during the year. Doing some house cleaning, like picking up leaves and other combustible materials, around the pit is important to ensure the fire doesn't accidentally spread. Always have a container of water nearby and a garden hose on standby before starting the fire.

To get a fire started, put a crumpled piece of paper or a store-bought fire starter in the pit, and cover one or both with small sticks — the smaller, the better. As the fire begins to burn, add larger and larger sticks until you're finally able to add a log or two. But whatever you do, don't try to start a fire with gasoline. It's way too dangerous.

The best way to extinguish a fire is to take the ashes, spread them over a larger surface area and let them cool down for a little bit. Then take your small container of water and gently pour it over the ashes, but monitor it. Don't just throw some water on it and go to bed because it can flare up in the night. If you have a fire that escapes your fire pit and moves into a nearby pile of kindling or a combustible surface, immediately call 911.

There's no getting around the fact that wood smoke is a pollutant and that outdoor fire pits and fireplaces are completely unnecessary. In fact, in some cities, both indoor fireplaces and outdoor fire features of any kind are illegal. This isn't just because of the potential for fires, but because of the pollution they produce. That said, the decision to burn or not to burn becomes, for many people, a personal rather than legal one. Regardless of how you feel about the subject, we can all agree that fires are far more decorative than functional.


Reference : hgtv.com

Patio Fire Pit Magic

Here's a nice story house. A few weeks ago I had my friend who had just moved into a new house with his family, and visits not much budget to make the most of your first day of the new place, I wanted something to the house to add to a personal place and identity, so that the whole family can feel that it is actually a new house, not a replacement for the old house.

The house was built about 40 years old, in good condition, kitchen and living room was renovated a few years, a resident of a woman in the house took care of him, had not much to do, or do not very important task. Part of the house a little "down and leave the court immediately of a fire in the yard, but I thought that was outside the house.

Something beautiful garden, and pictures of all the necessary re-put a little movement on the spot and enjoy the evening on the terrace. I knew that my experience is that many people with the patio homes as a means to spruce search social context otherwise gray. Fireplace can be used courtyard.

I spoke with my friends and asked them if they would be interested in the courtyard of the house is, was interested in, but clearly not satisfied, I took a mini-project may act prior to departure, and it is important, fireplace terrace substantial headroom is a problem, because the house saves a lot of heat, if the court is small, can not buy a big unit. A hole, a small fire, the court would be a good complement to this dish. Practice, I'm staying, so the focus can be set to the middle of the room, and people are not too hot.

When I finally buy a house, caught my friend looking forward to, and if the whole family helped to create emotion reached its climax. I spent the first night gala patio fireplace with friends and left the next day after this week's pictures from various social events and family a new and improved the house and thought it might be the kitchen to thank the courtyard .


Reference : spirittxarabians.com