> What are the chances of this thing burning along an underground root for 30' and coming up in my barn?
0% chance. Burning a stump is a slow process because as the stump burns down it smothers itself with its own ashes. Once the air supply is cut off to almost nothing, it starts turning the wood into charcoal and eventually runs out of enough air to do even that.
I burned a large American Elm stump by my house once that took weeks, smoking the whole time. Nothing burned any further than about a foot away from the stump (and those were buttress roots). If there's not a path for air to get down to the fire, it won't burn, just like throwing dirt on any fire, it gets smothered.
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Today's Featured Article - Listening to Your Tractor - by Curtis Von Fange. Years ago there was a TV show about a talking car. Unless you are from another planet, physically or otherwise, I don’t think our internal combustion buddies will talk and tell us their problems. But, on the other hand, there is a secret language that our mechanical companions readily do speak. It is an interesting form of communication that involves all the senses of the listener. In this series we are going to investigate and learn the basic rudimentary skills of understanding this lingo.
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