A wood-burning fireplace is the most hands-on option and, for a lot of homeowners, the whole reason to have a fireplace at all. Maintaining one well in DFW means the usual sweep-and-inspect routine, plus a bit of regional awareness that a lot of newer residents have not heard about.
The burn ban most people find out about the hard way
The North Central Texas Council of Governments, covering the DFW metroplex’s ozone nonattainment area, issues air quality alerts and voluntary or mandatory burn restrictions on certain summer and high-pollution days. These apply to outdoor burning broadly and, depending on the specific alert, can include recommendations against unnecessary wood-burning fireplace use. It rarely affects winter fireplace season, since alerts cluster around hot-weather ozone days, but it is worth knowing about if you are new to the area.
What keeps a wood fireplace running well
Frequently asked questions
Does the burn ban actually apply to me if I just use my fireplace occasionally?
Alerts and restrictions are generally aimed at outdoor burning and tend to be recommendations rather than hard bans for indoor fireplace use, but it is worth checking current guidance on active alert days, especially in late summer.
What is the best firewood for a DFW fireplace?
Post oak is the regional favorite for good reason, hot, long burning, and widely available. Cedar and mesquite both have their appeal but come with their own quirks worth knowing before you buy a truckload.
How is a wood fireplace different to maintain than a gas one?
Wood fireplaces need creosote-focused cleaning and inspection that gas simply does not require, but gas has its own mechanical components, valves, igniters, that wood does not.
Can I still get a traditional-feeling fire with an insert instead of an open fireplace?
Yes, a well-chosen wood insert keeps real flame and the sound and smell of a wood fire while running dramatically more efficiently than an open fireplace.