Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:There is a deep sensory pleasure with the warmth of a fire, the scent of the smoke, the crackling of the logs, watching tiny sparks floating into the night.
Even better if I am sitting next to a friend sharing a laugh and a beverage, or a cuddly dog.
I do understand this…it’s just something that imposes costs on others for your own enjoyment. Commenters who don’t care and think the environment and health concerns are ridiculous just typify a certain mindset.
What I don’t understand is people doing this the second the temps fall below 80.
No, they (we) are just people who understand that the "environmental and health concerns" from an occasional wood burning campfire are so vanishingly small that worrying about it is both a waste of energy and exceedingly stupid. And the "cost to others" apparently is that you had to close your windows for a few hours. Are you OK? Was that traumatic? Are you suffering from PTSD? Shall we secure a counselor for you? Perhaps in-patient intervention?
If you'd just said you don't like wood smoke, people would sympathize, but tell you to mind your own business. You know this, so you tried to frame this as some sort of significant health issue, which is transparently BS, which makes you seen like both a busybody and an idiot.