Stephen Bolsin

Stephen Bolsin

The babies were dying at triple the normal rate. One man noticed. They told him to shut up and protect his career.

His name is Stephen Bolsin. An anaesthetist — the person who keeps you alive on the operating table. In 1988 he took a job at the Bristol Royal Infirmary, a big, famous hospital with a children’s heart unit. The villains in this story are the men who ran it: senior surgeon and medical director James Wisheart, and chief executive John Roylance. Hold those two names. They matter at the end.

The unit operated on babies — tiny hearts with holes in them, defects that kill without surgery and are survivable with it. Simple math. Most of these children should have lived.

They didn’t.

Bolsin had worked heart surgery in London. The numbers there were nothing like this. At Bristol, for the youngest babies, the death rate ran close to 30%. Almost one in three. Dead on the table or soon after — at nearly double the national rate.

So he did the one thing nobody else was doing. He kept records. Quietly. Tracked who died. Compared Bristol to everywhere else. The data was clear: something was very wrong in that unit.

In 1990 he warned the chief executive, Roylance. He got a dismissive phone call. Then he was hauled into Wisheart’s office — one of the very surgeons doing the operations — and told, in so many words, that this was not how to “progress your career in Bristol.” Translation: shut up, or you’re finished.

He didn’t shut up. He took the numbers higher — to the NHS, the Department of Health, the Royal Colleges. The people whose entire job was to protect patients.

They ignored him. For years.

Why? Money. The unit’s status as a “specialist centre” came with funding and prestige. Admit the babies were dying too often, and they’d lose the designation, lose the cash, look incompetent. So nobody checked the surgeons’ results. Nobody was allowed to. The operations continued. The babies kept dying.

Now stop and sit with this part, because it’s about you. Before Bristol, no one in Britain monitored how individual surgeons actually performed. Your surgeon. Your child’s surgeon. There was no scoreboard. No one was counting. You walked into a hospital and simply trusted that the man with the knife was good at it — and if he wasn’t, the system was built to hide it, not catch it.

For five years Bolsin watched children die. Five years of warnings. Five years of being told to be quiet.

In 1995 it broke. A boy named Joshua Loveday was booked for a complex heart operation. Bolsin and others said the risk was too high. Don’t do it. Surgeon Janardan Dhasmana operated anyway. The child died.

That was the end. The program was suspended, and Bolsin took everything to the press — the records, the death rates, the years of being ignored. It became one of the biggest scandals in NHS history.

A massive public inquiry followed under Professor Ian Kennedy. Twelve thousand pages. Almost 200 recommendations. The verdict was brutal: a unit “simply not up to the task,” with “an old boy’s culture,” secrecy about how doctors performed, and nobody watching the results. The official count — between 1991 and 1995, 30 to 35 more babies under one died at Bristol than would have at a normal unit. Dead children who would have lived almost anywhere else. The families’ own lawyer believes the true toll across the full decade was closer to 170.

In 1998 the General Medical Council ruled. James Wisheart — struck off. John Roylance — struck off. Careers over. Dhasmana banned from operating on children. The men who told Bolsin to be quiet, finished.

And the unit transformed. With real oversight and real surgeons, Bristol’s children’s heart death rate crashed from nearly 30% to under 5%. One in three, down to one in twenty. Hundreds of children who would have died now lived.

Then it changed everything. The scandal created “clinical governance” — the rule that hospitals must track results, monitor surgeons, and publish their data. Surgeons across Britain began publishing their own outcomes so this could never be buried again. That scoreboard that didn’t exist before? It exists now. One quiet anaesthetist forced an entire health system to start policing itself. If you have surgery in Britain today, your surgeon is being watched because of this man.

So how did Britain thank him?

It ran him out.

He applied for jobs. Doors slammed. Nobody in the NHS wanted the man who proved the system protected itself before it protected patients. He couldn’t find work anywhere in his own country. So he packed up his family and left for Australia — Geelong, near Melbourne — and never worked as a doctor in Britain again. Australia built him a world-class anaesthesia service and gave him professorships. In 2025 it pinned the Medal of the Order of Australia on him. The country that didn’t raise him valued him more than the one that did.

Here’s the part that should make you furious. Bolsin says it’s still happening. That the NHS still punishes the people who speak up. That honest staff still can’t report danger without fear for their jobs. The wall of silence he tore a hole in? He says it’s still standing — which means somewhere, in some unit, the next person who notices the bodies piling up is being told the exact same thing he was: shut up, or you’re finished.

He saved the smallest, most helpless patients in an entire country. And that country’s first instinct was to silence him, and its second was to exile him.

The men who let the babies die were British heroes until a stranger started counting.

Tag the person you know who would have kept counting anyway.

James Bamford

James Bamford

James Bamford was 28 years old when he put on a pair of headphones and heard a crime.
1974. A Navy listening post in Sabana Seca, Puerto Rico. A two-week reservist placement. Routine. Then he heard the operator monitoring the line. American voices. The NSA was spying on American citizens. That was illegal.
He could have unheard it. Law degree almost finished. Safe life waiting. He didn’t.
1975. The Church Committee opens Senate hearings on intelligence abuses. The NSA testifies under oath. Says they stopped intercepting US citizens 18 months ago. Says it’s over. Says trust us.
Bamford knew they were lying. He’d heard it himself. Months earlier. With his own ears.
He called Senator Church’s office. Said the NSA is lying and I can prove it. They brought him into a closed hearing. Church’s private office. He told them what he heard, where, and when. His testimony helped build the case that created the FISA law in 1978 — the law that required a warrant before the government could spy on you.
Then he filed a FOIA request and asked the NSA for everything.
A year later hundreds of declassified pages landed on his desk. And the names of secret programs came with them.
Operation Shamrock. From 1945 to 1975, the NSA secretly copied every international telegram going in or out of the United States. Thirty years. Millions of private messages. Western Union, ITT, and RCA all handed them over. Zero warrants.
Project Minaret. Watch lists of American citizens. Civil rights leaders. Antiwar protesters. Martin Luther King Jr. Jane Fonda. Senator Frank Church himself was on a list — the very senator investigating them.
Bamford decided to write a book. He’d never written anything but legal briefs. Didn’t matter.
1981. Reagan takes office and the Justice Department switches sides. They come after Bamford. Demand the documents back. Say they’ve been reclassified — top secret now. Threaten him with the Espionage Act. Decades in federal prison.
He refused. He’d gotten them declassified, legally. He walked out of a meeting with NSA officials and his own lawyer and just kept the documents.
Reagan signed a new executive order so reclassified documents could be pulled back. The Constitution stopped him — you can’t make something illegal after it already happened. Bamford kept every page.
1982. The Puzzle Palace hits shelves. The first major book ever written about the NSA. National bestseller. The New York Times said he’d uncovered everything except the combination to the director’s safe.
The NSA still wasn’t done. Agents walked into a private library in Virginia, reclassified papers Bamford had used, and physically removed them from the shelves. The American Library Association sued. That’s how far they’d go to bury one man.
Here’s the part that should make you laugh and then make you furious.
In 2001 he wrote a second NSA exposé. Another bestseller. And the agency that tried to throw him in prison invited him to its Fort Meade headquarters — and sold his book in their gift shop.
Then 2005. President Bush admits to warrantless wiretaps on Americans after 9/11. No warrants. No FISA court. The exact thing Bamford’s testimony built the law to prevent. He joined the ACLU and sued the NSA as a plaintiff.
2013. Edward Snowden leaks the files. Mass surveillance of Americans, on a scale beyond Shamrock — exactly what Bamford had been screaming about for almost 40 years. In 2014 he flew to Moscow and sat with Snowden for three days. The longest interview Snowden has ever given anyone.
And it never stopped. The surveillance machine he exposed in 1974 is bigger now than it has ever been. Your calls. Your texts. Your searches. They built the infrastructure to watch everyone, and one Navy reservist saw it coming half a century before the rest of us did.
He’s 79. Lives in Washington DC. Still investigating. Still publishing — his latest book dropped in 2023. Still fighting an agency with a $10 billion budget and 40,000 employees.
Four presidents tried to silence him. They threatened him with prison. They raided libraries. They reclassified his evidence.
He’s still here. Still writing. Still warning you.

3 Ingredient, Sugar-Free Cake

3 Ingredient, Sugar-Free Cake

3 Eggs
1 cup/100 g Shredded Coconut
1 Cup/250 g Greek Yogurt

Mix well and bake in oven at 180 C(350 F) degrees for 30 minutes.

Because there is no flour, the texture is closer to a moist coconut custard or baked cheesecake than a traditional sponge cake. Start checking at 25 minutes; it’s done when the centre is set and the top is lightly golden.

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Papaya

Papaya

Your digestion isn’t broken, it’s just missing this forgotten biological catalyst.
You probably see it every morning at the hotel buffet or in your kitchen fruit bowl and ignore it as if it were just another tropical decoration. Most people assume papaya is just fiber and water for the occasional bathroom break, but that’s the biggest lie we’ve been sold by omission. Imagine for a moment that heavy feeling after a dense meal, that bulge in your abdomen that forces you to unbutton the top button of your pants as you feel your energy completely drained. You’ve tried expensive probiotics, enzymes in drugstore bottles, and designer supplements, but the real solution has been right in front of your eyes, camouflaged in vibrant orange pulp. It’s not just a fruit; it’s a bioengineering tool that ancient cultures used as internal medicine long before antacids existed. There’s a specific method to unlock its potential, and today you’re going to learn how to use it like a true biohacker.
The secret isn’t in the sweet pulp, but in a proteolytic enzyme called papain, which literally works like high-precision molecular scissors. While your stomach struggles to unravel the complex protein chains imposed by the modern diet, papain steps in to dismantle these structures before they begin to rot and generate toxic gas in your colon. Most people believe their stomach acid is sufficient, but under chronic stress, acid production drops, leaving food half-processed and creating a ‘digestive sludge’ that inflames your intestinal walls. Papain not only digests food but also has the ability to attack bacterial biofilm and fibrin debris that accumulates on the microvilli. It’s a deep-cleaning process that occurs at a microscopic level, removing the waste that prevents you from absorbing the quality nutrients you consume. It’s the difference between having an engine clogged with old oil and one that flows smoothly with high-performance synthetic lubrication.
To implement this digestive optimization protocol, you can’t just randomly eat the fruit after dessert. The most common mistake is consuming it when you’re already full, which dilutes its enzymatic effect. You need to find a papaya that’s perfectly ripe: not too green, because the alkaloids are too aggressive, and not too overripe, because the enzymes will have already broken down. Cut a slice about two fingers thick and eat it exactly twenty minutes before your heaviest meal of the day, preferably lunch. But here’s the real expert trick: don’t throw away the black seeds. Take five of these small seeds, rinse them quickly to remove any excess pulp, and chew them thoroughly before swallowing. They have a spicy flavor, similar to radish or pepper, due to the benzyl isothiocyanates they contain. These compounds act as a natural antiparasitic and a potent bile stimulant. By combining the enzyme-rich pulp with the potency of the seeds, you create a biological environment hostile to pathogenic bacteria and perfect for amino acid assimilation.
Don’t expect an instant miracle with the first bite, although you’ll feel lighter almost immediately. By the third or fourth day of following this ritual, you’ll notice something fascinating: the ‘brain fog’ that often accompanies heavy digestion will disappear completely. The sign that the protocol is working is an effortless morning bowel movement and a real feeling of emptiness in your abdomen—not hunger, but efficiency. The critical mistake that ruins the whole process is mixing papaya with dairy or refined sugars in the same sitting; the enzymes will be distracted trying to process the lactose and sugar instead of cleansing your tissues. Do it with discipline, and you’ll see that your body didn’t need more medication; it just needed you to stop ignoring the technology that nature has already perfected. Your gut doesn’t forget when you treat it with biological respect, and papaya is the first step to reclaiming your digestive sovereignty.
The bioavailable food: Consume a 150-gram serving of fresh papaya sprinkled with the juice of half a lime and a pinch of grated ginger. The citric acid in the lime acts as a cofactor that stabilizes papain, while the ginger accelerates gastric emptying so the enzymes reach the small intestine faster. Always do this on an empty stomach to maximize contact with the gastric mucosa.
* The natural protocol: Prepare an infusion with three dried papaya leaves in 250ml of water at 85 degrees Celsius, letting it steep for exactly ten minutes. Drink this bitter tonic after heavy meals to take advantage of the phenolic compounds that help reduce systemic inflammation. The taste is strong, but it’s a sign that the phytochemicals are active and ready to work on your gut microbiota.
Shot Booster: Concentrated Carica papaya leaf extract standardized to 5% flavonoids, diluted in 150ml of purified water just before bed. Nighttime absorption allows the bioactive compounds to modulate the immune response of gut-associated lymphoid tissue while the digestive system is at rest. This ensures deep regeneration of the intestinal barrier without the disruptions of the daytime digestive process.
Singh SP, Kumar S, Mathan SV et al.. Daru : journal of Faculty of Pharmacy, Tehran University of Medical Sciences. “Therapeutic application of Carica papaya leaf extract in the management of human diseases.” 2020. PMID: 32367410.

Allen Jones

Allen Jones

Johnson & Johnson the company whose baby shampoo is in your bathroom ran a secret bank account to bribe state officials into drugging prisoners, foster kids, and psychiatric patients with its most expensive pills. One man found the account. His name is Allen Jones. He was a state fraud investigator, and they fired him for refusing to look away.

2002. Pennsylvania. Jones gets handed a case that looks like paperwork.

The state’s chief pharmacist, Steve Fiorello, is taking checks from drug companies. In Pennsylvania that’s illegal. Small, contained, boring.

Jones starts pulling the thread.

The checks come from Johnson & Johnson and its subsidiary Janssen. The maker of an antipsychotic called Risperdal. On paper the money is “travel and speaking fees.” But state employees can’t keep that money. So it’s sitting in an unregistered, off-the-books account.

Then Jones follows the money out of the account.

It’s flowing to an official in another state entirely. The director of the Texas Department of Mental Health.

A hidden account. Funded by a drug company. Wiring money to officials across state lines.

He’d walked into something with a name. TMAP. The Texas Medication Algorithm Project.

It looked like neutral science. Official state guidelines telling doctors which drugs to prescribe for depression, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia. It carried the authority of the government.

But it steered doctors to one specific group of drugs. The newest antipsychotics. The ones that cost up to ten times more than the older medicines they replaced.

And the older drugs weren’t worse. A government-funded study later found the expensive new drugs were no better at treating schizophrenia than the cheap, off-patent ones.

So TMAP wasn’t medical science. It was a marketing program wearing a lab coat. The drug companies helped fund the guidelines. The guidelines recommended the drug companies’ priciest products. And the officials who pushed it were allegedly getting trips, perks, and money in hidden accounts.

Now ask who was on the other end of those prescriptions.

People in state mental hospitals. People in prison cells. Foster children who are wards of the state. People who don’t pick their own medication and cannot say no. The exact people Jones had spent his career around. Now he could see the money behind their pills.

So he took it to his bosses. Corruption was his whole job.

They told him to drop it. Too political. One manager said it plainly: drug companies write checks to politicians. Both parties.

When Jones refused, they pulled him off the case. Banned him from investigating. Buried him in menial work. Bury it, or be buried.

Then he learned the worst part. TMAP wasn’t staying in Texas. Pennsylvania was about to adopt its own version and switch patients onto the expensive drugs regardless of what they actually needed.

Jones made his choice.

He filed a First Amendment lawsuit to protect his right to speak. Then he took everything to the New York Times.

Pennsylvania fired him for it.

He lost his career for doing his job. But the truth was already out, and it could not be put back.

His story went national. The federal government’s own mental-health agency announced it no longer endorsed TMAP. The corrupt program was abandoned.

Then came the bill.

The Texas Attorney General used Jones’s documents to build a case against Johnson & Johnson. In 2011, Texas settled for $158 million. Other states filed and settled too. And it kept widening — until the U.S. Department of Justice resolved the Risperdal cases against J&J and Janssen for more than two billion dollars.

In 2012, Allen Jones was named Whistleblower of the Year.

And understand what this really was. This is how drug-company money quietly shapes the official guidelines your own doctor is told to follow. It started with the people who couldn’t fight back. But the system that decides which pills get pushed touches everyone.

The people he protected will mostly never know his name. The prisoners. The foster kids. The voiceless, drugged for someone else’s profit. He fought for them anyway.

One investigator followed one check. He exposed how Big Pharma bought its way into state medicine. They fired him for telling the truth.

He brought the whole scheme down.

And he’s still out there demanding accountability today.

How To Build A Thermal Mass Heater

How To Build A Thermal Mass Heater

Why settle for a heater that only warms the air when you can have one that cooks your food, heats your water, and stays warm for 24 hours? Modern wood stoves are efficient, but once the fire goes out, the room gets cold. A masonry heater captures every bit of energy in its stone mass, releasing it slowly all day. It’s an oven, a bed, a heater, and a water-warmer all in one.

Stepping into a home with a thermal mass heater feels different than standing next to a roaring cast iron stove. Instead of a blast of scorched air that dries your skin, you feel a gentle, deep warmth radiating from every surface. This is the difference between a high-temperature convective cycle and a steady radiant battery.

Building your own heater is a journey into self-reliance and ancestral wisdom. It requires a bit of sweat and some basic understanding of physics, but the reward is a lifetime of nearly free heat. Let’s walk through the grit and grace of building a system that turns a handful of sticks into a day’s worth of comfort.

How To Build A Thermal Mass Heater
A thermal mass heater is a high-efficiency wood-burning system designed to store heat in a dense material like stone, brick, or cob. Unlike a standard stove that sends 60% to 80% of its energy up the chimney, this system traps that energy before it can escape. The goal is complete combustion followed by maximum heat extraction.

These systems come in two primary forms: the traditional masonry heater and the modern rocket mass heater. Traditional masonry heaters are often large, upright structures built from firebrick and stone, common in cold regions like Russia and Scandinavia. Rocket mass heaters are a more recent DIY innovation that uses a horizontal “J-tube” or “batch box” to achieve super-hot, clean-burning fires with very little fuel.

Real-world application for these heaters ranges from off-grid cabins to modern suburban homes looking to slash their carbon footprint. Because they are so heavy, they typically sit on the ground floor or a reinforced foundation. They function as a “radiant hub,” acting as a thermal battery that regulates the temperature of the entire building even after the fire has been extinguished for twelve hours.

Visualizing the system is simple if you think of it as a battery for heat. A small, intense fire “charges” the mass over the course of two hours. For the next twenty hours, that mass slowly “discharges” its warmth into the room, maintaining a steady 21°C to 24°C (70°F to 75°F) without any further effort from the operator.

The Core Mechanics: How the System Works
Building a thermal mass heater begins with understanding the internal “engine.” In a rocket mass heater, this is the burn tunnel and the heat riser. The heat riser is a vertical, insulated chimney hidden inside the heater that creates a massive draft. This draft pulls the flames sideways through the wood, resulting in a roar that sounds like a jet engine.

Combustion in these units happens at incredibly high temperatures, often exceeding 1,000°C (1,832°F). Because the fire is so hot and oxygen-rich, it burns up the smoke and creosote that would normally clog a chimney. What exits the riser is almost entirely CO2 and water vapor, which then enters the thermal mass.

Once the hot gases hit the top of the heater, they are forced back down and channeled through a series of horizontal pipes or “bells.” These channels are buried inside tons of masonry. As the gases travel through this long path, they transfer their heat to the mass. By the time the exhaust finally leaves the house, it is often as cool as 40°C to 60°C (104°F to 140°F).

Practical construction follows a logical sequence:

The Foundation: You must start with a base capable of supporting 1,500 kg to 4,000 kg (3,300 lbs to 8,800 lbs). A concrete slab or a thickened earth floor is mandatory.
The Core: Use firebricks and refractory mortar to build the combustion chamber and the heat riser. This is the only part of the system that must withstand extreme thermal shock.
The Manifold: This connects the core to the horizontal exhaust pipes, usually made of 15 cm to 20 cm (6-inch to 8-inch) heavy-gauge stovepipe.
The Bench: This is where you lay the pipe in a horizontal zigzag pattern and cover it with cob or stone. This becomes your heated seat or bed.
The Exit: The final pipe carries the cooled, clean exhaust through the wall or roof.

The Practical Benefits of Massive Heat
Efficiency is the most measurable advantage. A well-built thermal mass heater can use 70% to 90% less wood than a conventional stove. Instead of cutting, splitting, and hauling four cords of wood every winter, you might only need one. This reduction in labor is a significant victory for any self-reliant household.

Air quality is another major factor. Because the combustion is nearly 100% complete, there is no visible smoke coming out of the chimney. This makes thermal mass heaters ideal for sensitive environments or areas with strict wood-burning regulations. You are burning the smoke itself, which is where a large portion of wood’s energy is actually stored.

Comfort provided by radiant heat is superior to convective air. Forced-air systems and metal stoves create hot spots and drafty cold corners while drying out the air and circulating dust. Radiant heat from a masonry mass warms objects—including the people in the room—directly. It feels like the warmth of the sun on a spring day, providing a deep, bone-warming sensation.

Multi-functionality turns the heater into a piece of furniture. A “radiant hub” design often includes a heated bench, a bread oven, and a surface for heating kettles. It becomes the heart of the home, a place where families naturally gather to sit, sleep, or cook during the coldest months of the year.

Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
One of the most frequent errors is using the wrong materials in the core. Beginners often try to use standard red clay bricks or metal pipes for the internal burn tunnel. Extreme heat will cause red bricks to crack and metal pipes to “spall” or flake away, eventually leading to a structural collapse of the inner engine. Always use high-duty firebricks and a properly insulated heat riser.

Failing to calculate the cross-sectional area (CSA) is another pitfall. The system relies on a delicate balance of air pressure. If your exhaust pipe is smaller than your intake, or if you create a bottleneck in the manifold, the heater will “smoke back” into the room. Maintain a consistent CSA throughout the entire gas path to ensure a strong, reliable draft.

Neglecting insulation around the heat riser is a subtle but critical mistake. The riser needs to stay as hot as possible to maintain the draft. If you surround the riser with heavy masonry too early, the mass will “steal” the heat, cooling the riser and killing the draft. Wrap the riser in ceramic fiber blanket or perlite-clay mix before encasing it in the final mass.

Improper seasoning of the mass can lead to structural cracks. When you first build a cob or masonry heater, it contains hundreds of liters of water. If you light a massive fire immediately, that water turns to steam and can blow the heater apart from the inside. Start with tiny, “candle-size” fires for several days to slowly drive out the moisture before attempt a full-heat cycle.

Limitations and Realistic Constraints
Weight is the primary limitation for many dwellers. You cannot simply install a 3,000 kg (6,600 lbs) heater on a standard 2×8 wood joist floor without significant structural reinforcement. This makes these systems difficult to retrofit into second-story apartments or homes with crawl spaces unless you are willing to build a dedicated masonry pillar from the ground up.

Thermal lag is a trade-off that requires a change in habits. A masonry heater takes two to four hours to start feeling warm if it has gone completely cold. This is not a “quick-fix” heater for a weekend cabin that you only visit for a few hours. It is designed for continuous occupancy where the mass is kept “charged” throughout the season.

Building codes and insurance can be a hurdle in some jurisdictions. Because rocket mass heaters are often site-built and don’t always carry a UL listing, some building inspectors and insurance companies may be hesitant. Traditional masonry heaters, however, often have better-established standards (like ASTM E1602) that make them easier to permit in urban areas.

Space requirements are substantial. A system with a 2-meter (6-foot) heated bench takes up a lot of floor real estate. While it replaces other furniture like sofas or beds, you must plan your floor layout carefully. The “Single Stove” footprint is much smaller, but it lacks the 24-hour heat retention and multi-use surfaces of a larger mass system.

Choosing Your System: A Brief Comparison
When deciding how to heat your space, you generally weigh the complexity of the build against the long-term performance.

Feature Standard Metal Stove Thermal Mass Heater
Fuel Efficiency 30% – 70% 80% – 95%
Heat Duration 2 – 6 hours 12 – 24 hours
Build Cost Med ($1,500+) Low – High ($500 – $3,000)
Skill Required Installation only Moderate to High DIY
Weight 100 – 300 kg 1,500 – 4,000 kg

Traditional stoves are “plug-and-play” but demand constant attention. A thermal mass heater is a “build-once” investment that pays dividends in fuel savings and comfort for decades. The choice often comes down to whether you prefer a quick, hot fire or a steady, lasting embrace of warmth.

Practical Tips for Best Performance
Sourcing the right wood is the first step to a clean burn. Unlike a traditional fireplace where you might want slow-burning oak logs, a rocket mass heater thrives on small-diameter “trash” wood. Dry branches, pallet scraps, and coppiced wood burn fast and hot, which is exactly what the “engine” needs to reach peak efficiency.

Cleaning out the ash is a task that only needs to happen once every few weeks or even months. Because the combustion is so complete, there is very little residue. However, you must include “clean-out ports” in your horizontal bench runs. Use a shop vac once a year to clear out the fine fly-ash that settles in the horizontal pipes to keep the air flowing freely.

Finishing the heater with a breathable plaster is vital. Cob (a mix of clay, sand, and straw) is the most common material because it is cheap and effective. You can finish it with a lime or clay plaster to give it a smooth, stone-like appearance. Avoid using cement-based plasters or oil-based paints, as these can trap moisture and crack under the thermal expansion of the mass.

Managing the “cold start” is an essential skill. If the heater has been sitting for a long time in a cold house, the air in the chimney may be heavy and stagnant. Lighting a small piece of newspaper at the base of the heat riser or in the clean-out port will “prime” the draft, ensuring that when you light the main fire, the smoke goes exactly where it’s supposed to.

Advanced Considerations for the Serious Builder
Integrating a water coil can turn your heater into a boiler for domestic hot water. By wrapping a stainless steel or copper coil around the base of the heat riser, you can harvest “excess” heat to fill a tank for showers or radiant floor loops. This requires careful plumbing and a pressure-relief valve to ensure safety, but it makes the home even more self-sufficient.

Designing a “Black Oven” or “White Oven” into the masonry adds a culinary dimension. A black oven is one where the fire is built directly inside the oven chamber, which is then wiped clean before baking. A white oven is heated by the hot gases passing *around* the outside of a steel or stone box. Both allow you to bake bread or slow-roast meats using the residual heat of the mass.

Scaling the system for different climates involves adjusting the mass-to-core ratio. In temperate climates, you might want a smaller mass that heats up faster. In extreme sub-zero environments, you want the largest mass possible—perhaps 5,000 kg (11,000 lbs)—to ensure the house never drops below freezing even if you skip a day of firing.

Considering “Bell” technology instead of long pipe runs can improve performance in larger homes. A bell is a large hollow chamber where hot gases naturally rise to the top and stay until they cool and fall to the exit. This creates a more even heat distribution and reduces the friction that can sometimes slow down the draft in very long pipe systems.

Scenario: The 8-Inch J-Tube System
Imagine a 100-square-meter (1,076-square-foot) cabin in a northern climate. The owner chooses an 8-inch (20 cm) diameter J-tube system with a 4-meter (13-foot) cob bench. The core is built from 120 firebricks, and the bench is filled with a mixture of local subsoil and sand.

During a typical winter evening, the owner feeds about 10 kg (22 lbs) of dry pine and maple branches into the feed tube over two hours. The internal riser hits 950°C (1,742°F). The bench surface slowly rises to a comfortable 45°C (113°F). By the time the owner goes to bed, the fire is out, and the intake is capped.

The next morning, the outdoor temperature has dropped to -15°C (5°F), but the cabin remains at a steady 22°C (72°F). The bench is still warm to the touch. The owner doesn’t need to light another fire until the following evening. The total wood consumption for the year is less than two cords, harvested entirely from deadfall on the property.

Final Thoughts
Building a thermal mass heater is a commitment to a different way of living. It moves you away from the frantic cycle of “feed the fire, starve the fire” and toward a rhythmic, sustainable relationship with your home’s energy. It is an act of defiance against planned obsolescence and a return to the heavy, honest materials of the earth.

The physical labor of mixing cob and laying bricks is a small price to pay for the security of a heater that doesn’t need electricity or expensive fuel. Once the mass is built and the first fire roars, you will understand why this ancient technology is seeing a modern resurgence. It isn’t just about heat; it’s about the peace of mind that comes with a warm hearth.

Do not be afraid to experiment with the design of your radiant hub. Whether you build a sleek masonry tower or a wild, sculpted cob bench, the physics remain the same. Respect the fire, insulate the riser, and give the heat plenty of mass to call home. Your reward will be a house that stays warm long after the last ember has faded.

https://www.ecosnippets.com/alternative-energy/how-to-build-a-thermal-mass-heater/

Quote of the Day

“I feel that there is nothing more truly artistic than to love people.”
Vincent Van Gogh (1853 -1890)