South Florida gives you only a handful of truly cool evenings a year, and when a cold front drops down, a fireplace suddenly sounds wonderful. The catch is that it has probably been sitting unused for months, so a little care before you light it goes a long way.

A fireplace that has sat idle through our long warm season is not always ready to go. Over those months a flue can collect debris blown in from the tree canopy, an animal may have moved in, or old creosote may have built up from previous winters. Lighting a fire without checking risks a blocked or hazardous flue.
The good news is that our light usage means chimneys here do not get dirty quickly. But dirty is not the only issue after a long idle stretch; blockages and nests are the bigger surprise, and they are exactly what you want to rule out before the first fire.
Before that first cold-snap fire, open the damper fully and look up with a flashlight for obvious blockage or nesting. Check that the cap is still in place from the ground. Notice any strong musty or animal smell, which can signal something living in the flue. If anything looks off, hold off and have it checked.
It is also worth making sure the damper opens and closes freely, since ours can stiffen or corrode after sitting through humid months. A damper that will not open fully makes for a smoky room, and one that will not close lets conditioned air escape all summer.
Use dry, seasoned wood and give the fire enough air to burn hot and clean. A hot fire drafts better and leaves less creosote than a slow, smoldering one. On our relatively mild cold nights you rarely need a roaring fire, just a clean, well-drafting one.
If the fireplace seems reluctant to draw, that can be the flue adjusting after months of still air, but a persistently smoky or hard-to-light fire is worth investigating rather than pushing through. It often points to a draft or blockage issue.
The easiest way to enjoy a cold snap is to have the chimney looked at before the cool weather arrives, rather than discovering a problem the night you finally want a fire. A quick sweep and check clears debris, confirms the flue is open, and gives you peace of mind.
If a front is already on the way and you are unsure about your fireplace, call us. We would rather help you rule out a problem than have you light a fire into a flue that is not ready.
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It is safer to check first. After months idle, a flue may have canopy debris, a nest, or old creosote. A quick look for blockage and a working damper before the first fire avoids a smoky room or a hazard.
Dampers here can stiffen or corrode after sitting through humid months. A stuck or leaky damper is a common, fixable issue, and worth addressing so the fireplace drafts and seals properly.
Have the chimney checked before the season so it is ready when you want it, burn dry seasoned wood, and keep fires hot and well-drafting. That is all it takes on our mild cool evenings.