Same. I've been slack this year but have about 15 cords sitting out back waiting to be split (half of was standing dead so it's good to go).
I know heat is heat but for some reason wood-stove heat seems like it just works better on the human body. Ours is in the basement, so it's 95 down there and that heats the entire floor upstairs.
I grew up in Lake Tahoe. and in 1982 - there was the biggest winter in over 100 years - we had 30 feet of snow, and no power - and we cooked all our food on the wood burning stove.
I had deliver care packages to the various tourists who got stuck in their houses due to the snow - and we would have people come to our house to bath because we had hot water....
I recall making popcorn each night on the stove...
Although I was only a child at the time wood stoves were being phased out in the Tahoe basin (sometime in the mid/late 90s?), I definitely felt torn between the "rustic / cabin" feeling of the ordeal and the better air quality of having them phased out. It was never so bad in the neighborhood I was in because it was mostly rich folks who came up for xmas and maybe once in the summer, but xmas was so smokey! It was even worse in areas that have some inversion layer / valley geography to hold in the smoke down close to the ground; the valleys leading up to Squaw and Alpine could get "hotboxed" with pine-flavored smoke at times!
edit: I'd take that pine smoke over the general "Essence de Diesel" that pervades the current European city I live in!
I know heat is heat but for some reason wood-stove heat seems like it just works better on the human body. Ours is in the basement, so it's 95 down there and that heats the entire floor upstairs.