...I've had very few problems with static unless I have my wood stove blazing or temperature fluctuating .
To expand on my previous post, while working for the same company I was sent to our facility in the central highlands of Mexico. It was a desert at 7,000 feet above sea level. We had to keep the temperature at 68°F in the testing laboratory and monitor the environment. The low humidity was wreaking havoc on the test equipment. The highest humidity I saw in a week was 13%. We had to run a humidifier to get the humidity to the point that the static electricity would dissapate. The analytical scale was the most affected. Woodstoves can definitely do that.