We burn wood here, so a room stat would be pointless

The boiler is "set" (by means of the air and mix valves) to run at around 80 degrees, meaning that at present it+s 22-24 degrees in here. If I set it any lower the boiler quickly fills with soot/tar.
The design of the boiler is such that it turns the pump on once it gets to about 72 degrees (according to the built-in thermostat). It also has a 80 litre hot water tank in it. What happens when you fire it up is it gradually rises to 72 degrees, turns the pump on, which cools the boiler down, which turns the pump off- With the water tank the boiler has a fair bit of inertia and takes a while to warm up again, then it turns the pump on again and so on until it reaches an equilibrium at around 80.
The old boiler did run away once, when the air valve stuck upen and we didn't notice until the boiler had got to over 100 degrees and was making scary "ping ping" noises, so it's always important to check it when we do anything to it (lighting, loading wood etc.)
What happens in effect is, when it first starts up, the radiators will get hot and my wife will ask me to check the boiler, which I do. Then the thermostat will cut out again, the radiators will go cold and my wife will ask me to check the boiler, which I do. Then the pump will cut in again, the radiators will get hot and my wife will ask me to check the boiler...
The other bit I enjoy is when I come in from wherever and ask if she's put any wood in the boiler "No, I didn't go because the radiators are still hot." Go out, find the fire's gone out and the pump just clicked off. It's a good job I don't drive the car like that....
Up at my house the heating runs on oil, I've actually just been up to clean it up and give it a test (all ok). The thermostat is set at 10 degrees constant because nobody's there most of the time. I had it on less before but the workshop the boiler's in got so cold the (cheap garbage Russian) oil waxed and blocked the burner.