To cover, or not to cover, THAT is the quesion

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This thread cracks me up. This has to be the most beaten to death subject matter on this whole site. I'm pretty ambivalent about the whole thing, but even I have thrown my two cents in on this subject in at least two or three other threads. Congrats to the OP for stirring the pot so successfully - there's current four pages of replies! :)
 
This thread cracks me up. This has to be the most beaten to death subject matter on this whole site. I'm pretty ambivalent about the whole thing, but even I have thrown my two cents in on this subject in at least two or three other threads. Congrats to the OP for stirring the pot so successfully - there's current four pages of replies! :)

You just made it 5!

So...do you cover or not?!? ==c
 
"We see days above 90% relative humidity for 7 months of the year, while northwest Iowa peaks above 90% for less than 3 months each year"
Are you trying to split hairs, Des Moines Iowa has an annual average RH of 78 in the morning and 56 in the afternoon, Harrisburg Penn. has an annual average RH of 77 in the morning and 54 in the afternoon.:confused:
Heh... you're missing a pretty large gradient in weather, if you compare Harrisburg to Philly. Philly snow melts in hours. Harrisburg... weeks.
 
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Heh... you're missing a pretty large gradient in weather, if you compare Harrisburg to Philly. Philly snow melts in hours. Harrisburg... weeks.

Cant this thread die, my point was they are fairly close, you said that and then changed your post.
 
Pick a city you want me to compare to, might as well keep the stupidity alive a while longer.
 
Covering it does nothing. This stack is 100% green Black Locust, cut down, bucked and stacked last winter (Jan/Feb...). So its 8 months old, un-covered ON THE WATER, on LONG ISLAND (read: one of the most humid places in the US in the summer). High humidity, salt water air..., snow on it last winter, rain all spring and summer. In fact, it poored on it a day before this pic was snapped! Yet, this stuff is ripe and perfect for the stove.

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Cant this thread die, my point was they are fairly close, you said that and then changed your post.
Changed my post? I didn't change anything.

This thread cracks me up. This has to be the most beaten to death subject matter on this whole site... there's current four pages of replies! :)
You just made it 5!
Do you guys cover your dead horses?

5 pages is nothing. Look at those Blaze King fanboys: 32 pages!

https://www.hearth.com/talk/threads/2012-2013-blaze-king-performance-thread-everything-bk.93182/
 
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Joful, underneath the charts it used to say Penn. was more humid then Iowa but not by much, now it has something different.
 
Covering it does nothing. This stack is 100% green Black Locust, cut down, bucked and stacked last winter (Jan/Feb...). So its 8 months old, un-covered ON THE WATER, on LONG ISLAND

That Locust don't count, I dug up some locust post here on the farm that was buried prior to 1960 :eek:, bucked them post to length and they burned great.....no rot either, no punk, no rot.......

OH WAIT, that Locust was covered....with DIRT ;lol

As for me and my wood....COVERED, ALL THE TIME, ALL DAY LONG!

And I'd appreciate folks not causing this thread to get shut down.....anybody with nothing to do some cold January night can read through the whole thing!
 
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Lets see if I can help get to 6....I never covered anything except about 1 cord on the patio but I am farther ahead than ever so I just bought some metal roofing seconds that will go on my stacks.
 
By the way never had any wood go bad just moved some that has been in the stack uncovered for about 3 years and it seemed fine......mix of cherry,ash,maple and locust
 
when its dead - its going in the shed !
 

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Going for6
I have a makeshift shed and 2 racks on the back deck and another rack close to the house , I fill with dry wood in the fall.

Last year, I had these top covered and had problems with wind blown, rain, freezing rain and snow,

so this year I will cover the top,sides ,front and back ,and only leave the ends open ,if the wood gets soaked and then it turns real

cold and stays cold it's hard to burn ice-cycles
 
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This is what is getting covered with metal roofing. This picture is from Spring...65' long,7' high and 3 rows deep. I may try to get a few more sheets for my other stacks or just rotate and keep the older stuff covered.
 

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This is what is getting covered with metal roofing. This picture is from Spring...65' long,7' high and 3 rows deep. I may try to get a few more sheets for my other stacks or just rotate and keep the older stuff covered.
Nice stacks bro
 
This is what is getting covered with metal roofing. This picture is from Spring...65' long,7' high and 3 rows deep. I may try to get a few more sheets for my other stacks or just rotate and keep the older stuff covered.

DON'T DO IT! You're going to ruin the wood!

6?

:)
 
Joful, underneath the charts it used to say Penn. was more humid then Iowa but not by much, now it has something different.
Ah... you're right! I had looked at the actual yearly peak, and saw that Philly and Sioux City were just a few percent apart, when I made that initial comment. Then I went back and looked at the duration of the high humidity (7 months vs. 2.5 months), and changed my last sentence to reflect that. Sorry for the confusion.

As to how beaten this dead horse is... what else should a bunch of pyroholics discuss in late summer?
 
I can't stop coming back to read the latest posts........every year........its like a bad wreck in slow motion.........every year.........I need a new hobby.......next year.......I'm hopeless.........I don't top cover........I know I'd be better off......I'm too lazy.......maybe next year......!!!
 
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Location...location...location...
I top cover with metal roofing sheets because Im NOT three years ahead. (my 2¢)
And this thread has been a fun read.
Sometimes dead horses become legends.
 
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You just made it 5!

So...do you cover or not?!? ==c

Long story short, I used to be in the "don't cover" camp and still think leaving the wood uncovered is fine. But now, after a year of drying, I throw a rubber roofing cover over my stacks under the "can't hurt" principle. From there, they go into the woodshed.
 
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