Cutting a Big Pine Soon

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Electric B

New Member
Nov 12, 2013
38
Middle Tennessee
I have one or two large pines in my yard that I am going to drop soon, maybe today. Thanks to this forum I am going to keep them for my stash!

How do you deal with pine once it is down? Do I need to buck/split it up the same day it is cut or would it be better to let it season in 8 to 10 ft sections a few years?

Thanks for any input.
 
With my white pine I cut them into 16" rounds then let them sit for 3-6 months to help dry some of the sap. Then cut split stack for 6- months and it's good to go at about 17% on the MM.

Others here say it takes them 2+ years to season it but I am burning pine I cut and stacked last winter. Maybe it's the white pine?
 
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Once the tree is down, cut into rounds of whatever length you want and split ASAP. All wood doesn't start drying much until it is split. Throw all the branches into a pile an burn.

Sap is sap, it won't hurt anything and it comes off with WD40.
 
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In my experience pine is okay to leave in tact if it falls in a storm (or even if you cut it) and it happens to land in such a way that most of it isn't touching the ground. Where I live in the foothills of western NC we have a lot of ravines on our property and I had a large pine tree come down in a storm where it spanned a ravine almost like a bridge. I left it out there for two years until I had space in one of my sheds to store it as firewood and it was in fine shape when I finally harvested it. However, once it gets flat on the ground out in the elements termites and other critters will get working pretty quick. As for disposing of all the waste material I like to either leave it in the woods to naturally decay or if it's closer in to the house I'll dispose of it down one of the ravines rather than create a lot of smoke by burning it.
 
My neighbor and I have cut down and burned about 175 red pine between our houses because they turn into telephone poles. They burn great with little smoke.

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If these are yard trees with extensive side branches, I would plan on using a hydraulic splitter. The hardest wood I ever had to hand split were spruce and pine rounds with extensive side branching. The hydraulic splitter worked pretty hard on them as well, once I resorted to that.
 
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Ditto on the cut and split now. Especially if you get below freezing temps, sap less an issue, and pine splits real nice when frozen, colder the better
 
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If these are yard trees with extensive side branches, I would plan on using a hydraulic splitter. The hardest wood I ever had to hand split were spruce and pine rounds with extensive side branching. The hydraulic splitter worked pretty hard on them as well, once I resorted to that.

Yup, white pine that has a lot of branches on it is almost impossible to split with a maul. I wouldn't even attempt it.
 
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image.jpg image.jpg The pines I am cutting are from our back yard but that's all woods:). Adkjake has it right the easiest splitting is when it is frozen. That's another reason I let it sit a few months. I usually cut in the fall and early winter. Then split-stack mid winter. Here's a pic. Of a few rounds about to be split and stacked this week.
 
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Borers will start munching from the bark inwards once it is cut. They proceed at a pretty steady pace and reduce the heating value plus introduces a source of rot. If you can get the bark off, they stop. Cutting it in rounds is good as it starts drying right away but if you can get it split within a couple of months, then the borers will not move in.
 
Pine cuts easy with a sharp chain.

I'd slice it into "pucks" that will fit into your stove opening and leave them in a pile until next fall.

Pucks will have a lot of open grain surface area to dry
 
If you split the pines around here right after they are cut it's like hitting a sponge. They splash but don't split. Also there are boring insects that only attack the pines. They bore holes in the wood that are about 3/8" in diameter.

If I get any if that pine I only bring home enough to burn in one year. I don't want those boring bugs turning into lying insects in the spring. If they like pine they probably like Douglas Fur and my house isn't that far from the woodpile.
 
What I do . . . cut, split, stack whenever it is convenient realizing that the earlier the better it is . . . season . . . burn . . . enjoy . . . dump the ashes.
 
Although we don't usually cut much pine, the last 2 years we have cut some. In 2012 a neighbor had a couple of large limbs break off two white pines. That was in July. We cut them up on December 1 and there was no sap and all of the wood in both limbs, which were fairly large, was dry enough to burn right then. It surprised me.

This year, almost the same thing happened but now the tops of those two trees came tumbling down. I don't remember for sure when but it was during the summer or early fall. Again, no sap issues. But, another neighbor wanted a bunch of pines taken down. Mostly scotch with a couple spruce for good measure. Over 20 in all. Of course lots of sap but it does no harm. Splitting will be interesting I'm sure.
 
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