Different Approaches to Cutting & Hauling Firewood

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And I work alone..........HA!


Yea I know that. I thats hitting it a little every day. I cant do that so it has to be a perfect set-up form tree to road. I pay for help to so 4 hour run is where I need to be for a cord.
 
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Ok, I've got to ask. How big of a house are you guys heating with 10 and 25 cords per year?
 
Ok, I've got to ask. How big of a house are you guys heating with 10 and 25 cords per year?


2600 in full wind. Winds are at 40 mph today and gusting over 60.
 
Ok, I've got to ask. How big of a house are you guys heating with 10 and 25 cords per year?

I honestly don't know if I'll be at the 10. I bet I am though. Last winter was mild.. and I stopped using oil before the year was up (I put a hour meter on my boiler) I was at 1500 gallons. Now I was using home brew fuel, which is about 8% or so less punch that #2

I'm heating just over 6k sf. 1200 is my wife's photo studio. 1900 for the house, 1900 finished basement, 1200 garage/utility room that's beneath the studio. Very much liking having it 72 down here in the basement this rainy morning.

JP
 
My record may be around 30 cords one year from early spring to late fall........it makes me madder than hell to do all that work, etc. only to have the stuff rot in the pile.
Yep, I need to refine my logistics, especially now that we'll be heating my MIL's house with the Buck 91 in addition to the others we are supplying.
This Red Oak is terrible for rotting if it lies around. The heartwood will last forever but the sapwood starts rotting in weeks, it seems.

How you can get all that wood and still have the time to maintain your guitar chops is beyond me. ;)
I too treat it as therapy. It's easier to explain it to my wife that way. I like to say.....
Would you rather I was a golfer? and disappeared every saturday and sunday?
:)
Let me guess; She said, "Go ahead, then at least I can get some peace and quiet around here." ;lol
 
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One of those firewood processing splitting machines must look real tempting to you mega-cord burners. After a point it would seem more like work than unwinding to me.
 
One of those firewood processing splitting machines must look real tempting to you mega-cord burners. After a point it would seem more like work than unwinding to me.

Are you psychic? I was eyeballing one at the fryeburg fair. I REALLY gotta get my toy barn built before I get any more STUFF that needs to be under cover.

JP
 
Are you psychic? I was eyeballing one at the fryeburg fair. I REALLY gotta get my toy barn built before I get any more STUFF that needs to be under cover.

JP
:)
No, but we are not as unique as we think we are. If I were in your shoes...
 
Ok, I've got to ask. How big of a house are you guys heating with 10 and 25 cords per year?
I only burn about 4 or so to heat my house. I sell the rest.
 
One of those firewood processing splitting machines must look real tempting to you mega-cord burners. After a point it would seem more like work than unwinding to me.
Never. I split it all by hand with my old 6# maul. Splitting is my favorite part of the whole process.
 
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Never. I split it all by hand with my old 6# maul. Splitting is my favorite part of the whole process.

Me too. I enjoy it even more than felling,bucking,hauling or stacking (that's boring lol).I dread the day when I'll have to stop splitting by hand for medical reasons.For supplemental heat in a 'normal' winter I burn between 3-4 cords,last year was barely 2 counting a bunch of smaller limbs,shop/milling scrap & the usual assorted odd chunks/uglies.
 
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And I work alone..........HA!


Ha, I have my 6 year old grandson helping me. As much as I love the little guy sometimes it would be much, much, much easier working alone ;lol .

I do most of my cutting on a friend's farm. He's been clearing land for several years so I haven't had to fell a tree on his place yet. He's dozed 'em down and piled 'em up with the bigger trees kind of off to the side a bit. On his place I'll cut it, split it, load it and haul it home. I don't even have to pile the brush much. If I get too neat with the brush he gets after me and brings his dozer or track loader out and pushes it around. Most of what I cut last year had been down for at least a year so it's partly dried already.
 
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