Are you seasoning the wood out in the open, and then moving it in to the shed when it's close to being ready to burn? Or are you stacking it in the shed freshly cut and split, 3/4/5+ rows deep, and letting it fully season there?
Makes me wonder, is it more work to just push some snow off a tarp or go through the effort and expense of building a wood shed and then have to move 3-4 cord of wood every year into the wood shed?
Try as I might, the wind eventually will move the tarp from how I wanted it. And the sun will destroy a plastic tarp (high altitude) in 1 or 2 years, unless animals speed the process along. But I have an already-built barn to tuck my wood into, so I am a tad biased.Makes me wonder, is it more work to just push some snow off a tarp or go through the effort and expense of building a wood shed and then have to move 3-4 cord of wood every year into the wood shed?
Makes me wonder, is it more work to just push some snow off a tarp or go through the effort and expense of building a wood shed and then have to move 3-4 cord of wood every year into the wood shed?
Makes me wonder, is it more work to just push some snow off a tarp or go through the effort and expense of building a wood shed and then have to move 3-4 cord of wood every year into the wood shed?
Dry the wood outside the shed, then load the shed. I just finished loading 4 cord this weekend. Roughly 8 hours work alone. Get a few people involved, it goes much quicker. This time is well worth it.Are you seasoning the wood out in the open, and then moving it in to the shed when it's close to being ready to burn? Or are you stacking it in the shed freshly cut and split, 3/4/5+ rows deep, and letting it fully season there?
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