How much pine do you burn? How long to dry ?

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OldLumberKid

Feeling the Heat
How much pine do you burn? How long does it take to dry compared with other woods?

What's the role of pine in your wood pile?
• Shoulder season only?
• all-year round?
• Just a little?
• Something to mix in to help the hardwoods burn better? or
• all of the above?
• your main source of wood cos that's what you get where you live?


I realize it's going to differ by pile, location and geography.
(As for my pile, in the very wet, soggy and humid East Coast, it's covered on rain and snow days and exposed to full sun and wind on non-rainy days.)
 
How much pine do you burn? How long does it take to dry compared with other woods?

What's the role of pine in your wood pile? Main wood fuel.
• Shoulder season only? Nope, main wood fuel.
• all-year round? Fall, winter, early spring.
• Just a little? 3 - 4 cords a year.
• Something to mix in to help the hardwoods burn better? or I have a little maple and walnut, but they don't burn any better than my lodgepole pine so mixing makes no difference.
• all of the above? Not applicable.
• your main source of wood cos that's what you get where you live? I have other choices, mostly other softwood, but some other "hardwoods" as stated above, but the lodgepole pine I get is all standing dead trees killed by pine beetles, it is plentiful locally and has a very high BTU content (for pine), and the best part is I can easily select trees that are pre-seasoned (<20% MC), so I can burn it right away, no need to stockpile which is good for me because I live on a small lot. I have yet to locate any other type of dead standing trees that I can burn right away.


I realize it's going to differ by pile, location and geography.
(As for my pile, in the very wet, soggy and humid East Coast, it's covered on rain and snow days and exposed to full sun and wind on non-rainy days.)
 
How much pine do you burn? How long does it take to dry compared with other woods?

What's the role of pine in your wood pile?
• Shoulder season only?
• all-year round?
• Just a little?
• Something to mix in to help the hardwoods burn better? or
• all of the above?
• your main source of wood cos that's what you get where you live?


I realize it's going to differ by pile, location and geography.
(As for my pile, in the very wet, soggy and humid East Coast, it's covered on rain and snow days and exposed to full sun and wind on non-rainy days.)
This was our first year burning pine, for the shoulder season only. I had two cords ready which we flamed up.
 
Have burned lumber scraps for kindling for years mostly,but will have about 1 1/2 p/u loads worth of split logs starting Fall 2013/Spring 2014 once its dried thoroughly.Love the smell of it,takes me back to childhood as a Cub Scout & spending time outdoors hiking & camping etc.I'm out of the native range of any wild White Pine - closest to me is in 3-4 NE IA counties,a fair amount up there one place is White Pine Hollow State Park/Preserve,over 900 acres for the 2 locations total.Any large older Pine seen around here & rest of state was planted decades ago.
 
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What's the role of pine in your wood pile? Main wood fuel.
• Shoulder season only? Nope, main wood fuel.
• all-year round? Fall, winter, early spring.
• Just a little? 3 - 4 cords a year.
• Something to mix in to help the hardwoods burn better? or I have a little maple and walnut, but they don't burn any better than my lodgepole pine so mixing makes no difference.
• all of the above? Not applicable.
• your main source of wood cos that's what you get where you live? I have other choices, mostly other softwood, but some other "hardwoods" as stated above, but the lodgepole pine I get is all standing dead trees killed by pine beetles, it is plentiful locally and has a very high BTU content (for pine), and the best part is I can easily select trees that are pre-seasoned (<20% MC), so I can burn it right away, no need to stockpile which is good for me because I live on a small lot. I have yet to locate any other type of dead standing trees that I can burn right away.

Who knew?
That's real interesting. And kind of why I asked, since I had the impression that a lot of folk avoid pine, but sounds like it's a perfectly viable wood for a main fuel for folks out there, so I'll be thankful for my latest mystery scrounge (pine).

However, I guess those dried out dead trees you are harvesting are a light years from the sap-filled, nearly fermenting-in-the-core pines I'm seeing. I can't believe how stinky and sickly-looking the inside of the pine I've scrounged has been. Sad to hear about the bark beetles, though.


This was our first year burning pine, for the shoulder season only. I had two cords ready which we flamed up.

Nice burns?

... will have about 1 1/2 p/u loads worth of split logs starting Fall 2013/Spring 2014 once its dried thoroughly.Love the smell of it,takes me back to childhood
Yes, provided you get a good piece. Love that pine scent, also takes me back to some vacations on the island of Jersey on a sandy path among the pines on the way to the beaches there.
 
We had two white pines that lost large limbs last July. The storm we had was right after the 4th holiday. The limbs had broken and were barely hanging on. Now white pine has lots and lots of sap and can be messy to cut and put up. However, on December 1 I cut up those two limbs. There was no sap and the wood was extremely light. No problem burning that right away. (Now that is something you won't hear me say very often!)

Most pine a year will do on the drying.
 
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You can get all the pine you want for free around here..
 
How much pine do you burn? This winter, I expect to use about 2/3 cord.
How long does it take to dry compared with other woods? I've c/s/s pine in March and had it gooder to go by Sept.-Oct. the same year.

What's the role of pine in your wood pile? Just being a smrtasz here, but I use it as firewood.==c
• Shoulder season only? Pretty much. Late Sept. thought at least Oct., then April- mid-May.
• all-year round? No
• Just a little? About 2/3 cord this winter.
• Something to mix in to help the hardwoods burn better? or I will use it as kindling at times.
• all of the above?
• your main source of wood cos that's what you get where you live? My main wood here is Oak.


I realize it's going to differ by pile, location and geography.
(As for my pile, in the very wet, soggy and humid East Coast, it's covered on rain and snow days and exposed to full sun and wind on non-rainy days.)
 
How much pine do you burn? not too much, but enough to know it definately has it's purpose in the stacks...
How long does it take to dry compared with other woods? generally, it'll be ready in a year, after being C/S/S....
What's the role of pine in your wood pile? I cut MOUNTAINS of pine, and up until just over a year ago, I gave it all away...
• Shoulder season only? it would be a great shoulder season wood, when properly seasoned...
• all-year round? I have been saving it for maple syrup season and using it in my wood fired evaporator. And MAN, does that get the sap boiling quick!!
• Just a little? adjust to your needs...
• Something to mix in to help the hardwoods burn better? You can if you mix it with oak or locust......a big load of pine by itself in the stove at once can get pretty damm hot!!
• your main source of wood cos that's what you get where you live? I mainly use soft and hard maple, ash, cherry, walnut, hickory, black and honey locust, red and white oak, beech, and even lilac......
It's not that I don't like pine, I just have more of the 'better' woods available and I want to maximize the BTU's out of the storage space I have. I've been saving all the trunks from pine trees I cut this past fall and winter, and I'll be milling them into boards to use on my woodshed project later this year....
 
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I've got a ring of VERY large white pines ringing my yard... yet none of the dead out of them reaches my chimney.... With all the locust, maple, oak, birch and ash I could ask for... why bother? the pine gets burned in my fire pit in the summer.... it's a damned good way to enjoy a 12 pack :D
 
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So I should be thinking about a year then.

What's the role of pine in your wood pile? I cut MOUNTAINS of pine,
P.S. Looking for the "overkill" factor; found it!^:)
...and up until just over a year ago, I gave it all away...
That was kind of you. :)
I think the only cherry I've seen in a while, what was not in Washington D.C. was on a hardwood floor I helped a friend in Long Beach rip up after Sandy ruined the bottom floor of his house. That was some heavy wood, but I think it was also polyurethaned but can't be sure. Hated to see that lovely wood go bye-bye.

the pine gets burned in my fire pit in the summer.... it's a damned good way to enjoy a 12 pack :D

On the wish list. (In the meantime, however, my charcoal grill is the de facto fire pit. Love it and so does the drooling furry cutting buddy, especially if there's salmon grilling.)

But I'm looking at IPAs, Pilsner, Lager, Black and Tans and, once Lent is over, the occasional nip of bourbon or scotch.
 
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However, I guess those dried out dead trees you are harvesting are a light years from the sap-filled, nearly fermenting-in-the-core pines I'm seeing. I can't believe how stinky and sickly-looking the inside of the pine I've scrounged has been.
Sad to hear about the bark beetles, though.

On the issue of sap, you are correct that these dead lodgepole don't have any sticky sap. In fact the sap issue is one reason I stopped harvesting Douglas fir. Even well seasoned Douglas fir splits would ooze pitch when we brought them in the house and it would drip on the floor around the stove and wood box area, and inevitably someone would step in it and walk through the house and we would end up with sticky spots throughout the house and on our sox. We get nothing like that with the Lodgepole pine, but that's just one of the many things in it's favor. Because lodgepole pine trees are so long and straight they are super easy to process into firewood, no twisted branches or knot, so splitting is a breeze. Another thing is they tend to die in groups so, I can drop all the trees I need in one spot, even overlapping them when I fall them, so I cut them off the ground and fill the truck from one central area. Unfortunately the overlapping lodgepoles can make great seesaws and that can slow firewood production sometimes. ;)
 
How much pine do you burn? How long does it take to dry compared with other woods? I burn only a bit . . . pretty much whatever large branches come down on the property from the winter or if I end up taking down a pine . . . such as the one I cut down the other day after thinking it was the reason for the loss DirecTV reception (although it turns out it wasn't the culprit.) I give the pine a year outside . . . another year inside the woodshed . . . unless I use it for camping.

What's the role of pine in your wood pile? Kindling and shoulder season burning . . . unless used for camping.
• Shoulder season only?
• all-year round?
• Just a little?
• Something to mix in to help the hardwoods burn better? or
• all of the above?
• your main source of wood cos that's what you get where you live?
 
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We have CORDS of it CSS and probably more than we can handle waiting for us in a windfall scrounge we're working on. We brought home a full car trailer load stacked about 3-4' high last week and there's at least 15 more loads like that waiting on us. Burn it throughout the burn season. most everything we get is standing dead or windfall, but we gave it almost a full year anyway. Nice burning wood, easy splitting when it's beetle kill :) no sap.
 
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On the wish list. (In the meantime, however, my charcoal grill is the de facto fire pit. Love it and so does the drooling furry cutting buddy, especially if there's salmon grilling.)

But I'm looking at IPAs, Pilsner, Lager, Black and Tans and, once Lent is over, the occasional nip of bourbon or scotch.


I like the way you think. >>
 
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...I guess those dried out dead trees you are harvesting are a light years from the sap-filled, nearly fermenting-in-the-core pines I'm seeing. I can't believe how stinky and sickly-looking the inside of the pine I've scrounged has been.

There are some 115 species of Pine, each with its own "personality". Processing the Pine that you have access to is likely a good deal different than processing the Pine I have access to...although, I really can't say as I've never known just where "Sandyland" is (cute name, though). Out here in "Softwoodland", I burn almost exclusively Lodgepole Pine along with some Larch, some Fir, and some Juniper. Haven't frozen to death yet. Never had a creosote problem nor anything even approaching a chimney fire. Had a couple of pieces of hardwood once. They burned OK. Rick
 
Who knew?
That's real interesting. And kind of why I asked, since I had the impression that a lot of folk avoid pine, but sounds like it's a perfectly viable wood for a main fuel for folks out there, so I'll be thankful for my latest mystery scrounge (pine).

However, I guess those dried out dead trees you are harvesting are a light years from the sap-filled, nearly fermenting-in-the-core pines I'm seeing. I can't believe how stinky and sickly-looking the inside of the pine I've scrounged has been. Sad to hear about the bark beetles, though.




Nice burns? It does the job in the shoulder season, we have about two cords of Hemlock ready for this coming heating season.


Yes, provided you get a good piece. Love that pine scent, also takes me back to some vacations on the island of Jersey on a sandy path among the pines on the way to the beaches there.
 
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we have about two cords of Hemlock ready for this cominh heating season.

Now that I never thought I'd see. Maybe your hemlocks grow large?
I got a 3 or 4 hemlocks out there, but they are kinda small ornamental things, full of twigs and such. (Reminds me I gotta spray them with horticultural oil to suffocate the doggone woolly adelgid pestilence.)

There are some 115 species of Pine, each with its own "personality"
That's a lot of personalities right there. Hopefully none of them multiple personalities. Us people have enough. ;) if trees start, we gotta re-think.

. .. Never had a creosote problem or anything even approaching a chimney fire.

Good to hear. I guess that was my biggest concern about pine. Maybe it gets a bum rap? If it burns hot, in theory that ought to help?

Had a couple of pieces of hardwood once. They burned OK. Rick
:lol:

I am a fan of pilsners and belgain whites..... and rum :D
OK I deliberately left out the rum cos I didn't want anyone thinking I was a lush. [too late probably] And because with rum, sometimes the requirement is to have some on hand for mixing (white Bacardi), some spiced rum for cooking and baking (Cap'n Morgan Black), and some dark rum for sipping, and dark 'n stormies (Gosling's) — see TMI. Lotta folks I know went through some rum during the powerless aftermath of hurricane Sandy, that's for sure. Have not replenished since. It will bring back memories.

We have CORDS of it CSS and probably more than we can handle waiting for us in a windfall scrounge ... most everything we get is standing dead or windfall, but we gave it almost a full year anyway. Nice burning wood, easy splitting when it's beetle kill :) no sap.

Just had another scrounge pine go down nearby. The wife is thinking we have no more room for any, and so do I. But I ... can't ... resist ... a ... good ... scrounge. Maybe just a round or two.

As for the beetles, you can keep those up there. Woulda thought it was too cold for those buggers up in Western NY? Man that is a looong drive from SE NY, I did it a while back ... 9 hours from here to up near flipping Ottawa, lol.
 
Now that I never thought I'd see.
I got a 3 or 4 hemlocks out there, but they are kinda small ornamental things, full of twigs and such. (Reminds me I gotta spray them with arboricultural oil to suffocate the woolly adelgid.)



Well that's good to hear. I guess that was my biggest concern about pine. Maybe it gets a bum rap?

:lol:


OK I deliberately left out the rum cos I didn't want anyone thinking I was a lush. And because sometimes the requirement is to have some on hand for mixing (white Bacardi), some spiced rum for cooking and baking (Cap'n Morgan Black), and some dark rum for sipping, and dark 'n stormies (Gosling's) — see TMI. Lotta folks I know went through some rum during the powerless aftermath of hurricane Sandy, that's for sure.

I take what Hemlocks are on the ground,we still have another 3-4 years if not more needs gettin! If we have any that are big enough for milling that are down, we'll make use of them.
 
I take what Hemlocks are on the ground,we still have another 3-4 years if not more needs gettin! If we have any that are big enough for milling that are down, we'll make use of them.

Good, hate to see good wood go to waste. Went by the golf course the other day for the first time in months. and they let some big juicy hardwood rounds rot from the outside. Dayum, I shoulda, but I thought they were going to pick it up, as they had busted the fence open and bucked it.

The municipality mulched thousands upon thousands of tons around here post-Sandy. If you saw, you'd go into shock. About a football field and a half of row after row of mulch, 16 feet high and 20 ft wide and wide as a football field — 24/7 processing for months. :O
 
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I see loads of chips every morning heading to the local pellet maker, Curran Renewable Energy. I always see the Asplundh truck with their chipper.
 
How much pine do you burn? Nearly 100 % How long does it take to dry compared with other woods? about 1/3 of the time of hardwood. If I cut down a 2 year old snag then it can be burned almost immediately. What's the role of pine in your wood pile? That and Doug Fir with a bit of cedar...but all soft woods• your main source of wood cos that's what you get where you live? Bingo! I realize it's going to differ by pile, location and geography. (As for my pile, in the very wet, soggy and humid East Coast, it's covered on rain and snow days and exposed to full sun and wind on non-rainy days.)
 
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How much pine do you burn? However much is available (probably a quarter cord in my yard now from random scrounges).
How long does it take to dry compared with other woods? I'm so far ahead now, that it's probably overkill at 2 years plus. I'd give freshly dropped material a solid year at least (same as cedar, but I try to give oak two years, for example).
What's the role of pine in your wood pile? Nothing special... I don't use it for overnighters, but it's not exclusively shoulder season material either.
 
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