Building My Firewood Shed

  • Active since 1995, Hearth.com is THE place on the internet for free information and advice about wood stoves, pellet stoves and other energy saving equipment.

    We strive to provide opinions, articles, discussions and history related to Hearth Products and in a more general sense, energy issues.

    We promote the EFFICIENT, RESPONSIBLE, CLEAN and SAFE use of all fuels, whether renewable or fossil.
Status
Not open for further replies.
I posted pics of mine as I progressed. I was surprised at how many people were critical of it. There are lots of computer chair pros out there. You did a good job! You'll be building another one in no time.
I know what you mean! Thanks again and great job on your too!
 
I have to believe that wood that is in a dry area will provide a much better quality burn than wood exposed to the elements. Even under a tarp wood is gathering more moisture.
If you look carefully, you'll see that even heavy rain or snow only penetrates a piece of wood a fraction of an inch. Since you've already been letting it dry out on your porch before you burn it, I don't think the shed will make any difference in the amount you burn for the same amount of heat.

But... relief from the annoyance of having to struggle with tarps and snow and etc. as others have said, is huge, not to mention no longer having to move it twice before you burn it.

As for your opening, depends entirely on your prevailing winds in winter whether snow will blow into it to any degree. You could also, if you find you need to, make some sort of roll-up tarp door you can let down when major snow is expected and deflect the worst of it.
 
Nicely done, it looks good. I have to ask why you cut into the fascia on each end to allow the support beams to show.

Webby, I like the look of the front of your shed. I probably would not have spent the effort of those angled cutoffs but they do add to the look.
 
Nicely done, it looks good. I have to ask why you cut into the fascia on each end to allow the support beams to show.

Webby, I like the look of the front of your shed. I probably would not have spent the effort of those angled cutoffs but they do add to the look.
I have to look at it everyday, I wanted it to look nice.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Jan Pijpelink
If you look carefully, you'll see that even heavy rain or snow only penetrates a piece of wood a fraction of an inch. Since you've already been letting it dry out on your porch before you burn it, I don't think the shed will make any difference in the amount you burn for the same amount of heat.

But... relief from the annoyance of having to struggle with tarps and snow and etc. as others have said, is huge, not to mention no longer having to move it twice before you burn it.

As for your opening, depends entirely on your prevailing winds in winter whether snow will blow into it to any degree. You could also, if you find you need to, make some sort of roll-up tarp door you can let down when major snow is expected and deflect the worst of it.
I am thinking of the same thing for heavy snow. I just have to figure an inexpensive way to do the tarps.
 
Nicely done, it looks good. I have to ask why you cut into the fascia on each end to allow the support beams to show.
To be honest, it's a wood shed, I wasn't real concerned with all of it's appearance. I'm more interested in it being practical.
 
I am thinking of the same thing for heavy snow. I just have to figure an inexpensive way to do the tarps.
If it were me, what I'd do is just get several inexpensive tarps, screw the tops into the shed using big washers and tie them up with some rope. When it looks like snow, just unroll them and let them fly loose in the wind. They won't keep the interior of the shed totally snow-free, but they'll do most of the job. You don't, I don't think, want to anchor them to the ground because, A, it's not necessary, and B, the pressure on them from a good windstorm might rip them off. Or you could, I guess, figure out a way to anchor them but poke a bunch of holes in them so the wind goes through, but I'd try just leaving them loose first.

I'm assuming the opening is facing the prevailing winter wind direction. If it's perpendicular, that's harder and you may have to rethink a little bit, maybe put some shutters up on that side as a windbreak or something.

Or just the hell with it. You'll still be much, much better off than you were.

My little 1800-something farmhouse has an attached enclosed but well ventilated wood shed at the back of the house that holds about 3 cords stuffed to the gills, and it's a fantastic boon.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Jan Pijpelink
firewood4.jpeg


I like this woodshed design. lol
 
Looks like somebody had a little too much time on their hands! LOL
 
  • Like
Reactions: crizpynutz
Was hoping to hear from someone that sheds their wood compared to tarping and uncovered wood. It would be nice to know that the investment was worth it.

Yes. Well worth it.

I have two sheds. One is a lean to off my garage and holds 5.5 cord.

Second is the same style as yours and is fully open front and rear. Can average 10' of snow here. The whole point of a shed is maintinence free storage. Nothing to mess around with, load the wood in and unload when required.

P.S Nice shed BTW.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.