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  1. bogydave Minister of Fire

    joined: Dec 4, 2009
    7,725 posts
    So Cent ALASKA
    Picked the hottest day of the year to work on the wood shed.
    This is the 1st of 3 sections, each to be 16' X 6'7" +/-
    8' tall in front, 6'6" in back

    Semi leveled a pad (old stump & roots)
    Dug down to gravel, filled hole with rock/gravel/sand up to 1' deep
    buried a pillar block
    treated 4X4 posts, braces beams & roof. (hurricane clamps on roof for strong winter winds)
    Raked fairly level, old carpet, pallets
    Ready for wood
    Well need to put on metal roofing or roll roofing to water proof it..
    [IMG]

    Attached Files:

    #1

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  2. Backwoods Savage Minister of Fire

    joined: Feb 14, 2007
    24,106 posts
    Michigan
    Dave, you sure will be loving that shed come the winter months. Now just think, once the shed is up, the work is not done. You still have to fill it. lol
  3. ChrisNJ Feeling the Heat

    joined: Sep 25, 2009
    371 posts
    Burlington County
    wow nice shed, now if only I could get the time to build mine :-(
  4. smokinj Minister of Fire

    joined: Aug 11, 2008
    15,410 posts
    Anderson, Indiana
    +1
  5. ggans New Member

    joined: Oct 11, 2009
    173 posts
    Michigan
    You might want to reconsider that carpet.
  6. zap Minister of Fire

    joined: Aug 25, 2009
    10,360 posts
    Looks good Bogey, will that be filled with birch.

    zap
  7. bogydave Minister of Fire

    joined: Dec 4, 2009
    7,725 posts
    So Cent ALASKA
    Finding time to build it has been the main issue this year, garden, fishing get in the way :)
    Filling this one with mostly "birch", 1 year + old.
    I have to move the wood piles to make room for the next 16' section, so am putting in the oldest wood
    to burn this coming season.
    **Why no carpet?? Will help keep weeds from growing up thru the pallets. ?**
    Back row is 6'6" X 15' X 1.5", the next 3 will be a little higher , maybe 7'+ high (roughly 5 cords)
    Looks much better with wood in it. :)

    Attached Files:

  8. North of 60 Minister of Fire

    joined: Jul 27, 2007
    2,449 posts
    Yukon Canada
    I think the carpet is a great idea. He may not understand our dry cold and dry rain. Spring is our only damp month. ;-)
    Nice work Bogy
  9. Blevesque Member

    joined: Oct 17, 2008
    149 posts
    Maine
    Looks great Dave! And yes looks much better with wood in it!
  10. bsig31r New Member

    joined: Jun 27, 2010
    33 posts
    VA Beach
    Great looking shed. Can't wait to have my finished. School has gotten me side tracked. Hopefully I will get mine finished before I report to my next duty station.
  11. firefighterjake Minister of Fire

    joined: Jul 22, 2008
    13,455 posts
    Unity/Bangor, Maine
    Looks great Dave . . . will look even better completely full.
  12. salmonhunter Member

    joined: Apr 16, 2012
    99 posts
    newbrunswick canada
    looks awsome im thinking about building one of these myself in the back yard. How much did it roughly cost? Im trying to come up with a list of all the materials needed.
  13. weatherguy Minister of Fire

    joined: Feb 20, 2009
    2,716 posts
    Central Mass
    Nice shed Dave, I was going to ask the same question that Rod just did. Dont you already have a similar shed or am I thinking of someone else in AK?
  14. bogydave Minister of Fire

    joined: Dec 4, 2009
    7,725 posts
    So Cent ALASKA
    Each section 4 sheets of 1/2" ply wood, 9 - 92" studs -- 2x6 (on 24" centers), 1 16' 2X6 (optional, not needed but I covered the front of the roof trusses to help keep the wind from lifting so much on the ply wood), 1 16' 2X12 front , 1 - 16' 2X10 rear. 4 treated 8' 4X4s, 4 concrete pier blocks
    I made 3 sections this size so 2 less pier blocks , 4X4 & "X" brace for the next sections. 3 rolls of roofing for the 48' total length. 6 2x4 studs (studs were cheaper than an 8' 2X4 & length didn't matter, just bracing.

    I got the 16' stuff at Lowes on a reject warped/bowed pile pretty cheap. I put the bow up & was able to get the fronts pretty straight inline with the ATV winch as I nailed on the plywood. I built the roof 1" short of 8'X16' to have a little overlap of the plywood for a drip edge.

    Don't remember the cost, $300 maybe for each section when all done. Could've been more, a guess
    Prices here have gone up allot on lumber since the build, fuel shipping cost, everything has gone up.
    VERY very glad I built it, easy to add another section too.
  15. maplewood Minister of Fire

    joined: Feb 12, 2008
    610 posts
    NB Canada
    Super shed. Thanks for posting the pics.
    Do you need to dry your white birch for more than a year?
    I find mine is down to 20% after just 12 months. Especially if it is under cover.
  16. sappy Member

    joined: Jan 30, 2011
    91 posts
    Vermont upper valley
    Looks great. I will be starting mine soon. Just started moving the 5 plus cords that are in the way. I have other wood on other part of property drying for 2013 2014 season. I will only be putting dried wood back in this one. Mine will look very similar but I will have only one section about 20 feet long by 12 feet deep and close to 12 feet high in front and 8 plus in the back. I am going to put one inch pine boards up later an inch apart for air even though the wood will be dry anyway. We get a lot of blwing wind here-i want to keep the snow out. I will in winter put a customm fit green heavy rubber tarp on a run I can slide across the top if needed. Keep psting pics. I love to look at out building like this and wood.
  17. muncybob Minister of Fire

    joined: Apr 8, 2008
    1,784 posts
    Near Williamsport, PA
    Good start on your "sectional"!! Reminds me of my project last autumn. Great feeling when done and filled. I wish I had built mine sooner though as the cost sure does go up each year for construction materials!!
  18. bogydave Minister of Fire

    joined: Dec 4, 2009
    7,725 posts
    So Cent ALASKA
    Thanks
    I season it 2 years. I learned the new cat stove really burns well with it 2 years seasoned. Much better than just 1 year.
  19. nate379 Minister of Fire

    joined: Sep 21, 2010
    3,985 posts
    Palmer, Alaska
    I burned about a cord that I had cut 6-7 months prior and it was just as dry as the 2 year old stuff. Dunno if maybe dries out fast from the wind we get?

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