35% Moisture Content Now, What about in March?

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MagdalenaP

Burning Hunk
Nov 10, 2018
239
Tilbury, ON
Not too sure what type of wood it is, reading 30-35% on a freshly split piece. What can I realistically expect by March?
 
That all depends on how you store it
 
And the species and split size.

I’d split it small, let and the wind and sun do it’s thing, and mix a little in every load of your dry stuff to spread it out.

It’s probably worth while to find some compressed sawdust blocks too.
 
Realistically 28-30%. Just a wild guess. Winter just doesn’t dry fast at all.
 
Bringing it inside a day or 2 before you burn it might take a little more off.
This definitely helps but i'd say more like 4-5 days (close to the stove) at least, but no way will a few days inside let u burn 30% moisture wood.
 
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Oh, I didn’t mean to imply it would! I’m just listing things that will help!
 
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You can realistically expect to lose about .20% moisture per month in the winter depending on species.. this would be for hardwoods like oak, hickory.. species like poplar will actually season in winter losing like 3% or more per month.. It will probably benefit you to figure out what kind of wood it is
 
Not too sure what type of wood it is, reading 30-35% on a freshly split piece. What can I realistically expect by March?
That’s reading corresponds to piece of wood that was processed a few months ago. On average, I’d guess high 20’s by March 24’. Burnable by Oct 24’.