Before last Aug I had 4-5 cords of 3 yr seasoned red oak & locust. Up until a month ago, my woodpile had grown to 14 cords, all the new wood being red oaks knocked down around my neighborhood and at my daughter's house by Hurricane Irene. A month ago, a neighbor let me cut up and keep the wood from 8 red oaks downed by Irene 2 doors down from me which brings my wood supply to 20 cords, cut, split and stacked on pallets. I cover my wood here in So. MD as it can tend to be wet and humid in the Summer months. It's worked well for me here these past 26 years.
I have another 8 cords or so yet to be cut and split at my daughter;'s house 10 miles away. No hurry to bring it back here, but I'll get it cut, split and off the ground to start curing.
Prior to buying my splitter, I split all my wood with a splitting maul, using wedges to bust up the bigger rounds into more manageable pieces. Two shoulder surgeries forced me into having to use the hydraulic splitter. I could split faster with the maul than with the hydraulic and liked doing that better.
As to what splits best, dry or green wood, in my wood burning days up north in NH, all wood split best in the winter AKA Wintah when the sap was out of the wood and it was frozen. I've always split green wood to hasten the curing process. Red oak unsplit takes a lot longer to cure than if it's split.![[Hearth.com] Almost Finished Harvesting Hurricane Irene's Bounty [Hearth.com] Almost Finished Harvesting Hurricane Irene's Bounty](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/64/64551-761c5de6354ce11f082516097a61ace4.jpg?hash=SjDKpjmrpy)
![[Hearth.com] Almost Finished Harvesting Hurricane Irene's Bounty [Hearth.com] Almost Finished Harvesting Hurricane Irene's Bounty](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/64/64552-ec5e9599b61f722dd02606fe2a735d25.jpg?hash=-1twoAgavt)
![[Hearth.com] Almost Finished Harvesting Hurricane Irene's Bounty [Hearth.com] Almost Finished Harvesting Hurricane Irene's Bounty](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/64/64553-b9b6e2ab55e33b9c48186006197a9a21.jpg?hash=IZrBiU8NgX)
I have another 8 cords or so yet to be cut and split at my daughter;'s house 10 miles away. No hurry to bring it back here, but I'll get it cut, split and off the ground to start curing.
Prior to buying my splitter, I split all my wood with a splitting maul, using wedges to bust up the bigger rounds into more manageable pieces. Two shoulder surgeries forced me into having to use the hydraulic splitter. I could split faster with the maul than with the hydraulic and liked doing that better.
As to what splits best, dry or green wood, in my wood burning days up north in NH, all wood split best in the winter AKA Wintah when the sap was out of the wood and it was frozen. I've always split green wood to hasten the curing process. Red oak unsplit takes a lot longer to cure than if it's split.
![[Hearth.com] Almost Finished Harvesting Hurricane Irene's Bounty [Hearth.com] Almost Finished Harvesting Hurricane Irene's Bounty](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/64/64551-761c5de6354ce11f082516097a61ace4.jpg?hash=SjDKpjmrpy)
![[Hearth.com] Almost Finished Harvesting Hurricane Irene's Bounty [Hearth.com] Almost Finished Harvesting Hurricane Irene's Bounty](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/64/64552-ec5e9599b61f722dd02606fe2a735d25.jpg?hash=-1twoAgavt)
![[Hearth.com] Almost Finished Harvesting Hurricane Irene's Bounty [Hearth.com] Almost Finished Harvesting Hurricane Irene's Bounty](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/64/64553-b9b6e2ab55e33b9c48186006197a9a21.jpg?hash=IZrBiU8NgX)