I should know this but I don't....
We have maybe 4 cords set aside for this winter. Some we had delivered last winter but it was not ready, some we scrounged late Winter-Spring, so it has all been sitting at least 7-10 months, and we tried to separate out the oak and just keep birch, ash, maple, locust in the stacks, with oak stored elsewhere.
It looks gray and weathered, is much lighter and smaller than it was, and a good bit of it sounds hollow when clinking 2 piecs together. Some splits still feel heavy so I think my oak ID skills are going to improve when I start moving stuff into the house. LOL.
We've had rain here for the past 3 days, but a very dry summer overall. I was wondering how long I should expect it to take for rain-wet splits to dry out before bringing them inside or burning them? Last year, I'd bring in about 2 days' worth at a time, which was a mix of bio bricks and wood.
Should I move rain-wet wood to the shed? Or leave it out a few days then move it in?Or do I leave it out in the stacks but cover it somehow before snow? I assume it will dry out better in the sun/wind, but for how long? Couple days?
Our stacks are not convenient, in that they are in the meadow on the South side of our property, and the woodshed is behind the barn (which is behind the house) on the far East side of the property, up a hill, so to move the wood into the shed I have to walk it right past the house. I don't want to do that until/unless conditions are optimal.
Thanks for any advice!
Mary
We have maybe 4 cords set aside for this winter. Some we had delivered last winter but it was not ready, some we scrounged late Winter-Spring, so it has all been sitting at least 7-10 months, and we tried to separate out the oak and just keep birch, ash, maple, locust in the stacks, with oak stored elsewhere.
It looks gray and weathered, is much lighter and smaller than it was, and a good bit of it sounds hollow when clinking 2 piecs together. Some splits still feel heavy so I think my oak ID skills are going to improve when I start moving stuff into the house. LOL.
We've had rain here for the past 3 days, but a very dry summer overall. I was wondering how long I should expect it to take for rain-wet splits to dry out before bringing them inside or burning them? Last year, I'd bring in about 2 days' worth at a time, which was a mix of bio bricks and wood.
Should I move rain-wet wood to the shed? Or leave it out a few days then move it in?Or do I leave it out in the stacks but cover it somehow before snow? I assume it will dry out better in the sun/wind, but for how long? Couple days?
Our stacks are not convenient, in that they are in the meadow on the South side of our property, and the woodshed is behind the barn (which is behind the house) on the far East side of the property, up a hill, so to move the wood into the shed I have to walk it right past the house. I don't want to do that until/unless conditions are optimal.

Thanks for any advice!
Mary