..then this is the highest BTU wood around!
![[Hearth.com] If splitting your own wood warms you twice... (Wood ID & Stack pics!) [Hearth.com] If splitting your own wood warms you twice... (Wood ID & Stack pics!)](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/102/102303-f17cb8450f53082ef45c148680b075f3.jpg?hash=x2Aa20zuME)
Can anyone ID this demon species? It's like it's designed to catch ax heads, compressing without splitting, despite lining up my swings with radial splits in the cut ends. I have 23 rounds like this one, and they're going to wait until I can get a hold of a splitter or winter comes and they freeze solid. I've split a couple with the ax, but only to see if it could be done. One round split after a dozen or so whacks, but refused to be quartered. There's a second species with darker bark but the same bad behavior:
![[Hearth.com] If splitting your own wood warms you twice... (Wood ID & Stack pics!) [Hearth.com] If splitting your own wood warms you twice... (Wood ID & Stack pics!)](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/102/102311-15f95b569435a5f6e316950fcbe5d976.jpg?hash=9GT7bp1LTb)
I had considerably less trouble with other species, and before the wood started to thaw out:
![[Hearth.com] If splitting your own wood warms you twice... (Wood ID & Stack pics!) [Hearth.com] If splitting your own wood warms you twice... (Wood ID & Stack pics!)](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/102/102307-49723e2852cf9d925f291b0376463682.jpg?hash=pC9-rOtt4-)
I figure it's about 3.5 cords and should last us the first winter. Most is cut to 19-22" long. There's two rows in the foreground and a bit more in back.All split with the Fiskars and cut with a Stihl 032AV ("Made in West Germany"). I've no idea what I have stacked up, but it's clear from splitting it that there's a variety of species. Some is unbelievably dense, which I suspect may be oak that'll have to be sorted out and saved for another year. My favorite is the dark-centered wood that never fails to split in a single swing.
Two and a half months ago I started with a pile of logs left behind after clearing half an acre for our new home:
![[Hearth.com] If splitting your own wood warms you twice... (Wood ID & Stack pics!) [Hearth.com] If splitting your own wood warms you twice... (Wood ID & Stack pics!)](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/102/102308-1da7c670f038841b3154a51dae0fea25.jpg?hash=PTxLnf6jxk)
Working on stacking for winter #2 in the hope of not having to bother with a moisture meter after the first year.
Finally, lest anyone think there weren't any mistakes along the way, here's the first of many stack collapses (hint: don't stack 5' high across a hill, especially before the ground's thawed and dried out):
Thanks to everyone on these forums for all the advice I've picked up, getting answers to questions I didn't know to ask!
![[Hearth.com] If splitting your own wood warms you twice... (Wood ID & Stack pics!) [Hearth.com] If splitting your own wood warms you twice... (Wood ID & Stack pics!)](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/102/102303-f17cb8450f53082ef45c148680b075f3.jpg?hash=x2Aa20zuME)
Can anyone ID this demon species? It's like it's designed to catch ax heads, compressing without splitting, despite lining up my swings with radial splits in the cut ends. I have 23 rounds like this one, and they're going to wait until I can get a hold of a splitter or winter comes and they freeze solid. I've split a couple with the ax, but only to see if it could be done. One round split after a dozen or so whacks, but refused to be quartered. There's a second species with darker bark but the same bad behavior:
![[Hearth.com] If splitting your own wood warms you twice... (Wood ID & Stack pics!) [Hearth.com] If splitting your own wood warms you twice... (Wood ID & Stack pics!)](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/102/102311-15f95b569435a5f6e316950fcbe5d976.jpg?hash=9GT7bp1LTb)
I had considerably less trouble with other species, and before the wood started to thaw out:
![[Hearth.com] If splitting your own wood warms you twice... (Wood ID & Stack pics!) [Hearth.com] If splitting your own wood warms you twice... (Wood ID & Stack pics!)](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/102/102307-49723e2852cf9d925f291b0376463682.jpg?hash=pC9-rOtt4-)
I figure it's about 3.5 cords and should last us the first winter. Most is cut to 19-22" long. There's two rows in the foreground and a bit more in back.All split with the Fiskars and cut with a Stihl 032AV ("Made in West Germany"). I've no idea what I have stacked up, but it's clear from splitting it that there's a variety of species. Some is unbelievably dense, which I suspect may be oak that'll have to be sorted out and saved for another year. My favorite is the dark-centered wood that never fails to split in a single swing.
Two and a half months ago I started with a pile of logs left behind after clearing half an acre for our new home:
![[Hearth.com] If splitting your own wood warms you twice... (Wood ID & Stack pics!) [Hearth.com] If splitting your own wood warms you twice... (Wood ID & Stack pics!)](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/102/102308-1da7c670f038841b3154a51dae0fea25.jpg?hash=PTxLnf6jxk)
Working on stacking for winter #2 in the hope of not having to bother with a moisture meter after the first year.
Finally, lest anyone think there weren't any mistakes along the way, here's the first of many stack collapses (hint: don't stack 5' high across a hill, especially before the ground's thawed and dried out):
![[Hearth.com] If splitting your own wood warms you twice... (Wood ID & Stack pics!) [Hearth.com] If splitting your own wood warms you twice... (Wood ID & Stack pics!)](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/102/102309-618c2109019b39935421d20236d15b84.jpg?hash=VkD15gZ1Vj)
Thanks to everyone on these forums for all the advice I've picked up, getting answers to questions I didn't know to ask!