I recently started a thread about my new favorite free wood....PINE
https://www.hearth.com/talk/threads/hey-pine-actually-burns-pretty-good.116440/page-3#post-1560233
My neighbor is a tree guy and happily dumped a 1.5 cord load of log length pine. I split it last April and have been burning the chunks/shorts/uglies since. The MC of even the large pieces has been in the mid teens.
Anyways....my oak is 2 years old and could season another year. Most splits are around 20% but the large ones are still in the low 20's. A thought dawned on me.....burn all the pine and save as much oak until next year when it will be better seasoned
I checked the MC of some of the shaded pieces of pine and they are all in the high teens. Only a few of the largest ones were pushing 21-22%.
So. Not being a pine aficionado....would you burn pine in the 15-22% range in favor of further seasoning your oak that is 19-24%??? Any reason not to?
Thanks!
https://www.hearth.com/talk/threads/hey-pine-actually-burns-pretty-good.116440/page-3#post-1560233
My neighbor is a tree guy and happily dumped a 1.5 cord load of log length pine. I split it last April and have been burning the chunks/shorts/uglies since. The MC of even the large pieces has been in the mid teens.
Anyways....my oak is 2 years old and could season another year. Most splits are around 20% but the large ones are still in the low 20's. A thought dawned on me.....burn all the pine and save as much oak until next year when it will be better seasoned
I checked the MC of some of the shaded pieces of pine and they are all in the high teens. Only a few of the largest ones were pushing 21-22%.
So. Not being a pine aficionado....would you burn pine in the 15-22% range in favor of further seasoning your oak that is 19-24%??? Any reason not to?
Thanks!