Out of firewood as of this coming Saturday. I have several choices:
1. Dig through the snow to find last year's log length pine and poplar, cut to length, burn. MC probably off the meter. No cost but a lot of time and effort. Probably mostly frozen too.
2. Cut down dead ash tree near driveway. Burn what seems dry-ish. Same problem with MC. Probably a cord of wood in it, it's a forked tree with 4 stems and 16-18" DBH.
3. Burn perfectly good pallets that were set aside for stacking next year's wood on. Don't have enough to last the season. Probably 30 pallets available.
4. Go to Tractor Supply and hope they have a pallet of EcoBricks or similar compressed sawdust available. Spend $.
5. Buy cut, split and probably green firewood, burn it now. Spend $.
6. I know of a sawmill that has huge bundles of pine slabs for near zero $. Still need to transport, cut and stack. Also probably dead green.
7. Turn switch on OWB to propane, walk away and prepare to write a big check to Suburban Propane in the spring.
I'm really opposed to spending money, but with all the snow we still have, numbers 1-3 seem like crappy options.
Given the circumstances, what would you do? I probably need a full cord of wood to get me into April, which is when the whole process starts again, but at least by that time I should be able to harvest wood without so much snow on the ground.
And 8. DO NOT do this again. Fill the damn woodshed before September.
1. Dig through the snow to find last year's log length pine and poplar, cut to length, burn. MC probably off the meter. No cost but a lot of time and effort. Probably mostly frozen too.
2. Cut down dead ash tree near driveway. Burn what seems dry-ish. Same problem with MC. Probably a cord of wood in it, it's a forked tree with 4 stems and 16-18" DBH.
3. Burn perfectly good pallets that were set aside for stacking next year's wood on. Don't have enough to last the season. Probably 30 pallets available.
4. Go to Tractor Supply and hope they have a pallet of EcoBricks or similar compressed sawdust available. Spend $.
5. Buy cut, split and probably green firewood, burn it now. Spend $.
6. I know of a sawmill that has huge bundles of pine slabs for near zero $. Still need to transport, cut and stack. Also probably dead green.
7. Turn switch on OWB to propane, walk away and prepare to write a big check to Suburban Propane in the spring.
I'm really opposed to spending money, but with all the snow we still have, numbers 1-3 seem like crappy options.
Given the circumstances, what would you do? I probably need a full cord of wood to get me into April, which is when the whole process starts again, but at least by that time I should be able to harvest wood without so much snow on the ground.
And 8. DO NOT do this again. Fill the damn woodshed before September.