What, you don’t find constant ads for Honda Motors relevant to wood burning? Do they even make a vehicle capable of hauling a cord of wood?*cough* Ublock Origin *cough cough*
Does a US company make one that can? I don't think a pickup can fit a cord in the bed without some bed pocket stakes, and it would have to be a long bed. At least the Odyssey can fold the seats flat and probably fit a whole cord without a trailer. Either way, everything short of the Civic sized vehicles could do the job with a trailer.What, you don’t find constant ads for Honda Motors relevant to wood burning? Do they even make a vehicle capable of hauling a cord of wood?
Yes. People have been hauling a cord of wood in pickup trucks for decades. A standard 8' pickup bed is around 80 cubic feet, which when stacked 10" above the rails will hold one cord, straps required.Does a US company make one that can? I don't think a pickup can fit a cord in the bed without some bed pocket stakes, and it would have to be a long bed. At least the Odyssey can fold the seats flat and probably fit a whole cord without a trailer. Either way, everything short of the Civic sized vehicles could do the job with a trailer.
My point was, if we're going to be flooded with near-constant car commercials on a forum of wood burners, you'd think it'd be a brand with some vehicles at least targeted at the hobby/lifestyle. Not Honda!
I do see several people getting wood delivered in log form, here. Less so with split cord wood, as the core demographic here is people heating with wood to save money, and delivered split cordwood leaves an awful thin margin for any savings over oil or gas.
I’ve never paid for a single stick of wood, but I did pay for a heavier trailer, electric winch, felling equipment, and even upgraded my truck to be able to haul heavier loads. All that equipment gets used for other things, as well, but woodburning is what drove the initial investment(s).
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