G'day All, getting cold enough to burn yet for you Northern Hemisphere folk? It's stinking hot here, high 30's to 40 degrees C (90 to 100+ F) with bushfires raging already . . . over 200 homes destroyed and dozens of fires with some big ones eg 300kms of firefront, and they reckon the next 2 days will be worse . . .
Having burned my way through ~7.5 cords 2011-2013 (see this thread) I have replenished my stacks from some backyard clearing including my Big Tree Drop (documented here with video of the tree almost falling on my car!) over the last few months. I've used a 40 ton petrol splitter manouvering 600mm long x 750mm diameter rounds into place for vertical splitting and used a wheel barrow to shift firewood to the stack locations, and near killed myself for ~5.5 cords. I take my hat off to you guys still maul-splitting, and I can't believe old timers did it all with axe and maul. Legends!
Row 1 along fence most splits 24 inches long, mixed Aussie hardwoods (bluegum, turpentine, paperbark)
Row 2 freestanding, left half (darker red) is bluegum and right half (lighter yellow) is turpentine.
Having burned my way through ~7.5 cords 2011-2013 (see this thread) I have replenished my stacks from some backyard clearing including my Big Tree Drop (documented here with video of the tree almost falling on my car!) over the last few months. I've used a 40 ton petrol splitter manouvering 600mm long x 750mm diameter rounds into place for vertical splitting and used a wheel barrow to shift firewood to the stack locations, and near killed myself for ~5.5 cords. I take my hat off to you guys still maul-splitting, and I can't believe old timers did it all with axe and maul. Legends!
Row 1 along fence most splits 24 inches long, mixed Aussie hardwoods (bluegum, turpentine, paperbark)
Row 2 freestanding, left half (darker red) is bluegum and right half (lighter yellow) is turpentine.

. Just looking at your awesome stacks - how long are you finding the seasoning time is for the hardwoods you have? i pretty new to all this and just got through my first season - i was quite surprised at how long it is taking for my wood to dry. i am close to 5 years in front with my longest seasoned wood being ~ 18 months but still not perfect. Also how soon does your gum wood turn the darker shade? Mine is still pretty light with no cracking on the sides which i would suggest means its drying very slowly.