I see a lot of people on the board saying that 9-12 months is not enough time to season wood. A lot of those postings are from the east coast. Does anyone have experience drying wood in the east coast and other areas of the country? It seems to me that maybe your more frequent rains, higher humidity and lower winds increase drying times back east (and in the Pacific NW).
I'm in Kansas and it seems like one of our hot, dry and windy summers is plenty of time to season wood.
I used to burn ash, locust and osage-orange, but since I moved I've been cleaning up my 9 acres and have been burning mostly ash with some mulberry, osage-orange and hackberry.
This winter I've been working on elm, osage-orange, hedge, mulberry and ash. It's stacked on pallets outside (no cover) and am pretty sure it will be ready by fall. I've got 6 pallets cut, split and stacked and should have 4-6 more by the end of winter. This will be enough for 2009-2010 and well into 2010-2011.
I'm in Kansas and it seems like one of our hot, dry and windy summers is plenty of time to season wood.
I used to burn ash, locust and osage-orange, but since I moved I've been cleaning up my 9 acres and have been burning mostly ash with some mulberry, osage-orange and hackberry.
This winter I've been working on elm, osage-orange, hedge, mulberry and ash. It's stacked on pallets outside (no cover) and am pretty sure it will be ready by fall. I've got 6 pallets cut, split and stacked and should have 4-6 more by the end of winter. This will be enough for 2009-2010 and well into 2010-2011.