There may not be an actual answer to this but I thought I'd ask anyway.
I have a large stack of uncovered firewood outside on a concrete pad. It wasn't perfectly seasoned, but it would burn all right, and I'd had no problems with it so far this fall. It was cut and split last spring. The fall had been reasonably dry here up until November hit.
Enter a very wet November. When I was able to get out to the stack again (didn't want to rut up the lawn using the skid steer bringing the wood to the house when the ground was so wet) I found the wood absolutely soaked. Heavy with water. We aren't talking wet in a rain storm type of wet, we're talking really wet.
I've been burning wood for the past ten years and have never seen this happen to my wood before, even as I keep it in pretty much the same conditions each season.
So, my question is, is it possible for wood to dry in the winter once this has happened, or should I just forget this wood until next year? I have a store of inside "emergency" wood (a very large Box Elder tree cut five years ago or more) that can be used, either by itself or perhaps using a small percentage of the wet wood along with it, so not in trouble as far as no dry wood available at all, but I'd sure like to hear people's take on it.
I have a large stack of uncovered firewood outside on a concrete pad. It wasn't perfectly seasoned, but it would burn all right, and I'd had no problems with it so far this fall. It was cut and split last spring. The fall had been reasonably dry here up until November hit.
Enter a very wet November. When I was able to get out to the stack again (didn't want to rut up the lawn using the skid steer bringing the wood to the house when the ground was so wet) I found the wood absolutely soaked. Heavy with water. We aren't talking wet in a rain storm type of wet, we're talking really wet.
I've been burning wood for the past ten years and have never seen this happen to my wood before, even as I keep it in pretty much the same conditions each season.
So, my question is, is it possible for wood to dry in the winter once this has happened, or should I just forget this wood until next year? I have a store of inside "emergency" wood (a very large Box Elder tree cut five years ago or more) that can be used, either by itself or perhaps using a small percentage of the wet wood along with it, so not in trouble as far as no dry wood available at all, but I'd sure like to hear people's take on it.