Thats what im going to doMy father had a setup like this. He put a double door in so he could fill a wheelbarrel and roll it right into the basement. He also put roofing material under the deck and sloped it so rainwater would not drip onto the wood.
Thats what im going to do
I do the same and have never had problemsI always spread a border of "critter death" around the foundation every year to keep the bugs away from the house.
http://i23.photobucket.com/albums/b398/Mustash29/Firewood/DCP00731.jpg
This is an area under my deck. Concrete pad, deck coverage yet fairly open. Do you think this would be a good place ro season?
I was under the impression you had to keep it out of the rain at all costs no? I can keep it out in a pasture we have by a fence row, but its in the open.Great place to stack wood in the fall and winter but not for seasoning. To dry wood it needs to be out in the open and then, of course, there is the bug situation. In addition, many times after stacking wood, bees like to come around. Do you want that near a door then?
For us, we stack out in the open then in October, we move enough for the winter into the barn. A little extra work but well worth it.
I was under the impression you had to keep it out of the rain at all costs no? I can keep it out in a pasture we have by a fence row, but its in the open.
True. The siding greens up on that side. (North) we gave to clean every yearIn your pics the bottom of the posts and a spot or two on the house look mossy/moldy. If that's the case I wouldn't try to dry there. Winter storage maybe.
Not only because the wood won't dry well there but for the houses' sake, you would be adding a ton of moisture to the area. Check out this chart that includes wet and dry weight of different species (cotton wood and buckeye ). http://forestry.usu.edu/htm/forest-products/wood-heatingTrue. The siding greens up on that side. (North) we gave to clean every year
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