Work Done In 2020

  • Active since 1995, Hearth.com is THE place on the internet for free information and advice about wood stoves, pellet stoves and other energy saving equipment.

    We strive to provide opinions, articles, discussions and history related to Hearth Products and in a more general sense, energy issues.

    We promote the EFFICIENT, RESPONSIBLE, CLEAN and SAFE use of all fuels, whether renewable or fossil.
I bucked up the punky Maple in my above post #646, I split it and brought another 4 or 5 loads of junk wood to the outdoor fireplace, hopefully we get some snow and rain so I can burn everything.

The last picture is the only good wood I kept form the Maple.
 

Attachments

  • 104_1093.JPG
    104_1093.JPG
    342.6 KB · Views: 123
  • 104_1095.JPG
    104_1095.JPG
    321.1 KB · Views: 111
  • 104_1100.JPG
    104_1100.JPG
    466.1 KB · Views: 119
Split and stacked just over a cord of red oak. This tree was taken down about 2 years ago at a coworker's house in town. They're happy to have the space back, I'm happy to have the woodshed full. 1.5 cords of pine, 1/2 cord ash also done this fall, 1/2 cord red oak this spring from the same oak today. SO, closing in on a year's worth--earliest I've had this much made for sure. Barn is getting full: probably 9 cord total under roof, some going on 7 years CSS.
 

Attachments

  • PXL_20201013_175526766.jpg
    PXL_20201013_175526766.jpg
    300.4 KB · Views: 110
  • PXL_20201018_192253331.jpg
    PXL_20201018_192253331.jpg
    249.8 KB · Views: 133
  • PXL_20201031_145309980.jpg
    PXL_20201031_145309980.jpg
    363.8 KB · Views: 130
Split and stacked just over a cord of red oak. This tree was taken down about 2 years ago at a coworker's house in town. They're happy to have the space back, I'm happy to have the woodshed full. 1.5 cords of pine, 1/2 cord ash also done this fall, 1/2 cord red oak this spring from the same oak today. SO, closing in on a year's worth--earliest I've had this much made for sure. Barn is getting full: probably 9 cord total under roof, some going on 7 years CSS.
Nice work @ClintonH , did the stacking crew give you any problems? ;)
 
Nice work @ClintonH , did the stacking crew give you any problems? ;)
No--the 4 y/o is coming in to his own! He will load splits on the trailer as fast as I can split them with the Fiskars. He also unloads and hands splits to me for stacking. Woop woop! The 2 y/o wants to help but can't handle the weight sometimes.
 
No--the 4 y/o is coming in to his own! He will load splits on the trailer as fast as I can split them with the Fiskars. He also unloads and hands splits to me for stacking. Woop woop! The 2 y/o wants to help but can't handle the weight sometimes.
My 2 year old loves carrying wood. He can only do one small split at a time but he's learning
 
My two girls age 7 and 3 like to help, plus they love the heat from the fires. The younger one loves trying to use the hatchet to split kindling, ( with my help of course). The younger they get involved the more they will appreciate it.
 
My two girls age 7 and 3 like to help, plus they love the heat from the fires. The younger one loves trying to use the hatchet to split kindling, ( with my help of course). The younger they get involved the more they will appreciate it.

Make sure you stress proper PPE too. Safety Glasses and Glove dress up time.
 
I've been scrounging wood for the last month and a half. What have I come up with in this low wood Rocky Mountain area, you ask?
Five or six cords of Red elm, Russian Olive, White Ash (Yah!), and some sort of nursery sold Pine. I'm good with all of these. One more load of Pine/Ash and I'm done for the year, unless I suck it up and trek up into the Sawtooth Forest for Lodgepole Pine (why did I buy a 4-cord tag?).
DSCF0131.JPG
DSCF0132.JPG
 

Attachments

  • DSCF0130.JPG
    DSCF0130.JPG
    153.1 KB · Views: 92
Suck it up and get your 4 cord of pine
More wood is better than not enough
 
  • Like
Reactions: MMH and JimBear
To get the pine, I have to cut two 12" fallen trees off of a 'kind-of-road' (ie goat trail), than back my trailer in. Next, I've got to hike 100 yards up a hill to get to some burnt standing lodgepole pine (and sub alpine fir). The burnt bark has mostly fallen off.

And next, I have to clear a down hill path/chute to roll the rounds down - this will take 3 or 4 separate rolls to get them to the bottom. On paper, it seems possible. Maybe drive my car up, cut up 4 chords, roll them down the hill, go home (i'll be pooped), come back next day with truck, load 2 cords, & return and load 2 cords. My excuse - I can't find the new 24" Oregon chains I bought.
 
You're not trying
That's what my better half would tell you
and your chain is right where you left it
It's not a big job just a whole lot of little jobs put together
 
  • Haha
Reactions: stoveliker
Took some time out from cssing. Finally had some old cherry & walnut sliced that I just couldn't bear to make into firewood plus some logs I brought home from up north to slice for building a mantle. GORGEOUS!!! Now it has to sit a year or two.
 

Attachments

  • 20201103_114033.jpg
    20201103_114033.jpg
    307 KB · Views: 100
  • 20201103_113928.jpg
    20201103_113928.jpg
    170.4 KB · Views: 88
  • 20201103_113919.jpg
    20201103_113919.jpg
    217.6 KB · Views: 102
I had a nice little fire with some of that punky maple that came down and more pine from trail clearing.
 

Attachments

  • 104_1108.JPG
    104_1108.JPG
    323.6 KB · Views: 105
  • 104_1110.JPG
    104_1110.JPG
    201.4 KB · Views: 106
I started cutting some Ash again since EAB will kill it, pictured are the two I felled today and some rounds in picture 1124 I cut from some tops earlier this year. The two Ash I felled today and some of the rounds in picture 1124 are stacked.
 

Attachments

  • 104_1115.JPG
    104_1115.JPG
    259.4 KB · Views: 105
  • 104_1116.JPG
    104_1116.JPG
    264.2 KB · Views: 98
  • 104_1118.JPG
    104_1118.JPG
    308.7 KB · Views: 116
  • 104_1120.JPG
    104_1120.JPG
    238 KB · Views: 115
  • 104_1121.JPG
    104_1121.JPG
    341.6 KB · Views: 103
  • 104_1122.JPG
    104_1122.JPG
    276.5 KB · Views: 97
  • 104_1123.JPG
    104_1123.JPG
    272.5 KB · Views: 110
  • 104_1124.JPG
    104_1124.JPG
    310.5 KB · Views: 98
Another Ash was added to the stacks today, dang bug.
 

Attachments

  • 104_1127.JPG
    104_1127.JPG
    255.2 KB · Views: 116
  • 104_1128.JPG
    104_1128.JPG
    308 KB · Views: 102
  • 104_1129.JPG
    104_1129.JPG
    266.4 KB · Views: 96
  • 104_1130.JPG
    104_1130.JPG
    279.1 KB · Views: 103
  • 104_1131.JPG
    104_1131.JPG
    281.7 KB · Views: 91
Moved about 4 cord indoors about a month ago, moved the 2 cord left out to a E/W layout instead of N/S to better air flow and have css about another 4 1/2 cord. Working on getting to that magic 3 years ahead. Another 3 1/2 cord or so to go. Hoping to get another 6-7 css and have more logs on hand to be ready for css next year when I move more inside again. Have more Aspen, ash, beech, sugar maple & red oak to haul.

Just ran out of logs though and I'm in quarantine... dangit! All good, no symptoms just an exposure (so far).
20201027_130914.jpg

Inside. Softwood (pine, Aspen & silver maple) on left, hardwood (beech, sugar maple & ash) on right.
20201107_150215.jpg

New E/W stack orientation. Left to right; stack 1 - Aspen & punky honey locust; stack 2 - Aspen & box elder; stack 3 - isn't there yet but figuring ash; stack 4 - honey locust, hickory & sugar maple; stack 5 - ash; stack 6 - beech. Stack 1 is 30" off the garage.
 
Taking advantage of one of the last nice days before the cold returns. Got compost spread on garden(still need to till it in), split up the cottonwood that fell over the summer(messy, see pallet of bark in pic), filled up house with wood because we are going to be firing up stove again this week after a week reprieve from burning. Beautiful fall weekend...
20201108_160051.jpg
20201108_160124.jpg
 
I had some smaller rounds that I stacked first and then split some other rounds I had left from the spring ash felling that finished up this stack.
 

Attachments

  • 104_1132.JPG
    104_1132.JPG
    316.1 KB · Views: 98
  • 104_1133.JPG
    104_1133.JPG
    349.4 KB · Views: 100
  • 104_1135.JPG
    104_1135.JPG
    259.1 KB · Views: 90
I worked pretty hard this summer cutting a load of logs that I had delivered. With the numerous pickup loads of scrounged wood this summer, I was good to go for this year. I really needed the break as my body was really feeling it by the end of summer.
Although my arthritis continues to keep me sore every time I try to do something, I am getting the fever to fire the saw back up.

My darn P/U truck has been a constant problem and won’t start. Having a load of logs delivered is the way to go in my opinion. It is extremely wet here and the area where he dumps them is not going to be accessible. Hope to get a load for Christmas and work on it slowly through the winter.
 
I bucked,split and stacked 5 of these this weekend. Way too windy here to do much today but retrieve this load. I'm liking the red oak as all I've cut is ash primarily. Oak splits easy with the f27.
The neighbour's bush got logged last winter and I'm cutting up the tops and split logs/trees that they have left. Im guessing there's 25+ cord on the ground.....its just a matter of getting it out. These first loads were the easy stuff. Now I will start dealing with the ravine. Slopes always make it that much more work I find.
20201115_135021.jpg
IMG-20201114-WA0001.jpeg
 
Last edited:
Bucked up a large dead Elm that was standing until the wicked winds came through last week and dropped it across a trail. Whats in the truck was only the bottom 20 ft or so before before it split off. Gave the 20" bar a workout. Had a heaping load and still couldnt fit it all in truck.
20201115_145050.jpg
 
Bucked up a large dead Elm that was standing until the wicked winds came through last week and dropped it across a trail. Whats in the truck was only the bottom 20 ft or so before before it split off. Gave the 20" bar a workout. Had a heaping load and still couldnt fit it all in truck.View attachment 266986

That looks like it could Slippery ( Red ) Elm. Nice find regardless, it will burn nice.
 
That looks like it could Slippery ( Red ) Elm. Nice find regardless, it will burn nice.

My cutting grounds is full of these dead elms. Started burning some that I gathered last year, burns great!