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saves thousand of dollars per year that I can blow on skiing
Man it's nice to live in an area with cheap natural gas. A year of gas bills for me, including hot water, adds up to maybe $500. We had wood heat growing up in the sticks, I have a lot of fond memories of hauling and splitting wood. Still pretty handy with a maul.
This past late summer into fall, I built a decent woodshed with my kids. A good project, lots of tools for the boy. Now no more fumbling with wet tarps in the rain digging around trying to get some wood.
Last spring, my wife had contacted a tree maintanence company that dumped 4+ cords of douglas fir and sitka spruce on us. And dumped is the operative word. Lots of the rounds were 3-4' in diameter and up to 3 feet long, way too big for me to easily move.
So the earlier part of the summer's "spare" time was burned up moving these enormous rounds to a better spot. This involved our little 92 toyota truck and lotrs of ingenuitity on building paths on a 6' tall woodpile for rolling and powerbarring rounds I could nowhere near lift. Some I just had to split with a wedge on the spot. Some of the super meggas I rolled off to the side and will have to spend a day with my itty bitty 18" bar chainsaw cutting up.
Spent a bunch of time in the last month in between soccer games, dance lessons and work splitting rounds, also a bunch of it with the kids. The wedge work is slow going for a 9 year old 60 pound girl or and 11 year old 90 pound boy. But now we're up to a decent cord and a half of really nice dry hot burning long lasting wood. It's not oak or cherry, 2 trees we don't see a lot of although there's some wild cherry I got a hold of a few years ago that was amazing, but the fir and sitka burn really well.
All hand split. The inlaws have a splitter, but ti would have to be dragged over here over 5 miles and it comes with the father in law. So I'll be hand splitting more. But those power splitters are the bees knees.
I've still got two huDge files of unsplit wood all tarped up for the winter at which I'm chipping away. Pics are too much organizational height.
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soft wood?
no thanks.
give me ash and maple, please.
Birch is not soft wood, ash is what I've burned the last 15 years but I'm getting old/lazy so this year I bought 11 cord. Going into the forest cutting, skidding by hand, hauling, sawing, splitting and stacking just did'nt seem like fun this year, so I bought birch and had it delivered.
I split all my wood with a ax. Want ta arm wrestle?
If the shocker don't rock her, then Dr. Spock her. Dad.
i buy kiln dried, bark off.
stack it once, burn it hot. the more you touch the wood, the less cost effective it is.
Ain't that the truth. Can't believe people are burning sitka spruce, seems like blashphemy for a wood that should be used to build airplanes or kayaks. Of course, westerners probably can't believe that I'm burning maple, which should be used to make fine furniture. Breaks my heart to throw a piece of bird's eye maple into the firebox.
Buttahflake, just curious what do you pay for kiln-dried firewood? It has to be expensive. I buy local winter-cut maple for $85 / face cord, split and delivered. I split some pieces again so they burn better. Six cords plus a tree or two I cut myself gets us through the Hinterlandian winter.
Bushman, that is a fuck-load of wood. Do you burn all that in one winter?
"... Enjoy yourselves, keep your brain in your head and your head firmly attached to your body, the body active and alive, and I promise you this much: I promise you this one sweet victory over our enemies, over those deskbound people with their hearts in a safe deposit box and their eyes hypnotized by desk calculators. I promise you this: you will outlive the bastards." – Edward Abbey
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I'll burn about 6 cords a winter, all hand split.
The worst thing about burning wood is the yellowjackets. I can keep about 1/3 of a cord in the house and every week and a half or so I'll bring a load of wood inside. after a day of being inside the yellowjackets that have been hibernating in the wood begin to wake up and fly around or they'll bite you when you grab a piece of wood to put in the stove. They also have a habit of falling from the posts and beam ceiling at night, lots of fun.
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