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Thread: My Pile

  1. #1
    Join Date
    May 2005
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    Whitefield, Maine USA
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    Default My Pile

    I wish I could say this was an extraordinary pile of wood, but it's pretty much the usual pile of wood I have been putting in my shed every fall for the past 25 years. For roughly 15 years previous to that I put an even bigger pile of wood in my folks barn. Before that, I didn't own a chain saw.

    This is 14 pickup loads or about 8 cords. I should have some left over come spring:

    http://www.sweettimeapiary.com/pics/wood2.jpg
    http://www.sweettimeapiary.com/pics/wood4.jpg

    This only half the wood I cut this summer. The rest I cut for my daughter for a wedding present.

    I'm getting too old for this.
    Dulcius ex asperis

  2. #2
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    Sep 2006
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    Dane County, WI.
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    Big Grin

    Nice pile! You must be predicting a long cold winter. On the other hand........it seems like a lot of work just to make a few "slam dunks". You don't have a ladder?

  3. #3
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Oldbee View Post
    Nice pile! You must be predicting a long cold winter. On the other hand........it seems like a lot of work just to make a few "slam dunks". You don't have a ladder?
    I am predicting a long cold winter. Here in Maine, that's more often what we see anyways, so it's not a stretch.

    Funny thing about that slam dunk... my son came by this afternoon to help throw some wood and commented, looking up at the pile, that he didn't think and old guy like me could throw wood that high. So I picked up a stick, and threw it into the basket

    Young Whippersnappers

    And yah.. I'll need a ladder to get that stick outa the basket. I can't really climb the pile, she's ready to come down as it is. I piled it pretty steep to keep it mostly out of my driveway..
    Dulcius ex asperis

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jul 2004
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    Seattle, Washington State
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    Default

    Dad use to make me stack the wood. Not sure how my brother got out of it...

  5. #5
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    Default The wood pile

    "I am predicting a long cold winter. Here in Maine, that's more often what we see anyways, so it's not a stretch". Well,..... that's good??............I miss those "winters" when we sat by the fieldstone fireplace that my Dad built with the little "waterfall" on the side, [my idea]. OB.
    "The rest I cut for my daughter for a wedding present". Wow!, just like the 'old days'; when a flock of chickens and a pig or two would 'suffice'; neat!. A wood burning fireplace: perhaps one of the last 'vestiges' of our primative beginnings. I like the house!.......rustic!......though I haven't been there....so.........Maine-ish.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
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    Columbia, South Carolina USA
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by George Fergusson View Post
    So I picked up a stick, and threw it into the basket
    Oh - the physical therapist called, your appointment for the shoulder injury is at 2:30. She mumbled sometrhing about knowing better "at your age".

    Keith

    PS: Nice pile though, nothing beats a real wood fire.
    Bee Sting Honey - So Good, It Hurts!

  7. #7
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    May 2006
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    Erie, PA
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    Default

    I thought you were supposed to wait until it got cold to stack the wood, so it can "warm you twice"...

    Wish I had a wood stove. Had 5 trees taken down and they are laying in the woods, and not a darn use for 'em.
    “The keeping of bees is like the direction of sunbeams.” -Henry David Thoreau

  8. #8
    Join Date
    May 2005
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    Pilot Hill, Northern CA.
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    Default

    It must get awfully cold up there in Maine. I only use one cord of wood per year and I use it to heat exclusively but then, I'm in CA.

    I wood say that if you cut and split wood yourself, it heats more like 5 times.

    Once when you cut it from the tree, once when you throw it in the truck/trailer, once when you move it from the truck to a pile, once when you split it, once when you stack it in the shed.

    Absolutely the best and most fun tool I own (next to the ATV) is a 26-ton log splitter.
    Once you see the bandwagon, it's too late...

  9. #9
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    Aug 2002
    Location
    Evansville, IN, USA
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    2,838

    Default

    >only half the wood I cut . . .
    >Nice pile . . .
    >Whippersnappers . . .
    >make me stack the wood . . .
    >wood burning fireplace . . .
    >nothing beats a real wood fire . . .
    >"warm you twice" . . .
    >most fun tool I own . . .

    Thanx for the memories

  10. #10
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    May 2007
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    Hillsboro, Wisconsin, USA
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Dee Bee View Post

    Absolutely the best and most fun tool I own (next to the ATV) is a 26-ton log splitter.
    A splitter for one cord of wood? Sounds like overkill to me!

    I burn about 5 full cords a winter (and another couple of cords of slab from a mill, for kindling), and split it all by hand. It is so easy when you are splitting hickory, oak, ash and maple. Kind of nice to wake up on a frosty morning, do some splitting to warm up before chores. And not have to hear the whine of an engine, either!

    MM

  11. #11
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    Pilot Hill, Northern CA.
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    Default

    Yah but...

    I don't gather just one cord at a time. I usually have three or more cords stashed in the shed.

    Also, I use the splitter to split the finer pieces of redwood and cedar for kindling. It goes fast that way.

    Also, have you ever tried to hand-split eucalyptus? It is stringy and doesn't split easily. I have a lot of that on my property along with oak. It burns well tho.

    Also, the older you get, the more you want to motorize your chores. My back ain't what it used to be.

    Also, I have a 85 year old mother who lives in the forest and guess who splits and stacks her wood? It ain't my 26 year old son, that's for sure.

    Also, no, wait a minute, I'm out of also's. Did I mention FUN? Arrr Arrr Arrr....
    Once you see the bandwagon, it's too late...

  12. #12
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    Mar 2005
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    Troupsburg, NY
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    Default

    I go through 15 cords minimum a winter here. I haven't cut enough yet though, think i'm about 8 cords shy. I have one of those outside wood stoves, an man do they go through the wood, seemed like a good idea when I bought it, though.
    "I reject your reality, and substitute my own." Adam Savage

  13. #13
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    Default

    I thought you were supposed to wait until it got cold to stack the wood, so it can "warm you twice"...
    Well yes, there is that, but I have a slightly different theory.

    I believe that wood actually gets it's latent heat from the handling, and the more you handle it the more heat it contains. For that reason, I make sure I handle it as many times as possible before actually putting it in the stove, to get the most heat out of it. To support this theory, I submit that an 8" maple tree growing in the woods costs about $2 and it won't heat your house at all. Cut it down, cut it up, split it, and haul it home- in short, handle it a number of times, and that same tree is worth about $31 and will heat your house admirably as long as it lasts.
    Dulcius ex asperis

  14. #14
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    Erie, PA
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    Default

    You know, the scary part is that that actually makes sense to me!
    “The keeping of bees is like the direction of sunbeams.” -Henry David Thoreau

  15. #15
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Dee Bee View Post
    Also, no, wait a minute, I'm out of also's. Did I mention FUN? Arrr Arrr Arrr....
    You used up your allotment of "also's" for the remainder of the year. You do have quite a few "in addition's" available though...

    I'll trade you my elm for your eucalyptus. At least it smells nice, right? Elm the nastiest stuff to split, it also goes by the name "piss-elm" which probably evolved out of settler's contempt for its inability to split. I have to cut elm very short, cut grooves in the face, and use wedges to get it close to splitting. Unfortunately, due to Dutch Elm disease, there is always a bunch of elm hanging around.:mad:

    MM

  16. #16
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    Default

    I see your elm, and raise you logs of locust cut last May.
    “The keeping of bees is like the direction of sunbeams.” -Henry David Thoreau

  17. #17
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Hobie View Post
    I see your elm, and raise you logs of locust cut last May.

    I'll take your locust - make mighty fine fence posts - last forever. Need to put some posts in the vineyard next spring, and looking for locust... Need about 300 posts. Willing to pay some $ for some straight running posts. Seriously.

    MM

  18. #18
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    Default

    There's about 6 of them (maybe more), 12-18" diameter and roughly 10-foot lengths. Some may have twisty grain and bark inclusions. Not the nice 4" diameter trees that you can just cut to length for vineyard posts. I can't move 'em. I'd love a few locust posts myself, but I can't talk the sawmill down the street into dulling his blade. In the mood for a road trip? Seriously.
    “The keeping of bees is like the direction of sunbeams.” -Henry David Thoreau

  19. #19
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Hobie View Post
    There's about 6 of them (maybe more), 12-18" diameter and roughly 10-foot lengths. Some may have twisty grain and bark inclusions. Not the nice 4" diameter trees that you can just cut to length for vineyard posts. I can't move 'em. I'd love a few locust posts myself, but I can't talk the sawmill down the street into dulling his blade. In the mood for a road trip? Seriously.
    I'll tell ya - especially if they have some burl, and you can cut them into blanks, they make some nice turnings on the lathe. Sell 'em on the 'bay.

    MM

  20. #20
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    Dec 2006
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    Sparta, Tennessee
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    Default

    I have acres of black locust... they burn wonderfully...they make great fence posts, they make great 4x4 or 6x6 posts, but the stumps are tough to get out of the ground! I hired a guy with a Cat 980 loader to pop 60 stumps out this spring...most came, but not without difficulty.

    Nothing like a great big pile of wood with the winter months coming. I love the heat from my Vermont Castings wood stove...

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