LLigetfa said:
woodzilla said:
I revisited a row of white oak that, compared to 5 weeks ago, is a whole different animal to burn. There is no doubt winter wind has done it justice.
A testament to all the nay sayers that claim wood doesn't dry in Winter. I posted a couple of pics in another thread that shows wood that bucked this time last year, sat out all Spring/Summer to dry, and laid up in the Fall, still shrunk close to 4 inches. I do notice a difference in how it burns now versus how it burned at the start of this burning season.
https://www.hearth.com/econtent/index.php/forums/viewreply/376796/
BWS,
Ja, we didn't get the ice storm here that hit much of NWO. It seems we are in a bit of a warmer micro-climate here and noticed that right off when I moved here, having lived nearer to Lake Superior most of my life and having worked all across NWO.
Hey, bravo, Lligetfa, for saying what dare not be spoken. The wood I left outside this winter has dried like a sumbitch, despite the snow. I'm beginning to think snow-cured
wood is the bestest. If I weren't having to cope with struggling through 1 to 2 feet of snow on the ground all winter between me and the wood stacks, I'd leave it all outside rather than bringing it into my attached woodshed. The difference between the stuff I brought in in November and the stuff I just left out there this winter is significant.
I did have a rush of brains to the head and bought one of those cheapo molded plastic kid's sleds to bring my outside wood down the hill to my house, which works
great as long as I keep out of its way on the slide down the slope. But wallowing back and forth through all that snow is just too much, even for dry firewood.