When I started gathering wood last fall after a hard lesson in how hard it is to buy decent firewood, I was not looking for silver maple. Locust, mulberry and cherry were what I hoped to find. I only acquired this stuff because there was nothing else, and I felt like swinging an axe. But I have changed my mind.
This tree was cut just over 9 months ago, and sat in rounds until about 6 months ago. Then I split it, and it sat on a grassy hillside in partial shade all summer. I just re-split a hunk of it and my old and primitive meter put it somewhere between 14-18% MC.
It may not be any good for overnight burns... unless one has a big cat stove, I suppose. It may not be pretty. Maybe it doesn't smell like much. It's not fancy in any way. But there isn't anything wrong with it, either. Any wood that is easy to get, seasons in six months, is reasonably dense, splits easily and doesn't actively stink doesn't need to apologize to me.
This tree was cut just over 9 months ago, and sat in rounds until about 6 months ago. Then I split it, and it sat on a grassy hillside in partial shade all summer. I just re-split a hunk of it and my old and primitive meter put it somewhere between 14-18% MC.
It may not be any good for overnight burns... unless one has a big cat stove, I suppose. It may not be pretty. Maybe it doesn't smell like much. It's not fancy in any way. But there isn't anything wrong with it, either. Any wood that is easy to get, seasons in six months, is reasonably dense, splits easily and doesn't actively stink doesn't need to apologize to me.