A couple days later, my buddy called and asked "how long do you cut your wood?" I said "twenty inches."
Before I could get over there the next day, he and his son had cut, split and stacked about two cords for their own use and had half a trailer already spilt and loaded for me! I took over the splitting and my friend dragged a thirty foot hickory trunk out of his donkey pen. We bucked and split that hickory, which was like cutting a steel I-beam. We loaded everything on the trailer and took it over to my place where they even helped me stack it. The next day I went back and split another trailer load and stacked it. In all, I got 1.8 cords of fresh, green OAK and hickory. He threw in much of the labor. I supplied the splitter and the cold beer.
That brings me up to about 2.6 total when combined with better than 3/4 cord of split, two year seasoned oak that will start seeing the Vigilant this winter. Burning only half a cord or so each winter (SE Texas) this should get me through several years.
By the way, since some people continue to talk about "face cords," I want to assure you that I'm talking 'real, 128 cubic feet,' cords.
Good friends/ neighbors are a true blessing.