I recently acquired a wood stove that I will hopefully be putting in my garage for woodworking purposes. That's a whole other question as my post in
a different forum thread is creating a lot of trouble for me. I'm sure it will get worked out fine though.
Okay, I live in Idaho and I have access to plenty of trees for cutting....snow levels on the ground being the only problem.
We have a lot of trees here that have been hit with bark beatles. These trees are dead on the hoof and dry. I cut one up a couple weeks ago and it was ready to go right then. But what do you all think should I cut something a bit green, are we talking serious time for it to dry? Like I mentioned, I can cut a lot of trees that look like skeletons but if I get one that's a pinch wet I'm certainly not going to leave it.
Thanks all
Robert
a different forum thread is creating a lot of trouble for me. I'm sure it will get worked out fine though.
Okay, I live in Idaho and I have access to plenty of trees for cutting....snow levels on the ground being the only problem.
We have a lot of trees here that have been hit with bark beatles. These trees are dead on the hoof and dry. I cut one up a couple weeks ago and it was ready to go right then. But what do you all think should I cut something a bit green, are we talking serious time for it to dry? Like I mentioned, I can cut a lot of trees that look like skeletons but if I get one that's a pinch wet I'm certainly not going to leave it.
Thanks all
Robert