
sure it weighs less, is much easier to work with than hard woods and gives off great heat but can you guys ever leave the stove

just kidding it's burning fine but way too fast
fossil said:You really need to be retired to burn Pine.Rick
What about the male patterened baldness? Or is that just a rumor?Pagey said:I LOVE pine. And the blurred vision. And the hairy palms. And the chimney fires.
mayhem said:Burns great...some nice dry pine in a smouldering stove is like tossing in nepalm.
My problem is all the pine I've been splitting is possibly the most difficult wood I've ever split. It was one of those trees that has lateral branches every few inches.
Yep, only harder to split and the pitch gets everywhere. It does smell good though.savageactor7 said:Never burned pine...must be like willow I take it?
Llamaman said:I am in cranberry country and have unlimited free pine supply-just grabbed a couple of trailer loads from some power lines of fresh cut logs about six feet long - guessing about a cord - as a rookie, can you guys advise as to when is best time to sut up and split? Now or in a few months? Is it easier on the chainsaw now or later? Thanks!
savageactor7 said:Never burned pine...must be like willow I take it?
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