I love that view -I second Larch. Theres lots of it in the east kootenays but treated like gold so you need to be pro active at getting it especially if you want aged standing dead. Its easy to split, crackles great and can grow quite large. Its about as good as you can get on the btu charts for coniferous trees. Not only that the tree is just so darned cool!
Tulip Poplar!
This is my first season burning, so I can only use whatever has dried sufficiently to burn efficiently in a year or less. Around here, that means tulip poplar. It grows very fast, splits easily, dries very fast and burns well, but maybe not the most BTU's. I've got several cord of oak C/S/S and much more oak standing dead, but none of that will be ready for a year or two, so for now it's tulip, red maple and/or cherry.
Spruce is not generally wanted either, so more crack for your stove.I'll vote for spruces. Season easily in one summer, the wife isn't allergic. I can turn our BK down pretty low to get some sustain out of it, or crank it up and take the chill off the house in a hurry. I especially love damaged trees with baseball sized globs of sap on them, the catalyst in my stove treats sap globs like cocaine.
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