I finally found my moisture meter after 2 years after misplacing it. I have 20 to 30 cords to sell, and other wood that I need to know the moisture content of. Great, now I will know. I took some fresh split readings with the General MM,
For Sale wood,
Siberian Elm (2 yrs seasoned) = 10.5%
Lodgepole Pine (dead standing) = 6.5% (double checked on another piece, 6%, mountain wood)
Red Oak (2 yrs, cut small) = 12.5%
Ash = 10% (just a little bit)
Wood I'm splitting right now,
Apricot tree wood = 20%-21% (dead standers, some rot)
Siberian Elm = 35% - 42% (looks drier)
Poplar = 50% (fresh cut trees, dripping)
Russian Olive = 25% (cut last spring)
Black locust = 20.5% (cut last spring, may have been dead)
Blue Spruce = 17.5% (logs on ground for unknown time)
I guess I should tell people the wood is very dry, so they don't stuff their wood stove and have a run-away situation. I'm going to split the Spruce (17.5%) this year and sell it, too. I'll sell the Apricot and Black Locust next year even though they appear to be around 20% moisture content.
For Sale wood,
Siberian Elm (2 yrs seasoned) = 10.5%
Lodgepole Pine (dead standing) = 6.5% (double checked on another piece, 6%, mountain wood)
Red Oak (2 yrs, cut small) = 12.5%
Ash = 10% (just a little bit)
Wood I'm splitting right now,
Apricot tree wood = 20%-21% (dead standers, some rot)
Siberian Elm = 35% - 42% (looks drier)
Poplar = 50% (fresh cut trees, dripping)
Russian Olive = 25% (cut last spring)
Black locust = 20.5% (cut last spring, may have been dead)
Blue Spruce = 17.5% (logs on ground for unknown time)
I guess I should tell people the wood is very dry, so they don't stuff their wood stove and have a run-away situation. I'm going to split the Spruce (17.5%) this year and sell it, too. I'll sell the Apricot and Black Locust next year even though they appear to be around 20% moisture content.
Last edited: