Exactly what I was thinking.Each section is 8' deep 7' tall in front, 6' in rear and 8' wide. Five sections in all
Yeah I'll look into the welded fence wire. Mine would be more for just containing the pieces on the back side to keep the wood from falling over if the stack shifted for some reason. Yeah chicken wire is pretty thin compared to the welded wire. I was also thinking maybe those 4'x8' sheets of concrete mesh. We don't get a lot of snow and it would probably be blown off before it would melt and run down the back. Rain wise I plan on putting some gutters on to divert the water around my driveway and wood. So far this season we only have had about 1' of snow the usual amount isn't much more than 2' total for my area so snow load isn't much of an issue. My plan was to to do 12' bays 8' deep and 8' tall in the front 7' or 7'6" in the back.I don't think chicken wire will work if it is the lightweight stuff I'm thinking of. I use 2" x 4" x 6' tall welded wire fencing. I think you could also use regular galvanized chain link fencing. A roll of the welded wire fencing 50' long is about $50 for me. The slope you use and the amount of support you use on the roof depends on the load. We could get a lot of snow here, so mine is supported pretty good and has a slope of 1.5' / 12' so things can run off. Mine kind of looks like the one BKVP posted, except that I stack on pallets. 4 pallets and a 4' x 4' in the center on the ground between them covers the ground area. I have some landscape cloth with sand on top under the pallets. I'll be dead before I have any issues with my shed unless a tornado hits it, but I'll have bigger things to worry about then.
Exactly what I was thinking 1 bay per a season so by the time I get to the last seasoned stack the next year I would be starting back at the front. My plan is to get about 4 cord per a section. If using 12' bays 8' deep and 8' tall in the front and 7' in the back it gives me 4.87 cord per a bay. I figure on a cold year I burn around 4 cord so it would give me a little extra just in case.What I discovered was that rotating wood for a FIFO ( first in first out) system was untenable for the structure I had. In hindsight, I'd set something up (anything) that would let me stack two cords (four cords total) that allowed two cords on the right to season while two cords on the left were ready to burn.
Burn two cords for one stove and leave the other two cords to season.
In other words, build bays that will hold two cords.