your shed seasoning philosophy is the same as mine and was my objective when building my 5-cord woodshed...I am curious what your thoughts are for stacking loose and seasoning in one year. How much room do you plan to leave between rows...or is there anything else you're planning on doing stacking-wise to help ensure seasoning?
I am currently planning to build vertical walls between bays on 44" centers, +/-. Plain 2x4 with wire fencing stapled to both sides, 8 feet tall. I am currently stacking 6' tall, will probably have to go to 7' tall green stacks , but they will shrink 18% as they season.
Imagine two parallel stacks of wood with their bases four inches away from the fencing on the 2x4 divider, tilted in to be leaning against the fencing 7' off the floor. So air gap between those two stacks of wood 12" wide at the bottom and four inches wide at the top. In the center of each bay about a 4" air gap between to stacks, with the other stack in each bay leaning against the other wall, so 4" between stacks at the floor and 12" at the top.
Clear as mud?
My lot lines are exactly NS, so I am currently thinking open on the E and W ends, but with a wall of splits leaning on fencing on 2x4 verticals... open on the north side, just enough framing to hold up the roof. Roof one flat panel shed roof tilted so all the rain drips off the southern edge, clear to let sunlight though, and then a clear vertical wall on the south side.
I am thinking that may be enough of so the bays in the middle will heat up, exhaust hot humid air out from under the roof on the north side, and draw in cool air near the floor on the north edge.
I do live between a river and ridge with dependable AM breeze out of the east and dependable PM breeze out of the west.
I can see maybe running solar powered fans near the floor on the north edge to push air along the floor into each bay or stall to help the convection current along. If I end up running 27 fans into a 12' (NS) by 20' (EW) shed I'll probably cover the sides in clear as well to help heat up the wood. Looking like polycarbonate sheets are going to be the way to go for me.
May have to insulate the North wall someday. Kinda want to insulate the floor while it's easy. My ground is already frozen, I have several months to think this over before I shovel the worst of the snow off the site and lay down black plastic to get the ground to thaw.