I have read in various places that wood does not season well in rounds, but must be split & stacked for optimum seasoning. This makes sense.
I posted an earlier thread detailing some burn duration & quality issues, https://www.hearth.com/talk/threads/49197/
I talked to the landscaper today who sold me the wood, and he was quite upset that I declined the delivery of the last 400 pieces of cordwood I had ordered. He claimed I was the first to complain about his wood. Now when I pressed him further for details, he finally admitted that while the wood had been cut into rounds for at least 2 years, maybe even 4, it had not been split until October (2 months ago!) I explained to him that wood will not season well in rounds but must be split & stacked in order to consistently dry out. Was I correct in this?
I explained to him that my burns were short, incomplete, and inconsistent. From split to split I get either popping or sparking or actual water boiling out the ends of what looked like a dry split when I loaded it. Also I am left with a large unburnt chunks when the flames die off, resulting in a large amount of coals. I kept what I already picked up (1.5 cord) which I'll move outside in the spring and dry out for burning next season.
Can anyone offer a more objective view of why rounds will not dry out like splits? Or perhaps confirm if the burn behavior I am getting is indeed consistent with a disproportionate amount of time spent drying as a round then as a split?
I posted an earlier thread detailing some burn duration & quality issues, https://www.hearth.com/talk/threads/49197/
I talked to the landscaper today who sold me the wood, and he was quite upset that I declined the delivery of the last 400 pieces of cordwood I had ordered. He claimed I was the first to complain about his wood. Now when I pressed him further for details, he finally admitted that while the wood had been cut into rounds for at least 2 years, maybe even 4, it had not been split until October (2 months ago!) I explained to him that wood will not season well in rounds but must be split & stacked in order to consistently dry out. Was I correct in this?
I explained to him that my burns were short, incomplete, and inconsistent. From split to split I get either popping or sparking or actual water boiling out the ends of what looked like a dry split when I loaded it. Also I am left with a large unburnt chunks when the flames die off, resulting in a large amount of coals. I kept what I already picked up (1.5 cord) which I'll move outside in the spring and dry out for burning next season.
Can anyone offer a more objective view of why rounds will not dry out like splits? Or perhaps confirm if the burn behavior I am getting is indeed consistent with a disproportionate amount of time spent drying as a round then as a split?