Well, I had a lot more wood left over this year than I had expected which is a great thing of course! I had a little bit of time this weekend so I measured it out and after doing the calcs it came in at just a bit under 1.5 cords. Given that I had been willing to burn the whole pile and hoped for 1/2 cord to be left over I'm rather thrilled really.
However, the down side is that the location that I keep my "ready to burn" pile is not very large (I'm generally cramped for storage space) so I stack all my wood for the season in one large cube (all 4+ cords). What was left over is the back left corner... clearly I'd rather burn the "new" wood later and not just have this wood that is now about as good and dry as it is going to get be in the hardest to reach part of the pile so I started the process of moving and re-stacking. Oh the fun
So I'm there tossing splits over the pile to the front and disturbing a bunch of mouse nests in the process. I figure easier to toss the splits over and stack the front than to carry them around. This way the middle will stay put and remain stacked. Fun part will be stacking the new wood back behind this pile once I'm done here. I should have taken pictures to show folks what I mean.
ANyone else gotten themselves into this? I think I need to re-think how I pull wood off the pile next winter. If I had the space to make multiple piles it would be much easier too. Then again if all my wood was of equal value it wouldn't matter as much and the mice would be happier not being disturbed.
However, the down side is that the location that I keep my "ready to burn" pile is not very large (I'm generally cramped for storage space) so I stack all my wood for the season in one large cube (all 4+ cords). What was left over is the back left corner... clearly I'd rather burn the "new" wood later and not just have this wood that is now about as good and dry as it is going to get be in the hardest to reach part of the pile so I started the process of moving and re-stacking. Oh the fun
So I'm there tossing splits over the pile to the front and disturbing a bunch of mouse nests in the process. I figure easier to toss the splits over and stack the front than to carry them around. This way the middle will stay put and remain stacked. Fun part will be stacking the new wood back behind this pile once I'm done here. I should have taken pictures to show folks what I mean.
ANyone else gotten themselves into this? I think I need to re-think how I pull wood off the pile next winter. If I had the space to make multiple piles it would be much easier too. Then again if all my wood was of equal value it wouldn't matter as much and the mice would be happier not being disturbed.