The high winds and rain in northern NH flipped the old sheets of galvanized roofing I use to top cover right off my stacks and set them on the ground. We got around 4" of rain in about 12 hours with high winds. The sheets where weighed down with logs but I guess the wind just got under it. Its a long stack and the roofing was fine on the other end.
I figure it was the piles way of getting back at me, I was just looking at it a few days before the storm to move it down into my bulkhead for the first load of the winter .
I am going to leave it uncovered for a few days and let it dry out before I put the tin back on.
I had a couple of other piles that I screw 3 uprights on each side of the stack to the the log ends and then run cross pieces front to back that are screwed to the uprights. I then screw the sheeting down to the cross pieces. It give about 4" inches of space to let any moisture coming out of the top of the stacks to escape without condensing. Both stacks rigged that way were fine.
Worse case is I have 2 cords in a woodshed with a tarp on front but normally leave that for later in the winter when I dont want to deal with snow in the stacks.
I figure it was the piles way of getting back at me, I was just looking at it a few days before the storm to move it down into my bulkhead for the first load of the winter .
I am going to leave it uncovered for a few days and let it dry out before I put the tin back on.
I had a couple of other piles that I screw 3 uprights on each side of the stack to the the log ends and then run cross pieces front to back that are screwed to the uprights. I then screw the sheeting down to the cross pieces. It give about 4" inches of space to let any moisture coming out of the top of the stacks to escape without condensing. Both stacks rigged that way were fine.
Worse case is I have 2 cords in a woodshed with a tarp on front but normally leave that for later in the winter when I dont want to deal with snow in the stacks.