What do you guys do with remaining bark when you stack your wood?

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Dear Community!

I'm still learning the science of burning and preparing wood... I had 3 cords delivered so far. I stacked them well, but have a lot of bark leftovers. I tried to put most of it together with the logs, as if they're together, but still have plenty left. So far I put it to a separate carton box, but what are you guys doing with it? Do you stack it together with the wood to later burn it in the stove? Or do you leave it out for the campfire? Or maybe just throw it away?

Thanks!
Bark that falls off gets gathered up and tossed on the brush pile.
Somewhere I read that oak wood will create about .5% ash, yet the bark creates 5-10% ash.
So I did a test one year.
4.5cords white and red oak
created about 120lb of ash, or 3 chicken feed bags full
120lb ash/(4.5cord x 4000/cord) = .66%
Usually when I'm moving wood around everything goes with it, bark scraps and all. Then only the cordwood gets restacked, like in the garage, or lean to out back, and the scraps at the bottom of the trailer then get hauled away.
 
I use it for mulch or as a base for paths which are then covered with chips.
 
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When you guys use it for mulch, do you somehow shred it? What do you use for that? My bark is usually in pretty big chunks... I tried to throw it on a muddy area with naked tree roots to make it more walkable, but it's not very convenient now, so I guess I have to cut/shred it somehow.
 
When you guys use it for mulch, do you somehow shred it? What do you use for that? My bark is usually in pretty big chunks... I tried to throw it on a muddy area with naked tree roots to make it more walkable, but it's not very convenient now, so I guess I have to cut/shred it somehow.
I find that if you step on it enough it breaks down nicely. Unfortunately at that point it is much less effective as mulch.
 
I find that if you step on it enough it breaks down nicely
Oh, not my bark... I could not break it by wakling or even driving my heavy cart full of wood on it. It doesn't bend, very hard bark... I would probably need an axe or bug hammer to cut it...
 
Oh, not my bark... I could not break it by wakling or even driving my heavy cart full of wood on it. It doesn't bend, very hard bark... I would probably need an axe or bug hammer to cut it...
I burn mostly hemlock, beech, birch, and maple. Birch bark can be a bit tough. What are you burning?
 
What are you burning?
This is going to be my first year so I'm not very good in IDing the firewood... But my supplier says that it's mostly Hickory, Red oak or Maple. And so far all the bark I found was very tough to break!
 
I live in the suburbs and scrounge for all of my wood so it all goes in the fire. I use my paper grocery bags to scoop up pieces of bark and sawdust/chips from where I cut and split and then put that BTU grab bag into my insert. It doesn't last long but it burns nice and hot and is a decent way to start a fire.
 
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This is going to be my first year so I'm not very good in IDing the firewood... But my supplier says that it's mostly Hickory, Red oak or Maple. And so far all the bark I found was very tough to break!
Hickory bark can be like iron--I'd be tempted to throw that into the stove--plenty of BTUs! Enjoy your first year--it will be a steep learning curve, but you are in the right place to learn a bunch. My first year with an EPA stove was about 15 yrs ago--the folks on this forum were a great support.
 
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I save it in totes and use it to burn down coals. I don’t waste anything.
 
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I usually just burn them but I ran out of pallets and got 3 cords that need piling, so....I'll lay the bark down and pile my splits on top of them. I guess they'll wind up in the stove anyway (or my neighbours field when he's not looking).
 
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we generally use the bark as kindling.
 
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