Never heard it called that . . .
what do yinz call it? lol thats what we call it here cuz thats how the dutcheys do it.I've never heard it called this either, but that's what I do, too.
what do yinz call it? lol thats what we call it here cuz thats how the dutcheys do it.
My dad called it "cribbing" the ends. I've heard that term used in other places, and if you search that term on the web you get pictures and links of what I'm talking about -- even links right back to Hearth.com! https://www.hearth.com/talk/threads/full-cribbed-stacks.126087/what do yinz call it? lol thats what we call it here cuz thats how the dutcheys do it.
Oh Oh, man, that's really painful.I am here to make everyone feel better about their stacks...
Had a storm roll through about 2 weeks ago with sustained winds of 15 and gusts to 40. I have about 6 cords of wood stacked up out back and had about 3 cords of it get blown over. Took me about 6 hours to get it all cleaned up and the blocks that broke replaced.
This is one reason I prefer Holtz Holden's
This is one reason I prefer Holtz Holden's
I tell ya . . . I'm learning all kinds of vocabulary here these days.[/quote]
Gotcha . . . I really thought you had a new type of holz stack going on there for a bit . . . now I'm a bit sad . .
...
Had a storm roll through about 2 weeks ago with sustained winds of 15 and gusts to 40. ...
Newf here does similar. She starts taking them apart from top down. No mouse house is safe.....My woodshed is in a fenced in section and the front row was getting a serious lean, so I went to look closer. Saw a few pieces on the se is safe.....ground and thought what the heck? Didn't take too long to figure my canine gal (bit of a tomboy) was pulling splits out off the BOTTOM of the 7' tall front layer. She was after mice or chipmunks or snakes or whatever. Straightened it up, happened again, repeat several times.
She's not gonna' get hurt because I'm keeping it low. But she's never more alive than when she's on a scent. So I'll work with her on this one.
I'm not a wood expert but your variety of wood looks a lot easier to stack and in larger pieces at that.(compared to OP).Hmmm? It sounds like I'm the only one here that has never happen.
I've had my stacks lean forward slightly after months (years) of drying, but never actually fallen over.
Looks like the weakness was in the middle of the stack, maybe you need to put an extra vertical support in the middle. I'd be a little PO'd if I restacked that wood and it happened again.
You are probably right. I'm a bit of a wood snob that way I guess, I like straight grained wood for that reason, and I'm a bit anal about having all my splits the same size. In fact we have lots of apple wood available in my area, but I don't like to take it because of all the branches and uglies. However, the one stack directly behind the bike in the picture does have some branches and irregular shaped pieces I ended up with from a maple tree and a walnut tree I pruned.I'm not a wood expert but your variety of wood looks a lot easier to stack and in larger pieces at that.(compared to OP).
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