After much thought about where and how to stack my (delivered) wood, I made the decision and got about 4 of my 5 cords stacked. I decided on 24' rows, stacked about 2' apart. Originally I was going to put them further apart so I could snow blow around them, but then read a post here and decided to move them closer so I could anchor the rows to each other by inserting the ends of wood slats, positioned perpendicular to the rows, throughout the length of each stack. In essence, making the 3 rows, one large structure. I then covered all 3 rows with plastic tarp, thinking come winter, I didn't want snow falling between my rows. I still hadn't worked out how I was going to scrape snow off the hard to reach parts of the tarp, but I was working on it. Here is a pic of how it looked a few days ago (at the time I only had 2 of my stacks up) -
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Well, starting yesterday it started to rain, and late this afternoon when I went to check on my wood (I tend to do that a lot once it's up) I found that water was pooling in low parts of the tarp, and I had small tarp pools hanging down between my rows. This was causing my tarp to pull off the outer rows, and I'm sure, put extra tension on my stacks.
I realized my tactical error just as one of the pools pulled one side of a tarp completely in, and the tarp and water collapsed between 2 of my stacks. Come winter, a heavy snow was going to do the same thing, not to mention any more rain we get before the snows start - of which there will be alot.
So...I made an on the fly decision to cover each row with a separate length of tarp. I cut my blue tarps in half, and, using another tip I'd seen here, cut a couple 10' lengths of 4 mm black poly to make up what I was now short.
The blue tarps are held down with wood, and the black poly is stapled into the wood about every 2'. Here are pics of how it looks now (can you tell it was raining)?
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My only worry now, is come snow season, what do I do about snow that pile up between the stacks. There's not a enough room for me to get in to shovel (not that I'd really want to) and the only snow blowing I'll be doing will be around the outside so I can get to the stacks come late winter. I'm thinking even if I get snow in between the stacks, it's not really going to get the wood all that wet. And since I plan to move wood from these piles, up onto my deck before they are moved into the house, any surface moisture from snow should dry up pretty quick in the cold air while waiting on the deck to be burned.
Would people agree? Or have I made another tactical mistake?
(broken link removed)
Well, starting yesterday it started to rain, and late this afternoon when I went to check on my wood (I tend to do that a lot once it's up) I found that water was pooling in low parts of the tarp, and I had small tarp pools hanging down between my rows. This was causing my tarp to pull off the outer rows, and I'm sure, put extra tension on my stacks.
I realized my tactical error just as one of the pools pulled one side of a tarp completely in, and the tarp and water collapsed between 2 of my stacks. Come winter, a heavy snow was going to do the same thing, not to mention any more rain we get before the snows start - of which there will be alot.
So...I made an on the fly decision to cover each row with a separate length of tarp. I cut my blue tarps in half, and, using another tip I'd seen here, cut a couple 10' lengths of 4 mm black poly to make up what I was now short.
The blue tarps are held down with wood, and the black poly is stapled into the wood about every 2'. Here are pics of how it looks now (can you tell it was raining)?
(broken link removed)
(broken link removed)
My only worry now, is come snow season, what do I do about snow that pile up between the stacks. There's not a enough room for me to get in to shovel (not that I'd really want to) and the only snow blowing I'll be doing will be around the outside so I can get to the stacks come late winter. I'm thinking even if I get snow in between the stacks, it's not really going to get the wood all that wet. And since I plan to move wood from these piles, up onto my deck before they are moved into the house, any surface moisture from snow should dry up pretty quick in the cold air while waiting on the deck to be burned.
Would people agree? Or have I made another tactical mistake?