I usually take it with me when I go in the woods, it's very useful.Hey I see you have a log stand - do you usually take that out with you in the bush when you're bucking? How do you find it - very useful?
I usually take it with me when I go in the woods, it's very useful.Hey I see you have a log stand - do you usually take that out with you in the bush when you're bucking? How do you find it - very useful?
Right on. I'm embarrassed to admit it, but I hadn't even heard of such a contraption until a few weeks ago. It looks like a mighty handy tool to have, and I was thinking of maybe picking one up. I'm not sure how much harvesting I have left in me at this point, but it could be useful for me to pick away at bucking in my driveway, rather than hauling the logs up onto a stack of pallets like I usually do.I usually take it with me when I go in the woods, it's very useful.
That dark wood next to the Honey Locust in the 3rd pic is Osage that is anywhere from 30-50 years cut. It came from old fence posts. It’s about like burning coal.That is some seriously seasoned wood... almost looks like charcoal! Very nice. Im jealous of all the nice flat land to season.
That is looking good & coming along nicely.View attachment 277018View attachment 277019
My split pile grew a bit more today. Made a little dent into the pile so I could tuck the log splitter closer in to the rest of the rounds. All set up to go again tomorrow. By supper time today the ground was getting mushy again, but it was really nice and frozen this morning. I'm really pleased with the ash so far - splits really nice, and smells wonderful. Another satisfying day working on my wood
Sounds like you had a busy day as well. You must been getting after it to get that far.View attachment 277021View attachment 277022
Bucked all of load 7 in 1.5 hrs or 3 tanks of fuel, then split as much as I could until dark, so about 2hrs or so, made a huge dent in it, hopefully everything will be bucked, split, and raked up by Wednesday or Thursday the latest, the weather has been so nice, I’m now trying to out pace the grass turning on
Nice work @MissMac , how much wood do you usually cut in the spring?View attachment 277018View attachment 277019
My split pile grew a bit more today. Made a little dent into the pile so I could tuck the log splitter closer in to the rest of the rounds. All set up to go again tomorrow. By supper time today the ground was getting mushy again, but it was really nice and frozen this morning. I'm really pleased with the ash so far - splits really nice, and smells wonderful. Another satisfying day working on my wood
Every year I restock one empty stall from my shed, which roughly works out to 2.5-3 cords. However the last few years it's taken me all summer to get them stocked up, and I've been playing catchup from having given some wood to a friend in need. Last year I'd say by the end of fall I had processed 5 cords. This year, I bought those 4 cords of ash home in log length, and then participated in a very unsatisfactory transaction that got me another 1.3 cords already processed.Nice work @MissMac , how much wood do you usually cut in the spring?
out of curiosity, do you top-cover your stacks or just leave them as they are?I ran out of gas just as I ran out of dry weather this morning, luckily the rain held off the rest of the day so I got my 2-1/2 cord stall of Ash filled up. I got all the bark & splitter trash raked & picked up. All that’s left of the State Park hoard is sitting in front.
My 6 cord c/s/s from the State Park sandwiching some Osage.
View attachment 277029View attachment 277030View attachment 277031
Leave them as they are. I usually try to move some dry wood into the machine shed but otherwise it’s all uncovered. The Osage isn’t going to rot, the Honey Locust & Oak are 3 years dry time everything thing else rotates yearly or ever other year.out of curiosity, do you top-cover your stacks or just leave them as they are?
The reason I ask is because I'm trying to decide whether I need to top cover my ash this summer. It will be sitting out in a sunny/windy spot for the whole season, and will then get moved into my covered wood shed for an additional 2 summers of drying. It's more work and a bit of a hassle for me to come up with cover material. What do you think?Leave them as they are. I usually try to move some dry wood into the machine shed but otherwise it’s all uncovered. The Osage isn’t going to rot, the Honey Locust & Oak are 3 years dry time everything thing else rotates yearly or ever other year.
If it’s just for the summer I wouldn’t think twice about leaving it uncovered. It’s not like it’s going to be buried under snow. I have read that some folks leave theirs uncovered till winter then top cover, some cover straight away. I am like you it’s not worth the hassle to me. Your climate may have an effect on it if you have a lot of rainy/drizzling weather.The reason I ask is because I'm trying to decide whether I need to top cover my ash this summer. It will be sitting out in a sunny/windy spot for the whole season, and will then get moved into my covered wood shed for an additional 2 summers of drying. It's more work and a bit of a hassle for me to come up with cover material. What do you think?
I'm one of those "folks" wood stays uncovered until the fall rains / snows move in, this is why I do the funky center rib of splits right down the middle of the pile, puts pitch on the tarp when its time to cover.If it’s just for the summer I wouldn’t think twice about leaving it uncovered. It’s not like it’s going to be buried under snow. I have read that some folks leave theirs uncovered till winter then top cover, some cover straight away. I am like you it’s not worth the hassle to me. Your climate may have an effect on it if you have a lot of rainy/drizzling weather.
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