I skipped over everything from about page 3. I am from a 4th generation Residential Tree Service. I always loved lawn work, and I liked firewood. I used to try and talk Dad into starting a lawn division, and I figured the wood could carry it through the winter. He was quite blunt on the subject. When he retired our 3 and 4 man crews were making 2-4,000 dollars a day. To put on a yard/wood crew he would have to buy another dump truck, trailer, splitters and hire 3-4 men. A yard crew would be hard put to bring in $750-$1000 a day. So, if he was going to hire 3-4 men, buy a new dump truck, he would just buy another chipper and put on another tree crew and make 3-4 times as much money. If you have dozers, loaders, skidders and access to straight logs to sell to a processor, you can make money too. If you have processors and get all logs that will run through your equipment, you can make money too. Firewood is the absolute low end of residential tree work. All of your trees are different size yard trees, few nice straight trunks, or too big for most processors. You can make some money on it, but you make a lot of money on the other stuff. As Choppy and Ted said, there are too many variables. We live in the Mid Atlantic area. Winters are mild enough that we had work booked all the way through. I sold firewood, but the business did not. There was just too much money to be made at what we were licensed and insured to do, to waste time on the low end of the business. Around here still, the only tree companies that mess with wood are new start ups, or unlicensed hacks, that don't have any clientele base