stonykill
ArboristSite Guru
my favorite wood....thats easy. Whatever the tree service guys drop off already chunked up for free. Thats my favorite firewood, free firewood.
my favorite wood....thats easy. Whatever the tree service guys drop off already chunked up for free. Thats my favorite firewood, free firewood.
I like to get the kind you are paid to haul away
Fir, the cady of woods for general burning, esp. natural second growth or old growth (rarer and rarer to find, mostly blow-downs), medium ash, good steady heat, no big surprises, lots of it here.
Alder, faster than fir, good heat, less ash but more creosote.
Oak, ooo-la-la, wish more'd die around here (jk)
Arbutus (hey, burning some now, imagine that), called madrone down south of here, cuts and splits beautifully green, will kill chains and mauls and teenaged splitters when well seasoned (only time I've seen sparks that weren't rocks, sand or metal, gah!), burns and coals up nicely, medium ash, almost no creostoe, only wood I don't mind throwing on the all-nighter green. Wish I had more!
Pine/grand fir etc., yuck, if free ok, good for daytime burns, pops, farts, poof-gone.
Cedar, nice kindling, you have a screw loose if you burn logs of this imho.
Willow, run away! Will burn okay if seasoned for a year+, hot, ashy, and some of the american varieties stink like dried pee (yummy, not), bleh, hard to split too, I think like elm, stringy junk.
Fruitwoods, gotta love 'em, apple, pear, and especially cherry
Maple, love it but burns too quick, little ash, good coaling, bit of creosote especially if burning wet (not green but water wet), want more of this too, great heat akin to alder and arbutus.
My 0.02$ worth of blather fer the evening/afternoon.
Serge
You can get $500 a cord here and I can sell pine/fir/cedar for $350, unseasoned, without any raised eyebrows. Its a crazy mixed up world but I'm happy to sell a truckload here and there to get some extra cash.
+1 on the free part. The best kind is the free kind....Man do I feel like an underprevlaged child. so many choices mentioned in this post. Pine is the main type of wood I burn. Get some Chiness Elm and Cottonwood sometimes for free. I guess thats the best kind, free!
2Tall
1. Ironwood (eastern hophornbeam)--rare but excellent
2. Bur Oak
3. Red Oak
4. Red Elm
5. Green Ash
6. White (American) Elm
7. Hackberry
8. Eastern Redcedar
Low end: Boxelder, Silver Maple, Basswood, Cottonwood, Aspen
Hackberry seems to rot before we can burn it, though it looks good at first.
White elm is unpredictable--many trees (especially small ones) are rotten the year after they die, while some are solid and burn hot. I just cut down a very large white elm (34" diameter at the base and 170 years old) that recently died of Dutch elm disease. Not one rotten piece in it. The rounds near the base are so tough and that I have to saw them 3/4 of the way through before I can drive a splitting wedge--and with each round weighing about 500 lbs that's a lot of cuts! I can only hope it's worth it when it dries and heats the house.
Has anyone else had this experience with inconsistent quality of white elm? Different subspecies? Different densities from different growing environments? Something else?