gorman
Addicted to ArboristSite
Leave it in logs until you have orders.
Ok but are you going to get the wood dry enough in log form before it’s split?
Leave it in logs until you have orders.
People on the east coast want seasoned wood.Leave it in logs until you have orders.
We switched over to the big firewood bags. Firewood seasoned great this past year, no mess, stack on pallets. Customers are getting exact amounts of wood. For us this works pretty good. We always got some molding/wet wood with our piles as well. This solved that problem. No more handling the firewood either. Off the conveyor into the bag, then from the bag to the dump trailer. There is a cost with the bags but if you factor in all the time saved by not handling the wood it makes sense. We are reusing last years bags again this year, not sure if we will get three years out of them or not.
View attachment 617871 View attachment 617872 View attachment 617874 View attachment 617873 View attachment 617875
That’s what I figured. So I basically need a large asphalt or concrete flat top with border blocks. This will mean I will need a way to screen it. On the upside I guess this will make it easier to load but I’m fed up with firewood.
they use this method for the beet pilers around here. if the beets heat up too much they rot so they blow air in there to keep them a consistent temp.
Go talk to your county road dept and get some old scrap pieces of steel road tube, a hole saw (although just having it a few inches off the ground might be all you need) and 3-4 steel fence posts to keep them stood up while piling against them. Should promote airflow in the pile and prevent the rotting. Should be free or cheap, doesn't matter if you smash them with the loader either... Weld some rerod to the top so you can pull it out of the pile with a fork tine.
Viola- air flow to the most critical area of the pile where rotting occours, for cheap or free.
In the vineyard industry, we have lots of trouble with chilling harvested grapes in totes.
We take 6" pieces of vented drain tile and put them in the middle of the totes to help get airflow to more of the fruit so we can chill it faster and it helps prevent it from going through a heat, promoting fruit quality in the winery.
Go talk to your county road dept and get some old scrap pieces of steel road tube, a hole saw (although just having it a few inches off the ground might be all you need) and 3-4 steel fence posts to keep them stood up while piling against them. Should promote airflow in the pile and prevent the rotting. Should be free or cheap, doesn't matter if you smash them with the loader either... Weld some rerod to the top so you can pull it out of the pile with a fork tine.
Viola- air flow to the most critical area of the pile where rotting occours, for cheap or free.
I windrow mine. Piles average 8' high and about 12-14' long. Stored in a field with full sun and wind exposure and I get zero mold. I have seen other guys piles around me relatively the same size but not the sun exposure and its moldy in the middle.
Ok but are you going to get the wood dry enough in log form before it’s split?
That sounds about right. I pay $100 a cord of hardwood logs.I charge $180 a log load and each load has at least two cords.
storing in log form works decent and produces relatively dry wood if done right. I stored my logs precut to 8' lengths, stacked on runners so even the bottom row of logs were a foot off the ground. store em out in the open where the sun is beating down on them and the wind can blow against the ends of the logs and in 6-8 months they will be at the very edge of acceptable for sale. they only dry out so much so dont try keeping a pile for 2 years and think it will be 14% because it wont.
I forgot to add this little nugget. I only dealt with 16" and smaller logs with an occasional 18" thrown in, dont think my method would work nearly as well on stuff much larger than thatThis is how I’m going to have to do it I think.
This is how I’m going to have to do it I think.
Oak is 2 seasons split and stacked to season in my experience. It'll rot before it dries to point of being usable if stored in logs.My experience has been, if selling seasoned red oak, white oak or hickory I can tell you storing in log length up off the ground in the sun doesn't work well at all even with the 100* summer days we have in NC. Fresh splits will still be in the 30%-40% moisture content range. Split prior to a hot summer for descent seasoned firewood. Oak really takes two seasons to season correctly but when you sell firewood not many can wait that long to sell.