Wow. Tough crowd. I knew it was a long shot but I wasn't expecting a smack down regarding the character of our scouts.
I had a few free minutes at work and I started thinking. I know... a dangerous thing. "Hmmm... If we are taking about 30 or so pieces of wood on a campout how long might a cord of wood last...."
So I Googled "How many pieces of wood in a cord". This thread was at the top of the result list. On reading the thread I realized that it is a silly question and has no real answer. Just as the concept of this entire thread is flawed, my original contribution was flawed as well. A better question would have been... "about how many wheelbarrow loads per cord?" And to eliminate snarky "depends on the size of your wheelbarrow" comments, my wheelbarrow is a Jackson contractor size (7 cu ft?).
now for the rebuttals...
Just a thought here, but how bout having the scouts gather up their own wood? Another fine lesson of how to keep yourself warm and have a fire to cook on, and not be dependent on buying wood could be a great plus on their side......call it a learning experience, maybe?
For the record they are not dependent on bought wood. The boys gather their own wood at our camping week-ends. Sometimes on their wood hunt they hit the mother-load but sometimes it's slim pickin's. It is for those times that we bring some extra wood along. Typically about a wheelbarrow load goes into the trailer just in case. Most times we bring a lot of it back. Sometimes I wish we'd brought more.
The boys in our troop are not spoiled or lazy and have not asked for anything. They work hard for what they get and do several service projects for the community each year. This was just me trying to get some info for a question that I admitted in my reply was virtually impossible to answer.
Talk to a tree service company in your area. I bet they would be happy to deliver a load of pine to your church or wherever. Split it yourself, have the boys stack (or help split too if they are old enough).... snip ...You could get a homeowner chainsaw and a splitting maul for the price of a bought cord, and those would be useful tools for service projects, as well as free campfire wood for the troop.
Thanks that is a good idea. I do have two chainsaws (Homelite 16" & Stihl 20"), and an ax and maul. While I'd love to spend an afternoon felling a tree, cutting to logs, splitting it, throwing it in my F250, coming home and stacking it in a neat pile by the fence i don't have time for all that. I should however be able round up a few scouts and find time to split and stack a delivered load of logs.
Have no idea how long a cord would last for campfires. Way too many variables, from how big, to how long, and how often.
Yes those are the same variables that I admitted in my original posting would make any answer a guess.
I'm sorry, were you taking his post seriously?
yes I am serious. The question may have been poorly stated or vague but a real question none the less. I always thought there were no stupid questions.
Go to the firewood wanted thread,
I didn't know there was a "firewood wanted" thread I'll check it. Thanks. I looked on Craig's list last night and saw a few "Free wood" ads. So there are other options to buying wood. In fact I'd rather not buy any wood. I've never bought firewood in my life.
...call it a learning experience, maybe?
Yes this has been a learning experience so I guess even with a poorly thought out question some knowledge can be gained. Until yesterday I didn't even know how much wood was in a cord. I now know it is 4'x4'x8'.
I still have no idea how many wheelbarrow loads are in a 4x4x8 stack but I'm sure I'll find out this week-end when I fill up the wheelbarrow with wood then stack it, measure it, and do the required math.
I also learned that a cord of high quality good burning wood would be in the $200-$250 price range. Good to know if we do resort to buying a load of wood,
think the idea is supposed to be self sufficiency, not drain mom and pops wallet.
I don't think anyone's wallet will be "drained" if we are talking about $10 worth of wood each month (with alot coming back most months). Works out to about $1 a boy added to the camping budget to ensure plenty of reserve wood just in case for the next several years. The real draining of the wallet comes from $75 sleeping bags, $125 backpacks, $50 performance undies (what happened to old fashioned cotton thermals), $75 insulated hiking boots that are outgrown every 6 months. etc. Camping isn't cheap unless you are only camping in the summer. But luckily alot of it is given at Christmas or Birthday so not too bad.
Really over the course of several years I'm sure there will be more branches brought down by storm, another dead tree by the stream, and so on. No real fear of ever running out of wood.
I will now unsubscribe from this forum.
Mike