+1It doesn't sound like you have Sugar Maple then, properly seasoned it should be hard as a rock.
I was cutting standing dead SM earlier this summer and although the wood was clean, sparks were flying and it was very heavy.
+1It doesn't sound like you have Sugar Maple then, properly seasoned it should be hard as a rock.
I agree Buddy!! When I lived up there in Philips, ME it's all we burned. That and yellow birch!I cut hard maple in the fall/winter. Cut,split and stacked, it has no problem being ready the following fall. In fact it is seasoned just fine by summer. Easy to split, burns hot, and is abundant (up here). Just about the perfect firewood,IMO. Beech and oak are plentiful, and even a little better. Oak takes longer to season, splits just as easily and burns a little longer. Beech splits a little tougher when green, but it burns hot and dries almost as fast as maple. You can't (won't) go wrong with hard maple.
Great post. An excellent description of those 3 classic firewoods in New England.I cut hard maple in the fall/winter. Cut,split and stacked, it has no problem being ready the following fall. In fact it is seasoned just fine by summer. Easy to split, burns hot, and is abundant (up here). Just about the perfect firewood,IMO. Beech and oak are plentiful, and even a little better. Oak takes longer to season, splits just as easily and burns a little longer. Beech splits a little tougher when green, but it burns hot and dries almost as fast as maple. You can't (won't) go wrong with hard maple.
Hard maple is great.....and even soft maple is better than most, even though it gets a bad rep.
It doesn't sound like you have Sugar Maple then, properly seasoned it should be hard as a rock.
Give me pine any day over bass wood. Heck even good popple and I cannot believe that i admitted that out loud.Im a dummy. I forgot i had some bass wood mixed in with the sugar maple i cut last year. The bass wood was the stuff that was all punky. I'll never cut that crap again, worse than pine. The sugar maple in the mix was beautiful.
So i was looking at the btu chart and it says that hard maple has a higher btu rating than almost all others on the list. I haven't burned really any hard maple that I recall but I just got about 4 cords of it for next year. Anyone else burn much of it and what would you compare it to?
So i was looking at the btu chart and it says that hard maple has a higher btu rating than almost all others on the list. I haven't burned really any hard maple that I recall but I just got about 4 cords of it for next year. Anyone else burn much of it and what would you compare it to?
So i was looking at the btu chart and it says that hard maple has a higher btu rating than almost all others on the list. I haven't burned really any hard maple that I recall but I just got about 4 cords of it for next year. Anyone else burn much of it and what would you compare it to?
welcome to AS...I have found hard "rock" or sugar maple maple to light easily and to burn hot but I have not found it to coal as well as most other hard wood species used for wood burning. I have a charmaster wood burning furnace where the air comes over the wood not under the wood and woods that coal well like Oak and black locust form charcoal like coals that last long into the night and sometimes into the AM. The hard "rock" maple burns out somewhat quickly after burning hot and gets reduced to fine ashes without coals so the stove cools quickly. That may be a desirable trait if one likes it cool during the night but I prefer waking up with warm walls and floors! Please understand that norway maple is barely a hard wood and loses a lot of weight when dry and is easy to split where true rock maple / sugar maple remains quite heavy and is often quite hard to split by hand.