We moved to a new property last August. Sounds completely backwards but the house we sold sat on a single acre with 4 trees and an OWB, the new property has a pretty efficient indoor stove and plenty of mature wooded acreage to cut from. I hauled in 6 trailer loads of my wood stash from the old house the week before we closed, and got through last winter on maybe 3 cord of it, but due to new house projects didn't (and won't) get to do any new cutting until this fall. Therefore I'll be relying on what's left of my old scrounge pile for this winter. My plan was to break down and pay for a few face cords this year to buy me some time til I can get in the woods, but as a matter of principle it kills me to do it when I've never paid for wood in my life except with my own sweat and labor.
So I finally had time this past week to get processing, most of it being ash in rounds from last year and a bunch of bigger splits left over from the OWB. And indeed it looks like I will be a little short, except I have plenty of oak which I'm not sure will be ready to go, and that's my question. I don't know what kind of oak since it was the only oak I ever scored, but the tree came down in May 2014. Some of it is still in rounds but I split a lot of it June 2014, the splits were then stacked in a tight pile 3 rows deep at the new house in august 2014 with no concern for airflow since we were just tossing them off the trailer as fast as we could in the heat of the move. There they sat, smaller rounds stacked on top of them, up to the present. I dug down and grabbed a piece today, put a moisture meter on it, and read 15 on the outside, but sawed one open and got readings around 21-22 in the middle.
So what do you all think? Any way the oak splits will season enough in the next 3 or 4 months to be ready? I can drag them out and stack in the open in single rows sometime in the next week, I was toying with the idea of cutting them all in half which I'll have to do with some of them anyways cause they're a little long for this stove. Or should I just buy a few face cords and focus on cutting for next year?
So I finally had time this past week to get processing, most of it being ash in rounds from last year and a bunch of bigger splits left over from the OWB. And indeed it looks like I will be a little short, except I have plenty of oak which I'm not sure will be ready to go, and that's my question. I don't know what kind of oak since it was the only oak I ever scored, but the tree came down in May 2014. Some of it is still in rounds but I split a lot of it June 2014, the splits were then stacked in a tight pile 3 rows deep at the new house in august 2014 with no concern for airflow since we were just tossing them off the trailer as fast as we could in the heat of the move. There they sat, smaller rounds stacked on top of them, up to the present. I dug down and grabbed a piece today, put a moisture meter on it, and read 15 on the outside, but sawed one open and got readings around 21-22 in the middle.
So what do you all think? Any way the oak splits will season enough in the next 3 or 4 months to be ready? I can drag them out and stack in the open in single rows sometime in the next week, I was toying with the idea of cutting them all in half which I'll have to do with some of them anyways cause they're a little long for this stove. Or should I just buy a few face cords and focus on cutting for next year?