WhiteMike
ArboristSite Member
Wow thanks for all the replies! I have definitely learned a lot just from that. My original plan was to burn through the wood that has been seasoned and then start on the stuff that I've cut this summer but after this thread I've decided to just use my furnace if I have to. I'd like to not have to turn it on but I looked on Craigslist and firewood near me is going for about 200 for a seasoned cord and I can't bring myself to pay that when there's 100s of miles of wilderness and forest service land out my back door. So I won't burn any of the wood from this summer until the winter after next. I'll probably get back up into the mountains in April when the snowline gets high enough... So once I gather that wood and split it should I just leave it in piles out in the open? (I have plenty of room to do so) and then stack it all in my wood shed towards the end of summer? The wood I've been cutting I haven't been letting it sit out, I split it and stack it in the wood shed immediately. It sits on pallets and isn't stacked tightly so there is room for air movement but I haven't been letting the sun get to it. here is a picture! The darker wood on the left is the seasoned wood, on the right its 5 rows deep of what I split this summer. Thanks for the help!
I also wanted to add that i have a guy coming next week to do an inspection and cleaning on my stove and flue for 150$. Does that seem like a reasonable price? He comes highly reccomended for this area
I also wanted to add that i have a guy coming next week to do an inspection and cleaning on my stove and flue for 150$. Does that seem like a reasonable price? He comes highly reccomended for this area