SteveSS
Addicted to ArboristSite
They do it on my mulberry trees too.I remember being in woods that was once Apple Orchard, and watching a deer go up on it's hind legs to get an apple off the tree.
They do it on my mulberry trees too.I remember being in woods that was once Apple Orchard, and watching a deer go up on it's hind legs to get an apple off the tree.
Scrounged up these today. Don't see that bottom one everyday.
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Thoroughly agree on taking out the tree pigs especially if you or neighbors have dogs. It's not a matter of if.....SVK, looked like you had some real nice fun cutting! Good deal!
If there are porkys any where near your hunting cabin, you shoot them! And if you have a dog, you shoot them twice!
Just went by there on Sunday morning.If you get a minute just throw a few in.
The biggest deer I see are going between the oak and corn, and travel a good distance to get to oak nuts.
We don't have much of a problem with that around these parts. Although one did tear up a bunch of bee hives 6 miles from me, rare though to have them this far south.
I was thinking of both you guys when I ran down to Ft Wayne today.
I went right by the Kubota dealer in Charlotte.
SVK you might recognize this intersection, I-69 and 80-90 at Freemont IN.
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Scrounged up these today. Don't see that bottom one everyday.
View attachment 487762 This was on my way back in the rd at the intersection of m-50 & m-43, I just pulled up to it and stopped for the stop sign and grabbed it.
What's a scrounger to do.View attachment 487763
And this on the way home from church yesterday.View attachment 487764 I even got it all split up with the Fiskars and in the wood rack in the house.View attachment 487765
Happy 2nd Birthday to the best thread on the internet!!!!!Thought maybe you guy's that scrounge wood, might share some of your scrounging methods with the seemingly growing crowd of newbie wood burners. From what I have been reading, they would be quite appreciative to hear how you score, and where you score. There is a lot of useful and interesting information scattered throughout the firewood forum. I thought it might be nice to share some of your experiences in one thread, for those who are just starting out and maybe those who are struggling a bit. Thanks to anyone who cares to share.
I got tired of lifting buckets of sap, so I put my slaves to work...
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Just went by there on Sunday morning.
Nice purse BTW.
this is a sappy bunch a posts... nary a one about getting or scrounging firewood... but heating the gathered tree syrup. awesome! and then pix of cooking it down... and now pix of the entire '2nd' shift production crew... no doubt as good as it gets in Hollywood... great theme, lots of suspense - will it taste good?, and intrigue... drama at its best. keep those sappy posts coming on in... can't wait for the 'bottling show!' lol good updates, makes me want to just lie down and.....
oh! oh yeah... and
that too!
That's the problem about being a year ahead on firewood - I don't need to do a lot of scrounging, so I have to provide something for you guys to read and comment on when you are supposed to be working!
I hope to have bottling pics tonight.
Only a year ahead?!?!
Is there any hard/fast rule of number of cords worth of tops per acre?212 acres would leave a lot of tops plus some A+ deer habitat.
we always figured about a 1/2 cord per top. with pulp wood prices higher the loggers are scrounging all they can after they get the saw logs out. we started buying tops at $5-10 per top when they only took the saw logs and you could saw a lot of wood. just saw an ad from a guy that had his property logged. he want $60 an 8' p/u bed full. u cut.Is there any hard/fast rule of number of cords worth of tops per acre?
We cleaned up a 40 acre cut and there must have been 12 cords of hardwood tops and at least that much of aspen that was left to rot.
Persimmon trees as well...they'll just about stand on each other's backs to get to 'em.They do it on my mulberry trees too.
You must be cutting bigger trees. Red maples and oak around here rarely go past 16" DBH so tops are a whole lot smaller. The piles we were working were from when logs were delimbed in the woods and tree length logs skidded to the landing. When we were scrounging was basically the cut offs at the top of the tree that were less than 8' longwe always figured about a 1/2 cord per top. with pulp wood prices higher the loggers are scrounging all they can after they get the saw logs out. we started buying tops at $5-10 per top when they only took the saw logs and you could saw a lot of wood. just saw an ad from a guy that had his property logged. he want $60 an 8' p/u bed full. u cut.
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