I do the same thing as you from the door to the stove, but I use Costco bags. A bit smaller than IKEA but quite tough.
Smaller might be better. An IKEA bag full of Oak is a struggle!
I do the same thing as you from the door to the stove, but I use Costco bags. A bit smaller than IKEA but quite tough.
Here's a few pics, I thought these were more common, but looking around online they dont seem to be. This one came from Harbor Freight. Don't see them on there website currently. It's 12" to the outside of the rails where the wood sits. About 20" clearance between the tires near the axle. Around 22" clearance farther away from the axle. If I needed to replace it, I would probably look for the same thing. It works for me and beats carrying a bag or whatnot.ALONGSHOT - I'd probably not be the only one who would like to see your actual carrier. After two days of looking I think this would work best for me, but it would need to have a simple nylon fabric attached to it to catch all the bark and moss. Anybody know what this actually was made to do, what it was called, etc? I can picture handling a few days worth of wood in one shot. Thanks for showing this concept.
And then from the deck is it to a wood box or straight into the fire - what do you do to get it there your Eminency, carry it by the armload?
Use a cart from stacks to door.
Have a wood rack next to indoor stove.
Hand carry until full. Lasts a week give or take depending on the weather.
I don't wanna bring in wood everyday and I've never seen a hand carrier that saved any work.
Setting up a ramp and going from stack to inside with the same cart would be slick.
There's no doubt in my mind, moving wood about is the biggest pita of wood heating. A bag or sling and a cart are things they save a little bit of effort each time, a big saving when summed over the winter and 2-3 cord of trips to the pile!
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