sirbuildalot
Addicted to ArboristSite
I've seen some really sweet setups where guys will stack the firewood on pallets and move it into a garage or large walkout door with a machine. Unfortunately, my house has a bulkhead and isn't setup for that. The way I typically do it is I cut all my own wood from my land. Its easier to handle it in stove length than log length, so usually I cut it to stove length and move it with the trailer to a spot where I stack the rounds for splitting. I process to 20" lengths.
Once split I stack it outdoors on wood pallets and let it season for a year+. I usually do 2 rows deep so the wind and sun hit at least one side of each stack. The two rows seems to be a lot more stable than a single row.
Here is some fresh stacked stuff. I like a wheelbarrow around the piles as its easier to maneuver than a tractor or trailer. Holds a decent amount.
In Sept or Oct. I will move the firewood into my basement and stack it in my "bins". I have a typical sized bulkhead. So I throw it in there and can usually get 1.25-1.5 cords in before it is flush with the doors. All together I can fit about 5-5.5 cords in the basement and still have room for my other stuff.
This is probably about half of my wood down there. These 2 "bins" are each 2 rows of 20" wood. 8.5' wide x 6.5' high. I usually accomplish this either by a tractor with a trailer or a special box I made for my little tractor that will dump directly into the bulkhead.
To transport the wood from the bulkhead to where I put it in the basement I made what I call a "miners cart". Basically a wooden box on a caster. It holds about 10 cubic feet when flush with the top of the wood box. This load of Shagbark is more like 12 cubic feet.
I've tried having the wood outside and bringing it in as I need it, but when there is 2 feet of snow on the ground and/or its -5 out, I prefer having it inside. I don't seem to get too many bugs. Plus they told me they like being warm too. LOL. The woodstove also seems to dry out the nearby wood just that little bit extra.
How do you do your wood???
Once split I stack it outdoors on wood pallets and let it season for a year+. I usually do 2 rows deep so the wind and sun hit at least one side of each stack. The two rows seems to be a lot more stable than a single row.
Here is some fresh stacked stuff. I like a wheelbarrow around the piles as its easier to maneuver than a tractor or trailer. Holds a decent amount.
In Sept or Oct. I will move the firewood into my basement and stack it in my "bins". I have a typical sized bulkhead. So I throw it in there and can usually get 1.25-1.5 cords in before it is flush with the doors. All together I can fit about 5-5.5 cords in the basement and still have room for my other stuff.
This is probably about half of my wood down there. These 2 "bins" are each 2 rows of 20" wood. 8.5' wide x 6.5' high. I usually accomplish this either by a tractor with a trailer or a special box I made for my little tractor that will dump directly into the bulkhead.
To transport the wood from the bulkhead to where I put it in the basement I made what I call a "miners cart". Basically a wooden box on a caster. It holds about 10 cubic feet when flush with the top of the wood box. This load of Shagbark is more like 12 cubic feet.
I've tried having the wood outside and bringing it in as I need it, but when there is 2 feet of snow on the ground and/or its -5 out, I prefer having it inside. I don't seem to get too many bugs. Plus they told me they like being warm too. LOL. The woodstove also seems to dry out the nearby wood just that little bit extra.
How do you do your wood???