is that it warms you several times.
We had a couple of dead trees felled when we moved in here (standard Tennessee method - chainsaw to prepare the fell, and a length of line, a block, and a pickup truck to do the actual felling) and the feller chainsawed the trunks into firewood lengths.
On Monday we hired another chap to split the logs - he reckoned a couple of ricks (whatever that is) so about $80. In fact he spent much of the day at it, estimated the pile at 6-7 ricks ($240) and there's still as much again to split.
So this week I've been moving the split wood up from where the trees were to the lower porch and stacking it. I now have a pile about 8'x2'x2', and the original pile doesn't look any smaller.
Who needs a gym?
We had a couple of dead trees felled when we moved in here (standard Tennessee method - chainsaw to prepare the fell, and a length of line, a block, and a pickup truck to do the actual felling) and the feller chainsawed the trunks into firewood lengths.
On Monday we hired another chap to split the logs - he reckoned a couple of ricks (whatever that is) so about $80. In fact he spent much of the day at it, estimated the pile at 6-7 ricks ($240) and there's still as much again to split.
So this week I've been moving the split wood up from where the trees were to the lower porch and stacking it. I now have a pile about 8'x2'x2', and the original pile doesn't look any smaller.
Who needs a gym?
no subject
I presume the "chap" you hired used a powered splitter to do the work; splitting fresh wood with a maul and wedge is a bugger and if it was done manually you got a bargain. If you stack the slabs you've got left under cover and let them dry out for a couple of seasons then a cruiser-weight axe and some practice will do for the rest of them.
no subject
The splitter was indeed powered, (by gas/petrol) and I'm now looking at the small electric splitters (around $300) to deal with the stuff he left. I have a maul and a pair of wedges should I feel short of exercise at any time...
no subject
Even having a broken arm didn't exempt me from hauling in firewood from the wood pile to the fireplace. And when I had a newspaper route, I was up a couple of hours before everyone else in the house on account of needing to fold my papers and go deliver them, so I also got to get the fire stoked up in the morning. I'm getting cold just thinking about it.
no subject
When he retired, the concession went down to 5 tonnes a year and I used to go up to his cousin's farm to their timber wood to bring down van-loads of pine to supplement the coal. I'd also pick up anything like broken pallets or other scrap wood as targets of opportunity.
no subject
no subject
Oak will take longer to season (a couple of years stacked) than pine or other softwood. If it's red oak then you will need a splitter, unless you want to end up with forearms like Popeye. Problem is that once you have your own splitter you start looking around for other trees to take down and turn into firewood. That means getting a chainsaw and a pickup truck and a hound dog -- no, scratch the last one. Samson will have to suffice. P.S. give him a scritch from me.
no subject
But, at least for ash, easier than splitting seasoned wood because you put it off because it's a bugger....
My pile is a lot smaller though.
no subject
The version of the "several times" I've heard was "once for felling, once for splitting, once for burning".